Jul. 27th, 2005

charliesmum: (Default)
Charlie wants to be Ludo for Halloween.

You know, from Labyrinth? A movie that came out almost 20 years ago, and most certainly no longer has any merchanding attached to it. At least not anything not on E-bay.

Now a good mother would make the costume, but I can't sew, and even if I could sew I don't have the first idea how to make a Ludo costume. I mean, it's pretty complicated.

Last year he wanted to be Spiderman. Now there were fifty million other Spidermen running around, but at least the costume was easy to find.

Hopefully he'll change his mind by the time Halloween roles around.
charliesmum: (Default)
Charlie wants to be Ludo for Halloween.

You know, from Labyrinth? A movie that came out almost 20 years ago, and most certainly no longer has any merchanding attached to it. At least not anything not on E-bay.

Now a good mother would make the costume, but I can't sew, and even if I could sew I don't have the first idea how to make a Ludo costume. I mean, it's pretty complicated.

Last year he wanted to be Spiderman. Now there were fifty million other Spidermen running around, but at least the costume was easy to find.

Hopefully he'll change his mind by the time Halloween roles around.
charliesmum: (Default)
[livejournal.com profile] moony has a story on her journal about an altercation she saw at some fast food place, and wondered about it, and it reminded me of my one bit of heroism. It's my only one, so it's easy to remember.

Years ago - pre-Charlie - when I still worked in Philadelphia I was walking to the train station to take me home after a long day, and this guy in front of me accidently bumped into this woman and her boyfriend coming the other way. One of those 'misjudged the distance' kind of things, she wasn't knocked down or anything.

Now, I think the guy, let's call him Fred, should have said excuse me, but apparently he didn't. The girl, let's call her Gladys, could have just rolled her eyes and muttered something about stupid people to her boyfriend, but instead she felt the need to be verbally abusive to a complete stranger.

Fred, obviously not the sharpest knife in the drawer might have done better to just keep walking, but instead he responded in kind and the very next thing I see, barely 3 feet in front of me is Gladys's boyfriend hauling off and punching Fred who fell, dazed, into the street.

This is where I come in.

Fred gets up, looking confused and upset, and gets ready to punch Gladys's boyfriend back, but I jump in between them and start yelling at them both in my best kindergarten teacher voice. I tell them they are being stupid, and it isn't worth hitting perfect strangers and let it go you idiotic morons because you don't even know each other. Why are you punching someone you don't even know? Something like that, anyway. I like to think I was amazingly eloquent. At any rate, they all stared at me a moment with sheepish looks on their faces, and then walked away.

And yeah, I'm lucky no one pulled a knife or a gun, but I have to admit I was proud of myself for speaking up at that moment.

I personally think the world would be a better place if everyone kept a sense of humour about things.

In fact, there is a Monkees song that sums it up nicely. Laugh )
charliesmum: (Miss Piggy (by brinshannara))
[livejournal.com profile] moony has a story on her journal about an altercation she saw at some fast food place, and wondered about it, and it reminded me of my one bit of heroism. It's my only one, so it's easy to remember.

Years ago - pre-Charlie - when I still worked in Philadelphia I was walking to the train station to take me home after a long day, and this guy in front of me accidently bumped into this woman and her boyfriend coming the other way. One of those 'misjudged the distance' kind of things, she wasn't knocked down or anything.

Now, I think the guy, let's call him Fred, should have said excuse me, but apparently he didn't. The girl, let's call her Gladys, could have just rolled her eyes and muttered something about stupid people to her boyfriend, but instead she felt the need to be verbally abusive to a complete stranger.

Fred, obviously not the sharpest knife in the drawer might have done better to just keep walking, but instead he responded in kind and the very next thing I see, barely 3 feet in front of me is Gladys's boyfriend hauling off and punching Fred who fell, dazed, into the street.

This is where I come in.

Fred gets up, looking confused and upset, and gets ready to punch Gladys's boyfriend back, but I jump in between them and start yelling at them both in my best kindergarten teacher voice. I tell them they are being stupid, and it isn't worth hitting perfect strangers and let it go you idiotic morons because you don't even know each other. Why are you punching someone you don't even know? Something like that, anyway. I like to think I was amazingly eloquent. At any rate, they all stared at me a moment with sheepish looks on their faces, and then walked away.

And yeah, I'm lucky no one pulled a knife or a gun, but I have to admit I was proud of myself for speaking up at that moment.

I personally think the world would be a better place if everyone kept a sense of humour about things.

In fact, there is a Monkees song that sums it up nicely. Laugh )

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