Monday, December 25, 2006

season's greetings




Muzzle up with someone you love.

Saturday, December 23, 2006

prepare the way


secular spectacular

[Note: We'll get around to posting more about NYC sometime in the next century. But first. . . ]

The closets have been cleared. The de-furring crews have come and gone with their pneumatic equipment, trenching muddy tracks on the lawn with their truck. The chilis are simmering on the stove. Random piles of 15-year-old clutter have been banished. White Christmas is cued up on the dvd player. Beer is cached in a sad little snowbank. The candles are lit, the Xmas lights are lit, the yule log is lit, the stove burners are lit, and the wines are uncorked, so we're well on our way to getting lit.

In other words, welcome to the first annual Schwillig Secular Spectacular Holiday Xmas Kickoff. It's been officially ON for 47 minutes, and no one has showed up yet. But no sweat. We still have 11 hours and 13 minutes to go until the big ball drops at 2:00am.




Waiting expectantly.

Wednesday, November 22, 2006

schwilligs take manhattan

The Muppets did it first and better, but we nonetheless here boldly declare our intention to take Manhattan.

We're in New York for a top secret consulting contract involving maglev hovercraft technology, rappelling down the sides of buildings, and organics. We can't say more.

Tonight was the Macy's Tryptophantastic Pre-Parade Inflation Ceremony. During tomorrow's annual Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade, Snoopy, Big Bird, Spongebob, Super Grover, and other giant-size cartoon creatures will soar godlike over the streets and into our hearts. But before their miraculous rising, they have to be pumped full of helium. The Inflation Ceremony is held under bright blitzkrieg lights in the cloudy outdoor cathedral of the American Museum of Natural History, Central Park West. The parade balloons are held in place during inflation by huge nets anchored by a sandbag perimeter. Stoic Macy's acolytes in orange jumpsuits diligently monitor the helium tanks, check hoses and fittings, and test the balloons for suppleness and lift. Throngs of supplicants file by whispering prayers, leaving burnt offerings, etc. Under the watchful eyes of Auxiliary NYPD, the crowds are funnelled through a series of barricades and then sent around the museum grounds on a one-way route that ensures happy traffic flow; the signs say "Enter here for inflation." We sure will, and did. Everything goes like clockwork.






Saturday, October 14, 2006

Never leave me unsupervised

Scott is off with the Bad Seeds this weekend to run the Edmund Fitzgerald Ultra Marathon. You can follow their adventures here.

So I'm home with the three other female household members. Being of the furry, four-legged variety, they provide excellent company but not much in terms of witty conversation. This means I spent my Friday evening watching bad tv. Really bad tv, like reruns of Everyone Loves Raymond bad.

In the brief time that Scott has been away I:
  1. Managed to break the kitchen window. While looking for the dog last night through the kitchen window I decided it was really filthy. So seizing the moment I grabbed the windex and paper towls. Everything was fine until I tried to put the window back together (we have those kind where the windows pull out towards you so you can clean the outside from the inside). Anyway it won't go down all the way now. I have no idea what happen. I even tried pounding it down with a hammer. It's not open to the fridgid outside air, but the lock won't meet up so I can't lock it.
  2. Almost got into a car accident while going to the gym. I had attempted to go to the gym Friday night - twice! Both times there was absolutely no parking. Don't believe it when people tell you that there's nothing going on in downtown St. Paul. So after work today (yes, I had to work today, see #3), I thought I would try to make up for last night. Again I get downtown and there are no parking spots. I finally spied one across the street and went for it. However, I failed to check the oh-so-crucial blindspot. I almost side-swiped the car next to me. Luckily the other driver had good reflexes and brakes. Of course I was too ashamed and embarassed to do anything but flee the scene. So I still haven't made it to the gym! Maybe I'll walk there on Sunday.
  3. Decided that I hate my job and need a new one. Since I vowed I wouldn't discuss work on this site that's all I'll say, but if you hear of a job opening let me know. It needs to be something that's Mon-Fri 9-5 with no special events.
Thank God Scott is coming home tonight. Until he arrives I'm locking myself in the bedroom. I'll be just as dangerous and prone to fits of flightiness when he's home, but he usually prevents me from hurting others.

Friday, October 06, 2006

drilling for vermicelli

It was time to face the harsh reality. After weeks of damp rings around the basement sewer drain, we finally bit the bullet and rented a Roto-Rooter. No more living in fear. No more sluggish draining. No more heart-stopping backups. Now, after a full day of sewer snaking, we may not be ready to declare “mission accomplished,” but we have made solid progress. We recognize this will be a continuing odyssey. Our consciences are clear, and the sewer line is getting there.

