Thursday, December 24, 2009

A letter from Santa to Doolittle T. Cat

Dear Doolittle:

I want to apologize, my furry friend, for not being able to
bring you a squirrel for Christmas. You were indeed a very
good cat this year! But there were a number of problems
with your request.

Catching a squirrel was the first problem. I'm a pretty old fellow and
I don't run so well these days. Bad knees, you know. The reindeer --
Dancer especially -- just laughed their antlers off watching me try
to catch one of those crafty little buggers. And mean? Oh, Lord,
they have really bad attitudes. Let me just say that there is one
squirrel in particular who is NOT getting any nuts in his
stocking tonight.

So, not having much luck with catching one, I tried asking for
volunteers. For some reason, not a single squirrel I talked to was
particularly eager to be stuffed in your stocking. I was willing to
give you the benefit of the doubt, but I think they mistrusted
your motives. Seems they have had some bad experiences with
cats in the past, but I think it's species-profiling myself.

Then, somehow, PETA got wind of my efforts, and next thing
you know, I got a bunch of people picketing my workshop.
I reminded them that I know who's been naughty and nice,
and that picketing Santa is a sure-fire ticket to the naughty list.

Then they asked me if I was aware that forcing my reindeer to fly
all over the world in just one night violated OSHA regulations
about overtime hours.

I told those PETA people that those lazy reindeer only work one
freakin' night a year, and that they should get off my property
before I turned a yeti on them.

Now they are threatening a lawsuit, and my lawyer says I can't
really afford the bad publicity, what with the increase in my liability
insurance this year due to that unfortunate incident with a 747.
Besides, the reindeer were threatening a boycott and my elves
are already grumbling about the hiring freeze.

Honestly, I don't understand all the drama about squirrels, which
are basically just rats with bushy tails. And bad, bad attitudes.
No Christmas spirit at all.

I hope that you will like the presents I was able to bring you.
Fake mice laced with catnip are a lot safer, anyway. They don't
have all those sharp, pointy teeth. Or the bad attitudes.

All my best to you, Doolittle. Keep up the good work....
and leave that sofa alone!

Ho Ho Ho,
Kris Kringle, aka Santa Claus

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Doolittle's Letter to Santa


Deer SanTA Claws-

hoW is you? i haz ben verry good cat this YEAr if u donnot count lazt thanksgibben. i is up to sleepin 12 hourz a day and haz gott rid of laST MINiblinds in houze so i kin see reaL good out of windoze. i even hep MOMa when dat bad box go WONK WONK WONK evry moRNing by sittin on her hed but she do not seem greatful.

FOR kittmas me wood like a squirral. me know which one i want, two. dat mean one in backyARD who teeze me. he bad, bad squirral.

me wood also like pidgen. a fat slow one. do not mater which one. robin wood be ok if u cannot catch pidgen. me try and try but canot catch one EITHer. wood hep if mOma not make me sneaK out when she NOT lookin. can yu bring me housekey?

me wood also like ME own juizy steake sinze momma do not Like me lick herz. do not kno why she so stingy me do not wanT TO Eat it jus to lick IT.

for MOMA i wood like dead Mouses. she say NO but me knows she wood like tHEM. noTthing say i luv U like dead mouses. m e do luv momma even if she no like M E sleepin on her hed.

i wood leve dead mousez for yous but moma she say cookie beTter.

luv dookitty

pS kin U bring momma new sofa befor she see watt me did 2 back?


Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Gay Eskimos, ABBA and Grad Night

First, let me say that I think the iPod is the greatest invention since peanut butter. I listen to mine everyday, especially late at night when i'm working on the computer. I listen at work 1) when the funky lady in the next cubicell starts jamming and 2) when I think that I simply can't stay awake one more minute.

I have 237 GB of songs loaded, and a lot more still available. But that 2377 GB is filled with an wild variety of songs that range from "Mack the Knife," to miscellaneous Andrew Lloyd Webber to Nina Simone to Kate Bush to 9 Inch Nails to Bill Monroe to a bizarre but hilarious song called "I'm the Only Gay Eskimo in My Tribe" by a group called Corky and the Juice Pigs.

Most amazing, to me, are the songs that form the soundtrack of the egocentric little farce called My Life. Songs that call up in stunning detail a place, a time, a person, an emotion, in a way that nothing else can do. Call it a musical flashback that comes zooming out of the past and -- if the memory is powerful enough -- can knock you on your ass.

Start with "Joy to the World" by Three Dog Night. Most people refer to is as "Jeremiah was a Bullfrog." It came out in 1971, when I was eight years old and in the second grade. It is one of the very first Top Forty songs i can remember falling in love with. (Interesting factoid: the song was written by Hoyt Axton and TDN didn't really want to record it, but they needed a final cut for an album.)

But the memory it recalls is a rather fuzzy one, as memories from second grade tend to be, but even sweeter for it. My dad took me, my sister and some friends down to River Street for a parade (or something). I remember my first BBF Mindy Higgs and I joyfully, no doubt flatly, singing that song, probably until my dad begged us to stop.

My dad is alive in music for me. He and his cousins had a band in high school called The Hep Cats. Giggle. As time moved on, his tastes turned to folk rock -- Peter, Paul and Mary; the Kingston Trio and Bob Dylan. At family gatherings, he and those same cousins would sing "Lemon Tree," "Tom Dooley" and "Four Strong Winds." He played guitar and sang "Puff the Magic Dragon" and "There's a Hole in the Bottom of the Sea" at my birthday parties. I have an old recording of Dad and cousin Roger singing some of these songs, but it's quality is so terrible that it's painful to listen to. I listen anyway, because the music and the photos which chronicle my life are all I have left of him.

The song that started my relationship with radio was Paper Lace's "The Night Chicago Died." (If I had realized that Paper Lace had recorded "Billy, Don't Be A Hero" I might have boycotted it.) I heard it on some television show and loved it so much I started cruising up and down the radio dial looking for it, until Christmas when I got the 45 from Santa. That was 1974, when I was eleven.

I am not going to talk about Donny Osmond or Bobby Sherman here. Almost any woman of my generation would recount amazingly similar memories of swooning, shrieking, reading Tiger Beat and kissing lunch boxes.

I am also going to skip my rather embarrassing infatuation with Barry Manilow, and recall instead Elton John's Greatest Hits as the first truly grown-up album I ever bought; followed by Some Girls from the Rolling Stones -- which I bought mostly because I heard there was a song on it too dirty to played on the radio.

Then there's ABBA, which was cool, then dorky and now kitchy-cool again. And ABBA belongs to Sammy Adams. Around sixth or seventh grade, Sammy told me he'd had a dream in which he and I and Robert and Denise actually WERE ABBA. I thought it was cool that I'd been in someone's dream. Particularly Sammy's.

