WFMW: Instant Messenger

Many moons ago, in the dark ages, when my hubby was at work and I needed to ask him a question or just tell him “I love you”, or complain about what his our children were doing, I’d have to call him at work. And hope that he’d answer his cell phone (which he does about 20% of the time). If it was really important, I’d have to call the actual work number and have him paged, which always makes me feel like a nagging wife. Then one day Bobby suggested we start using Instant Messenger, and, TA-DA! Now we can pretty much talk to each other via IM whenever we want to or need to! It’s great to feel connected all day and not have to try to get ahold of each other via phone. I also use IM to talk to Emily while she’s at work. It’s very fun! I love to help her slack off and not get her work done! Ha ha, just kidding, Emily’s boss! IM is actually used at Emily’s work kind of like inter-office mail, and it’s fun that she and I get to chat during the day when we need to about blog stuff, the terrible wonderful things our kids have been up to, etc.

So, Instant Messenger woks for me! For more brilliance, check out Rocks in My Dryer.

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More Mayhem from the Mom’s Market

As Emily mentioned in yesterday’s IKEA Adventure round-up post, she toootallly ditched me for part 2 of our shopping weekend extravaganza – the Mom’s Market Sale. Lucky for her, I was feeling gracious and forgave her. You know, since she is nine months pregnant and had to spend another four hours in IKEA that day and since you have to be at the Mom’s Market at the butt-crack of dawn to get anything good! So, off I went in the fog and the rain to stand in line with hundreds of other bargain-hungry moms. It was really, really, foggy, and the drive there was a bit nerve-wracking, but I didn’t let it stop me from my pursuit of the perfect gently-used Carter’s romper or Children’s Place jeans! The sale started at 9, and Em and I were going to meet there at 8 to stand in line, but without the other half of the Dynamic Duo, I just couldn’t motivate myself to get up that early. So I got there about 8:45, and this is what I encountered:

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I took that with my camera phone, so the quality isn’t the best but you can still show how foggy it was and how many darn people there were waiting! In this photo, you can see up to about HALF of the line. The sale was at an elementary school and you can’t even see the school at all! It was crazy! There were also TONS of people with their kids in strollers waiting in line. To all those people I would like to say – WHY?? Why do you do that to your kid, to yourself, and to the other shoppers?? The bargains are good but I will tell you right now it is NOT worth it to me to bring Sophie, try to keep her happy, try to navigate that place with a stroller, shop, and not be in ther people’s way. Nooo way! There was a pregnant woman in line behind me who had never been to the sale before. We watched a woman with a bundled up toddler in a stroller walk by to the end of the line and I turned to the prego and said, “Trust me, Do NOT bring yor baby here next year!” But anyhoo… the sale started at 9:00, and by the time I got up to the door it was about 9:10. It was pretty cold outside, but as soon as I hit the door I was HOT. The temperature rose about 10 degrees as soon as you stepped in the building. I made a beeline to the Sophie-appropriate clothes, which were of course all the way at the back of the building. Since I was so late getting there, there were already tons of people where I wanted to be. As a matter of fact, the Joshua-appropriate clothes were nearer to the entrance of the building, but I couldn’t get anywhere near them due to those who had beat me there, so I continued on to the baby girl’s stuff. Fortunately I was able to get in and look at stuff for Sophie after just a minute or two. I found quite a few things, but not as much as I wanted to, which I blame on my lateness. When I was finally able to get to the boys’ 4T clothes, I did find Joshua three pairs of pajamas, which I was really happy about! Then I headed off to the toys and books. I was hoping to score Joshua some Thomas the Tank Engine stuff on the cheap. They did have some stuff but not exactly what I was looking for (again, I was berating myself for my tardiness!) However, I did find him a Thomas DVD, and he hasn’t gotten a new video of any sort in a very long time, so I was happy with that.

