Sunday, September 1, 2013

Manna From Heaven

When my brother and I were little, he had a metal toy firetruck. After learning the firetruck was up in my parents' attic, Skeeter had been begging for weeks for my dad to get it down. Despite the blazing heat, my dad crawled into the attic one morning a few weeks ago to get the firetruck for him.



I stood with Skeeter as he waited anxiously at the bottom of the attic steps for my dad. Suddenly, I felt something smack me on the head. I looked up and saw my dad's feet dangling through the ceiling!



He'd been carrying a box of my old toys, but he took a misstep and came crashing through the ceiling feet-first. As he did, the box of toys he was holding spilled through the hole in the ceiling and came raining down on Skeeter like manna from Heaven! While I was absolutely horrified to see my father dangling through the ceiling, Skeeter just stared in awestruck wonder at all of the toys that now surrounded us. Then he looked at me with big eyes and said, "This is the greatest day of my LIIIIIIIFE!"


Meanwhile, his Papa continue to dangle from the ceiling, halfway through. Eventually, he did slide the rest of the way through and got down safely. The first thing Skeeter said to him after surviving his ordeal? "Papa, did you get my firetruck?"

No, Papa did NOT get his firetruck. What Papa DID get was some serious cuts and scrapes, a large dose of pain medication, and a hefty bill from the roof repair man. 

Monday, August 5, 2013

Rollerskating to Work

"You have the best luck with cars KB! I totally wish I was you!" - said no one EVER.

In 2010, my beautiful, black Camaro died a tragic death by fire. In case you missed the blog about it (or the radio announcements that day, or the 9 mile traffic jam), you can read the whole story here:
http://calamitykatiebeth.blogspot.com/2013/04/smokin-hot-firefighters-and-cold.html

But in short...it burned down.



Post-fire, the Camaro was replaced by my Mustang convertible.


At first, things were going pretty well for my lil' Mustang and me. Then one morning, after a long, hard rain, I hopped in the 'Stang to go to work and my windshield wipers would not go off. Despite the fact that it was a sunny, clear morning, I drove to work with my windshield wipers going full blast! Ugh. After 24 hours of driving around looking like an idiot, my wipers finally stopped. Relieved, I considered the incident a "fluke." The next week it began raining as I headed home from work. I flipped on my wipers and...nothing. I drove home on the interstate going 25 miles an hour with my hazard lights flashing, hunched over the wheel like a little old lady. 

One week in the shop and $2,000 later, the 'Stang was fixed. It turns out the rain had gotten into my dashboard and burned out my electrical system. Poor, but glad to have my car back, I began the 30 minute drive from the dealership to my house. As I was exiting the interstate I sensed movement on the side of the road to my left. As I looked over I made eye contact with a DEER!...about .006 seconds before it pranced headfirst into my driver's side door, and then bounced down the side of my car, crushing in my driver's side door handle, denting my rear tire well, and smashing out my tail light. 


With a car directly in front of me, and one directly behind me, it is like the deer CHOOSE me for it's suicide gallop. I'm just guessing it was suicide, I was too traumatized to stop the 'Stang to see if Kamikaze Bambi lived or not. Not only was I traumatized from committing (probable) deer murder, I also had another $1,000 worth of car damage...less than an hour after getting it out of the shop! 

After eating Ramen Noodles 3 meals a day for a year to finish paying off all of the car repairs, the 'Stang and I had another sweet few months of respite. 

Then, last month, as I was rolling back the convertible top to enjoy an evening drive, I suddenly hear mechanic squealing followed by a ripping sound. Yep, my mechanics broke and in the process ripped 2 holes in the top of my car! I called the Ford dealership to fix it and the told me to bring it in. They charged me $200 just to tell me, "Yep, your roof is broken. But we don't fix convertible roofs. You'll have to take it to a specialty top shop." Uh, so I just paid $200 for you to tell me my roof was broken? Really? That is why I am HERE. Sweet goodness. 

One week and $2,500 later I got the 'Stang back with a completely new roof. SURELY things would be fine now. Negative. After today's monsoon I got in my car to grab some dinner before heading back for church. As I turned on my car my windshield wipers kicked on...by themselves. Like a horrible flashback, I drove through West Little Rock in the evening sun with my windshield wipers going full blast and making a horrendous squeaking sound as they dragged across my completely dry windshield. I'd try to occasionally play it cool by squirting washer fluid like I was "cleaning" my windshield, but after about time number 10 of doing that I ran out of washer fluid. Story of my life. 