(Flash forward to freshman year in college, and losing my virginity while ABBA crooned in the background -- a song called "Andante, Andante," which i have NOT got in my ABBA collection. Not out of bad memories, but just because I now think it's a stupid sappy song. Not that "Waterloo" is a particular masterpiece, but it is bouncy and mindlessly happy.)

Billy Joel's "Only the Good Die Young" also brings back high school, playing that song at the Halloween party our class had at Mrs. Moore's parents place, the Savannah Seamen's Home.

But a song that always knocks me out with memory is "Superstar" by the Carpenters.

I know that Bette Midler did a 'hipper' version, but i always preferred the Carpenters. I fell in love with their Singles double album (I can see the brown cover) -- at a slumber party at Ann Gooding's house. Or was it Cindy Banks? I remember getting that album for my very own for Christmas later that year, and being so happy to have it.

But neither of those memories are the one that come first when I hear that song. No, it's Sammy that comes back so clearly, and the bittersweet sadness of Karen Carpenter's voice captures my own emotions of this particular memory so perfectly.

Graduation night in 1981 was, for me, a miserable disappointment, clouded by my growing panic about leaving high school. Not that high school was particularly great for me. It was a hellish ordeal of insecurity, self-doubt, embarrassment, fear of embarrassment, loathing myself for not being popular enough or thin enough or pretty enough. It would take me years to realize no one in high school ever thinks they are popular enough or pretty enough or smart enough or just plain enough. I was such a ninny back then, and deeply, passionately concerned that I had never had a real boyfriend, or a first kiss, at 18. But high school was my world, a known quantity, a place in which I knew, at least, in which niche i belonged. (The good girl, the smart girl, the quiet girl, the best "drawer.") The great unknown of college -- which would take me away from home for the first time -- yawned like a friendless, black and bottomless cavern before me.

My depression that night was compounded by the fallout of the night before. The Beowulf Society had gone out to River Street with the intention of getting drunk, something I'd never done before outside of our Senior Trip in the Bahamas. Getting drunk was a goal for which we strove with a ridiculous innocence and naivete. Denise and I drank pina coladas, for God's sake.

What's the Beowulf Society, you might wonder? It was what we called ourselves, the private in-joke of the little troupe of nerds I hung out with, mostly because we always ended up in the same classes, being the "smart" kids, and worked on the student government together, the newspaper, and were all on various literary teams that went on trips to Macon every year.

Anyway, we had gone down to River Street, the center of Savannah's nightlife, and managed to get served at the Dodge City Saloon. They did card us, but when Robert told them with ludicrous gravity that we'd left our IDs in the car, they shrugged and served us anyway. Oh, for the good old days.

But somehow, even on pina coladas, i managed to get drunk. And i committed the single stupidest, most horrible mistake of my young life up to that point. And it's probably still in the top five of lifetime stupid, horrible mistakes. Possibly the one thing I'd like to erase from my memory completely.

I kissed Robert.

I'd had a love/hate relationship with Robert since seventh grade, when I briefly had a crush on him, and he "went with" me and my friend Cindy both. "Going with" for us at that time consisted mainly of exchanging valentine's and sitting together at lunch.

The "hate" part of the relationship came from the fact that Robert was deeply competitive in nearly every way. And in his own personal hell of trying to fit in, he was frequently enormously annoying, sometimes outright pompous.

I also loathed Robert because he asked me out. How dare he.

I only had four dates in high school. Robert; Chuck, the son of my english teacher, who put him up to it; Fred, whom I knew from church and asked to a dance myself, but viewed with a sort of sisterly detachment; and Bill, an upperclassman whom I adored in a kind of groupie way. I've never really understood why Bill asked me out, but our first date remains to this day the most fun I ever had on a date. He cooked dinner for me at his house and then we went to the Nutcracker. It was also the first time I ever saw that ballet -- or any ballet --and I was mesmerized.

But Robert.... Robert was the target of a great deal of snickering from the "popular" kids in our class. Every social blunder Robert ever made, they found hilarious and another reason to hold him in contempt. I resented him for blithely ignoring that contempt back then. Now I realize it took a bizarre sort of moral courage.

And because i was young and stupid and dying to be accepted, so keenly attuned to being outside the popular circle, I resented Robert for making me so conspicuously "uncool" by asking me out. And I hated myself for being so desperate to go out with ANYBODY that I accepted. Having gone out with Robert, none of the other boys would ever, ever ask me out. (As if that was the only reason. Chalk it up to the desperation of a teenager.)

I kissed Robert only because he happened to be there. He drove me home that night, and I refused to go into the house until i had a goodnight kiss. Little did I know how totally I panicked him with my drunken overture. I only knew that I was keenly distressed by my apparent lack of attraction to the opposite sex.

So I suffered through Graduation day and the consequent festivities of Grad Night feeling such acute embarrassment that I would have welcomed meningitis, an emergency appendectomy, a brain embolism-- anything to avoid having to face Robert and anybody who might have heard what I'd done.

All this was made more excrutiating by the fact that I had a hopeless crush on Sammy. I had had a crush on him ever since Jennifer Fredrich's birthday pool party, where we sat alone on the dock for some time, talking about music, mostly. I had no real expectation or hope of ever having that affection requited, but still, i harbored it. The one time I might have fessed up to this infatuation was on our senior trip. My first night of inhibited drunkeness, I got back to my room in time for curfew, and kept calling the room Sammy shared with Robert and Jonathan. I kept asking to talk to Sammy, but Robert -- always Robert! -- kept talking to me and wouldn't pass the phone to Sammy.

My friend Sonia had a crush on Sammy, too. And i played cupid for her with a generous loyalty born mostly of my own belief that i didn't matter whether I liked Sammy "that way" or not, so he might as well go out with someone I liked. That way I could sort of date him vicariously. He had already spent most of senior year dating a cute little blonde freshman, and had already expressed an interest in Sonia. Sonia was prettier than i was, bubbily and fun and hung out a lot with the popular crowd. I couldn't possibly compete.

And Robert... well, it seemed that he was always getting in the way of any progress I might have made with Sammy. That first dance in eighth or ninth grade? I had found out later that Sammy had mentioned asking me, but Robert had been the one to suggest he ask my friend Ann while he asked me, and that we could double date. When i could spend time with Sammy, Robert was always there too. That whole time on the senior trip, Robert stuck to me like glue. Just about every dance that came around in high school, Robert asked me first, even when i had started steadfastly turning him down. I even went to the homecoming my senior year stag, rather than give any more fuel to even the appearance that Robert and I were an item.

So Grad night was a miserable haze of trying to avoid looking Robert in the eye, and trying to be sympathetic while listening to Sonia obsess about her love life. I don't know, but suspected, that the cool kids were having parties to which I hadn't been invited, or were at least doing something a lot more fun. Worse still, Denise was there with her longtime boyfriend, and even Jonathan was dating someone whom he brought with him that night. More horrifyingly, Robert had apparently told Sammy and Jonathan something about taking me home the night before, because when we all decided to drive down to the beach the first time that night, Sammy turned to Robert and said, "I'm going to ride with Belinda, if that's all right with you."

