Eat, Drink, And Oh Wait…Just Drink

It dawned on me yesterday that I’ve never had a huge bang up New Year’s Eve. I mean we’ve gone to parties in the past at friends’ houses but I’ve never ridden in a limo or been to Times Square or anything mind blowing to ring in the New Year. And quite honestly I’m secretly a little bit of a home body and that’s fine with me. Hubby and I have dinner reservations at an Italian restaurant and then we’ll probably head home and watch New Year’s Eve coverage on TV and drink some bubbly.

One of the most memorable New Year’s Eves that we spent together was in 1998. A good friend of mine from college invited us to Memphis and I was so excited because we had tickets for a party at the Botanical Gardens. The event was sponsored by a young working professionals philanthropic organization my friend was involved with and I was certain it would be a fabulous soiree. We skipped dinner because we knew there would be a fantastic spread of food. Of course we started drinking before we headed for the party.

We arrived at the venue and it was an absolutely gorgeous setting. The place was filled to the gills with 20-something singles dressed up and dancing their asses off and drinking cheap mixed drinks and beer.

Hubby and I held hands and snaked through the crowd toward the highly anticipated buffet. We were starving. And there it was, the most incredibly (disappointing) sight ever—all you could eat Wendy’s chili.

WTF? (Pardon my French but, frankly, that is what we were both thinking.)

Young women in flirty little black dresses and heels and men in suits and ties were actually standing in line and waiting to fix themselves a bowl of chili. This seemed so wrong. I know the organization was happy to have the evening’s food donated but I would have gladly taken some smoked weenies and cheese squares on fancy toothpicks. Where were the fancy pants hors d’oeuvres?

We’d driven more than three hours for an out of town party, gotten all dressed up and hit the town, and the only available food at the event was being donated by a fast food joint. To make it even more comical for me, the only fast food job I had in my life had been one summer in high school at our small town Wendy’s and it was a particularly heinous experience. Flashbacks to high school and wearing navy polyester pants, a zip up striped top, and a goofy hat and coming home smelling of a single with cheese—-this was not good.

We decided to make the best of it because we were out with a great group of friends and we were all in the same boat. I know at one point some song came on that I loved and I kicked up my heels and catapulted a black high-heeled pump half way across the dance floor. Thankfully I didn’t take out anyone’s eye. Hubby and I ended up drinking our calories that evening, which was unfortunate for both of us the next morning. This was four years before we had Miss C, though, so we could handle it better. And by handle it better I mean we could sleep in the next day and do absolutely nothing that required bright light or noise or rapid movement.

Tonight we’re having a nice quiet dinner out, just the two of us, and sipping on champagne at home from our crystal champagne flutes that we got for our wedding in 1997 and I can’t wait!

What are you doing to ring in 2010?

Beale, Barbecue, A Big Ole Bed, And Midnight At The FedEx Super Hub

One of the great things about being a blogger is the networking opportunities. Oh sure, I’ve yet to be invited to Disney (hint hint) but who needs Mickey and It’s A Small World After All when you have Elvis and rockabilly and blues on Beale just a short car ride from your own driveway?

A few weeks ago a PR representative from FedEx invited me and the fabulous Amy from Milk Breath and Margaritas to tour the FedEx Super Hub in Memphis. I love Memphis and I was excited to have a little mama field trip with Amy who had never been to the land of Elvis and ribs and the blues. We hit the road mid-morning (I admit I was a little late getting our rental car and panicked momentarily when they didn’t have a car but we got a free upgrade at Enterprise to a Nissan Xterra which I totally loved driving since I’m an SUV mama) and headed to the beautiful historic Peabody hotel. As many times as I’ve been to Memphis I’ve never stayed at The Peabody, although my best friend and I hit the Peabody spa last summer. It is truly a gorgeous hotel and a must see when in Memphis.

I didn’t know much about FedEx as a company but of course it’s a very visible company and we receive a lot of FedEx deliveries at home and at work. I left thoroughly impressed with their entire operation, which is NO small entity. Amy and I met with our wonderful host and tour guide Matt Ceniceros, the resident social media geek at FedEx, who is genuinely interested in developing a rapport with the mommy blog community. FedEx Chairman, President, and CEO Fred Smith and several executives at FedEx, such as Sheila Harrell, Vice President for Customer Service Operations, who was an absolute joy to meet, are now blogging. Harrell, who has an 11-year-old daughter, said the positive reaction she’s received from some of the posts she’s written about her own quest to find work/life balance has been amazing.

After some free time on Beale Street, the highlight of our trip was a late night tour of the FedEx Express Super Hub with special media passes. Basically FedEx takes over the Memphis International Airport every night in a well-orchestrated display of productivity ingenuity. Everything has a backup plan and the backup plans have backup plans. It’s quite amazing for a company that launched in 1973 with just 14 small aircraft that now has the second largest commercial air fleet in the U.S. and has more than 290,000 employees worldwide.

fedex


Me with FedEx VP Sheila Harrell and fellow Nashville mommy blogger Amy from Milkbreath And Margaritas.


