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[personal profile] elfs
A few weeks ago, Omaha and I attended the Democratic district caucuses and through some bizarre set of circumstances ended up being the representatives to our legislative district as well. This Saturday was that day. So we woke the kids early and gave them a quickie breakfast of home-made bran muffins and orange-banana smoothies, then herded them out the door.

I'll just say this: if the Democrats hope to win this fall, they'd better be more organized in general than the 33rd District. These people treated the event as if everyone could be counted on to pretend it was 1925, when people had nothing better to do on a summer afternoon than sit all day in a hot, un-airconditioned room and argue about the finer points of Roberts Rules of Order, work their way through a mind-numbing 66 resolutions all condemning George Bush or advocating expensive social projects without specifying from where the money might come. A process that was supposed to take 2½ hours ballooned to a stultifying six hours of acrimony about how each proponent's proposals were not being taken seriously by the rest of the party. The reading of the rules alone, necessitated by an archaic assumption that some of those attending could not read for themselves, took twenty minutes.

Through all this, the girls were just amazing. Kouryou-chan and Yamaarashi-chan kept themselves more or less well-occupied playing in the back yard of the meeting hall, which abutted against an undeveloped greenbelt with a tiny stream running through it. The bugs, leaves, dirt and water were perfect for them. Omaha and I switched off monitoring them and the party's goings on. We were there for one reason only: to nominate our candidates (Omaha was "undecided", I was committed to Edwards-- remember him?).

As it turned out, the thing broke down into two groups: Kerry and "uncommittted." Since I had been given the vote by my district, I went with uncommitted. "Uncommitted" ended up with six votes, but twenty people wanted to represent those six votes, so Omaha and I put in our voices for the six we wanted after meeting with all twenty, and then we bugged out. Not very democratic, I suppose, but that's the way things work. If other members of our district couldn't be bothered to show up, it fell to mine & Omaha's sensibilities.

I got home, made tuna-fish sandwiches for everybody, and then took a nap while Omaha hacked on her computer and the girls went outside to play. When I woke up an hour later, I had a curious post-nap blurriness of vision that took about twenty minutes to work itself out; this happens whenever I nap in the daytime and use the facemask to keep the light out. It went away after twenty minutes or so.

Omaha went out to visit with some friends, so I had the girls to myself. I cooked dinner-- adult macaroni and cheese, which actually takes a while to make since it's a full-blown white sauce recipe. One of my better investments was in the non-stick cookware, which made cleaning up a white sauce recipe trivial.

Preheat oven to 400F. Bring a large pot of water to a boil.

Cook 2½ cups milk with 2 bay leaves in a small saucepan over medium heat. Wait until bubbles form, then turn off heat and let stand 5 minutes. Meanwhile, cook 1 lb. pasta (I used shells, but elbow or ziti is fine) according to directions, drain and rinse in cold water to stop the cooking process. Pour pasta into a greased casserole dish.

In a small saucepan over medium-low heat, melt 3 tbsp butter until foamy, then add 3 tbsp flour and whisk until smooth. Take out the bay leaves from the milk and add the milk, 1/3rd cup at a time, to the flour mix, whisking until smooth continually.

Add 1½ cups grated cheese. I used smoked Cheddar, since that's what we had, but any Cheddar or Emmenthal works, choosing sharpness to taste. Stir until melted. Pour over pasta, toss with 1/2 cup grated Parmesean, salt and pepper according to taste, and sprinkle heavily with at least ½ cup bread crumbs. Bake in oven for 15 minutes or until breadcrumbs turn brown.

Dinner was at 7:30, and around 8:00 we settled down to watch the "Japanese" episode of My Life as a Teenage Robot, which was great. I think it's amusing that they can do an entire episode in Japanese, expecting the American kid audience to be hip enough to "get it." We played a few rounds of Sequence, and I gave the kids ice cream cones with one small scoop of vanilla-- it was all we had left of that flavor.

While the kids got into their pyjamas and did a load of laundry and swept the dining room floor, put away the dishes and all the usual chores. They picked their books-- Horton Hears a Who for Yamaarashi-chan, Hop On Pop for Kouryou-chan-- and we read them. The girls went to bed without complaint and then so did I, too tired even with my nap after such a long and rather grueling morning.

Date: 2004-05-02 11:55 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] poetpaladin.livejournal.com
Did you really name them Yamaarashi and Kouryou? Or are these your terms of endearment for them? :)

Date: 2004-05-02 12:28 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] elfs.livejournal.com
Neither. They're on-line nicknames I gave them because I didn't want their real names blasted across the Internet. It's a standard bit of parental paranoia; I say a lot about what the kids do and who they are, and they know that anyone who doesn't know their real names is not a friend of theirs or their parents.

Date: 2004-05-02 12:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] poetpaladin.livejournal.com
Gotcha. Cute nicknames though. :)

Date: 2004-05-02 01:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] woggie.livejournal.com
Kouryou is pretty straightforward, but Yamaarashi is both a band name as well as a martial arts grip just before a throw. Which were you thinking of? :)

Date: 2004-05-02 01:49 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] elfs.livejournal.com
Oh, grief, and they're like a bad warmed-over hip-hop band as well.

Neither, actually. It's a pair of kanji that mean "blustery mountain," which is a reasonable translation of my last name. (Another pair of kanji with the same homonym means "porcupine".)

Date: 2004-05-02 01:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] elfs.livejournal.com
Auuugh! And those are the Kanji I use for her name! Auuugh!

Date: 2004-05-02 03:44 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] woggie.livejournal.com
Actually, that translation helps me understand the martial arts grip a lot better, too. Thanks! :)

Japanese Kanji

Date: 2004-05-03 08:44 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Interesting; I was told something similar not too long ago.

I was at a local meeting of the Society for Creative Anachronism the other week, where the night's topic for the weekly class as "Japanese & Chinese characters". One of the central ideas mentioned was how there are words which are homonyms, but have completely different written characers (and therefore, different meanings).

And to think that I thought German was complicated to learn. At least it uses the same character set...

Date: 2004-05-02 01:38 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] omahas.livejournal.com
While the kids got into their pyjamas and did a load of laundry and swept the dining room floor, put away the dishes and all the usual chores.

I think, my love, that you mean: "While the kids got into their pyjamas, I did a load of laundry and swept the dining room floor, put away the dishes and all the usual chores."

The way you had it written it sounded like the kids did all of that. Oooh, kiddie-slave labor! Heh.

Date: 2004-05-02 03:21 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] elfs.livejournal.com
You're right. I did all that work; all they did was put away their Play-Dough and the Sequence game.

Not that they shouldn't have a few more responsibilities around the house. They need to get used to the notion that the house only continues to "work" well because the people who use it take care of it. But most of the dish cabinets are a bit too high for them right now.

That's what I get for writing when I'm tired and ready for bed.

Mac and Cheese and Eyeballs ;)

Date: 2004-05-04 10:42 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] darklilith69.livejournal.com
Hee hee hee. Your macaroni and cheese recipe is wonderful. And SO Atkins/Southbeach evil!

As for your eyes...if you wear one of those light blocking masks to help you sleep, it's the ever so light pressure it puts on your eyes, malforming the surface of your eye for a brief while. That's likely why it takes about 20 minutes for the blurriness to fade away. I've had similar things happen to my own eyes.

DarkLilith69

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