As I sat in the Panera drive through line, I saw people staring at me like, "Aw, that poor girl. She does not even know how to turn her windshield wipers off. Bless her lil' heart." And I'm like, "Helloooooo. I know they are on and I know how to turn them off okay!? It just won't WORK!" Sheesh. 



The highlight of the evening came after church. Some guys from church suggested I just pull the windshield wiper fuse out of my fuse box to stop the constant wiping. Sounds so logical! Not being a girly-girl dependent on some guy to save me, I decided to go home and do it myself. "This won't take long. I'll just find the fuse box, get my manual to figure out which fuse, and pull it. It'll take 5 minutes and I'll be back in business!"...20 minutes later I found what I believe (but am not entirely certain) may POSSIBLY be my fuse box. I opened that baby up and held the manual up to it...who draws car manuals?!? Seriously!? If this is my fuse box, it looks nothing like the stinkin' manual.


After 15 minutes of randomly plugging and unplugging things (and praying to God not to get electrocuted), I gave up. 

After some internal debate this evening, I've decided to just forget the 'Stang. I think I am just going to park it on my lawn like a decoration and just roller skate to work. "See what a nice car I have? Isn't it pretty? Thanks! Now if you'll excuse me I have to put my knee pads on and roll to my office."

Downside: Possible death.
Upside: Save on gas money.
Downside: Would arrive to work sweaty, out of breath, and most likely bleeding.
Upside: Would get in super great shape.

I can just see myself rolling into the parking lot like, "WHEEEEE! MY BUTT HURTS BUT I'M HEEEEERE!!!"





Thursday, August 1, 2013

My Mom 2.0

I'm not sure when it happened, but at some point during the last few years I have turned into my mother! It hasn't been an overnight change, I think it has been more of a slow progression. Nevertheless, I daily find myself saying things I never thought would come out of my mouth.

For years my mom has been known around our house as "Little Miss Neat" because she is constantly cleaning, talking about cleaning, or talking about how she needs to be cleaning. Despite the presence of 2 dogs and a five-year-old, her house is always meticulous. Without realizing she's doing it, she sometimes will follow you around the house cleaning up after you. You put your mostly empty glass down on the table...swoosh! Little Miss Neat whisks it off to the dishwasher. You toss something in the trashcan...swoop! Off to the big garage trash can it goes! You dry your hands on one of the bathroom hand-towels...bam! It's in the washing machine as soon as you unlock the bathroom door.

Last week mom was on vacation, so I stopped by my parent's house mid-week to make sure that my dad had clean laundry and wasn't eating bacon three meals a day. I walked in and the kitchen was COVERED in piles of mail and old newspapers, and the cabinets were COVERED in crumbs! While the KB from 5 years ago would have hardly noticed, I saw the mess and was utterly horrified! 


Before I could catch myself, I said, "DAAAAAD! How do you not see all these crumbs on the cabinet! AUGH! And why is the mail just scattered around!" I immediately walked over and took a rag to the cabinet, scrubbing the surface within an inch of it's life, and then organizing the mail in a tidy, chronological pile and tossing all of the old newspapers in the trash can. As I sighed with relief, I suddenly realized I had become Little Miss Neat...the 2nd Generation.

Then there is the 5-year-old. Every time I open my mouth to talk to him, I turn into my mother. Comments such as:
  • Inside voice!
  • Where is your helmet? You can't ride on your Power Wheels without your helmet! I don't care if it only goes 0.3 miles an hour.
  • Skittles are not a fruit. 
  • No, you can't wear your Superman cape to church.
  • Say "Excuse me" when you burp! Were you raised by wolves?!
  • No dessert or chocolate milk until after dinner! A GOOD dinner. There are kids out there who are so hungry they'd rather have food than toys!
  • It's "Dad and me," not "me and Dad." 
  • Have you eaten ANYTHING green today?
Like my mom, I have also perfected "The Look." 

One look from me can bring even the most defiant toddlers into line.             

I have also developed mom's sense of humor. Mom and I can laugh at just about anything. We can't sit together at weddings anymore...or funerals. Because, even through tears, we will somehow end up giving each other the giggles. 

