Showing posts with label birthdays. Show all posts
Showing posts with label birthdays. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

30th birthday highlights

A year late, but here they are. The highlights of my thirtieth birthday celebrations:


Starting from the top left: running the Reindeer Run around Lake Harriet with good friends, the weekend before my birthday; free birthday week car wash at the fabulous Downtowner in St. Paul; waking up at 5:30 am on the morning of my thirtieth birthday for a reflective, soul-refreshing walk around Lake of the Isles; tucking into a calorie-rich dessert at Pizzeria Lola at my birthday dinner with Kevin; birthday cupcakes with Kevin and my sister and Alex on the morning of my birthday; birthday decorations on my birthday morning; accidental rainbow outfit worn out and about on my birthday; picking out my birthday gift - a kitchen appliance! - with Kevin at Macy's; the winter wonderland Kevin lovingly created for my birthday party; birthday cocktails and karaoke with Kev, Mel, and Alex at El Mariachi in Minneapolis; a totally sober Melissa having a blast at El Mariachi (my sister is awesome); birthday balloon photo shoot; post-drinks dance party in the basement; birthday popcorn - my favorite food group! - from a dear friend; birthday party photo booth; gorgeous ombre birthday cake; drinks with my sister (hers was nonalcoholic, as she was about 4 months pregnant at the time); awesome work friends at my party; with my gorgeous friends, Katy and Adri; Kevin and the boys, Chad and Barry; group shot 1; group shot 2; hamming it up with the awesome giant number balloons; Alex rocking out with Lola; birthday song! 

A wonderful way to enter my thirties! Thirty was a complicated, difficult, wonderful, transformative, healing, emotional, and exciting year for me. I already love this decade, and I know that becoming a mama this year is only going to make it even more complicated/exciting/emotional and AWESOME. 

Monday, December 10, 2012

thirty!

You guys. I turned thirty. 3-0. Proof:



I had so much fun celebrating my birthday week, which began with a 5K and brunch, had some margaritas and Spanish karaoke in the middle, and ended with a cocktail party at our place. More on the celebrations, and my thoughts on turning thirty, later.

THIRTY!

Saturday, November 10, 2012

twins for a month: twenty-nine

It's time for this year's Twins for a Month! Because my sister and I are a mere eleven months apart, every year, from November 10 (her birthday) to December 6 (my birthday), we get to be twins for a month.  I love my sister, my first friend. She is a rare beauty, with porcelain skin, cheek bones to die for, big brown eyes, and glossy chestnut hair. She is kind, and patient, and really, really funny (ask her to do her stand-up routine for you sometime). I love that we have now celebrated nearly three decades worth of birthdays together. This sister of mine, with whom I have shared so much.

Mel, may 29 be an awesome year for you (and I am thinking it will be!). May you be blessed with much love, plenty of time in the company of your family and friends, a little adventure, and all the joy your heart can hold. I love you. Here's to you on your 29th birthday.

Now, to the fort! (Alex built an awesome birthday fort, in which we will eat pizza, play board games, and watch movies tonight).







Tuesday, December 6, 2011

birthday morning

I am twenty-nine today. It came fast. Now that it's here I am determined to embrace the last year of my twenties and prepare for a graceful (I hope) entry into my thirties.

It is a beautiful snowy morning, and I am feeling thankful and reflective. I decided to do some writing this morning (it's a school day, so I don't go into work today) to start my birthday off with a bit of quiet reflection on the past year, and to set some goals for the coming year. Its been lovely to sit in our guest room/office this morning and write with the snow falling outside. I think this might become a birthday tradition. 

I woke up this morning to the traditional chai latte and cupcake breakfast that my loving husband wakes up at the crack of dawn to procure on my birthday mornings (and which I look forward to all year long), and a sweet little whale ornament. I'm excited about the day of celebrating ahead of me - class (okay, that's not celebrating, but it's part of my day), yoga, a manicure, buying some new tights to wear to my birthday dinner tonight, a snowy walk with Lola, lots of sweet phone calls/texts/emails/messages from the people I love, dinner with Kevin, and cake and wine, of course. I love birthdays. 