ANALOGY
First, a word about the roots. Imagine Dee Snyder was your houseguest for, say, twenty years. Let’s magically extend the glory days of Twisted Sister for the same twenty years to ensure his hair remains magnificent, stage-ready, indestructible, in the mature expression of its twisty fullness. Dee showers every day and loses a couple hundred strands of hair down the drain. Twenty years later, the accumulated mass of thousands of hairs have coalesced into a springy, snarled, forty-foot-long tubular wig of evil nastiness. This is bad.

ETYMOLOGY
It wasn’t until many hours of snaking had passed that I gained striking new insight into the etymology of the “Roto-Rooter.” My hasty, naive assumption was that “rooting” referred to digging or poking, the sort of activity an industrious hog might enjoy, and that poking a flexible metal tube down a hole surely qualified as rooting. This couldn’t have been further from the truth. Sewer lines are full of hairlike snarls of tree roots; removal of said roots requires. . . rooting. Rotate the rooting device for more effective rootage, and what do you get? Roto-Rooter. You could argue that the procedure should properly be called derooting, but that opens up the whole ravel vs. unravel can of worms. Besides, Roto-Derooter doesn’t have the same catchy mnemonic flair. Although it would be a good name for a trance DJ from Amsterdam.

ADVICE
Having earned my sewer stripes, I feel qualified to dispense advice to all you aspiring snakers and wildcatters out there. Listen up, little rooters. Sitting for hours over an open drain encourages a meditative state of mind. After sending the snake down and pulling it back up a few hundred times, I found myself imposing a set of organizing principles on the experience and composing a sort of mental manual on the Principles of Effective Snaking. Here, then, are helpful rules of thumb for the young sewer rat.


Rotation is good; more rotation is better.
The task is not unlike twirling spaghetti onto a fork from across the room while blindfolded. The more you rotate the rooter, the more likely you are to snag a wad of roots. Torque is your friend.

Gloves are non-negotiable. Really. And resist the absentminded urge to scratch your nose. Wash your hands twenty or thirty times before lunch.

Three heads are better than one. The typical rooter-head palette includes 1) an arrow-shaped head for general-purpose poking and twirling, 2) a U-shaped cutter head, the more aggressive serrations the better, and 3) a corkscrew-shaped snagger head for capturing root snarls and dragging them back up the line.

Avoid kinks. In all things snake-related, straighter is better. Get too enthusiastic about spinning that roto motor and you’ll find yourself with a snake around your neck.

To drip or not to drip? Running water through the line is useful for diagnosing the still-unclogged clog. Remember to turn it off when it starts backing up and flowing over your shoes. The handy rinsing action also keeps the snake cleaner. It’s all relative, however. And, on the other hand, a wetter snake means your gloves will turn to mush more quickly.

Resistance is not futile. In fact, resistance is good. On the way out, resistance on the line means you’ve run into a juicy clog. On the way back in, it means you’ve successfully snagged a slimy wad and now have a fighting chance of dragging it out into the light of day. If your snake line goes slack, you’ve lost your bounty and will have to go in and hook it again. Fishing analogies are apt.

Unwind slowly. When your sweet bundle of e.coli-laden slime emerges from the drain, it’ll be wrapped around the end of a dangerously-torqued snake. Release that potential energy with utter caution.

Safety last. The Roto-Rooter directions advise against handling the snake while the motor is in motion. Ignore this dictum. Sometimes pushing a spinning snake is the only way to chew your way through a tough patch.

Tuesday, September 12, 2006

With luck and love

Well - we did it. We got married this past weekend.

It was a fabulous day made possible by good luck (it didn't rain) and lots of love (our families were incredible).

Pictures are still coming in from the multiple photographers that were present but if you just can't wait here is what we have so far...


The happy couple kissing
Originally uploaded by schwillig.


Tuesday, August 29, 2006

comeback (!)

Like [INSERT 80's HAIR BAND OF YOUR CHOICE HERE], we're launching our Schwillig comeback tour. Promising big splashy performances. Hoping for packed auditoriums. We're back, brasher and flashier and brashier than ever. Hello, Cincinnati!

I hereby declare a moratorium on exclamation points from this day forward. A moment ago, I caught myself cheerily end-punctuating with an exclamation point, and I don't like it. At work I often e-point in emails; it's become an ugly, unconscious reflex, an overpowering urge to project a benign aura of friendly accessibilty, a helpful custom-service orientation. Salutations and sign-offs are particularly dangerous; those bastards shoot out exclamation points like noxious weeds. Hello! Thanks for your message! Take care! Looking forward to meeting you!

