image of a brain Did you think this whole anatomy thing was over?

I did.

And if you did, too, then we were both wrong.

And if you thought the whole “femur sounds like lemur which starts with ‘le’ as does ‘leg’ which is where the femur is” was bad, you ain’t seen nothin’ yet.

After the retest on the bones and muscles (which I’m proud to announce that the boys passed—barely), it came to my attention that the third grade science curriculum had moved on to the nervous system. Don’t their teachers have any idea that the nervous system is the very source of all moms’ pain already? Must we really add insult to injury?

I gave the vocabulary list a once-over. There were words like cerebellum (which Jack can only remember as ‘cellophane,’ and dendrite, which Henry only chooses to use in the following sentence: “Jack, you are a dendrite.”

I told them they could go to kidshealth.org and even play games to help them learn the concepts, but apparently, if SpongeBob isn’t the lead surgeon, they aren’t interested.

Have I mentioned my distaste for SpongeBob?

Meanwhile, George (who’s 6) is sitting on the couch saying, “Henry, come on. Cerebral cortex? Helloooooooo! It’s in your brain. Duh!”

I wonder, dear teachers, can George take their test for them?

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lit candle

I almost ran over my friend Caroline today.

“Hey!” she shouted from outside the back passenger window.

Precisely as I turned to apologize, I realized she wasn’t shouting to alert me that I was about to run her over; she was simply trying to get my attention.

So I swallowed my apology and pretended it was totally acceptable that I almost ran her over accidentally on purpose.

“Are you going back toward your house right now?” she asked.

I wasn’t planning on it, but after she told me the following story, I changed my mind.

“So there’s this guy,” she began, “and he’s running out there on the road.”

Caroline is from England, and I know it rains a lot there, but surely she’s seen someone running on the road before. Right?

She continued, “He’s running or walking or something from California to Washington DC to support deployed soldiers.”

Apparently the expression on my face made her feel the need to be more convincing.

“I swear it!” she exclaimed. “This is his business card!”

“Um, how did you acquire his business card?” I inquired. “I thought he was running!”

“Well, right. I saw him running, and he had on a backpack and a huge sign, and I just stopped and got out and said, ‘What on earth are you doing?’”

At this, I had to laugh. Because Caroline would pull over and inquire as to why on earth someone was running down the street wearing a huge backpack and a large sign. And I love her for that. Because, given that I would also do that sort of thing, it confirms that I’m not that weird. Or, at least that I’m not that weird all by myself.

Right?

I drove down the road and back. And down and back. And down and back. And could not for the life of me find Thomas Trujillo (the crazy Walk Across America guy). Which is par for the course because I seem to routinely be 3 minutes late or 4 dollars short (or both) lately.

Curiosity intact, however, I arrived home and immediately looked up Petty Officer Thomas Trujillo. And I’ve been thinking about him. Because should-we-shouldn’t-we, war-themed political opinions aside, I bow at the feet of anyone who does something this completely absurd for a cause he believes in.

Thomas Trujillo is out there doing this whether or not anyone’s watching. Or honking. Or caring. The only person who knows for sure that he’s doing it at any given moment is him. And it’s about the most inspiring thing I’ve heard of in…well…a while.

He’s not sitting outside of a building protesting or picketing or complaining (or all three). He’s just putting his beliefs and his commitment where his mouth is (or, in this case, where his legs are) and making his statement, for whatever it’s worth.

Like the age-old philosophical question, “If a tree falls in the forest and no one’s around to hear it, does it make a sound?”

That fallen tree makes a difference in the forest as a whole; whether or not it does so silently isn’t really the point.

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“I got a sitter for Saturday,” David announced a few days ago. “And I have a few ideas for our agenda.”

I was ready for anything. Especially if I didn’t have to come up with the anything.

“There’s an art show in Cave Creek.”

Maybe.

“There’s a sale at Cabella’s.”

No.

“The Situation’s going to be at Total Wine & More in Scottsdale.”

Sold.

The infamous “Jersey Shore” cast member—whose 15 minutes of fame seem to have somehow morphed into their 16th minute—was scheduled to sign bottles of Devotion, his protein-infused Vodka at 3:00. As far as I’m concerned, protein-infused vodka seems about as asinine a product as Pajama Jeans, but what do I know?

It’s perplexing how quickly Americans have made GTL the latest and greatest acronym. Which is why I’m unapologetically intrigued by the whole Jersey Shore phenomenon. It’s really nothing more than a sociological fascination. I swear.

So we get to the liquor store, which David is more than thrilled to enter under the premise that he’s being a fantastic husband when, in reality, he’s overflowing with excitement because their beer section alone is bigger than Acme.

The store patrons fell into one of three categories: those who were definitely there to meet The Situation, those who had no idea who The Situation is (or what Jersey Shore is…or what MTV is, for that matter), and those who were there to see the phenomenon in the flesh but would rather die than admit it.

I fell into the last category.

After 45 minutes wandering the aisles, killing time by stocking up on far more beer than we can fit in our refrigerator, the man of the hour arrived.

By this point, 3 distinct crowds had formed: those who had no idea who Mike Sorrentino is (or cared). Most of these people were over the age of 50 and were audibly lamenting the state of today’s youth. Then there were those who knew exactly who The Situation is, cared very, very much, and felt this was the biggest moment in their lives to date. These individuals’ hair was a fire hazard, wore skirts that screamed, “Please don’t bend over while wearing me,” and were too young even to legally be in a liquor store.

And then there were the rest of us.

We were huddled together just to the left of the signing table, all between the ages of 30 and 45, holding up our phones as though they were lighters at a Journey concert—rule breakers hoping to get a photo without having purchased something as asinine as protein-infused vodka—leaving one by one while hiding our faces and announcing to those around us, “You never saw me here.”

A few of these folks even quietly asked David to do their camera work since his height allowed him to get a camera about 9 feet in the air—but first he had to sign their confidentiality agreement noting that he neither saw them there nor held their camera.

I stealthily snuck my 5′ 3″ self up to the front, got the following shot, and then exited with the requisite, “You never saw me here.”

The Situation at Wine and More in ScottsdaleWe loaded all 89 bottles of beer into the truck, and continued on to more tasteful and less embarrassing establishments like Anthropologie and Sprouts. At one point outside Teavana, a tea store within 50 feet of which The Situation surely would not be caught dead, David mentioned that what he found most hysterical about the entire event was how many people just like us were there, trying to act uninterested but refusing to leave until they’d laid eyes on the guy, to which I simply replied, “Yeah, and why exactly was he wearing sunglasses? It’s pouring out!”

So that was our date. And now we’ve got some beer to give away.

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