Of course this prompted a furious seething on my part. When Robert said, "Sure, it's okay with me," i shot back, "Damned right it is." No wonder people thought we were a couple. We fought enough to look like one.

I forget what we did when we got there -- i remember it was foggy and once we got there, we couldn't decide what to do. There wasn't anything to do at the beach at night then. Driving to the beach was more a journey than destination, a reason just to drive somewhere.

We came back to the "senior breakfast." I have a picture of me looking quite sour, holding a napkin on which i'd scribbled "Dodge Sucks" over a fork sticking out of congealed grits, in some kind of makeshift flag.

So, just when i thought the night could get no lower for me, Sammy made me laugh. Sammy could always make me laugh. And when it came time for things to break up, somehow, miraculously, Sammy suggested he, Sonia and I drive back to the beach to watch the sun come up.

And that's when we sang "Superstar" together. In the dark car, lit only by the dashboard's glow, we sang with a total lack of self-concious attempts to be cool.

The sweet sadness of the song resonated in my hopeless puppy love and the sense of impending loss. And yet it was my happiest memory of Grad Night: driving to the beach with Sammy and Sonia in the deep darkness that comes just before dawn, on the eighteen mile stretch of empty two-lane highway through the marsh.

We never did see the sun come up. We realized, too late, that the particular stretch of beach we had chosen was actually facing the wrong way, for Tybee -- or Savannah Beach as everyone called it then -- is a long curving peninsula on the tip of Georgia's coast.

I spent a lot of time talking to Sammy on the phone that summer. Long, rambling, ridiculous conversations about everything and nothing. That Christmas break, he called me up one day to ask if I wanted to drive to Jacksonville with him; he was working for WSGA radio then, and they needed him to go get tickets for the big Michael Jackson concert.

I called in sick to work that day, just so i could go with him. God, we had fun on that drive.

I saw him again after college began. He was at UGA, just an hour from Atlanta where I was, with Denise. Denise and I went to the apartment he shared with another classmate, Craig -- who would be dead in another couple of years, the first death in our class that would shake us all profoundly. We cooked spaghetti, and talked and laughed. I had begun to find some confidence around boys, and flirted shamelessly. And while Sammy talked and joked with me a great deal, he never seemed to get the hint. Or maybe he did and just wasn't interested.

I had a party at my house the following summer. Sammy was there, making me laugh as always. But still, I never found the courage to profess my feelings for him.

I would see him next my senior year in college, when i asked him to be my date at Spring Fling, along with Denise and her current boyfriend. As luck would have it, I was desperately in love with someone else by the time the dance rolled around, and preoccupied. Even so, Sammy was the worst date I ever had. He spent more time talking to my friend Kitty and her boyfriend than me.

I would see Sammy again at Denise's wedding. I had gained a good deal of weight by then, and I was shattered when I overheard him making a comment to someone about me that, yeah, I had "more chins that a chinese phonebook." I slunk home early, and cried myself to sleep, deeply bewildered and hurt that he could be so malicious.

But I still had a thing for him. So much so that the last time we all got together one summer in Savannah -- and I had lost all my weight again, was looking better than I ever had before -- and i had dressed carefully in a lowcut blouse and short skirt with every intention of seducing him.

The evening began well. Sammy and I talked feverishly about writing, and Kerouac in particular. Then something happened. Sammy found that some of his friends were downstairs in the hotel. He said something about going down to talk to them for a few minutes, but that he would be right back....

He never came back. And I haven't seen or spoken to him since.

I wonder how things might have been different if I'd ever told him that I liked him. Possibly even loved him: my first real love that lasted, unconfessed but hopeful, for years. I don't harbor any delusions that we would have had a lasting, lifelong relationship, but still...other choices and relationships in my life would have probably been different, and that would make me slightly different somehow.

And when i hear the Carpenter's "Superstar" -- that sad, sweet song of loss -- I still miss him.

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

The Truth About Fat Chicks and Personal Ads

At forty-six years old, I've not only been around the block and back a few times, I've been down the garden path, up on the roof, under the boardwalk and seen paradise by the dashboard lights.

Understand that I'm not looking for a conventional relationship these days. I have no driving obsession to pick out china patterns, procreate or even cohabitate. (I love comedian Rita Rudner's old joke: "I want a man in my life, just not in my house.")

I'm not looking under bushes and cabbage leaves for any vaguely presentable human with a pulse to keep me from being lonely. There are many people in my life, and when they aren't around, I'm too busy to be lonely: reading, writing, painting, making jewelry... or wasting time on FaceBook running an imaginary cafe and plowing cyber-fields.

Nor am I interested in casual sex. That's not because I'm a prude or conservative, or believe that sex is bad unless you're "making love." It's because sex is so important, and so intricately part of who I am, that -- like ice cream and books -- I only expend the time, energy and calories on the good stuff, those experiences which truly engage my spirit and mind as well as body. After all, I am a modern woman with a drawer full of triple A batteries, if you get my drift. (Wink, wink, nudge, nudge.)

If I'm just looking for physical release, I can manage that better than most men on my own just fine, with the added bonus of not ever having to fake it or sleep in a wet spot.

I am, however, keeping my eyes open for a particularly compatible person who might add something unique and enriching to my life. That's why I sometimes look at various personal ads on the Internet, just in case Mr. Pretty-Darned-Good-for-Right-Now happens along.

But I think I'm going to stop. It's too depressing. Oh, it's not just that so many of them are misspelled, grammatical nightmares. (I'm not expecting Faulkner, but geesh, is it so much to hope that high school graduates know the difference between "there" and "their"?) It's the prejudices these ads make so plain. Men who claim they are "open-minded, sensitive and caring" keep writing things like:

"I am seeking a woman with a slim or average figure with an open mind and outgoing spirit. Age or nationality has no bearing on a person's attractiveness. It's the mental age and heart within that makes the difference."

In other words, this guy wants anything female as long as she's not FAT.

I know, I know; you gotta be honest and ask for what you want, and I'm not putting anyone down for it, honest. Obviously those of us in this age bracket have figured out by now that if you don't ask for what you want, it's not going to just drop into your lap like a gift from heaven. If you are certain that no other possible combination of amazing qualities could ever overcome your lack of attraction to a body, then by all means, yes, be blunt and get it over with. Heck, you can write to Santa Claus asking for a life-sized Malibu Barbie, with a teeny-tiny doll-sized brain to match, for all I care. (Just keep in mind, between the ears isn't the only place Barbie is missing something.)

