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    92 Days of Summer

    Already yelling at the kids? Try a summer sanity spreadsheet

    Dawn McMullan
    Jun 9, 2013 | 10:05 am

    Editor’s note: We are happy to bring you the opening installment of 92 Days of Summer, a new column from East Dallas mom and longtime writer Dawn McMullan, in which she documents her attempts to maintain her sanity with two teen boys at home for the summer.

    What the first two weeks of summer feel like:

    One hundred molting chickens and large vats of peanut butter have been dropped in my house for a Nicki Minaj video, with the promise that Charlie Sheen and his entourage will be stopping by soon to practice snorting cocaine off his idling Harley-Davidson.

    The rules are simple: a list of 10 things — five that are good for your brain, five merely for the fun of it. I also imagine this will be treasured reading when they have moved out.

    What the first two weeks of summer actually are like:

    New Teen home since May 24, mounting a respectable-yet-failed campaign against the two-hour-a-day screen rule, frequent requests for his friends to come over/go to the pool/have a sleepover/breakfast/lunch/bake cupcakes/go to the movies/make a quick run to Sonic and reminding me he’d be less bored if he could have more screen time.

    His older brother, Driving Teen, mounting a respectable-yet-failed campaign via text about DISD’s schedule and why I should write him a week’s worth of excused absence notes so he could be home to chime in/wrestle with/play football with/argue with his younger brother, doubling the amount of noise in my otherwise peaceful home office.

    I’ve done some version of this summer dance since Driving Teen came into this world in June 1997. Working part-time from home is all bonbons and Days of Our Lives until the last bell rings, right?

    Then it’s Charlie, Nicki and those damned sticky chickens roosting on my furniture, my laptop, my kitchen table and my otherwise napping dogs while I try to work and continue my usual Mom duties.

    (I won’t bore you with those details, but if you are the primary stay-at-home parent, you know. And you’re trying to remember what I was talking about because you’ve already been interrupted four times. This is where ADD meds taken with a glass of wine come in.)

    And so it goes until August. 26. That’s 92 days that I have at least one kid out of school this summer. Imagine what that feels like in dog years.

    I’m always astonished when people ask me what day school starts. Seriously? Do you also forget your children’s birthdays? What day Christmas and Valentine’s Day fall?

    To tame the chaos just a bit, I came up with the annual summer goal list.

    At first, just creating the list would kill half a day. Now, as teens, the eye rolling takes longer than typing it out in iPhone notes. But they do it. When asked this year how much longer this would be required, I said as long as they live here. Or at least summer here. Seems fair enough to me.

    The rules are simple: a list of 10 things — five that are good for your brain, five merely for the fun of it. I feel it centers us (maybe just me) a bit and creates a sense of focus and accomplishment during months we, in glorious and frustrating ways, have a difficult time remembering what day it is. I also imagine this will be treasured reading when they have moved out and the clearest memories remain mostly in snapshots.

    Some of my more impressive goals:

    • Help build a house in El Salvador.
    • Lose 20 pounds.
    • Organize the laundry room and office (these are on the their third tour on my summer goal list, with high hopes of getting them checked off this summer).
    • Read all my back issues of New Yorker magazine.
    • Do five minutes of daily meditation and yoga several (catch how vague the list can be?) times a week.
    • Read To Kill a Mockingbird.

    A few less lofty examples from previous years: Sit on Sue & Angie’s green couch (you just need to know this involves wine and dear friends) and spend five weeks outside Texas (this is an evergreen).

    From the kids’ lists:

    • Read 20 books.
    • Place in the top four for at rock climbing nationals.
    • Grow two inches.
    • See sharks while snorkeling in Florida.
    • Go to Ernest Hemingway’s house.
    • Learn all the state capitals.
    • See Mount Rushmore and Abe Lincoln’s birthplace.

    For fun:

    • Eat a triple Whopper (this made both boys’ lists three years ago).
    • Learn to yo-yo.
    • Catch up on Bones episodes.
    • Play ping pong every day.
    • Go to Six Flags.
    • Get a UT football player’s autograph.

