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Posted by Susan Hartman on July 8, 2009, 9:51 am
Queencityxstitcher wrote:
show/hide quoted text
> lucretiaborgia@fl.it wrote:
>> On Tue, 07 Jul 2009 16:26:49 -0400, Cheryl Isaak
>>> I find when he's gone, even to work for a few hours, I really miss
>>> him. But
>>> I can live with out the food pickiness (which is getting better).
>>> When DD is
>>> gone, it's like a hole in my life.
>> Daughters are always yours ! I do love my son but if the four of us
>> were in a lifeboat and I could only save two, it would be a hard toss
>> up lol My daughters and I are simply on the same wavelength, we think
>> as one.
> My DD moved out just last week. She had been working 2nd shift for a
> couple of years and spent wkends with her DBF, so our separation had
> already begun. She stopped by before work today. We migrated her email
> acct from ours to her own acct. Its strange as she now has her license,
> a Garmin GPS, a cell phone, and her own car. She had been my best friend
> and stash building buddy as well. So here's to her new life!!!
>
> Bobbie V.
I took it as a compliment of the highest order when DD (who has her own
home a few miles away) called one night last week. She'd ordered a movie
from Netflix ("Inkheart," a book we'd both enjoyed), and as she was
putting it in to play, said to herself, "Wait! Mom would enjoy this
movie, too," and called to set up a time to watch it together...which we
did on our day off last Friday. Made a frozen pizza for lunch and ate it
in front of the TV.
That was SUCH a gift!
Sue
--
Susan Hartman/Dirty Linen
The Magazine of Folk and World Music
www.dirtylinen.com
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Posted by on July 8, 2009, 4:10 pm
On Wed, 08 Jul 2009 09:51:55 -0400, Susan Hartman
show/hide quoted text
>I took it as a compliment of the highest order when DD (who has her own
>home a few miles away) called one night last week. She'd ordered a movie
>from Netflix ("Inkheart," a book we'd both enjoyed), and as she was
>putting it in to play, said to herself, "Wait! Mom would enjoy this
>movie, too," and called to set up a time to watch it together...which we
>did on our day off last Friday. Made a frozen pizza for lunch and ate it
>in front of the TV.
>That was SUCH a gift!
>Sue
I could see my son, he would watch the movie then highly recommend it
to me whereas the girls would do as your daughter did lol
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Posted by Dawne Peterson on July 8, 2009, 4:04 pm
<lucretiaborgia wrote
show/hide quoted text
> Daughters are always yours ! I do love my son but if the four of us
> were in a lifeboat and I could only save two, it would be a hard toss
> up lol My daughters and I are simply on the same wavelength, we think
> as one.
Funny, for me its DS who is, as DD says, the same person but in a bigger
body. We test the same (almost exactly) on Meyers-Briggs, are equally
rightbrained, and have the same Chinese horoscope sign. And we both equally
frustrate DD, who is much more decisive, and finds we tend to.....dither.
Both of them are happy to include mumsie in all sorts of things, call
regularly, and are all around Good Things.
Dawne
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Posted by Trish Brown on July 6, 2009, 6:24 pm
Cheryl Isaak wrote:
show/hide quoted text
> I had a nice little schedule down - house work type stuff until 11 - watch "
> The Price is Right" and stitch, have lunch, finish the need to be done today
> chores and then stitch to "Bizarre Foods" other such escapist dreck until
> the school buses started rolling home...
>
> Now - while I do get to sleep in, my daily stitching time is no more. Even
> if the shows are on, who can stitch with the constant commentary (positive
> and negative), the "Mom, where is my????" (that never happen while I don't
> have a needle in my hand) and general commotion.
>
> But I do love them
>
>
> C
>
Guess I'm a weirdo! I *love* school holiday time and am counting down
the five days till ours begin. Since both my kids are older (DD will be
*fifteen* soon!!!), they're pretty much set-and-forget, so that helps a
lot. Still, I've always enjoyed having them at home and doing stuff with
them. To my horror, I realised just recently that DD will only be a kid
for a few more years! AAaaaarrrrggghhh! Gotta put brix on her head *now*!
--
Trish Brown
Newcastle, NSW, Australia
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>> On Tue, 07 Jul 2009 16:26:49 -0400, Cheryl Isaak
>>> I find when he's gone, even to work for a few hours, I really miss
>>> him. But
>>> I can live with out the food pickiness (which is getting better).
>>> When DD is
>>> gone, it's like a hole in my life.
>> Daughters are always yours ! I do love my son but if the four of us
>> were in a lifeboat and I could only save two, it would be a hard toss
>> up lol My daughters and I are simply on the same wavelength, we think
>> as one.
> My DD moved out just last week. She had been working 2nd shift for a
> couple of years and spent wkends with her DBF, so our separation had
> already begun. She stopped by before work today. We migrated her email
> acct from ours to her own acct. Its strange as she now has her license,
> a Garmin GPS, a cell phone, and her own car. She had been my best friend
> and stash building buddy as well. So here's to her new life!!!
>
> Bobbie V.