But suppose you found a woman who possessed Meg Ryan's adorable sweetness, Julia Roberts' smile, Jane Pauley's intelligence, Julia Childs' culinary skill, Princess Diana's grace, Joan of Arcadia's moral courage, Gilda Radner's sense of humor, and the heart of Mother Teresa. But this fantasy wears a size 16 or 18 or 22 instead of a size six. If you still wouldn't even consider having dinner with her, then just skip the rest of this article. But stop describing yourself as "open-minded, sensitive and caring," okay?

There are amazing women, myself among them, who are more...uh, shall we say, voluptuous than "slim"? Gravity, metabolism, Ben and Jerry's ice cream and my body have come to a truce at the age of forty-six.

And while I've made peace with the regrettable fact that Angelina Jolie inhabits the body I requested, it does become tiresome reading personal ads. Someone describes their criteria for Ms. Right (or even Ms. Right Now) and you are thinking, "Hmmm, that could be me; yes, yes, that's me..." until you get to their physical qualifications. (Insert obnoxious game show buzzer here.) Oh, too bad! Let's show this contestant our lovely parting gift!

I do envy people who can see a mere photo or set of measurements and say, "YES! I want to meet that person! That's what I'm looking for!"

For me it's much harder. Do I want to be at least mildly attracted to the physical package? Sure, I'm as human and shallow as the next person. If you could order a partner from some gigantic menu at Cupid's Intergalactic Dinner, I'd ask for a man with Brad Pitt's boyish good looks, Antonio Banderas' sex appeal, Dr. Phil's emotional sensitivity and sanity, Anthony Hopkins' voice, Dennis Miller's wit, Einstein's brain and Bill Gates' bank account.

But people aren't pizzas. Besides, looks are fleeting, attractiveness is subjective and beauty is often a subtle, mystifying blend of any number of qualities.

Let's be honest. Women -- and men, too -- know that their physical appearance plays a big part, sometimes the only part, in how other people see us. We're all insecure about something. Maybe it's a smaller than average penis or being short or balding. So many people, deep down inside, fear they are not really attractive enough. They worry their nose is too big, their teeth are too dingy. Even beautiful women worry that their breasts aren't big enough, or their butts are too big, or they won't raise their arms for fear of that tiny pocket of fat flopping around under their upper arm. American commercialism thrives on our insecurities.

Yet women don't post ads saying, "Small penises need not apply" or "No bald men" or "If you have a huge nose and bad teeth, don't bother responding." Very few men would dare to advertise "Looking for a woman with huge knockers; A and B-cups need not apply." But people (generally men, sigh) are still saying that if you're fat, you're not worth even exchanging photos and an introductory email with.

And who decides what is fat, anyway? For some people in our thin-obsessed culture, being a half a pound over a size eight is "fat." For others, a size 12 or 14 is thin. And I know, having been a size eight and a size 24 and everything in between. Even now, I'm sure there is somebody out there who thinks, "Damn, if only I could fit into a size 24, I'd be thrilled; stop whining, you skinny wiener."

There are just so many other things I'd like know before deciding whether to invest the time in responding to someone's personal ad.

What they are passionate about? What books do they read, what movies make them laugh or cry?

I want to know what they would change about the world if they were God.

I want to know if they have a soul that is open to the entire spectrum of human experience and the courage to embrace it.

I want to know if they have the compassion to accept other people's frailties as well as their own.

I want to know if they can deal with disappointment gracefully; if they can win without gloating; if they have a genuine capacity for joy. I want to know they see the glass as half empty or half full -- or if they're the type of person who says instead, "Tell me what's in the glass first, and then I'll tell you whether it's half empty or half full."

Monday, October 5, 2009

Oldie but Goodie... Bathroom Renovations

I have a couple of friends who are or have recently gone through bathroom renovations, so, in an effort to share one of the most excruitiatingly messy events of my entire life, I'm reposting something from my old Myspace blog.

The Bathroom That Wouldn’t Die
SUNDAY, Feb. 3, 2008
Current mood: drained
Category: Life

You will notice that I've added a new default pic, one that is sure to make Rex shudder, lol. But I want to take this opportunity to salute him wholeheartedly for busting his ass to help me through this project. [this refers to a pic of Rex ripping out the old vanity. This pic to the left is the old bathroom downstairs.]

Of course, it was distressing to see him rip out the old vanity -- bleh, it was so old, tired and dark for such a small bathroom -- and i did hold my breath as we pried the old mirror from the wall... and i won't even relive the trauma of ripping out the old soffit with the light fixture. Rex and I both are totally bewildered as to why the builders of this condo put that in in the first place.

The worst thing about renovations -- aside from the mess, and the expense, and the way it just never seems to end, but instead grows and grows like a redneck's gut in middle age -- is that when you rip some of this stuff out, you see just how badly constructed your home is to begin with. You discover there is not a single right angle anywhere. And somehow seeing the skeleton of the room makes you shiver as you realize just how insubstantial your biggest life-investment really is. 

Gone are all your illusions of the stability and solidity of the very shell of your life. It's just a bunch of matchsticks, two-by-fours and sheets of drywall that crumble under a hard stare. And you get to see just how nasty the underside of things are, and how many spiders are living in your walls. What exactly are those spiders living on, anyway? I don't even want to think about it.

I've completely exceeded my expected budget for this, which is being funded my mother, otherwise my unemployed ass would not be doing this at all. I found an incredibly cheap vanity (sitting in the living room) and when i realized I could save money on the formica vanity top (also still sitting in the living room), I splurged just a little bit on a fabulous new sink (currently sitting in the backseat of my car).

It was only after I'd had the vanity cut to fit the new sink that i realized the awful truth. The new sink would require a new faucet -- and not one of the less expensive basic faucets, oh no. It only takes an 8" center set lavatory faucet, 90% of which cost over a $100. I found a discontinued model for $86 and counted myself fortunate.

Yikes. I'd fallen into the first renovation trap. Unforeseen consequences always cost more money.

In ripping out the soffit, we found that the utterly stupid way it was constructed would also require a new section of ceiling and side walls that would have to seamlessly flow into the rest of the ceiling and walls. Only after we'd cut the new wallboard did we realize that the old wallboard was 1/8" thicker than the standard wallboard we'd bought. If you don't think 1/8" is very much, you've never tried to make walls meet with any kind of mutual agreement. 

I spent a week up to my elbows in wall mud, mostly on a step ladder trying not to get great blobs of joint compound in my eyes and hair. Luckily, I wear glasses and so my eyesight was not imperiled; dried wall mud does in fact come off of glasses with a chisel, and the hair will grow back. I went through a gallon of joint compound.

And the sanding between the layers, and the final sanding -- oh my god the utter mess. A fine mist of eye-scratching, nose itching dust that somehow manages to get in every corner of the house. I stayed up past 1 am the night i finally finished all the sanding, washing everything, dusting everything, because i simply could NOT STAND IT for a moment longer.