The 2 times in my life I have come closest to literally almost wetting my pants were both with my mother. Once on a bus in the middle of Italy, and once in the Bryant Target where I literally had to run from the store screaming, "Don't get close to me!" because I knew if she made me laugh anymore that I would seriously pee myself. 

In other news, mom is upgrading from a Droid to an iPhone tomorrow, and Dad is getting an iPad. Let the hilarity ensue! There will most definitely be enough for a blog on THAT. 









Thursday, July 11, 2013

5 Things I Like About Having The Beetus

Despite what you may think, having The Beetus comes with a lot of perks!

Perk Number One: Unsolicited Compliments! 
The vast majority of diabetics are Type 2's, and all the news ever talks about is the Type 2 Diabetes epidemic. Type 2's tend to be middle-age or older have a bunch of co-morbidity factors like obesity, heart disease, etc. So when people find out I'm diabetic I usually get one of the following reactions:
"Diabetic? But you're so skinny!"
or
"Diabetic? But you're so young!"
or
"Diabetic? But you're in such great shape!"

Compliments compliments! I'm all, "Why thanks! I workout."



Perk Number Two: Being Movie Theater Royalty
One of the things that can get you kicked out of a movie theater is getting busted sneaking in your own snacks. Movie theaters make a killing on their overpriced snacks and they do not like people cheating by bringing in their own food! However, if you have The Beetus you can carry in whatever you want. When you are asked about your purse bursting at the seams with food you just flash your insulin and say, "I've gots The Beetus!" and suddenly theater staffers can't move fast enough to help you. "Oh, okay ma'am. No problem. Can I get you anything?" And I'm like, "Nah, I've got a hot dog, some Twizzlers, Sun Chips, Thin Mints and a whole bag of popcorn in here. I just need a Coke...actually, make that a DIET Coke...gotta cut back somewhere, you know?"



Perk Number Three: Technology!
By now you know I am obsessed with my Dexcom. My HOT PINK SPARKLY Dexcom in it's rainbow polkadot case! I'm not the only one who is obsessed with it. During my weekend of blindness, my Mom had to check my glucose for me so she became familiar with my Dexcom. Now she checks it just for the heck of it. 
PAT: "How is your blood sugar. Want me to check your Dexcom?"
ME: "Nah, I'm fine. Thanks."
PAT: (Checks it anyway) "NINETY-SEVEN!"
ME: "Sigh. Thanks mom."

Skeeter likes to check it too because he is so proud that he can read the numbers. Although he sometimes reads them wrong and nearly gives me a heart attack.
SKEETER: "Look Tates, it says three-hundred and one!" (Smiles proudly)
ME: "WHAT!? 301!?" (Check Dexcom) "That's one hundred and three dude. You are reading it upside down."

Perk Number Four: Snacks!
Before a few years ago, rapid acting insulin (you just shoot up right before you eat and then chow down!) didn't exist. So PWB's (People with The Beetus) would have to take a massive dose of long-acting insulin that would just continually drop their blood sugar all day. So if they didn't eat regularly they would pass out! That doesn't really happen any more, but most people don't know that...so I get offered snacks ALL THE TIME. And as previously discussed, in detail, I love me some snacks! People are like, "Sweetie, do you need a snack?" and I'm like, "Uh, "need?" No. Want? Absolutely!" 

Perk Number Five: Skinny Jeans!
If you aren't careful with your insulin, it can make you gain weight. BUT, a lot of the oral medications they give 1.5 diabetics like me can make you LOSE weight. After a recent trip to the doctor, my endocrinologist put me on a new medication, and real life his warning was, "Just pay attention and make sure you eat enough. This medication tends to cause loss of appetite and weight loss, so don't forget to eat a little something, even if you don't feel hungry." I was like, "Sorry, what did you say? I completely stopped listening after "loss of appetite and weight loss." I couldn't hear you over the sound of my own euphoria! Now if you'll excuse me, I need to get home and dust off my skinny jeans! BAM!"

Perk Number Six: A Puppy!
So, there are these dogs called "DADs" which is short for Diabetes Alert Dog. Real life. When my friend Heidi first told me about them I thought she'd lost her mind, but they exist! Dogs can smell the changes in blood sugar, so they can train dogs to basically work like my Dexcom. The dog will alert you if your blood sugar is getting too high or too low. MIND BLOWN! Unfortunately, since my cheap-skate insurance company wouldn't even pay for my Dexcom, I highly doubt I'm going to convince them to buy me a puppy. I can only imagine how horribly that conversation would go. "Um, hi. I am ensured by your company and I was wondering if my insurance policy covers dogs? Like, a medical alert dog to monitor my blood? No, I'm not drunk. Why do you ask?"



