Naomi’s party


We made lanterns at Naomi’s birthday party.


Pirate Naomi attacked the bull pinata with everything she had.

And Annabel swung on the tire horse.

Until Eli finally broke the pinata open and let the toys out.


The party guests hanging out on the catwalk stairs.


Behind Annie, in the back right you can see the finished lanterns hanging up to dry.


Then up to the globe to get the big picture.  Anselm , Eliot and Blaise.


Dana, Jeremy and Eliot checking out the view.

My big reward was when Eliot said, “That was awesome,” as she made her way down the spiral stairs.

“You never lose by loving. You always lose by holding back.” or How many times have you been married …to the same person?

“You never lose by loving. You always lose by holding back.” -Barbara De Angelis

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Don’t you think re-reading vows and being part of a raucous party makes sense.   Proposing again?   Better skip that part.  Chances are, at least in my case, it wouldn’t go so well…   or would it?

Always good to let someone know you love them and a trip away together, well, that sounded awfully good to me.

ROUND ONE, our original wedding, took place on the Iles of March in 2003. It was lovely and small, no family, just a few friends who happened to get our calls that morning.

We’d been engaged for six months and David was getting itchy to just do it. Jules and Sonya agreed to help me find a dress on Saturday morning so we set the ceremony for 1pm. It was goofy, profound, beautiful and tender but not at all what I imagined for us.  I was happy that David liked it so much.


ROUND TWO marked the passing of eight years and the arrival of two of the most important things in my life, Simone and Naomi.

The RE-WED was hosted by Sarah & Richard Barton, Maryam Mohit & Erik Blachford, Janet & Lloyd Frink and Leslie & Nick Hanauer.  They sent out mysterious invites with this link.  I booked the flights and dug into the non-hermetically sealed kids costume chest to pull out my wedding gown.  It was more than fine.

What a rush to put it on!  Giddy.  Even more heady was seeing the formal flocks en masse as us wives, gathered to ….tap the primitive archetype for another squeeze of juice. (Wordy but fun!)

Let the jollity begin!

The men assembled in their atrium cave and the women gathered above in a long velvety garret.  We sorted and resorted till we became an organized female troupe standing by to sashay down the two tiers of stairs in our blinding finery.  It was a show.

The minister proclaimed, “Life is to be measured not in breaths but in the moments that take our breath away.”

The ceremony was touching and playful and concluded with each couple reciting vows.

Yes, vows.  I added a few lines to capture what our eight years had meant to me.  David went white at the idea of reading his vows and shook his head that he hadn’t thought he would have to read those and he wasn’t prepared. The back side of my vows had his original text and I offered them to him.  He was stricken but as the room started to become alive with words, he took the paper and lip synced while looking up at the ceiling. Inaudible but as I pealed my ears, in came the amorous words from all around me bouncing off the corners of the room. Then fireworks and smoke (for real) and we “re-wedded” couples cheered.  Elvis look a-likes appeared by the dozens to wrap their arms around ours and lead us playfully toward the flashing bulbs of the patio reception. Onward!

Out in the bright sun, 70 suited pairs began receiving one another in a commingled reception. Soon an Elvis here or there appeared to ensure we had everything we needed and in a low pitch and stretched cadence, they came up to each of us and said, “Sorry to intervene, but …you know, it is time for your dinner seating.”  We reentered the cave of a Kings feast and The Second Act began.  Each table decorated with a equally amazing, though quite different, cake.  I wandered among friends listening to freshly written love poems, songs, watching as goofy and sweet little mementos were being exchanged…and of course…tasting the cakes.  There were arms draped around one another and sweet caresses between couples every where I went.

After dinner we migrated to the top of the world (a night club) with a grand balcony looking out over the neon of Las Vegas.  The dancing was indoor and out and the great disco beat was easy to get lost in.  David retired about then and the rest of us let the music take over.

The clan swayed together in big circles and then re-located to a swanky suite with plenty of provisions and a pool table.  There the night rolled on with dancing on table tops, costume changes and the various silly antics we dream up to entertain one another and commemorate this adventure together.