Next misery came from trying to make the new ceiling texture match the old. This, of course, is impossible. And so the entire ceiling -- now mysteriously expanded to the size of a football field -- had to be redone. More mud and paint to be picked out of my hair. You can see a pic of my ceiling work -- it may not be the Sistine Chapel, but I'm damned proud of the final outcome. Of course, i can still see the seam, but i'm okay as long as i remember to squint slightly whenever I look at it.

In an effort to recoup the faucet miscalculation, I had to give up my dreams of track lighting with two super cool pendant lights on either side of the new mirror. Instead, I went with a generic light fixture. It ain't very pretty, but it is nice and new and clean and lights the bathroom much better than the old bare bulb fixture that was ensconced in the old stupid soffit. 

As an added bonus, since the wiring was now exposed, Rex put in the long-discussed and desperately needed light fixture in my adjoining closet. With the new light, i found things i forgot I even owned.

Then, there are the things that you don't know you need until you're in the middle of it all and realize: you don't have enough of the right color paint; you need new electric boxes and switches for the closet; sandpaper; not just tile, but mortar, grout, spacers, grout sealer and a new transitional bar for the doorway; wall seam tape; a new wax ring for the toilet, which may yet require new bolts because the old ones are so badly corroded; new shoe molding for the whole room, because the old stuff broke and warped and splintered and the original nails are completely rusted and unremovable; new burst-proof supply line for the sink and toilet; paper face masks because sanding the bathroom is like standing in the middle of the Sahara in a dust storm, making breathing a health hazard and causing you to blow really gross snot blobs for the rest of the day, assuming you can stop sneezing long enough; a ceiling texture brush because there is no way to make a ceiling look like anything except some mutant paper mache made by a developmentally impaired fourth grader without one (and believe me, I tried.)

None of that stuff is expensive, but a dollar here, five bucks there, twelve bucks back here again -- it adds up. And one more trip to Home Depot, I may kill myself, if i don't kill the ignorant employees I always seem to find first.

We won't even mention all the tools I would have needed without Rex's extensive collection of masculine toys. Not just ordinary things like pry bars, hand saws, mud- and grout applicators, and a heat gun for removing linoleum; but things I didn't even know existed, like a pin gauge for making a template of the cuts needed for tile around molding. Oh, and the frightening tile saw. Diamond blades for the Dremel to sand the rough edges of cut tile.

But tonight the tile was finally laid. Which reminds me of the other side effect of this project: a drop-off of the sex drive. After a day of doing this manual labor, neither Rex nor myself has the energy. Not to mention that a sweaty, dusty woman with joint compound in her hair and paint smeared on her elbows is hardly an enticement to amorous exploits.



Thursday, October 1, 2009

Quickie Cubical Lunch Review

I had to go the post office and spent an ungodly $29.95 to overnight a loaf of Amish Friendship Bread to my sister. If I'd planned ahead, I would have spent only $7, but noooo, I had to be a day behind.

I passed Taco Bell, and for a moment, a Fiesta Salad called my name. But noooo, I decided to be fiscally responsible and eat what I brought this morning, namely, California Kitchen's Marguerita Pizza. But now there are four people in front of me for the microwave. I am hungry, hear my stomach growl....

But I can tell you that I like this pizza. It actually crisps nicely in the microwave. If you eat it fast enough, of course. Everything in the microwave becomes inedible after 10 minutes.

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Quickie Cubicle Lunch Review

Today it's Healthy Choice Asian Inspired Five Spice Beef & Vegetables. One of the basic problems with this dinner -- and all others containing "beef" -- is that the beef never looks very appetizing. Instead it's a fake-looking thin sliced "roast beef" not unlike the stuff you used to eat as a kid from Banquet frozen dinners. It also has this weird textured-leather look. But in spite of the look, the beef is actually tender and tasty.

While not among the ingredient list (unless if falls under "spice blend"), almost all I can taste is ginger, and the peppers. I was suprised to see "sake" among the ingredients. Not a big fan of water chestnuts either. I mean, they have no taste, really, just this crunch.

Overall, not bad, but I don't know if I'll try it again.

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Quickie Cubicle Lunch Review

Today's Lunch is what I was supposed to have yesterday until the hostage situation arose: Marie Calendar's Breaded Chicken Parmesan. Besides being tasty, with actual recognizable vegetables, it's a fairly generous amount of food (as frozen entrees go)and it should be at 650 calories.

What I noticed today, however, is that Marie Calender's: 1)has supposedly been around since 1948 -- and this will require investigation because inquiring minds with low tolerance of advertising BS want to know; and 2)is actually part of ConAgra Foods.

I don't know anything bad about ConAgra, but it sounds so coldly and unappetizingly corporate. I mean, would you go to a restaurant named "ConAgra"? They also make Healthy Choice, Orville Reddenbacker, Hunts and Chef Boyardee, among a dozen or more other brands. Which is just kinda weird to me. Does this mean Marie, Betty Crocker and Chef Boyardee all get together to have drinks? Is there perhaps some fiddle-faddle going on between Orville and Peter Pan? And just where does that innocent little Swiss Miss fit into this sordid little family?

Monday, September 28, 2009

Quickie Cubical Lunch Review 9-28-09 Arnolds (Again)

I had intended to have Marie Calender's today, but around 11 am, my mouth sent a ransom note: "We have the stomach hostage. Give us Arnold's Country Kitchen or you'll never eat ice cream again."

I don't generally believe in negotiating with terrorists, but what could I do?

So down Rosa Parks to 8th Ave I went, not really minding being sorta "out" in this gorgeous weather. Even the bums loitering at the bus station seemed to have a spring in their step.

I was kinda hoping for country fried steak, but that's only on Thursdays, and I was momentarily tempted by the fried chicken, but I went for my standard: roast beef, mashed, green beans, mac and cheese.

I am pleased to inform you that the roast beef today is sheer perfection --- nicely pink and tender, ohmigod. The mac-n-cheese is still a little too peppery for my taste, but it's still a cheesy, gooey kiss of heaven. I really don't need the three "veggies" -- esp since two are starches - but it's so hard to choose. I mean, I passed up fried green tomatoes this time.

Have I mentioned how much I like Arnold's staff? Most of them have been there forever, and they obviously take pride in being a part of a Nashville tradition.

I tried to take a photo of my lunch with my cell phone, but I think company email is blocking it. I am disappointed.

Now, if you'll excuse me, I have to finish my lunch.

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Ah, vanity! Women have endured a lot of stupid things over the centuries, all in the name of beauty. Corsets, high heels, pantyhose, girdles, Richard Simmons. As a forty-something woman and feminist, I’ve given up on a lot of that, more out of exhaustion than philosophy or politics. But whether it’s society’s programming (i.e. my mother’s voice in my head) or simply something deep in those XX chromosomes, I continue to participate in one of the most painful and stupid rituals ever inflicted on the female of the species: the removal of unwanted facial hair.

