My family either loves me a ton or they wanted to see me drop dead of a heart attack. I went to yoga after work on Friday as I try to do most weeks and then headed home to contemplate what non-meat dinner options we had for Good Friday. I walked into the house, still in my yoga gear and somewhat tousled and sweaty, to find my children staring back at me with big cheesy grins. What? Uh. Ack! Um. (There exists video of my absolutely gobsmacked reaction but given that it mostly shows me repeating “What are you doing here?” in a squeaky thunderstruck voice, I don’t think I’ll work to hard to show anyone where it is. It also shows just how much taller than me my children are. Generally not flattering footage.)
This was the first genuine surprise Frank has pulled off in decades. He coordinated with the kids – and apparently the neighbors – to get them home for a belated birthday surprise. As he would explain, he figured the only thing I really wanted for my birthday was more family time so that’s what he got me. And he’s right.
After 15 or 20 rounds of hugs, when I was truly convinced that they were here and were going to stay for a little while, we wandered to one of our favorite places – Louie’s Wine Dive – where they make the most fabulous fish and chips (gluten free, of course) – and talked and laughed our way through dinner while a jazz trio played. I heard about roommate issues, girlfriend and ex-girlfriend issues, rugby matches and salsa dancing. We told stories from our recent trip and generally had a regular family dinner. It was a priceless gift.
Because getting the kids to KC was as much planning as Frank could manage, we had nothing on the agenda for Saturday. Frank and I ran errands while the kids got some homework done – very pedestrian, I know. Then it was off to the West Bottoms for some antiquing. As it was “First Friday” weekend, all the antique shops in the West Bottoms were open. We prowled through rooms full of trash and treasures and managed to pick up a few items of interest before grabbing a snack – the Food Truck Mafia was out in force. Then home to have the neighbors over for drinks, cheese and charcuterie. Finally, we ended the evening the only way that made sense: a family screening of Animal House. Nothing but class in the Cannon household!
Easter Su
nday started with a run with Jesse, something we haven’t done together in years. Then a full fry up including homemade tattie scones followed by church. I could almost forgive the sea of people who would only attend church on Easter and who prevented us from sitting together as a family. Then several runs to the airport and they were gone.
I think it took nearly as long to clean up after them as they were actually here for a visit but I don’t mind. They bridged the distance for me, and that’s what matters.

she did daycare way back when. Duncan and Jesse spent wonderful hours with this amazing woman who helped us cement the foundation for the fine adults my kids have become. As often happens, we got consumed with our lives and didn’t keep in touch very well, occasionally running into each other at store. But the ties run deep and as we marveled at serendipity and for caught up on the last several years over drinks as the banks of the Mississippi drifted by.

Although St. Patrick’s day is not quite here yet, we went to the Brookside St. Patrick’s day “Warm Up” parade yesterday. It is ostensibly a neighborhood event covering about 2 miles of local streets through the middle of Brookside. We live on the border of Brookside and Waldo and so had to walk about 3/4 mile north to get to the parade route. I wasn’t sure what to expect, I had seen neighborhood parades before – our old St. Andrew’s used to do one on the 4th of July – but this was something else. There were thousands of people lining the streets, lots of little kids with front row seats and shopping bags. Lots of parents in lawn chairs with keg cups and cans in koozies. Police shut down the streets along the parade route. Our new St. Andrew’s was at the start of the route and they had a lawn party for kids with face painting and a bouncy castle.



ust barely inside the city limits. Yet about halfway through my run I came upon the Catamaran Resort where we had stayed when we first moved to San Diego from Massachusetts. Even though we drove across country on “vacation” (with all the flotsam and jetsam that didn’t make it into the moving van stuffed in the back seat with me and my brother), the moving van took longer and we ended up spending about 2 weeks in the hotel just waiting. We’ve stayed there since then as well and my clearest memory is of the plastic balls that floated on top of the jacuzzi to keep the heat in. They made awesome projectiles for bored teenagers back in the day.











When the former John Cougar took the stage to great applause, it was to open with 3 songs that I (and apparently most of the crowd) didn’t know. Very bluesy instead of the bluegrass style on the most recent album of his we bought – “No Better Than This” which came out in 2010. This was the tour for his “Plain Spoken” CD so I may have to check that on out as it’s much more my style. His voice wasn’t in top form and he admitted that they considered canceling the concert but the performance was enjoyable nonetheless. Especially considering that for his biggest hits, he didn’t need to sing at all; the crowd did that for him.