bonny, his gums and mouth look okay, and his tummy doesn't seem sensitive. He still hasn't eaten his food, but I put some treats in a toy and he went after those. Still haven't gotten any pumpkin, but I have some chicken broth I made yesterday with no salt. I'll strain some of that and see if he'll drink it.
'Lessons'
Spike's Bitches 45: That sure as hell wasn't in the brochure.
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
Thanks, Beverly. I know these things, but I am marking your post to reread and remind myself.
Beverly is verra wise.
Still haven't gotten any pumpkin,
And you won't, at least until the new harvest comes in. [link]
Libby's has six cans of pumpkin pack left. Craziness.
edited because half my post was eaten.
Laura, so much ~ma for you and the family. You are a good mother, and if I didn't love mine so much, I'd want you. Bev is wise, and keep what she said close to your heart.
Joe is laughing about the Libby's pumpkin because for the 5 years he worked at Nestle US Headquarters, it was his job to take, process, and ship the order of canned pumpkin to Mexico in time for the Thanksgiving holidays (which he always thought was odd since Mexico doesn't really celebrate Thanksgiving, right?) Anyway, 15 - 20 palettes of Libby's canned pumpkin to Mexico every year and every year, no matter how early he started (usually around July or August), the pumpkin would barely make it there on time because of the whacky cutoms process.
One year he had to write up an "official" document on how the pumpkin was processed and canned. "Pumpkin is picked. Pumpkin is cooked. Pumpkin is canned."
I currently have 3 large cans and will be hoarding them.
Crap! I need to hit the healthfood store and buy up what they have left.
Still, for the stated purpose, do not despair. Get some nice yams or butternut squash and have them ready to boil up and freeze. It's not as quick as you might need for an emergency, but it's better than nothing.
It's the fiber you are looking for when it comes to the pooches.
I can't imagine Laura -- and I was lost at that age , too. Even though I was going to school. My thought -- He knoows, but let him know formally that you are unhappy. But that it is upto hom to figure out what is next . But as long as he is doing something ( school, working, or even volunteering ) you will back off. And that of course he can come to you for help.( not meaning money, but whatever) And if he does want to come back home , come up with a contract. ( min rent, call by 4 to tell you his dinner plans, and chore x and y are his) The contract is more so everyone can be adults.
You can freely ignore everything I said. but i think drawing boundaries for you might help
I currently have 3 large cans and will be hoarding them.
I need to check the pantry. I *think* I have a can or two hidden.
I am really getting tired of seeing the black bumper stickers saying 01/20/13Celebrating Obama's re-inauguration? What? I can be an optimist, no?
((( Laura ))) I am in awe of parents. I point at what others have said, and reinforce, you are a good mother. From the sounds of it, I'm a bit like your hubby, and want to fix things, so feel free to ignore my next bit. I agree with beth b. If he doesn't want to finish HS, then he is an adult. An adult has responsibilities. As such, he needs to pull his own weight. Pay him a modest allowance for doing chores. Dock him pay when he blows them off. Charge him rent, and encourage him to get a real job. As happened with you, when he sees what jobs he is qualified for without a HS diploma, maybe that will get him on track. As much as you love him, the last thing you want is a 35 y.o. son still living at home playing his xbox all day. Well, that last part is a guess on my part.
Ease-of-parental-stress vibes plus a healthy dose of Harvey-purrs to you, Laura.
bonny, may this wedding ceremony be a means of divine blessing of joy and love, passion and compassion for the happy couple, for their guests, and for the celebrant.