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The cold stuff has eased off considerably, with only a few deep coughs and a bit of snozzliness in a given hour. This may be due to cold meds finally being enough to hold it at bay; we'll see. Anyway, today I'm mostly left with much dizziness (lots of blue sparkly dots, wheee!) and a rather uncalled-for degree of weariness. I can deal with that, sort of. By taking it easy and reading a lot and snuggling the beastlet, who is helping me type.

My voice is barely starting to reappear. I have a tiny thready I-am-5-years-old sort of voice, which is not at all the sort of voice I actually had at 5. Somewhere around that age, I was in a fundraiser bridal fashion show for my grandmother's church -- I wore flower girl dresses -- and several old family friends permanently have an impression of me as the bitty little blonde girl who calmly but firmly corrected the pastor/MC when he called me Melissa. I never really went through a soft-spoken phase, except the ones like these that are virally induced.

(ETA: I am corrected. The MC was not the pastor, and there was no fund-raising, just a bridal fashion show for the fun of people who liked that sort of thing. So now you know.)

I continue to feel like rereading things, but since I have a long mental list of stuff I've meant to reread, that's not a problem. Unlike most of my lists, though, it's only a mental list, so I will be winging it again in just a minute here. Despite missing the Dreamhaven reading for Dr. Mike's birthday/memorial (sigh), I don't really feel like it's time for one of his, so...well. We'll see what comes up, when I look around downstairs.

Re: Same here - child voices

Date: 2007-04-11 06:28 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mrissa.livejournal.com
Oh, we're pretty relentlessly polite here, too. So yes, your grandmother's name. And the idea that you were permitted to call her Ganny. Most northern children who can't say "gr" are saying "gamma" instead.

When I was veryvery small, I called my grandmother Dramma. She worked with me one whole vacation on it: "Rissy, say grr." "GRRRRR!" "Say Grrrramma." "Grrrr--Dramma. [giggles]" By the end of the vacation -- I am told I was 15 months old -- I was calling her Gramma pretty consistently, and then she wanted me to switch back and I wouldn't.

Re: Same here - child voices

Date: 2007-04-12 02:11 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dichroic.livejournal.com
Not my part of the North - I called mine Mom-mom and Pop-pop until they old me I was old enough to switch to Grandmom and Grandpop (only we pronounced it Grammom and Grampop).

For some reason,, cards from my husband's paternal grandparents are generally signed "Grammy and Pops" even though he's never actually called them that. When I first mem them, she introduced herself with "Hi! I'm Gramma!" (Given how hard it often is to figure out what to call your spouse's grandparents, I appreciated that.)

Re: Same here - child voices

Date: 2007-04-12 04:46 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mrissa.livejournal.com
Is it often hard? Oh. I was so head over heels for Grandpa and Grandma Lyzenga from the first time I met them that there was no question that they were Grandpa and Grandma -- it was just convenient that [livejournal.com profile] markgritter had provided me with some grandparents who clearly belonged to me, because otherwise we'd have had to arrange for me to get them some other way. And then the precedent was clear and I was referring to the Gritter grands as "Grandma Gritter" and "Grandpa Gritter" before I'd even met them.

As for my grands, my grandma has my friends call her grandma, if they ask. So.

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