Here are some fascinating facts about the FedEx Super Hub:

  • More than 15,000 employees work at “the hub”

  • The facilities are located across 500 acres at the Memphis International Airport

  • Operating hours: 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year

  • More than 5,000 flights pass through the Memphis Super Hub monthly with an average of 1.5 million packages sorted through the facility daily

  • More than 300 miles of conveyor belts create a state-of-the-art automated package-sorting system capable of processing 500,000 packages an hour (!)

I have to admit that since touring FedEx I notice every white FedEx delivery vehicle on the road…and I see them constantly! Amy and I were able to view the entire impressive operation from an observation tower and were given a tour by van and also by foot. The planes are landing constantly and everything is timed precisely down to the second. FedEx takes their packages VERY seriously. It’s truly a science.


We got back to the Peabody shortly after 2 a.m. as the Super Hub media tours start after 11 p.m. and I crashed in my king-size bed. Isn’t it a beauty? Yes I took a picture of my bed. I was that excited about burrowing into the plush high thread count midst of it with as many pillows as I could muster.


peabody-hotel-bed


Thankfully Matt spared us from any early morning meetings. About 10:15 we headed out to tour the packaging design and development area at FedEx. It was completely fascinating to hear and see how boxes are engineered, designed, and tested to ship everything from furniture to Mother’s Day flowers. We even met the engineer responsible for the seabound FedEx packages in the Tom Hanks film Cast Away. The packages had to be specially designed to withstand being tossed around at “sea” and being waterlogged on the set for days.

Before we headed home to Nashville we enjoyed a delightful lunch with FedEx executive and fellow working mom Sheila Harrell in her office with a beautiful view of the FedEx headquarters’ campus. Sheila was truly down to earth. She began her career with FedEx 30 years ago (FedEx launched in 1973) and is one of FedEx’s most popular bloggers, along with Chairman, President, and CEO Fred Smith. Sheila spoke with Amy and I about blogging and other issues relevant to being a working mom and it was clear to me that no matter if you are a behind-the-scenes at work  mom like me or a high-powered C-suite executive, all working moms deal with the same day-to-day issues of balancing motherhood and career.

It’s easy to see why FedEx is one of the world’s most admired companies. The culture is amazing. Harrell spoke passionately about customer service. FedEx boasts the fastest response rate in the industry with less than a 2-second call pickup response time, and with 283,000 calls a day that is no small feat. At the heart of the culture is the belief that the customer is always first and something FedEx calls The Purple Promise. It may sound hokey, but after touring FedEx I believe it’s true.

Thanks FedEx and to Matt for the invitation to get a behind the scenes look at your company!

Do you have any questions for Matt about FedEx or any ideas about how FedEx could work with the mommy blog community?

p.s. FedEx is now the official shipping provider of Rendezvous ribs ya’ll! Get ya some fine slab of rib goodness shipped straight to your doorstep. You won’t regret it (but you don’t want to wear white while eating the ribs.)

Seven-Year Itch, A Great Giveaway, And I’ll Never Work At Hooters

I had a great time in Memphis with my best friend this past weekend, even though I was still a tad under the weather. We both got much needed massages Saturday at Gould’s Day Spa in that beautiful downtown Memphis icon, the Peabody Hotel, and ate dinner at Rendezvous. I then slept the sleep of royalty because there were no small people to wake me up at 2 a.m.

How often do you get massages? Every time I get one I nearly kick myself for not doing it more often. This was the first massage I’ve had all year and I had to will myself to not come off the table when she worked the kinks out of my shoulders.


Taking a carriage ride around downtown Memphis with our four-legged companion, Hazel.



I need a little blog break this week, but true to real life I’m mouthing off elsewhere. I’m on deadline at work and I’ve got several things I want to get accomplished before Miss C starts FIRST GRADE August 11. Sniff.

Last week at Deep South Moms I wrote about exploring a possible job opportunity. It turns out it wasn’t something I would be interested in, but I’m glad I investigated it and went ahead with a phone screening interview, as nerve wracking as it was. I haven’t had a job interview in more than seven years, so it was a good exercise in resume updating, at the very least. The entire process proved so distracting, however, that I qualified for The Worse Mother Of The Year Award by completely forgetting to take Miss C to her weekly ballet class. So far she hasn’t mentioned it, but I may have to pay off her instructor and the other parents this week so they don’t ask where we were.

All kidding aside, the entire process validated something I already knew. My current flexible work schedule is something I can’t and won’t give up. I think God was trying to tell me, “Simmah down girl…you’ve got it made!”

I also wrote recently at Deep South Moms about finding my fashion mojo. I’m probably only two pima cotton t-shirts away from morphing into a Lands End poster mom, but I have added some fun pieces to my wardrobe recently.

At Savvy Housewife I’m having a PeaceLoveMom CARE t-shirt giveaway. It’s not only the hippest t-shirt ever, but it benefits a great cause. I’ve also posted a great roundup of online shopping sources for school uniforms to help you save time and money.

July is coming to a close and I’ve been remiss in thanking Sonia Sunshine for a highly esteemed committee induction. My boobs are more flopsy wopsy than itty bitty, nothing a great bra can’t remedy, but how great is it to have your boobs recognized on the Internet.

Note to self, quit using the word great.

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