Perk Number Seven: Excuses, Excuses 
When PWB's get low blood sugar they often get cranky. When PWB's get high blood sugar we often feel tired and lethargic. So, pretty much whatever bad mood I'm in can be covered by using The Beetus as an excuse. "Sorry I snapped at you earlier my blood sugar was a little low." Um, but not really, you just annoy me...
"Sorry I didn't get the yard mowed today. My blood sugar was high so I was pretty tired." Um, but not really, I was just in the middle of a Vampire Diaries marathon.
I'm not saying I ever do that...I'm just saying I COULD. Mwahahaha!

Perk Number Eight: Teacher's Pet
Every three months I go to see my endocrinologist for a check up. I love making people proud of me, and my endo is no exception. He's all, "Your A1C level looks great! All your numbers are great! You're healthier than most non-diabetic people!" On the outside I'm like, "Oh great. That's really good. Thanks." But on the inside I'm like, "BAM! Rooooooocked it! I am the smartest woman aliiiiiiiiive! I'm a freaking DIABETES NINJA!" 


Perk Number Nine: Fearlessness!
Nobody likes getting shots and I was no exception...until I got The Beetus. Now I take at least one shot a day, sometimes two or three if I decide to eat lots of high-carb delicious treats. So now, I laugh in the face of shots! Everyone else is like, "Eeek! I have to go get my flu shot today!" or "Ugh. I have to go to the doctor and he is going to poke my finger. I hate it!" or "Oh no. I have to go get that new vaccine. I hate needles!" But I am so comfortable with needles at this point it doesn't even phase me. It is literally such a common part of my routine that it is on my "Need to do it but do it on autopilot" list, like brushing my teeth and combing my hair. By the time my morning coffee kicks in and I become self-aware, I've already done my shot. Boom. 



Perk Number Ten: Healthy Eating
I have always been a healthy eater, but now I am even better. Partly because having The Beetus has made me more aware of what I am ingesting, but let's be honest, it's mostly because I am lazy. If PWB's want to eat something high carb we totally can, but we have to calculate it so we know how much insulin to use to compensate. I HATE math, and I am just too lazy most of the time. So trips to restaurants lately have been going a lot like this, "Yes, I'll have the chili-cheese fries please. Let me just calculate the carbs in that. Let's see, I need to divide the number of carbs by 15 and then multiply that by...er...uh...does anyone have a pen? I can't do math in my head...uh, let's see...uh...oh, forget it. I'll have the grilled chicken."

 VS. 




Sunday, June 23, 2013

The Blonde Leading the Blind

After an allergic reaction to some contact solution left me completely blind Friday night, I found myself at the mercy of my mom, dad, and Skeeter. With eyes swollen completely shut, I could not see a thing. After a trip to the emergency room for eye drops, antibiotics, antihistamines, and pain meds (the pain was excruciating!), I came home with mom and dad to be cared for. It is interesting to me how different my "treatment" was from each of my family members.

MOM- My mom played the perfect nurse. She held my hand and walked me from room to room, she helped me with my eye drops and made sure I ate and took my medicine. She was unendingly patient in meeting my every need. She even learned to work my Dexcom so she could read my blood sugar numbers to me, in fact, she is kind of obsessed with it now. She's all, "eat some cheesecake and then I'll tell you your number!" Because I was completely blind, I had to teach her to work my iPhone so that she could respond to my emails and texts, and despite her protests, she did really well!


DAD- Dad's idea of "taking care" of me consisted of parking me on the couch next to him while he watched his favorite tv shows, and occasionally describing what was happening on the show. "That noise was the semi-truck blowing up." "The main guy just fell down a flight of stairs, but he got back up." Etc. When I would get up to feel my way to the bathroom or the kitchen, he wouldn't even warn me about objects in my way. He would just watch me smack face first into them and then say, "Wall!" or "Table!" After the ER doctor had assured him I wouldn't be permanently blind, he found the entire "blindness" situation quite humorous. Clearly he will be winning no awards for his nursing skills. 



BROTHER- He sent me a text saying, "Heard you were blind for a while. That sucks! Love ya." No nursing awards for him either.