Thursday, November 10, 2011

bandito turns 28

My sister turns 28 today, and thus begins our annual month of being twins (we're eleven months apart, and no, our mother isn't crazy, she was 22 and had a lot of energy).

Happy Birthday to my beautiful, creative, and funny sister, whom I love an insane amount! I wish I were in Austin getting ready to: 1) Make you a celebratory birthday breakfast, 2) Take you out for an afternoon of shopping and lunch, 3) Go out for dinner and drinks, followed by something cheesy but fun (like line dancing!), and 4) Give you a GIANT smothery hug, and a smooch or two.

Love you, Mel.


xoxo,
Sissy

Saturday, June 11, 2011

thirty-three


This man, my awesome husband, is thirty-three today. 
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, KEV! 
I love you. 

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

twenty-eight

I turned twenty-eight today. I was born on a Monday at 4:15 pm, at Hospital Tehuantepec in Mexico City, with my eyes wide open. I was delivered by Doctor Vargas, a colleague and friend of my grandmother's - a kind and trusted man who delivered many of the children in our family.

When I was born, my father and grandmother were in the hospital cafeteria;  Doctor Vargas had told them that it would be a while yet before I arrived, and so they had decided to take a short break for lunch. So, it was just my twenty-one year old mother and me - her skinny, blue-eyed, long-fingered baby daughter, her firstborn child - on that December 6 afternoon, twenty-eight years ago.

My first nickname was E.T. - my mother’s uncle, tio Miguel, began calling me that because of my saucer-like eyes and skinny limbs. The skinniness did not take long to wear off.


There is a picture of me somewhere, at around age five, wearing a too-small t-shirt with a drawing on the front, of a spotted dinosaur with a wristwatch in his mouth, with the words "Running out of time!" jauntily scrawled across the bottom of the shirt, just above my little protruding belly. The thought of that shirt - of its too-smallness, and its totally un-ironic morbidity - never fails to make me laugh.

Every year, right around my birthday, I get a bit reflective and sometimes a little down; I wonder where the year has gone (it does seem to go by faster each year), and if I have “done enough”  - if I have enough to show for another year of life lived. I doubt whether I have improved myself enough, whether I have grown enough, and I wonder how I stack up among all the other people my age. Does everyone do this, to some extent? 

Last night I made a quick list of twenty-eight things from the last year, in order to see what came to mind first when I thought about the past year of my life, and to gain a more balanced appreciation for 365 days not lived perfectly, but lived nonetheless.

And here is the list:

1. I worked at the Minnesota State Senate. I spent a night at the Capitol, on the floor of suite 328, waiting for the governor to reconvene the session. 
2. I celebrated one year of being a co-homeowner.
3. I celebrated four years of marriage, and seven years with Kevin overall.
4. I went to California twice. On one of those trips I spent an entire day in SF with my sister Gigie. On the other trip, I made a soul-refreshing solo drive from Ojai to Lompoc to Folsom to Martinez, and spent time with family and friends at every stop.
5. I went to Paris! I took pictures from the tops of the Eiffel Tower and the Arc de Triomphe. I saw the Mona Lisa. I ate French food IN FRANCE. There was also the Spanish food in Spain (maybe a little bit too much ham on that leg of the trip, but still very good). Magic.
6. I got pregnant in the fall. We told our families, and some close friends. I bought some baby clothes, and we talked about names. 
7. I had a miscarriage at seven weeks. I ached deeply, and was carried through it by the love and support of some seriously wonderful people.
8. I wrote a lot of personal literary nonfiction. I've received a lot of good and constructive feedback. I am working on cutting my sentences in half. 
9. I took an editing class.
10. I finally – finally! – read Wuthering Heights. I hate Heathcliff. I love Hareton Earnshaw!
11. I revamped my blog.
12. I changed my major from Political Science to English. It only took ten years.
13. I drove from Texas to Minnesota with my mom. We got a flat somewhere near the Oklahoma/Missouri border, Officer McCutie Pants came to our rescue, and we laughed all the way through it. My mother told me she feels like she can really be herself around me - I hope I can always make her feel that way. 
14. I gardened. A lot. I planted hydrangeas (my favorites). I dug up an old fountain and put in a flagstone patio, nearly by myself.
15. I went to Florida to celebrate a best friend’s wedding, and spent some much-needed time with two women I love a lot. It was hard to say goodbye. I went to Disney World – it was strange, but fun.
16. I drank my first vodka tonic. Not to sound too boozy, but where was this drink my whole life?
17. I quit dyeing my hair, and fell in love with my natural color (which I hadn’t seen for years). I feel liberated, and it's cheaper. 
18. I sewed half of a skirt. I made stuffed fabric elephants, and flower pins out of brightly colored felt. I crocheted garland for our Christmas tree. I painted vintage furniture.
19. I celebrate one year of being a dog parent to my lovely and spirited sweet girl. 
20. I played softball on a co-ed team. I sprained my wrist with an overzealous barehanded catch at second base. There was the second annual summertime trip to the emergency room. (Let’s hope there’s no third annual trip.)
21. I apologized for things that mattered, and stopped apologizing for things I should not be sorry about.
22. I bought a vintage dress and went to a hangar dance. I curled my hair, wore seam-in-the-back stockings and a garter belt, and "smoked" candy cigarettes. Very authentic.
23. I got bangs. It’s going much better than the last time I had bangs (it was 1995, I tried to speed up the process of growing out my bangs by cutting them off as close to my scalp as possible – disaster).
24. I went to summer school, and finally read Beowulf.
25. I read Neruda and decided that if I ever have a daughter, I would very much like to name her Matilde.
26. I had a birthday brunch with the ladies. I always wanted to have a birthday brunch. There was quiche - with a flaky homemade crust – made by my mother, French toast casserole made by Kevin, wedding china finally used, tea in delicate cups, and lemon birthday cake. I blew out my candles and wished for health and happiness for the people I love, a child, peace, self-acceptance, time with family, and another year (and many more) with my husband.
27. I tried more honesty. It’s been working out well.
28. I decided it’s time to start making peace with myself. I am a work in progress. I am a work in progress, and I am just fine.

There were also winter walks with husband and dog, visits from friends, dinners, cooking, sledding, trivia, libraries, parties, yoga, summertime bike rides, outdoor baseball games, storms, canoeing, tears, movies, laughter, fights, make-ups, restaurants, bills to pay, cleaning, weeding, organizing…

This morning I woke up, and I was twenty-eight. Outside it was snowy and clear and cold, and I was under thick quilts, warm and safe beside a man I love and respect. There was a sleeping black dog on a chair, and my mother in the guest room downstairs. There was a Christmas tree in the living room, and the anticipation of my entire family coming to spend time together in just two short weeks. The house was clean, and the dryer was broken, and soon Kevin would have to get up to go to work and I would have go to school. It was the morning of my twenty-eighth birthday, and things were not perfect, but they were very good because I felt good about them. 

Today, I went to class, and Kevin brought me a chai latte (a birthday tradition) at lunch, and my mom and I went shopping (lovely boots!), and then we all went out for Afghani food at a favorite restaurant. I came home to thoughtful birthday greetings from friends from all over, and then I sat down to write. It’s been a quiet and simple birthday, a very good birthday.

Homemade quiche and French toast casserole. 


Lola is either about to help me blow out the candles, or she is about to lunge into my delicious lemon cake. Most likely the cake. 

* I just looked at the clock. It's not my birthday anymore, and I am up much too late.

Friday, June 25, 2010

kevin's 32nd birthday weekend

Kevin's birthday got off to a great start with a game at Target Field on the Thursday of his birthday weekend. The Twins lost, but as always, we thoroughly enjoyed ourselves --- I don't know if we are capable of not having a good time at an outdoor baseball game (Target Field totally kicks the Metrodome's marshmallowy butt, by the way).