It began innocently enough as an ironic pose, a cheeky postmodern smirk at the clunky punctuation practices of an older generation from the POV of our own sleek, subtle-to-the-point-of-vanishing dashes, periods, and lowercase everything. Kind of like wearing glasses with Buddy Holly frames even though your eyesight is fine. But then something gee-whiz began to creep in, something dark and terrible and habit-forming, and next thing you know it's five years later and your every utterance, your every thought is couched in Wonderbread.

With my last ounce of strength, I plunge one final exclamation point like a dagger into the heart of the matter.

Saturday, July 29, 2006

blog-a-do

Most folks who know me know that I have a bit of an addiction to blogs. I read about 20 different blogs and that list is growing all the time. I'm impressed daily by these people who share their lives with complete strangers. They post about the good, the bad, the awful, and the absurd. What's really amazing is how much I care about these people who I don't even know. Reading someone's blog strips the nonsense away and you realize how much people really have in common. So here are a few of my favorite blogs:

Alice of finslippy is a phenomenal writer. She's witty, intelligent and fearless about her writing. I wish she had time to post every day.

Heather of dooce is the most famous blogger I read. She received notoriety in 2002 for being fired from her job because of her blog. She even discontinued blogging for a while. But now she's back and has made headlines again with her openness about her battle with depression, especially post-partaum depression, and the fact that she's making a living by blogging. Her husband Jon also has a blog at blurbomat.

Maybe it's the influence of my dear Okie friend Anne, but I've realize two of my favorite blogs are written by folks who are originally from Oklahoma.

The first is Sarah Brown at queserasera who is an Okie now living in Brooklyn. She's kind of like my "Sex and the City" blog series. She's a single girl in NYC but wears normal clothes and has real friends and relationships.

It was through Queserasera that I discovered Erin and Brian, also former Tulsans, over at byrneunit. They're married with a one-year-old son and recently moved to Chicago. Again they're very funny and complete pop-culture-whores.

There's also Tracey from Baltimore at sweetney who taught me about the blog phenomenon "Snakes on the Plane." She also introduced her friend Amy to me at amalah, who has some kick-ass beauty tips.

I could go on and on and talk about Melissa, Julia, Laid-Off Dad, Mimi, Maggie and Eden, but I'll just let you discover them by yourself.

Monday, July 10, 2006

the dream realized

this is an audio post - click to play

spin

this is an audio post - click to play

Taking the new KitchenAid mixer out for a spin: in this clip, we roll out onto a lonely, straight highway and rev her engine up past liquify. Seriously, though, this mixer is so powerful and stainless-steel-clad and intelligent its settings range from "brain surgery" to "devastation."

Wednesday, July 05, 2006

the eyes have it
















Jen after a knock-down drag-out fight with her mountain bike.
















Kelly wide-eyed with sympathetic shock.

Wednesday, June 28, 2006

we're all grown up now

We received our first comment spam on the blog today. We're still feeling a little breathless and shaky, even now that the first exhilirating rush is over. We hardly feel violated at all. In fact, it feels like we've passed a developmental milestone, or somehow been initiated into real bloggerhood.

Let me tell you about our first spam.

It was so. . . sweet. Sweet and gentle. It came out of the blue. Our first spam was delivered in lowercase, in a soft, faintly-exotic Eastern European accent---it's hard to tell when it's barely even a whisper. Like the lost stoned hippie chick who wanders in from the rain and ends up in a pool of light on your couch, it started with a meandering apology. It said it had lost its way, stumbled onto our blog, didn't see what it was looking for, but wondered if we wanted to make some money? Hell yeah, we say. Sure we want to make money. Then suddenly she sprouts stainless steel talons that knock over the lamp, plunge into the couch (though in a panic, we still notice that the couch is covered in cat fur. . . oh, it is exactly these prosaic small things that keep us grounded and protect us from real harm) and grind right through the floor, and she instantly grows other tentacles and whipping appendages and spikes and plates like a technohorror chia pet. Humming alien ductwork runs everywhere. Someone somewhere has fired up a stage fog machine, dramatically blanketing the room in a knee-high layer of white dry ice smoke. Her metallic spiderbot body hovers, spinning. Her red eyes glare. We wait, unable to move or even blink, limp with. . what? desire? terror? Finally, sounding uncannily like Stephen Hawking, she commands us to visit a website. Do we want to make money? Yes! Yes! We move to comply. We point our browser. But suddenly we remember the small things that matter, precious necessities like pesky cat fur on the couch and ice cream and calls to pick up siblings at the airport, and we come back to our senses. Begone, beautiful dark lady of the spam world! And take your robot spiders with you! We'll put in our iPod earbuds and crank up ABBA Gold tunes to drown out your siren song of wealth and fame and splendid penis enlargement! Go away!