I headed wearily to the checkout after about an hour of careful rack-scouring and waited in line. The checkout line is in a long hallway and there are two lines, one against each wall. I had to wait for about 15 minutes, which wouldn’t have been so bad if not for the extremely over-tired two-year-old (who had obviously given herself a recent hair cut!) throwing a tantrum in line in front of me. Yee-ikes. I felt sorry for her and her mom, but also for all of us who had to endure listening to that. Again, the bargains are great but I would NEVER bring Sophie there and expect us both to live through it! But finally, I got up to the checkout line and my total was $20.25 for all of this (and a cute pair of pink water shoes for Sophie that I somehow managed to leave out of the photo):

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I got three pairs of PJs and the Thomas video for Joshua, the water shoes, 2 Carter’s rompers, one Carter’s bodysuit, one Osh Kosh bodysuit, one pair of Carter’s PJs, and two pairs of Children’s Place jeans for Sophie! Not too shabby! And, since I know I could’ve done better if I’d gotten there earlier, I now have a renewed commitment to get my rear out of bed earlier for the OTHER sale I go to – the local Mom of Twins club sale – which is the weekend after next. Stay tuned to find out if Emily might choose THIS location to go into labor instead! Actually, it would be a convenient place, cause if this baby’s a boy, she is gonna need to get that kid some clothes! And since I’ve brushed up on my baby delivery skills, I think it sounds like a plan!

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Our Ikea Adventure

And what an adventure it was!! I don’t think either one of us has recovered yet. But it was awesome.

We met at the secret rendevous point we’ve been using for years (which is actually the Towne Mall parking lot for you locals, but it is a convenient place to converge when we are heading to the Cincinnati area!). Armed with Cini-melts, coffee and Diet Coke, we were on our way.

After stopping at Kinko’s to fax forms for my life insurance application (Jenny got a big kick out of that – I think she thought I was in fact concerned that Ikea was going to do me in), we finally saw it. A big blue and yellow building. I’m pretty sure it was glowing. If you’ve never seen the place, it is a monstrosity. The parking lot is enormous – we made sure to note that we were parked in Bam Bam 5 (actually it was like C1 or something, but I always like to use King’s Island references where applicable). The parking lot was apparently not big enough, however, because the first thing we saw was a big charter bus that was shuttling people to and from the Ikea Park ‘n’ Ride area a couple miles away. Yes, this is truly a tourist attraction.

Have I mentioned it was pouring down rain? Yeah, but like that was going to stop us. We made a run for it (the entire time I was running I was saying “I can’t run!”), and when we reached the promised land, we asked the first yellow-shirted worker we saw to take a picture of us. Apparently Jenny introduced this guy to the world of digital photography, because he was trying to look through the view finder and couldn’t see us, so he and Jenny were simultaneously yelling “I can’t see anything!” and “There’s a screen. Look at the screen!” for about 45 seconds before the guy finally got it. So anyway, here we are in front of one of the many bins full of big yellow bags.

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Dear Lord I cannot believe I posted that picture on the internet. Anyway….

The big yellow bags were the first of many “green” things about the store (Karen, you would be proud). They have recycling bins wherever there’s a trash can, toilet flushers that offer the option to use a lot or a little bit of water, and they don’t give away bags at the check out like every other store does – you have the choice to buy blue bags (like the yellow ones) for 59 cents or “throw away” bags for five cents, in an effort to discourage using the throw away ones. Pretty cool.

Another thing to note about Ikea is the family-friendliness that can be found throughout the store. The restrooms even have little seats where you can strap in your kid to prevent him from wallowing on the floor (they also have a button to press in case of a medical emergency, which I made sure to take note of in case this baby did decide to come out). Ikea is all about promoting family life to their customers and their employees – the can always be found on the “Working Mother” magazine list of the top 100 companies to work for.

Anyway, back to our adventure. The first thing we noted was the “SmallLand” area, where the poor suckers who have to bring their kids shopping with them can drop off (potty-trained) children for a while as they shop in peace. Fortunately, we were not two of those suckers on Friday, so we didn’t pay too much attention. Unfortuantely, I was one of those suckers the following day, but more on that later.

We were corralled upstairs, and we tried to make a beeline for the sign that said “Children’s Ikea,” but some worker dude cut us off and said “You want to go this way.” Jenny said “We do?” and he assured us we did. I said “Where do we get a cart?” and he said “Carts? Where you’re going, you don’t need carts” (a little less Back to the Future-y than that), so we did as we were told and went where he pointed, cartless. We wandered around all the fun little areas where they have the furniture set up into realistic living areas (ok realistic if you’re really good at home design and have a ton of money) (oh and we picked out a really cool round bed that was my #1 choice to give birth on should the situation arise) until we finally found the main point of our shopping extravaganza – the kids’ area.