It’s gotten worse as I have aged. When I was a teenager, a few painful moments with the tweezers were enough to save me from the “unibrow” look. As I entered my forties, suddenly there were whole armies of tiny but stunningly black hairs sprouting from the damnedest places. More than a week of inattention now and I begin to resemble Sasquatch in drag.

Given my carpal tunnel, developing arthritis and failing eyesight, tweezing has become rather like playing the old Operation game of childhood. No cartoon of a fat naked guy, true, and no buzzer, but a great deal of clumsy grappling at exasperatingly evasive objects. I began searching for another method, hopefully one that did not involve poking around my eye with pointy metal objects.

What I came up with was waxing, an ancient technique first used by the Romans to torture those criminals for whom crucifixion was deemed too “kind.” Modern waxing technique was later perfected by the Marquis de Sade (all the best and most painful beauty secrets come from the French, for reasons I don’t care to examine too closely but I suspect has something to do with their profound contempt for anyone not French.)

I found a product called “SurgiWax.” I liked the description because it required none of those pesky “muslin strips.” (I don’t know exactly what muslin strips are or what part they play in other waxing techniques; I only know that several of the products touted not needing them as a good thing.) You could heat this particular product in your microwave, which we all know is fast and quite modern so it must be convenient. And Surgiwax is quite effective, I admit. Here’s how it works, step by step:

1) Loosen the lid and microwave the small plastic jar according to the directions.

2) Test the temperature of the wax cautiously with your fingertip.

3) Think: "Hmm, seems about right."

4) Lift the small wooden paddle loaded with wax toward your left eyebrow, drizzling droplets of gooey wax onto the bathroom carpet, tile and even the mirror. At this point, a single droplet will land inevitably in your eyelashes, in effect waxing your left eye completely shut.

I have learned from experience that this lump of wax cannot be dislodged without leaving a 1/4" gap in the fringe of your already meager lashes, causing you to look like a drunken drag queen that has lost a section of her falsies. Pry lashes apart and attempt to scrape wax off with fingernails. If you accomplish this with a loss of ten lashes or less, consider yourself blessed.

5) Take another paddle of wax and this time make it all the way to the unwanted forests of left eyebrow.

6) Emit a sound often mistaken for an enraged mongoose that's been stepped on by a hippo. Why? Because no matter how long or short a time you heat the wax, no matter how carefully you have tested the temperature, the wax is always – ALWAYS -- still too #@I& HOT!

7) Stomp a foot and mutter, "Why the hell do I do this to myself?" as you feel the flesh beneath the wax begin to blister.

8) Repeat steps 4 and 5 on right brow.

9) Attempt to repeat steps 4 and 5 on upper lip, only to find the wax is now too cold, and refuses to adhere to upper lip.

10) Trudge back downstairs to microwave.

11) Repeat steps 1-7.

12) Allow wax to cool completely. You can amuse yourself during this time by making faces in the mirror just to watch the planks of hardening wax wiggle up and down.

13) Carefully peel up the corner of the first section of wax, getting wax under your fingernails that will later have to be carved out with a nail file.

14) Once you have a solid grip, give one enormous yank, pulling in the opposite direction of the hair growth.

15) See stars as blinding pain immediately causes eyes to fill with tears.

16) Grip the edge of sink (to keep from falling to your knees) and stop screaming.

17) If necessary, stand there for several moments, blinking and squinting, stomping foot, using language that has been banned in 34 countries.

18) As the profanity dies down to a sustained hiss, remove fingers from countertop. (A little sandpaper will remove the crescent-shaped imprints.)

19) Realize that there is snot dripping down your face, because the tears have, of course, set your sinuses running like the Mighty Mississippi. Blow your nose.

20) DO NOT -- I repeat -- DO NOT LOOK in the mirror at this point because what you will see is not pretty: a sobbing, snot-nosed face with thick yellow crusts of wax on one eyebrow and upper lip, and a scarlet crescent of angry red flesh above one still-squinting eye.

21) Repeat step 13 on next eyebrow. Only this time, in vain hopes of making it hurt less, pull S-L-O-W-L-Y.

22) Halfway across, unable to see for tears, give up this strategy as stupid and simply yank the rest in one motion.

23) Repeat steps 15 - 20.

24) Consider just letting the wax on your upper lip wear off naturally over the next 24-48 hours.

25) Decide this course is not viable, as you cannot bear to go to dinner, even at Waffle House, with a wax mustache.

26) Repeat steps 13-20 on one side of your upper lip.

27) Allow yourself one expletive of choice before doing the other side.

28) When your vision clears, examine eyebrows to make sure they are balanced. Find that you have actually removed your ENTIRE right eyebrow.

29) Consider whether you will look funnier with only one eyebrow drawn with the eyebrow pencil or if you should just remove the other eyebrow and draw on both.

30) Decide to hell with it and go eat the rest of your carefully hoarded Ben and Jerry’s Chunky Monkey while you sulk. You’ve earned it.

Friday, September 25, 2009

Friday Night Dinner Review: Tom's Elite



Rex, my psuedo-significant other, has dragged me to Barbecutie a couple of times. He thinks the food there is good, including the dry, tasteless impersonation of brisket he ordered a couple of times. (I worry that he has such low standards; he is dating me, after all.)

When I found Tom's Elite, I brought the brisket plate home for dinner and told him, "THIS is what brisket is supposed to taste like." Moist, meaty, tender, flavorful, smoky heaven.

Tom's has become one of my favorite places to stop on my way home to get an excellent dinner that I don't have to shop for, cook or clean up. I just have to eat it. Which is exactly the way I like it. Plus, the portions are generous, so I always have enough brisket left over for a sandwich the next day.

Tom's Elite is located on Gallatin Rd in East Nashville, across from Nicholson's Cleaners and my SunTrust bank. I don't think I would have tried them if they hadn't gotten a glowing review in the paper. But thank goodness, they did. I love the ribs, but the brisket has captured my heart. The turnip greens are excellent too.


So that is what we had for dinner tonight. Beef brisket from Tom's. I had mac-n-cheese and green beans. Rex had the baked apples and greens.

We were going to watch Schindler's List, because Rex has never seen it (and that will not do -- i believe it's possibly the greatest film ever made), but I discovered that my VHS copy has developed that annoying buzz. So I'll have to get the movie on DVD.

Instead we watched my NetFlix "Dracula" with Frank Langella. I developed a definite crush on Langella in this one, back in 1979 when I first saw it. Not having seen it in years, I was a bit dismayed to find myself distracted by his hair, which looks disturbingly late seventies, maybe even a tad Liberace. But I'd still let him in my bedroom window, even if he was hanging upside down like a bat.