It was that close. But now we're older and wiser and we know better.

Tuesday, June 27, 2006

haiku by cat upon release from accidental imprisonment in basement



lock me in a hole?
your reward for such hubris:
fur on your keyboard.

Monday, June 26, 2006

Slackers no more!

Yes, yes, yes - it has been almost 3 months since we've updated the blog. Our excuse...we can't or don't have time to post while at work and our home computer was very, very slow (dial-up plus an eight-year-old computer). But that is all about to change! I am proudly typing on our new MacBook using our new wireless DSL connection! The Schwillig's are back. And to prove it here is a picture right now that I took using the built-in camera on the MacBook:



In keeping with the picture theme, here is a picture of Scott running at Grandma's Marathon a couple of weeks ago.



The picture is courtsey of Scott's father, Norm, and was taken less than a mile from the finish line, which explains the smile.

Whew...I think I've blogged before properly stretching. I promise this is just the beginning. We have so much to catch up on--the pets, the house projects, oh and yeah that whole wedding thing coming up in September...

Wednesday, April 12, 2006

creamer vs. creamer

flight or fight: automated response

The following is a work of fiction, an imagined transcript of exactly half of a telephone call placed to an automated flight information system. Any resemblance of characters in this work to real persons living or sleeping in the next room is purely coincidental.

KELLY dials phone. Waits.

KELLY: One.
KELLY: I don’t know.
KELLY: Arrivals.
KELLY: Today.
KELLY: Minneapolis.
KELLY: New York.
KELLY: New York LaGuardia International.
KELLY: Next.
KELLY: Next.
KELLY: Next.
KELLY (exasperated): Details.
KELLY (urgently): No, back up!
KELLY (hanging up): Screw it.

Saturday, April 08, 2006

Tula doesn't want to live with the cats

On our recent trip to Zion National Park in Utah, Scott and I found our wedding bands. We found them at a Native American art gallery. They're two layers of silver with black markings symbolizing water made by the Hopi tribe. Very simple and they matched! Our two goals were met.

We returned home triumphant! I pulled the two jewelry boxes out of my bag and placed them on my dressing table. Since I'm in the process of moving into Scott's house this month I did mention to Scott that he should take them home so that the rings didn't get lost in the move. What fateful words those would turn out about to be.

Friday morning proceeded as normal. I got up, got ready for work, Scott came to pick me up and off we went. I did pick up on the fact that Tula seemed slightly peevish about our leaving. Granted we had only been home two days and had jump right back into work completely ignoring her needs (this is her opinion, not mine.) So I braced myself for finding some level of destruction upon our return home. Usually Tula manifests her unhappiness by eating part of a houseplant and then throwing it up on the living room rug. Annoying but not fatal.

Of course you see where this is all going.

We returned home Friday night to find a chewed up jewelry box and a spit-saturated blob of tissue paper on my bedroom floor. Wrapped within the tissue was my wedding ring. Now with more character! Tula must have chewed on the tissue a number of times before she decided that I had been thoroughly punished for leaving her home that morning. The ring was still wearable but no was longer completely round. It was slightly bent on one side and had multiple teeth marks.

Needless to say I was distraught! "Is it a sign?" I asked Scott and Jen who witnessed the discovery. I mean, both rings were on the dresser but she chooses to chew on my ring, not Scott's. Did this mean that Tula doesn't want us to get married? Or maybe it means she just wants Scott all to herself. She goes crazy whenever he arrives and if we come home together I get ignored while she jumps on and licks him with abundant joy. Or she doesn't want to move to Scott's house. Tula simply can't bring herself to cohabitate with another species. A species so foul and evil. Tula doesn't want to live with the cats.

In reality I know the real reason she chewed up the jewelry box and ring are because of one or all of the following:
1. She was mad that we left that morning and thus was going to act out in some way.
2. She discovered the jewelry boxes at perfect muzzle level. Heck, she didn't even have to work to get at them.
3. There is the possibility that the boxes smelled like food. They had been in my backpack co-mingling with chocolate covered espresso beans and yogurt covered almonds.

I think #3 is the real reason.

The ring has been sent back to the gallery in Utah and now we're awaiting word about its status. The owner was very kind when I spoke to her. Either the artist will be able to repair it or they'll replace it with a new one. Either way, it'll turn out fine.

Now getting Tula to live peacefully with the cats...that's another story.