Baseball is a birthday tradition in the Shevlin house, ever since Kevin's 26th birthday (the first of his birthdays we celebrated together, which I can't believe was 6 birthdays ago!), when I threw him a giant party that began with a group outing to an A's game. I think baseball games are one of the best parts of summertime birthdays, and also, they just happen to combine some of Kevin's favorite things: beer, hotdogs, the outdoors, baseball, and a crazy wife who yells things at the players like "What are you doing?! After what THAT GUY just did?!" I once yelled that at an A's player who totally bumbled an easy play right after a downright spectacular play by one of his teammates. I happen to think this is a totally legitimate thing to say at a baseball game, but Kevin found it absolutely hilarious --- granted, I did stand up, with absolute wild indignant abandon, and shouted this in front of a lot of other, much milder-mannered, spectators. What? I'm Latin.





After the game we went to Mickey's Diner (the slightly sketchy one down on West 7th Street, not the one in the cool dining car downtown), a St. Paul classic, for burgers and shakes, and so that I could serenade my husband the instant his actual birthday began. We were the only people there at 12:01 am, so it was very cheesy and romantic, and just right for a guy like my husband.

This is where we had the french fry as a candle situation, because, apparently, Mickey's doesn't get enough requests for birthday candles in scoops of ice-cream to keep a stash of them on hand.


Kevin's birthday dinner request was for "a big, non-fancy, authentic burrito," so after he got home from work on Friday, we did an online search and discovered Pinedas Tacos. From the outside, the Pinedas we went to (there are three or four in the Twin Cities) definitely seemed to fit the description of a hole-in-the-wall/dive. I think it's housed in an old Pizza Hut, near a strip mall, in West Saint Paul. We actually almost didn't go in because I was too busy being snooty and forgetting that the best Mexican food tends to come from places that look sort of questionable from the outside. Kevin however, looked at me like I was totally missing the point (which I was), so we decided to give it a whirl, and holy carne asada, am I glad we did. The food was SO good! It was the perfect place for us  - Mexicans cooking the food (we talked soccer - Mexico had just played South Africa), Mexican customers (the best endorsement I can think of for any Mexican restaurant), a hole-in-the-wall type location, totally non-fancy, and horchata and flan on the menu. Also, I think our meal came out to about $15 for both of us. Perfect. 

It was by far the best "non-fancy" Mexican food we've had since leaving California, and I can't believe it took us three years to find this place. We are slipping, people. I mean, for Pete's sake, we are two seriously enthusiastic Mexican-food eaters, and one of us is even a Mexican. Three years! 

Here's Kevin enjoying his non-fancy, and very delicious, Pineda's burrito:



After our big time score with the burritos, we went home to do a test run of the backyard movie set-up. Kevin borrowed a projector and screen from work (with permission, of course), and we bought some inexpensive computer speakers at Target. Kevin fiddled around with everything for a bit, and then voila, "The Princess Bride," one of our favorites, right in our own backyard. 



The next day it rained for most of the morning, while we ran around shopping and getting ready for Kevin's birthday party. Kev kept checking the Weather Channel online to see if it was going to clear up in time to actually watch "The Goonies" in our backyard with our friends that night. The party started at around 6:30 (still raining), and we had a great time - lots of good friends, lots of kids and babies, Lola running around simultaneously terrified by, indifferent to, and excited by all of the commotion, plenty of drinks, and good food. The crowd sort of thinned out by 9 pm, and the rest of us gathered on tarps in the yard for the main event. Yep, it stopped raining just in time to watch the movie. Kevin was stoked, and everyone settled in to enjoy the awesome birthday slideshow movie preview (a giant THANK YOU to everyone who took part in it), and, of course, the Goonies were a hit. There were even two kiddos - ages 5 and 3 - watching it for the very first time. It's always fun to experience a childhood favorite from the 80's with kids who have never seen the movie before. 

We stayed up until the wee hours of the morning hanging out and talking (and maybe doing a birthday shot or two) with our buddy, Chad. We finally called it a night at around 3 am, and fell into bed exhausted, and in unanimous (Lola voted) agreement that the party had been a success. A great 32nd birthday for Kevin. 














Your 33rd year is underway, babe, and I know it's going to be a great one! May you be granted all the love, light, peace, joy, harmony, and adventure you desire. I'll be here for it all. I love you. 

