Happy Tax Day; I hope you’re not as delinquent as I am.

At approximately 10:04 tonight (April 14, two hours prior to April 15), I looked over at Andy and said, “We forgot to do our taxes.”

“Well shit,” he replied.

We’ve had our federal, state and school district returns done for ages and have already gotten our refunds and everything (yay for too much withholding!), but we’ve failed to complete the return for our city taxes.

Again.

We decided that we still had a good 26 hours to get it postmarked, so we’d just deal with it tomorrow… but it got me thinking about my long and sordid history with local taxes.

We currently live in the town in which I grew up. In order to protect the innocent (or guilty, as the case may be), we’ll call that lovely little town Germanville.

Years ago, on one unsuspecting summer night, the Germanville police pulled into our driveway. We all happened to be outside, and my dad went over to see what was up.

“Is this the home of Emily and Anna Burns?” the officer asked my dad, who replied in the affirmative.

“I have a warrant for their arrest,” Barney Fife told him.

My dad, always able to remain unnervingly calm in such situations, said “Oh really. What’s the charge?”

“They haven’t paid their taxes to the city of Germanville,” the officer said.

“Well, there they are,” my dad said, pointing to the eight- and ten-year-old versions of me and my sister as we rode our bikes around the cul-de-sac. “Take them in.”

The officer quickly realized that there was a mistake and fortunately he didn’t cuff us and throw us in the slammer.

But it turns out, he wasn’t wrong, per say, just a little too early.

About 13-ish years later, my husband and I were residing in Germanville but decided we had had enough of big-city life… it seemed we were always stuck in a line of at least three cars at one of the two stoplights in town, and longed for a place with no stoplights at all. So we packed up and moved down the road to Farmerstown.

Despite the fact that we had purchased a home, paid utilities, and were regulars at the town bar bakery, we apparently failed to alert the proper authorities of our residency, because they never sent us any local tax forms. For the entire four years we lived there.

So, we figured that maybe they just didn’t have local taxes in Farmerstown, and we didn’t pay them.

(Now would be the appropriate time for that arrest warrant).

Until about a year and a half after we moved back to Germanville. Then, and only then, Farmerstown sent us income tax forms.

“We didn’t even live there in 2007,” I said to the nice village administrator (who sat in front of us in church every week), “How can we owe taxes?”

“Hmm… you have a point,” she said as she looked over her records. “But you did live here in 2003, 2004, 2005 and 2006.”

Crap.

So last summer, long after the April 15 deadline (and long, long after April 15 of all those previous years), we had to suck it up and pay all the back taxes we owed. And you can bet I booked it down to the city building in Germanville to file our 2007 return with them, too.

So really, you’d think we’d have learned our lesson. Judging by our revelation tonight, we clearly have not.

But it’s cool, we still have 23 hours before the deadline. We’ll make it this time, I’m certain of it. I would really hate for Kate and Sam to have to bail us out of jail.

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Enjoying Today.

I moan and complain a lot about how my kids are growing up too fast, how I want Sammy to just stay a baby (he’s still a baby, right? Even though he’s 1 now??), and how in general time passes too damn quickly. (Except when I was bitching about wanting my pregnancy to be over. The grass is always greener, no?)

But one comment I got on this post (“Does anyone know how to freeze time?”) has really stuck with me, and though I didn’t really get it at the time, I am starting to see it now.

Karen at Pediascribe told me this:
In some respects freezing time would be great. I miss my kids as babies. But in other respects, I’m glad time marches on and they grow older and wiser and morph into little people. We’re just back from vacation and we had the best time with our 11 and 13 yr old kids. It was a totally different trip than when we went when they were 3 and 5. In a different way. In a totally fun way. In a way that could not have happened had I frozen time.

I am really starting to see this with Kate. We do such fun things together now, stuff that Andy and I enjoy as much as she does, and not just in the “Oh this is so fun because I love seeing her have so much fun” kind of way. Karen’s words came back to me the last time we were at Chuck E. Cheese. Kate and I played a fierce game of air hockey (one of my personal faves), and even though she thought she was scoring when the puck went into the goal on her side, we had a blast. We watch tv shows and movies we both enjoy now (she has inherited my love for “Full House,” which makes me ridiculously happy, and seriously she, Andy and I all really liked the new Hannah Montana movie!), we play fun games like Uno, and we read real books together. Just last night I was trying to figure out how old she has to be before I start buying her Sweet Valley Twins books… I can hardly wait. (If only I hadn’t sold my complete collection at a garage sale…).

And while I still look wistfully at the pictures of her as a tiny baby, wishing I had clearer memories of those sleep-deprived, hormonally-imbalanced days, I am so proud of the individual she is becoming, and I look so forward to all the ages and stages she’ll go through in the future.

Except the part when she’s a teenager and hates me. Then I’ll be looking for a way to fast forward time, rather than freeze it.

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I’m (not) Pumpin’ Up the Party Now

Today was a big milestone for me.

I pumped for the very last time.

And I am so relieved.

No more packing and unpacking, or washing all of the 9000 parts every night. No more schleping the pump back and forth to work anymore. No more trips to vacant parking lots in the freezing cold because there’s nowhere in my office to take care of business. No more business trips with a van full of colleagues wondering why I have a heavy Trader Joe’s freezer bag on the way home that I didn’t have on the way there.

No more worrying that I’m going to be pulled over on my way to and from work and have to explain why I’m half naked.

So yeah, I’m relieved.

I have been counting down the days, really, but now I’m surprised to find I am kind of sad about it in a weird way. Sammy will be a year old on Thursday. He’s not a baby anymore. And while I’m planning to continue to nurse him when we’re together, he no longer relies on me when we’re apart.

I’m just not sure I am ready for that.

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