Archive for the ‘meaningful labor’ Category

Disappointed by the Internet


2011
02.05

Dillon is invited to a Harry Potter-themed birthday where attendees are to dress as their favorite HP character, and despite my entreaties, wants to go as Harry himself. I thought it would be fun to pick someone a little more unknown/less likely to be represented – Cedric Diggory or Oliver Wood or someone – but no, we’re into Harry. But Dillon decided, and it is going to be Harry in Quidditch robes.

No problem, I thought.  I can totally make those.  I love, love, love to make costumes.  To the point where I’ve volunteered with local nonprofit theater companies and my old high school to help out with their productions (pre-grad school, of course).  But it is REALLY off-season for costumes, so when I went to my local fabric store  – of which there are not many in Milwaukee, these days – the patterns are really lacking.   And there is a Lord of the Rings cape that I can probably modify sufficiently, but I am pretty sure I have the pattern already and so I come home empty-handed.  (Noting that it will likely cost me at least $40 for the fabric when I could get the made-in-China version on Amazon for $25.)

And then I think – really, there has to be a pattern online for this.  Harry Potter merch and craft stuff is EVERYWHERE online.  But while I see someone who will make you a custom Quidditch cape for $140, I can’t find any great ideas.  I am kind of bummed out.  Really, I could probably fake it, but the hardest part is knowing how much fabric to buy.  Too much and I spend more than I need (and add to the two giant bins of random extra fabric already in the basement) and too little and it won’t come together correctly.

Now to dig through the bins to see about that old pattern and if there is anything I can do with it.

Fairies and light switches


2011
01.12

Charles made Rose’s week by helping her install a Tinkerbell light switch cover in her room.  This doesn’t sound like that big of an issue, but when we moved into the house we changed the ancient, polluted light switches into the wide, flat ones that don’t actually accommodate a Tinkerbell switch cover.  So, you know, it is slightly more complicated than pulling the old one off and putting the new one on.

Rose was a great helper, letting her dad know when he turned the power to her room off, and then handing appropriate screwdrivers and other implements of torture.  Quite the little tinker-er.

For those of you that are unfamiliar with the Tinkerbell reboot, she’s basically a fairy who invents and builds stuff.  Not the worst Disney role model to have.  And Rose LOVES the new movies, and is pretty much obsessed with them.  She was Tinkerbell for Halloween.  I tried to talk her into going as Iridessa, Tinkerbell’s (are fairies African-American?) friend, but Rose just wasn’t interested.  She had her heart set on Tinkerbell.  I got her Iridessa for Christmas anyway, which Rose seemed to think was better than nothing.  Of course, she prefers Silvermist, the (Asian?) one that her aunts got her for Christmas, who is voiced by Lucy Liu in the movie.  I don’t know if it is a racial issue or the fact that Silvermist’s wings light up and she makes these chiming sounds when you push her bellybutton.

But Rose got a real kick out of helping her dad with a project.  Usually D and Charles do those kinds of activities (often as a result of Dillon’s homework requirements) and I think it made her feel like a big kid.  We’ll have to do more of that stuff with her – I often forget she’s a really capable kid.  She is a great helper for all my projects, but those have lately tended towards cooking and holiday stuff.  I did make a point of letting her watch me put the toaster back together the other day after I pulled it apart to clean it, just so she knows I am (almost) as capable as Charles with this stuff.

There was a notable exception the other day: when it comes to picking out a soldering iron.  Charles sends me to the store saying “they are all the same, you really can’t go wrong” and there are ten different sizes and prices, so I basically am choosing the most expensive one when a nice hardware store patron asks me, “what are you soldering?”  And I tell him it is for a science project we’re doing with Dillon and he’s points me down a couple of sizes and price ranges and says “the one you’ve got is for something the size of jumper cables, these smaller ones are probably better for science projects…”

Tom Sawyer


2010
08.07

So, Dillon is trying to raise/save money for an iPad. His Dad told him if he came up with half the money, we’d pay for the other half. The question then became: how does an 8-year-old with an allowance of $4 per week raise this kind of money?

It occurred to me that there is a hot, long, laborious job that I wanted to be completed this summer that I could outsource.  The fence needs to be stained again.  And Dillon and I negotiated terms and he got to work.

He’s been listening to his iPod shuffle while he works, and occasionally I hear him belting out the strains of a song as he paints.  Yesterday I heard the familiar, “way oh way oh waaaay ohhh waaaay ohhhh,” and he runs over and puts an earbud in my ear.  “You need to hear this!”

I already know, as I am the person who loads the music on his iPod.  And I tell him that the Bangles was the first tape I ever bought.  I am not sure he knows what a tape even is, but he says, “This is my favorite song in the whole world!”  I tell him I’ll make sure it’s on my iPod for our upcoming car trip, and he says, “Yeah, put it on FIVE times in a row.  I like it a LOT.”  And I laugh.

We can haz cheezburger


2010
08.04

For mother’s day this year I gave several of my favorite mothers (including my own) a copy of Animal, Vegetable, Miracle by Barbara Kingsolver.  I loved this book about a family’s quest to eat local, healthy, non-factory-farmed foods.  My mom took this book to heart, and has been trying a similar experiment at her house.  She and my dad ate pretty well and mostly vegetarian (to my dad’s chagrin) anyway, and my dad’s standard joke when she serves up a heaping plate of quinoa is: “well, as long as you made me a cheeseburger.”

So, for father’s day this year, my sister Kate and I decided to take my dad on the Best Four Burger Tour.  Basically, I googled and tried to find a consensus of the best burger joints in Milwaukee and came up with a list: AJ Bombers, Sobelman’s, Solly’s, and Stack’d.  And we made a date to go out for burgers on four sort-of-consecutive Wednesday nights.

Our first burger was at AJ Bombers, where we realized we needed a rubric, which we discussed and drew up on a napkin as we ate.  We decided to go with: Burger to bun ratio, Creativity, Quality of secret sauce, Messiness, and Taste.  We also gave an overall grade, which we borrowed from http://www.madisonatoz.com/ (You should check out their website if you haven’t, it is awesome.)  I set up a surveymonkey to track our grades, and we were good to go.

Each of the burger joints stood out in their own ways.  [Spoiler alert: at Solly’s the secret sauce is butter.]  The perfect burger is an elusive thing, and I wasn’t disappointed at any of the establishments.  And I am not turning this into a food blog, so if you want to get the ratings you can message me.

But really, this was the best present I have ever given my dad.  Well, I haven’t asked him, but it was my favorite present anyway.  Because it was just awesome to hang out with him and my sister once a week and have a burger.  As a matter of fact, none of us wanted the burger tour to end, so we’re expanding our list a bit.  (Let me know if you have a recommendation.)  Though that might just be to save my dad from having to consume excessive amounts of quinoa.