Doolittle, however, spent some quality time with Rex's shoes. One of these days, I'll grab the camera in time to get a shot of him rolling orgasmically on his back, which a shoe clutched tightly in his paws, or trying to force his entire head into one shoe. My cat just LOVES those shoes. Maybe it's a leather fetish, I don't know.

Quickie Cubicle Lunch Review

Today, it's Marie Callendar's Pasta Al Dente: "Inspired by Modena, Italy, the home of balsamic vinegar, Fettuccini Chicken Balsamico features spinach and mushrooms drizzled with a balsamic reduction sauce."

I've always thought that Marie had some of the better frozen entrees, and now she's going after that "steamed fresh" trend/marketing ploy. This one, the first i've tried, was... well, okay. I should have chosen a different variety, because actually I don't care much for balsamic vinegar. (I know, what was I thinking?) They could put more spinach in here. Spinach is cheap, healthy and I like spinach.

The good news, there's a generous portion of noodles here, so maybe I won't be gnawing on the desk by 4 pm. Maybe.

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Quickie Cubicle Lunch Review: Marche

Somehow, my lunch reviews have become rather popular -- or so people tell me. Maybe it's just three people desperate for diversion, but still....

But I'm wondering if the fact that people are actually reading about what I had for lunch is making me seek out lunches that are... well, bad for me.

I've been a bad, bad girl today. I had to be in East Nashville, dropping off some art, and thought: "Hmmmm... Marche would be a yum-fest."

So I stopped at Marche's Artisian Foods. It's an almost unbearably trendy temple to food in the Five Points area, and only the fact that the food is in fact fabulous prevents it from being pretentious. The interior is shabby chic French provencial, where the waiters are all unemployed musicians and starving artists.

It's the kind of place where you'll pay $8 (plus tax) for a BLT -- but it will be the best BLT you have ever tasted. It will be the Sistine Chapel of BLTs.

It will start with fresh baked sourdough bread, toasted lightly, with generous, thick-cut smoked applewood bacon... and sun-dried tomatoes that are to die for, and fresh tender greens. There's some kind of dressing on it, I think, something light. I'm always too busy eating and sighing in bliss to take note.

But today, I was lured by the Cheese Steak -- soft, fresh foccacia bread, still slighty dusty from the oven, with Boarshead Roast Beef, roasted red and green peppers, carmelized onions, and cheese that I think may be brie.

Yum. I'm a sucker for food lovingly, artistically crafted... a welcome antidote to the recently-frozen, mass-produced and mundane crap that passes for food in most restaurants.

I suppose I wasn't as bad as I could have been. Did I mention... creme brulle? Madeleines? Chocolate Expresso Cake with Caramel and Cream Cheese frosting? Butternut Squash Cake with Apple Mousse frosting? Every kind of bread you can imagine. Chocolate croissants. Baguettes. Stuff you could just sit down with, along with a pound of butter, and eat until you die a happy piggie.

Monday, September 21, 2009




This weekend, I painted up a storm. I think I'm painted out. These are going to Meg at Art & Invention Gallery this afternoon.


Sunday, September 20, 2009

Confessions of a Craft Junkie

I should have known, early in childhood, that I would develop an addiction to making stuff. I had a ton of Barbies, but I wasn’t at all interested in dressing her, or taking her around town in her spiffy orange jeep, or even posing her in compromising positions with Ken. No, not me. I spent all my time building and decorating her dream house.

Having only the limited resources of a child, I found my materials around the house. And nothing was safe. Not my mother’s jewelry box (brooches made excellent wall decorations), not her closet (scarves became curtains), and not the kitchen table mats (excellent for carpets). When Mom couldn’t locate her pincushion, she knew she’d find it being used as an ottoman for that little blonde bimbo.

Soon came all those elementary school projects: handprints in plaster and lopsided ashtrays. In Vacation Bible School, they showed me how to cover cigar boxes in macaroni, and spray-paint them a gaudy gold. I made bookmarks and Christmas ornaments out of felt, egg cartons, pipe cleaners and way too much Elmer’s glue. While the other kids were busy spreading layers of glue over their hands just for the sheer joy of peeling it off, I labored over macaroni designs and glitter placement with all the concentration of Michelangelo painting the Sistine Chapel.

I didn’t really blossom into full-fledged crafting until I moved into my first apartment. Having little disposable income, I had to get creative. I’ve talked to other crafters and found that for many of us, poverty is truly the mother of invention. I’d see something fabulous in a store (that I could not afford) and think, “I could make that.” Or some approximation of it. God knows, some of my first attempts were indistinguishable from, say, the work of blind, motor-deficient fourth graders.

But whether it was a dorm room or a cardboard box, I had to decorate it. Had to. Just as surely as I had to breathe. And I would use anything and everything. I became a compulsive pack rat of discarded ribbons, buttons, pretty paper and miscellaneous “stuff” from garage sales and thrift stores. There was no furniture so scarred and battered that it couldn’t be painted, decoupaged or covered in fabric.

Eventually I discovered the craft and hobby stores springing up all over the place: Michael’s, Joann’s and Hobby Lobby. I’d wander the aisles, my eyes glazing over in a blissful daze of creative mania. Not just for the things I already dreamed of making, but for whole new crafts that I never even knew existed. Clay sculpture, glass painting, wire wrapping. Even the rolls of multicolored yarn, in so many colors and textures, could mesmerize me, and I didn’t even know how to knit.

I learned to cross-stitch, and for several years, the biggest goal of my life was to own every color of DMC floss known to man.

I bought my first glue gun. It was wondrous in its possibilities, but I couldn’t understand how Martha Stewart managed to use one without yelping, “Oh, shit!” as the hot glue melted all her fingers together into mutant flippers, or the cat chose just the wrong moment to stick out an inquisitive paw. But even the searing pain of red-hot glue could not stop me. Let me just say, I no longer have fingerprints. And my cat is now afraid of the glue gun.

The money I once tried to save by making pretty things now went to feed my addiction at the various craft stores. Even walking through their doors, I felt my wallet opening like a thirsty flower to spring rain, even if it meant forgoing food, rent and cable television. At one point, a friend threatened to post my photo on signs at every register, saying: DO NOT SELL TO THIS WOMAN: SHE IS SICK AND CANNOT HELP HERSELF.

My current boyfriend has suggested that I should only be allowed into Hobby Lobby if he accompanies me with a cattle prod.

When I discovered beading, I was like a pot smoker graduating to heroin. Oh, the variety of bright, shiny objects in so many colors, textures, sizes and shapes! Semi-precious stones, glass, plastic — it didn’t matter. I had to have them all, and now discovered entirely new specialty stores to plunder.

