These girls have the most beautiful dresses. And so do I -- how about that?

Kaylee ,'Shindig'


Spike's Bitches 31: We're Motivated Go-getters.  

[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risque (and frisque), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.


JZ - Jul 09, 2006 3:04:15 pm PDT #3538 of 10001
See? I gave everybody here an opportunity to tell me what a bad person I am and nobody did, because I fuckin' rule.

Oakland is where I was born, and I don't know it that well but what I do know, even the less savory parts, feels familiar and good. San Francisco is my home, and my hometown.

ION, grr. I hate getting baby stuff. Everyone has an opinion, and everyone's opinion is different, and everyone outvotes everyone else.

  • Hec and I both want a dresser with a curved changing pad on top so after diaper-changing is done with it can just be a plain ol' dresser and it's one piece of kid furniture we won't have to worry about.

  • My mom thinks this is awful because dressers don't have guard rails all around the top (but all the changer/dressers I can find with guard rails are either cheapish things from Target and WalMart with user comments warning about how pieces fall off if you look at them cross-eyed, or craxy expensive $1200 custom jobbies that offend my penny-pinching soul (she would pay for it, or split the cost with my dad, but the cost just fundamentally offends me)).

  • My dad is happy to help with anything we want, but always looks faintly puzzled as though everything I say is being filtered through a sickly babelfish and our conversations always end with me feeling somewhat comforted but also mildly worried that I am in fact insane or possibly accidentally speaking Romanian.

  • One of my best friends thinks changing tables are of the devil and all babies should be changed on the floor always because everyone knows that babies are incessantly rolling off of tables and cracking open like pumpkins, and she will be loudly offended no matter what we get -- because, with a 38-year-old mom and 45-year-old dad, we're bloody well getting
something. Ain't no way we're spending half our lives between October and toilet-training crouched on the floor shredding our knees and lower backs.

Conclusion: EVERYONE BACK OFF BEFORE I BITE YOU. Also, how do the already-parental Bitches filter out all the noise from all directions about "I know what you must do and everyone else is WRONG and probably trying to KILL YOUR BABY OMG" before you go feral on someone?


Amy - Jul 09, 2006 3:11:37 pm PDT #3539 of 10001
Because books.

Oh, good, Aimee! Hope you can use the stuff inside.

Also, how do the already-parental Bitches filter out all the noise from all directions about "I know what you must do and everyone else is WRONG and probably trying to KILL YOUR BABY OMG" before you go feral on someone?

It gets easier with practice. First time around, it's always a little overwhelming. If there's a happy place you can go to, and pretend to listen, while nodding zombie-like, when someone is giving you that kind of "I know what you MUST do!" speech, it helps.


Topic!Cindy - Jul 09, 2006 3:13:21 pm PDT #3540 of 10001
What is even happening?

JZ, pick what you like.

Oh, I misread. What you want is what I think is best. FWIW.


d - Jul 09, 2006 3:17:16 pm PDT #3541 of 10001
It's nice to see some brave pretenders trying to make it interesting.

Sorry you are having such a time, JZ. My friends got their changing table from Ikea, I believe. Although they do a fair amount of changing on the floor as well. (Or the couch when they're really teeny and immobile.) It's not part of a dresser though. I don't see it from quick googling, but they also have a changing table dresser thing for $200ish. [link]

I need some -ma. I'm having car troubles galore. I was really hoping the car would last me a couple more months before replacing it, but I'm afraid that might not happen. As is always the case, it's really inconvenient timing. So wish me it's not as bad as it seems right now.

I also need health ma. Not sure if I managed to get poison ivy or some other rash-inducing problem, but the itchy is bugging me.

My hometown is Hollywood, FL, but I have no really fond memories of it. I feel my true growing up happened in Paris, even though I only lived there for 2 full years and then summers and vacations.


Topic!Cindy - Jul 09, 2006 3:20:38 pm PDT #3542 of 10001
What is even happening?

d, do you have any antihistimines in the house? Benadryl might help your rash if it's either poison ivy, or another allergy of some kind. Also, if you have cortisone in the hosue, it might help with the itching. Use cotton balls or tissues or something to apply it though, so that if you do have poison ivy, you don't spread it to your hands.

Carma~ and my sympathies on the car. I swear cars wait 'til you can least afford to do something about repairing/replacing them, and then act up.


Gris - Jul 09, 2006 3:22:12 pm PDT #3543 of 10001
Hey. New board.

This hometown discussion has been interesting. Some people seem to think that "home" and "hometown" are related, but to me, they're not really. Home has been NYC to me since about 2 days after I moved here. To some extent, I think home has been NYC since I first visited here at the age of seven. It's where my heart is, as the saying goes.

My hometown, though, is the small Mississippi town I grew up in. I'll never live there again, I'm quite sure, but it will always be my hometown. It defined me, even as I rebelled against it, and that earns it that place. I'm sure that within a few years, going back there will feel strange - to some extent it already does - but Tupelo the way it was will remain my hometown in my memories.


libkitty - Jul 09, 2006 3:27:49 pm PDT #3544 of 10001
Embrace the idea that we are the leaders we've been looking for. Grace Lee Boggs

JZ, you and Hec are going to be wonderful parents no matter what kind of changing table you get. Since you two are going to be doing most of the changing, I recommend getting what you like and playing deaf when anyone suggests otherwise.

In changing babies, I have found the couch works well, as long as you have a big enough pad or towel. You're neither so high that they'll be seriously injured if they fall, nor so low that it bothers your knees and back. However, cleary YbabychangingMV. Seriously, in this choice, you can do no wrong.

What do you all say when someone asks where you were "born"?

Manchester, CT, but this is none of my homes or hometowns.

Car and health ~ma, d.


Laura - Jul 09, 2006 3:30:31 pm PDT #3545 of 10001
Our wings are not tired.

Also, how do the already-parental Bitches filter out all the noise from all directions about "I know what you must do and everyone else is WRONG and probably trying to KILL YOUR BABY OMG" before you go feral on someone?

{{JZ}} It helped that I was already old and set in my ways when I gave birth I suppose. I never had a changing table. At home I mostly changed them sitting on a bed. There was a big dresser that often was the changing table. They went to work with me. The boys got changed on desktops, car hoods, conference tables. I always thought the changing tables in the public bathrooms were mighty cool, but the boys outgrew them about instantly.

The most grief I heard was about nursing them everywhere and anywhere. Whatever. Given the choice of crying child or scowling adult I'm feeding the child.


libkitty - Jul 09, 2006 3:34:23 pm PDT #3546 of 10001
Embrace the idea that we are the leaders we've been looking for. Grace Lee Boggs

Given the choice of crying child or scowling adult I'm feeding the child.

Seems like the right priority to me.


Laura - Jul 09, 2006 3:35:18 pm PDT #3547 of 10001
Our wings are not tired.

Car~ma and Health~ma d. Hollywood, FL has some great neighborhoods back on the canals. Nice town. I have relatives there so we go pretty often. Nice beach and pier too.