Saturday, June 12, 2010

thirty-two

I love my husband. He turned 32 yesterday. 32. I met Kevin just a couple of months after his 25th birthday - he was all boyish good looks, corny jokes, love for ethnic foods and mini-adventures, and sweet-natured charm back then. He still has those boyish good looks (that crooked smile - I melt), the corny jokes, and all the other attributes that made me fall in love with him, but they've been seasoned with a few laugh lines, and a sort of quiet and strong manliness (of both looks and personality). 32 looks good on my love. I feel honored and blessed that this lovely person has chosen to spend his years with me, and I look forward to seeing how 32 more years, and 32 more years after that, will add to the depth and breadth and delightfulness of the man I love. Here are 5 things (5 things because 3+2 = 5) that I love about him:

1. The previously mentioned crooked smile. There's a small gap between the two front teeth. Easily brought on by, amongst other things: my natural dorkiness (it's very nice to be married to man who really thinks that your absolute most true self is just the best, most lovable thing he has ever encountered), corny jokes, cute kids, the 49ers, good beer, burritos, San Francisco, Lola the wonder-dog, ridiculous movies, fancy watches, puffy clouds, cheesy spy novels, 90's music, lamborghinis, silliness. 

2. He is a man of integrity. He is honest and upstanding to his core. He radiates honesty --- I once tried to lie to him, and I got zapped by his field of glowing goodness and instantly had to tell him the truth. 

3. He never, and I mean NEVER, says, or probably even thinks, anything petty or mean-spirited about someone else. He is not a gossip, and he likes to give people the benefit of the doubt. 


4. He loves to dance. Or, if he doesn't love to dance, he sure does it with gusto and joy. Some of my favorite moments between the two of us have occurred out on a dance floor. He likes to dip me, spin me, show off his hilarious - I mean, awesome - dance moves, and he never says no when I want to dance. One of his favorite places to take me dancing is in our kitchen. Very sweet and cheesy all at once. It makes life so much fun! 


5. His brain is full of knowledge. He just knows so much about so much. Together, we make a deadly trivia team. I love a man that loves to learn - I think that this, combined with his endless reserve of patience, will be an excellent attribute to have when he's a father. 


Happy Birthday, Kev. It's going to be a great year. 

The crooked smile, during the early years. 

Ringing in 32 at Mickey's Diner in St. Paul. Yes, that's a french fry as a candle. Hey, we make do. 

Thursday, November 12, 2009

twins (for a month)

This is my sister, Melissa, and me, circa 1988:


I freaking love this picture. That's our grandma on the right, and I think this must have been taken at our favorite great aunt's house (our aunt Carmen, a.k.a. Tia Mini, so nicknamed because she's teeny tiny). I love that my sister and I are wearing matching enormous bows, no doubt handmade by our momma, and I love how Mel is holding her knife, ready to spear her hot dog, and how I'm trying to wipe my mouth but someone is holding my hand back. I like that it's not posed - just us, eating dinner, little kids, always together, sisters in childhood. I took a picture of this picture, which resides on my sister and Alex's fridge in Austin, when Kevin and I were in town for their wedding in October. I like to think of this picture where it lives, on the fridge, in Mel and Alex's home.

Mel turned 26 on Tuesday. I'm two days late wishing her a happy happy birthday on this blog, but I think she knows that the love is just as strong today. Every year, from November 10th (Mel's birthday) until December 6th (my birthday), Mel and I get to live as twins (don't get a headache trying to figure it out, we were born only eleven months apart!). We used to get such a kick out of confounding our friends by saying, "We're sisters, we're not twins, but we're the same age," then we'd laugh like maniacs when all the other kids said, "That's impossible!" Hilarious we were.

Here is how I feel about my sister:


And here is just one of the many many reasons why I, and so many others (including the handsome guy in the video, my new brother-in-law, Alex), love her so stinking much:


Happy 26th to my lovely sister - my temporary twin. I love you, Mel.

P.S. - I can't turn the video so that it isn't sideways - urgh! Working on it. For now, enjoy it from a different perspective.