The next day David and I went to see A Sense of Place, from Monet to Hockney at the Bellagio museum (Therrien, Mangold, Cristo, Boudin, Lichtenstein, Giehier, Millet, Rauschenberg, Muniz, Chagall and others) and then followed a treasure hunt through the Skyscraper hotels of Las Vegas to discover a vast modern art collection sited across the city.  When we re-joined the tribe, it was time for dinner at Jaleo, a Vegas version of Andre’s DC classic.  (Have you ever had liquid olives melt on your tongue or pomme frite served in a sneaker?)

To top-off our weekend of debauchery and revelry, we snuck into a fever pitch disco and grooved in a pit of colliding bodies and then recovered in the breezy pool or on the two person patio swing…. til morning was sighted at the edge of the dry earth.  A wedding indeed.

How many times have you been married….   to the same person?

A sheet holding confetti and balloons


The girls went over to Trixie and Vivian’s house for a Disco New Year’s Party. Sarah and Scott Miller have been doing this for a few years and the kids love it. At 7pm there was a huge countdown and then balloons and confetti rained down on the kids. They loved it.

A disco ball and tunes from the 80′s played for a couple hours.

Let 2011 begin!

Why are you smilin’ like a rabbit in a briarpatch?

Kevin, Simone, Elias, Liam, Simone, Drew


We are fairly frequent visitors to the CLAMS house. Cora is 4, Liam is 5, Annie is the mom, Miela is a dog and Scott is the dad. Like their other parties, this one was wildly fun! The horse theme was in celebration of Cora’s 4th and Lola’s 5th birthdays. Lola is another part of our clan…i.e. the youngest daughter of Kevin Flick and Melissa Hartley. Presents and a cake did happen but the dominant event was horsing around in the best way. Why with straw, mud, ice cubes and bubbly water… Right?

Scott, Kevin, Liam, Simone


As we got out of the car, Scott (Cora’s dad) zoomed by with a dozen kids on his heels trying to lasso him and put him in the jail out back.

Naomi with a funnel, an upside-down filter and a strainer.


Seattle was built on the gold rush and the kids fell for it too or I could just say that the girls had fun panning for gold (beads, that is) in the mucky kiddie pool and stringing up necklaces for their horse’s manes. Okay…maybe there were no real horses…so us parents had to ante up and wear the muddy things.

Scott, Kevin, Drew, Liam


So a hay fight erupted. It was tons of fun but it didn’t stop there. Ice cubes were great to drop down pants but that too got old. I’d say the mud was probably a bad idea but the seltzer bottles….now those were genius as, with a little shaking, they could get someone from a yard. Oh that reminds me of that old saying…don’t judge till you’ve walked a mile in their shoes. Pretty good advice really as you are a mile away by the time they get wind of your words and YOU have their shoes. Back to the fight…and the discovery of a projectile seltzer.

Julie, Naomi, Gwen


Not everybody joined in the chaotic rough-housing. There were safe spots one could take turns swinging or (below) …their were moms to nestle up with like Catherine and Francesca below.

Catherine, Francesa, Julian

Kim, Elias, Simone, Liam, Drew, Simone


Here is a clip with some of the action.

A One Nation Sunday


A One Nation demonstration is happening on 2nd Ave. The girls are watching folks congregate in the street and tell me that there are a buses driving up 1st Ave bringing more people to the rally. Then as quickly as it appeared, it vanishes. Not a sole on 2nd Ave…no people and no cars.

Time for us to go. We’re heading over to the first gymnastics meet of the season. Simone is uncertain about it. She says she can’t remember her routine and doesn’t want to go. I pack everyone into the van and say we might as well drive over there and root for the rest of her team.

Turned out just fine. In fact, as we were walking out, Simone said, “I want to do that again. It was awesome.”

It was Naomi’s turn to pick whether we head to a playground or to a fashion show some friends are involved in. Naomi chose the Harbor Steps fountain and a trip to the Seattle Art Museum.

The feet of SAM’s Hammering Man