SKEETER- LIfe with a four-year-old is already interesting. Being BLIND with a four-year-old is down right horrifying. For starters, anyone with kids knows that when kids are making noise everything is fine, it's when they go QUIET that you have to worry. So the entire weekend became a 36 hour-long game of Marco/Polo. Anytime he was being quiet I'd yell, "Marco!" So that he would yell, "Polo!" and I would know what vicinity he was in. After the first few hours of my blindness, he had an epiphany and turned to my parents and said, "You guys! Since Tates can't see us it means we can sneak up on her ALL THE TIME!" After that I would be sitting quietly by myself when I would suddenly feel breathing on my neck, or a little hand creeping around by my foot, or hot breath on my face. Then Skeeter would yell "I SNEEKED UP ON YOU AND YOU DIDN'T SEE ME! Mwahahaha!" 


Aside from the sneakiness, he was actually a really good nurse. He would take my hand in his little hand and walk me from place to place. He would bring me water bottles from the fridge, and he would describe everything with lots of details while walking me around. "That breeze you are feeling is the fan. We are in the living room." "That sound you are hearing is me eating a granola bar." However, we apparently need to nail down the difference between left and right. Several times he would be holding my hand and would say, "Okay Tates, now turn left." WHACK! "Oops. I meant right." 

Now that I have my vision back, I can see all of the bruises I have accumulated from a weekend of blundering blindly around my parents' house.  

The only other issue that occurred during my blindness was that I was not available to ensure that Ot didn't:
1. Survive only on chocolate milk, provided by his grandpa while I couldn't see it.
2. Make sure his teeth were brushed properly and that he didn't just wet his toothbrush.
3. Dress him for church Sunday morning. 

I always dress him in cutesy "preppy" outfits. Yes, I have been known to occasionally send him out in a sweater-vest and dockers. I like preppy boy clothes. This morning after church when I had regained the majority of my vision in my left eye and partial vision in my right eye, I saw that he had attended church in THIS:

That's right, in the 90+ degree weather, he attended church camo boots, jeans, and a "Naps are the enemy" t-shirt. I guess I should just be thankful that he did not sneak by me in a cape and his Spiderman rainboots. 

Sunday, June 9, 2013

New Baby

My friend crush, Diabetic Danica,
 
once mentioned that having a CGM was like having a baby monitor for your diabetes. At the time I was like, "That is a super weird analogy Danica (I refer to her on a first name basis, because in my head we are already besties)." 

But now that I have my very own CGM, I realize it is the perfect analogy! I feel like a new mom. My baby is Baby Diabetes, and my baby monitor is my CGM. 
Most of the time my baby is very well behaved. As long as I eat right, exercise, and take my shot at night I am good to go. But occasionally Baby Di can get a little needy. If she is ever going to misbehave, it is guaranteed to be during the middle of the night. 

For instance, last night I spent the night at my parents' house with Skeeter. My "baby monitor" started beeping at midnight telling me I was low.
The upside of having The Beetus is that it gives you the right to do some midnight snacking, and I LOVE a good snack! 

So I popped out of bed and went to the kitchen where I helped myself to a few crackers and some peanut butter. Then I went back to bed. A mere 15 minutes later, Baby Di woke me up AGAIN to tell me I was too low. Now, I like to eat, but I also need my beauty sleep. I am not a nice person without sleep. So this time I was like, "Come on Baby Di! Pull yourself together. Mommy needs her rest!" Back to the kitchen I went for snack number 2. This time the sound of my crunching woke my mom. A good mom would stay up with her diabetic kid while she snacks, but a GREAT mom joins in on the snacking. So there we were at 12:15am, eating peanut butter and vanilla wafers with 2 big glasses of milk. Finally, my baby monitor told me Baby Di was good to go and back to bed we went.

Today in church my mom could barely hold her head up. Her sermon notes kept devolving into little squiggles. It wasn't because Pastor Greg's message was boring, it was because she'd been up in the night snacking with her kid! 

My dad and Skeeter slept through this entire event. Because, while I am the world's lightest sleeper (like, if a mouse toots within a five mile radius of me the noise will wake me up), my dad and Skeeter could sleep through a Riverdance performance. Or a hurricane. Or a stampede of elephants wearing tap shoes and walking on tin foil. 



Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Pin Fails

Fantasy Football is to men what Pinterest is to women. It allows women to "shop" without spending any money, "do crafts" without ever having to touch fabric or glue, and plan everything from a dream vacation to their dream home. Sure, 99% of the things we pin will NEVER happen. But in the unlikely event I ever become a millionaire, I already have my pin boards prepped and ready! That way I can show my architect, personal trainer, personal shopper, and personal chef exactly what I want.

Aside from the fun of planning imaginary futures, Pinterest is also a fabulous place for recipes and DIY project ideas. Many of the Pinterest ideas are great!..but there are some that I think mean women put on there just so they can sit back and laugh at we goobs at home foolish enough to try them. Below are some of my most recent Pinterest fails.

1. "Spray wet nails with Pam and they will instantly be dry!"


I tried this at a girl's night we were having at a friend's house. I had just painted my toenails. So I took pam and sprayed the nails. Not only were they not "instantly dry", I got Pam all over the floor that I then had to clean. Then I smudged my (still wet!) nails checking to see if they were dry. As if that wasn't cringe-worthy enough, my toes were so greasy I couldn't even put my shoes back on. I slipped and slid on one slick foot and one dry foot all the way to the car. I'm sure her neighbor's thought I was trying to pimp walk. FAIL.

2. "Put coconut oil in your hair. When you wash it out your hair will be silky smooth and shiny."


After standing in my living room for half an hour, afraid to touch anything for fear of getting coconut oil on it, I took a shower and washed my hair just like the instructions said. First, my hair was NOT silky and shiny. Even after shampooing it twice it still felt kind of waxy. I thought maybe if I dried it the "silky and shiny" would kick in, so I blowed dried my hair straight. When I turned off the dryer and looked in the mirror, it looked like I'd stuck my finger in a light socket. My hair was waxy, dull, and smelled like crayons. I not only had to wear my hair up for a week, but even after 3 more washes I could not get the crayon smell out of my hair. FAIL.

3. "If you are trying to eat low-carb or if you have diabetes, try using sheets of toasted Sushi Nori as a yummy, low-carb alternative to bread. You can also eat it as a snack on its own and it will not spike blood sugar."


I should have known as soon as I pulled it out of the package that it was not going to be good. For starters, it smells like fish food. Literally, fish food. Second, no food that is that color green is ever "yummy." I convinced myself that Nori must be like broccoli. It doesn't look good or smell good, but with a little salt, pepper and cheese it's a great snack. So I took a tentative bite...there are no words to describe how quickly my gag reflex kicked in. Every instinct in my body was like, "THIS ISN'T FOOOOOOOD! GET IT OUUUUUT!" In the words of Skeeter, "It made my tongue cry." FAIL.

4. "Rub mustard oil on your legs. They will be touchably soft and the oil prevents scarring and spider veins." 



Since I trip and injure myself pretty much daily, my legs have an impressive number of scars. Plus, who doesn't want to prevent spider veins? Following Pinterest's directions, after my evening shower I cracked open my newly purchased bottle of mustard oil and rubbed it all over my legs. This seems obvious, but my first reaction was, "Wow. This is really oily." Deciding it probably took a bit for the oil to absorb, I went about my nightly routine. Annoyingly, everything I touched or bumped into got marked with a greasy streak. After de-streaking my house, I decided to sit at the kitchen table and catch up on some work emails while I waited for the rest of the oil to "absorb." I hopped up in my bar-height chair and literally slid straight across and landed butt-first on the floor. It looked like I had just pulled a Bo Duke hood slide. 


After my Dukes of Hazzard moment I decided to give up on having silky, scarless, spider veinless legs and take another shower. FAIL.

5. "Mix 1/4 cup of blue Listerine, 1/4 cup of vinegar, and 1/2 cup of warm water. Soak feet for 10 minutes, and when you take them out they will be soft and flip-flop ready!"


My mom is anti-pedicure. She doesn't like people touching her feet. When I saw this on Pinterest I was like, "Oh perfect! Mom could do this to get her feet summer-ready without having to get a pedicure." So I sent her the directions. Tonight I got a text from her that said, "Pinterest is wack. Blue Listerine plus vinegar plus water equals two blue feet! I'm an idiot. This worked like Easter egg dye." Sure enough, it looked like she'd been out kicking Smurfs. Whoopsie! I guess I won't be receiving that "Daughter of the Year" award this year. Sorry mom!