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  1. Fireworks!

    July 4, 2011 by Michelle O'Hagan

    Who doesn’t like fireworks?

    Patrick and I took Molly and the boys out to the Park Ridge July 3 fireworks show last night at Maine East H.S. and it was great.

    In fact, it was the second-best fireworks show I’ve ever seen (In 2009, we got to sit on a private pier on Lake Michigan to watch the now-defunct Chicago 4th of July fireworks; too bad the ne’er-do-wells got that one shut down).

    Parking was free and abundant, and there was plenty of room to spread out with chairs and blankets and coolers.

    Total cost of the evening: $10 for some light-sticks that kept the boys entertained until the 9:30 p.m. start time.

    It was the perfect opportunity to play around with my recently purchased SLR camera which, honestly, I have very little idea of how to use it. But, the pics turned out pretty well!

    Via Flickr:
    Who needs downtown? The Park Ridge July 3 show was spectacular.


  2. Facebook, and Face to Face

    July 1, 2011 by Michelle O'Hagan

    Click for Larger Image
    Michelle-Amaya-Luisa
    Michelle, Amaya & Luisa at the pool; InterContinental Hotel, Chicago

    Because it’s ubiquitous now, I sometimes forget about the really cool, and even life-changing things made possible by social media in general, and Facebook in particular.

    A few years ago, my husband arranged a surprise for me: He contacted a few of my high-school friends (whom he’d never met, and with whom I had not been in contact for many years), and signed me up for my high-school 25th reunion. I had wanted to go but previously had declined the invite because of the expense involved. But it was something Patrick knew I’d enjoy and so took matters into his own (virtual) hands by first contacting my old friend Vive Bridges (whom he’d already met) who put him in touch with a few other people on Facebook.

    Since that reunion, I’ve been able to keep in touch with a handful of old friends on almost a daily basis because I’m now connected to them on Facebook and a few other social media outlets. And I’m at the stage in my life where that feels so, so good. I’m lucky to have them in my life again. Not only because of the obvious perspective it brings a few decades after high school. But mainly because they’re just super-interesting women that I really enjoy knowing all these years later.

    I’ve was privileged to commiserate and brainstorm (online and in-person) with one friend who was laid off from her job last year. Last Christmas, she and I met at Starbucks for some girl-time and talked about careers, kids, what it means to be an adult, knitting and the possibility of her having to move from Little Rock back to Memphis. During her job search and interview process, she stopped in Chicago for an afternoon and I was lucky enough to be able to take 1/2 day off work to go meet her for drinks. She eventually found a much better, much cooler job (I knew she would) in Memphis. All these years later, I like her so much, and I’m so glad to call her a friend.

    This week, I received a Facebook message from another long-time friend, one I’ve known since we were about 8 years old. We were on a swim team together as kids, and I used to love going to her house to spend the night. Then she and her family moved to Spain for a few years and we fell out of touch. When they moved back to the U.S. a few year later, she and I attended high school together. Since then, she married and moved to Atlanta, I moved to Chicago, and we were out of touch again for many years. But we re-connected at the aforementioned high-school reunion. I’ve enjoyed getting to know her family/kids through Facebook photos for the past couple of years. But I got to meet them in person this week when she and her husband and kids were in Chicago for an impromptu vacation. It was fun, and kind of surreal, to see her kids and my kids playing in the pool together. It brought back so many memories. And even better, her husband and my husband were there, and we all sat around the pool for a while talking about Holland and traveling and kids and swimming like we’d all known each other all along.

    Our-Kids
    Amaya, Ruairi, Lucas & Liam at the pool; InterContinental Hotel, Chicago

    So, thank you Facebook, for making it much, much easier to enrich my own life with old friends, and people I’d never see on a regular basis. I love to see them online, and I love it even more when I see them in person!


  3. Snotty Underpants

    March 12, 2011 by Michelle O'Hagan

    So, this morning Patrick and I were lying in bed when the kids joined us. It was almost time to leave the house for the kids’ weekly swim lesson. Liam (my 4-year-old) was standing on the bed, and I was helping him out of his pajamas and into his swimsuit. As I was removing Liam’s underpants, I noticed a big glob of snot hanging out of his nose and–without even thinking–I used the just-removed underpants to wipe his runny nose.

    Patrick was aghast, looking at me as if I’d just given Liam a big dose of codeine to induce drowsiness (no, I’ve never done that, but I’m pretty sure I know someone who has).

    Me: “What’s the big deal?”

    Patrick: “You just wiped his face with the underpants that he’s had on since yesterday!”

    Is there anything wrong with this? I mean, the underpants were going right into the hamper, and Liam was going right into a chlorinated pool.

    Bad mom? Or super-resourceful nose-wiping mom with easily-aghast husband? You decide.


  4. I Don’t Own A Business, And Why Would I Ever Want To?

    October 20, 2010 by Michelle O'Hagan

    The elections are less than two weeks away, and I’m actively trying to avoid the pernicious political ads that dominate every single television station. They’re not even entertaining this year, just ridiculous.

    It has taken me 44 years to get to this point, but I’m really all about kicking everyone out this year, no matter what side they’re on. The people who “serve” in Congress really have no idea–no idea–what is going on in people’s lives. I don’t care how or why they grew so clueless, I just want them gone.

    My good friend @mhellyar just posted a link to 1099 Tax Rule May Bring Big Pain To Small Business on Facebook. Apparently, a new IRS rule (which was piggybacked on to a health care bill–sneaky) requires all businesses, freelancers or contractors to file 1099 forms for goods as well as services, if those goods cost more than $600 annually (the current threshold).

    I read the article–twice–and if I understand correctly, the IRS now will require “vendors” (such as a local restaurant or office supply store) to pay federal income taxes on “goods” sold to another business or freelancer (like a business that treats its employees to pizza once a week).

    That is ridiculous enough, but here’s the really crappy part: The onus is on the business or freelancer (the one buying the pizzas or the paper towels) to keep track of all the goods (office supplies, pizza, gasoline, etc.) it purchases from individual vendors so it (the business or freelancer) can issue 1099 forms to all these vendors, so the vendors can then pay income taxes on the goods they sold to the business. WTF? Could that be any more confusing? And why force a business to keep track of all this stuff, so that yet another business can pay taxes on it? Who thought this up? And who voted for it?

    This is the most asinine thing I’ve read this week, and and I’ve read a lot of silly stuff this week. This is just one example of why everyone who “works” for us in Congress should get the boot. Every. Single. One. <<she said, as she crossed that party line>>


  5. Scenes from a Street in Chicago

    March 5, 2010 by Michelle O'Hagan

    It is a beautiful, sunny day in Chicago. Still cold, but sunny.

    So, I walked to lunch at Wishbone. On the way back, my tummy full of black-eyed peas, I snapped these photos on my iPhone in the 800 block of W. Washington.

    On my side of the street: an art gallery, with this on display in the front window:

    Logo Baby

    Directly across the street: an auto body repair center with what I’ll guess is just a shout-out to passersby, something to make us all stop and feel beautiful for a second:

    You Are Beautiful

    Today I am happy, not cynical, and so I’ll focus on the auto body shop. :-)