    We are still working on this year’s lists. So far, my goals include watching every episode of the show Girlfriends and finding a beer I like. My husband plans to read and, important, understand The Sound and the Fury. Driving Teen plans to get his driver’s license (he just has a permit now) and New Teen wants to make $200 mowing lawns.

    I’m not hardcore about the lists, other than they must be made and put on the refrigerator. I color code them per family member and check goals off as they are met. Some goals are not accomplished, and there is no shame in that. Some goals are put on the list with full knowledge they will be complete (Mount Rushmore was already on our summer road trip itinerary).

    At the end of summer, I ceremoniously remove them from the refrigerator on the first day of school and file them away. Charlie, Nicki, the chickens and the boys return to school. I return to my quiet office, dogs napping at my feet. In those first couple of weeks of school, I look back at the lists and the hundreds of pictures we’ve taken during the summer.

    And I miss them all. Just a bit.

    See Mount Rushmore: check.

    Mount Rushmore
      
    Photo by Jay Ketel
    See Mount Rushmore: check.
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    Money news

    Dallas ranks as No. 1 city with smallest inflation problem in U.S.

    Amber Heckler
    Jun 16, 2025 | 11:43 am
    Dallas skyline
    Photo by Erin Hervey on Unsplash
    Dallas' inflation has cooled off after it was last saddled with the highest inflation rate nationally in January 2024.

    Inflation has been one of the biggest hot-button issues in the country in 2025, but a new study says inflation not impacting Dallas nearly as much as it is other U.S. cities.

    Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington ranked as the metro with the smallest inflation problem in the U.S. in WalletHub's new report, "Changes in Inflation by City."

    The report analyzed the impact of inflation across 23 major metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) using Consumer Price Index data from the latest month available and compared to data from two months prior. The analysis also factored in inflation data from last year to better track both short- and long-term inflation changes.

    Dallas saw only a 0.10 percent increase in its local inflation rate when compared to two months prior, and the rate is only 0.60 percent higher than it was this time last year.

    Dallas residents may be feeling the sting a lot less than they did in January 2024, when WalletHub said the city had the No. 1 highest inflation rate in the U.S. In April 2023, Dallas-Fort Worth had the 10th highest inflation rate nationwide.

    The study found Boston-Cambridge-Newton, Massachusetts-New Hampshire is the MSA that is currently being rattled by the highest inflation rate in the nation. The northeastern metro saw a 1.10 percent uptick in inflation when compared to two months ago, and it's 3 percent higher than it was a year ago.

    Inflation has continued to fluctuate throughout the year in different areas, but WalletHub said the national inflation rate has significantly lowered since it last hit a 40-year high during the COVID-19 pandemic.

    "The year-over-year inflation rate sits at 2.4 percent as of May 2025, which is still above the target rate of 2 percent," the report said. "Various factors, such as the war in Ukraine, labor shortages and recent tariffs, drive this higher than average inflation. Despite the country not meeting its target yet, the Federal Reserve will keep interest rates at the level set in December 2024."

    Elsewhere in Texas, Houston-The Woodlands-Sugar Land experienced the 13th highest inflation rate in the U.S., the report found. Inflation in the region increased 0.90 percent over the last two months, and it is currently 1.2 percent higher than it was one year ago.

    The top 10 metros where inflation has risen the most are:

    • No. 1 – Boston-Cambridge-Newton, Massachusetts-New Hampshire
    • No. 2 – St. Louis, Missouri-Illinois
    • No. 3 – Baltimore-Columbia-Townson, Maryland
    • No. 4 – San Diego-Carlsbad, California
    • No. 5 – Denver-Aurora-Lakewood, Colorado
    • No. 6 – Urban Honolulu, Hawaii
    • No. 7 – Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim, California
    • No. 8 – Chicago-Naperville-Elgin, Illinois-Indiana-Wisconsin
    • No. 9 – Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, California
    • No. 10 – New York-Newark-Jersey City, New York-New Jersey-Pennsylvania
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