Friday, April 07, 2006

simulated haircut

this is an audio post - click to play



Enjoy this audio simulation of the haircut Kelly's getting right now at Moxie. As you listen, let your imagination run wild. See the orphaned clips of her hair floating gently to the floor. Feel the warm afternoon sun streaming in the windows. Hear the robust hubbub of Snelling Avenue traffic. Smell the Paul Mitchell hair products, bottles all neatly lined up in their racks, ready for action like a really stylish militia. "They gave us these raw kids, and we turned them into fashion soldiers," says General Mitchell, his voice husky with repressed emotion, his eyes teary beneath the shining helmet of his hair. "They didn't think they had it in them, but we knew they'd go far. I have to say, this group really gelled."

We have two urgent search objectives these days: a suitable chew toy for the Bucket, and an officiant for the wedding. For the former, we're looking for something that will give her a legitimate outlet for her oral fix and redirect her from chewing on cardboard, paper, or Flea. What is she, a dog? Apparently so. Anyway, she's been on a real paper-shredding tear lately. Hello? PetCo? Do you stock titanium mousies?

For the latter, we're thinking of something affordable, maybe with a dab of flair, and preferably in a non-denominational or secular model. Gender is not an issue. A meaningul connection to our lives would be nice. Friends who've always wanted to pursue their internet M.Div. are encouraged to apply.



Sunday, April 02, 2006

flashback, spring forward

Daylight Saving Time. Tonight, for many of us, our fathers will wander the dark halls of our memories in their tighty-whities, resetting all the clocks in the house.

Tuesday, March 14, 2006

haiku for steve-o's element

over-fence branch sweeps
snow (tears?) from lime pumpkin cheek.
captiva postcard.

Monday, March 13, 2006

toupee


new livingroom rug
Originally uploaded by schwillig.

We got a new rug. It's in the living room. It's been pet approved.

Thursday, March 09, 2006

experiment results

So I get up in the morning and find that, after her little photo op, she didn't touch the carrot. Or at least didn't chew it to pieces. There may have been licking involved but no visible evidence remains. Let sleeping carrots lie.

How does this advance our hypothesis? It doesn't. More experimentation required.

Tuesday, March 07, 2006

scientific method

Unkind hints have already been made in this forum about a certain sweet-tempered Bucket’s indelicate mass. Or how shall we say. . . weight problem? But before we libel the pudgy little marmot any further, let’s get the facts straight. What we know so far, scientifically speaking:
  • She weighs as much as a squirmy bag of sugar.
  • She chews and shreds paper products with great relish, especially cardboard. This is known as pica. This handy pathology saves us the expense of buying and maintaining a costly document shredder and keeps us safe from identity theft.
  • She often steals toilet paper or kleenex, drowns it in her water dish, soaks it, and then gorges on the resulting tasty gruel. Nothing but empty calories, cat.
  • She only gets 2/3 cup of crunchy food a day: 1/3 cup in the morning and 1/3 cup in the evening, both intensely anticipated and wildly celebrated.
  • And yet she gains.

Hypothesis #1: She’s hungry.
Hypothesis #2: She’s bored.

This calls for experimentation and hardcore data collection. To that end, we’ve placed an unadorned carrot on a plate and placed the plate on the dining room table. We’ll leave it unguarded overnight and see what morning brings. Have at it, Bucket. Carrots improve night vision.

Saturday, March 04, 2006

Monday, February 27, 2006

good girl!

tula! what a good girl!



this is an audio post - click to play

Wednesday, February 22, 2006

Save the Date!

We have a wedding date - Saturday, September 9, 2006.

The day will begin with a family breakfast at Savories Bistro in downtown Stillwater. The ceremony will be held at William O'Brien State Park just north of Stillwater. We'll have a picnic dinner at the park later in the day. Check out the Wedding Links on the right for details on locations.

Tuesday, February 21, 2006

haiku by cat with glowing eyes

your knees my batcave,
these blankets my lair. be warned,
mousies of gotham.

Monday, February 20, 2006

menagerie a troix












Here are the usual suspects: Bucket, Tula, and Flea. Nothing but sweetness and light, not a bloodthirsty bone among them. And yet we put them together and immediately fear for everyone's safety. Think of it as Hardball for pets. Our goal is a harmonious household. So far, after a single first-blood incident, the score is Bucket 1, Tula 0.

Sunday, February 19, 2006

Is there a spell check on this thing?

Howdy folks! Welcome to the Schwillig blog. At this here location you'll be able to find important information about our upcoming nuptials, crazy pet stories and anything else we feel like sharing. Thanks for checking in! Come back again real soon.