The have SUCH cool stuff for kids. We were a bit overwhelmed! And I was getting hot, so I stopped to take off my sweatshirt. Another yellow-shirted worker was dying to put his new skills to work and help us, but he quickly changed his mind after hearing Jenny say “No, we don’t need any help. We just stopped to disrobe.”

I immediately saw one of the main things I had been eyeing on the website for weeks – a super cool changing table.

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I carefully wrote down the aisle and bin numbers so we would know where to go to pick it up in the warehouse area, and we went on with our shopping.

About 10 minutes into it, we discovered that the yellow shirt dude was wrong and we were definitely going to necessitate a cart. We eventually found one, and while we were in the elevator taking our it upstairs, we heard a woman say “I forgot my camera! I was going to take pictures to put on my blog.” We were like “Hey that’s what we’re doing!” Great minds think alike. So anyway, we went about filling our cart.

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After we showed Children’s Ikea who was boss, we needed some nourishment so we headed off to the food court for some chicken fingers (we weren’t brave enough to try the meatballs).

But we did sample the chocolate cake.

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The foodcourt is one of the things that’s super family-friendly. They have 99 cent kids meals, jars of baby food for sale, and a spot that has bibs, kids’ dinnerware, a microwave and even bottle warmers! How cool is that??

After lunch, we headed downstairs to the Marketplace, where they have anything and everything you’d ever want for your home. The only problem is that all the tags are in Swedish, so sometimes you don’t know whether you’re looking at an ice cream scoop or a toilet brush. But whatever it is, it is sweet. We grabbed a bunch more stuff and headed to the furniture warehouse.

We were pretty successful in finding the areas in which the items we wanted to purchase were located, and we felt so smart. A good Samaritan even helped us load the super-heavy packages onto our (second) cart, and a friendly yellow-shirt took our picture for us. The “after” picture, you might say.

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We then headed to the check out, got in the wrong line (of course) and finally managed to pay for our goods. Except the pillow I grabbed happened to be the floor model and they wouldn’t sell it to me, so Jenny waited with our stuff while I went back for another pillow. I really wanted that pillow! However, it’s not exactly as simple as running into the King Quick and getting a gallon of milk – the clever Ikea people set up the store so that if you want to go in for anything, you must walk through everything. So in addition to the pillow, I came back with a blanket and something else (is it a bad sign that I can’t remember?). With that little jaunt, on top of our already lenthy trip, it is truly a miracle that I made it out of the store without going into labor. I was nearly dead by the time I found Jenny again.

Eventually, and with the help of some friendly workers in the loading zone, we were safely in my car and on the road. And it had only taken us a little over four hours.

It was awesome.

But that night I felt like I had been hit by a truck. At about 9:00, I had to make the sad phone call to tell Jenny that I was going to have to wimp out on Part II of our weekend o’ shopping, the Mom’s Market. I told her I was too tired to think about standing in line for an hour only to battle the crazy bargain hunters.

“And,” I said to her, “I have to go to Ikea again tomorrow.”

You see, I had intended to buy this.

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But when I got it home and completely assembled, I realized that I had in fact bought this.

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What is that, you ask? I have no frickin’ idea. But it sure isn’t a changing table.

So Saturday morning, as Jenny stood in line for the Mom’s Market cold and alone, Andy, Kate and I headed to Ikea. I was only there to buy one thing, the elusive changing table.

We came home with the changing table.

And with this.

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This (it’s a dresser – or it will be someday – because we had to have something to put the other random piece of furniture on).

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And this.

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And various other random items that were begging to be bought.

Another four hours and a whole lot of money later, we finally left.

Someday, when we have all these things assembled (and the baby is starting elementary school), I will show you the before and after pictures of the nursery. It is going to be really cute, I swear. But for now, you’ll have to take my word for it, because it is a disaster.

So baby, if you can hear me, thanks for not being born at Ikea, despite the copious opportunity to do so. Jenny, the yellow-shirts and I appreciate it. And although I’ve been begging you to be born just a little early for months and months now, do me a favor and stay gestating for at least another week. That is, unless you understand Swedish. In that case, we could use your help translating assembly directions.

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