Soon I was buying sterling silver by the gram, beads on long strings in bulk. Bead shows at the fairground beckoned to me with a siren’s song. Even on vacation, in every destination from Memphis to New Orleans to Pigeon Forge, I would check the phone book to seek out new suppliers to feed the ravenous beading monkey on my back. I showered friends and family with beaded jewelry until they were afraid to open even one more gift.

I wasn’t even safe in my own home, as I discovered mail order catalogs and the Internet. When I spent $200 on a state-of-the art wood burning kit on EBay, I began to suspect I had a problem. When I donated two bulging bags of perfectly good clothes to Goodwill just so I could devote an entire closet and dresser to my craft supplies, I knew I had hit rock bottom. I had a sudden vision of myself standing on a street corner, with a sign that said: “Will Work for Beads.”

Then, I found my salvation. I discovered others who did not judge me, for they suffered from the same addiction. They understood. They did not turn away or yawn when I rambled excitedly about my new paper cutter.

I have one friend who crafts in her car during her lunch hour, and frequently puts her three children into an assembly line of prep-work similar to third-world sweatshops. Another roams estate sales and thrift stores, obsessively searching for interesting junk to fashion into funky art and jewelry. We confessed our sins, the depth and width of our addiction, like alcoholics at an AA meeting. “Hello, my name is Belinda, and I’m a craft junkie.”

We shared our secrets: new ideas, new materials, the best places to find supplies, the newest adhesives, and how to hide Joann’s receipts from husbands. We found Cafe Press, Lovli and Etsy as an outlet to turn our addiction into hard, cold cash – or at least enough to fund our next expedition to Michael’s. And when those websites were not enough, whole groups of us began banding together in armies like the Craft Mafia, CRAFT, Artsy Mamas, and the Etsy Street Team, just to name a few. When we could not find enough existing venues for selling our wares in the established fairs and shows, we took to the streets of Nashville, creating our own events.

I have now come to terms with my addiction. I no longer hide in shame, but I embrace it, cherish it, and nurture it. I am not alone, and with my new friends, I have the strength to get out and testify to the masses who have not yet embraced their inner crafter. I openly scorn the mass-production of third world countries, the ugly and the just plain boring. I spread the gospel of the handcrafted and the one-of-a-kind like a born-again prophet.

I am a craft junkie, and damned proud of it.

How to Tell If You Are a Craft Junkie:
1. Family members will no longer go into Hobby Lobby with you.
2. You have sacrificed sleep to make "just one more ______."
3. You have considered trading your least favorite child (or spouse) for a gift card to Michael’s.
4. You have ever lied about how much you spent at a craft store.
5. You have bought a craft material or tool even when you had no idea how to use it.
6. There is at least one closet/bookshelf/cardboard box in your house crammed with craft supplies. And there are things in there you don’t even remember buying.
7. You have ever refused to throw “trash” away, because you are sure you can someday use it.
8. You are physically incapable of throwing away a scrap of fancy ribbon.
9. You have ever called in sick to work or made excuses to get out of a family obligation in order to stay home and make something.
10. The mention of a cold-temp, cordless glue gun makes your heart race faster than Antonio Bandera’s butt.

Friday, September 18, 2009

10 Steps to Happiness or Some Approximation Thereof

In my forty-six years, I have collected some small bits of wisdom for a happy life. And now, I'm going to share them with you whether you want them or not.

As a misanthrope/cynic/sometimes negative-nelly, I'm not talking about the broccoli-brained happiness of game show hosts and certain religious cults, but rather the fleeting and transient happiness of a Survivor contestant who wins a finger-full of peanut butter on day 47. But sometimes a finger-full of peanut butter can keep you off the rooftop with an AK-47.

1) Never say no to whipped cream. If you are eating something, somewhere, where someone would possibly ask you if you wanted whipped cream with that -- then, damn it, say yes to that fluffy puff of indulgence. Don't stop to calculate calories, carbs or fat grams. You're already in the pool, so go ahead and grab that inflatable donut of wild abandon. Say yes to whipped cream. And the cherry, if for no other reason than that it's a cheerful, lovely red.

2) A bathroom of your own. Virginia Wolfe espoused the benefits of having a room of one's own, but I'll take it a step farther. Not just any room, but a bathroom.

It doesn't matter if you're five, dancing in agony in the hallway waiting for your brother to open the door; or twenty, beating on the door and yelling at your roommate that you have the right to blow-dry, too; or thirty-five, sighing at the vast amounts of hair, dried shaving cream and petrified toothpaste splotches on the marble vanity, all left by your partner.... the bathroom is the last bastion of personal space where you should be free to linger, soak and pluck your eyebrows in peace without having to clean up anybody else's used personal hygeniene products. Do what you have to do -- lie, steal, cheat or kill -- but with God as your witness, never share a bathroom again.

3) Never pass up the opportunity to nap. Ah, the joy of totally unnecessary, unrequired langor. True, it's often hard to find the time, but indulge yourself once in a while. There is something so decadent about lying in bed during the daylight hours, rolling over to press your cheek into that soft, cool pillow case. And it's even better if you can convince someone to indulge with you. Your lover, your child, your cat.

4)Throw your alarm clock across the room. Personally, I think we'd all be better off if no one had ever invented the clock; we could all just show up wherever whenever we felt like it. Imagine, no more rush hour, because no one would have to rush. As for the bastard who invented the alarm clock? Dig him up, disembowel him and feed him to hyenas. That foul electronic honking is enough to make your ears bleed, second only to crying babies on an airplane, and the only reason it comes in second is that babies don't have snooze buttons.

Once a month or so, set your alarm even when you don't have to get up, and give yourself the criminal pleasure of grabbing that wonking Big Brother of our hurry-up culture and send that puppy crashing into the wall. The spackling will be worth it, believe me.

5)Learn how to read. I don't mean just mastering the ABCs enough to read the back of cereal boxes and snarky YouTube comments. I mean learn how to read a good book. And I don't mean "good" as in just the Bible or Moby Dick. Pulp romance novels will do, if those are what take you out of your own world for just a few hours.

A good book -- a good story -- is like a vacation without going anywhere and it's still absolutely, positively free. Let's face it, reality is overated. Learn how to read, and you learn how to leave it behind.

6) Adopt a pet. Cats and dogs are best, but a goldfish will do in a pinch. It's a scientic fact that a pet can lower your blood pressure and make you live longer. Sure, there are the walking-the-dog, clean-the-litter-box chores, as well as the occasional loss of your favorite (and expensive) strappy designer sandals, but the joys of a pet outweigh all of that.

I get so much pleasure from my cat, Doolittle, even if he does almost nothing but sleep, and he has an unfortunate affection for launching himself at my ankles when I least expect it. Even when he does things that annoy me -- like walking on my head at 3 a.m. -- I still find myself smiling at the way he looks curled up on the sofa cushion that I've tried so hard to keep him off of. I laugh when he runs full-tilt through the house for no reason at all. I smile at the way just the tiniest pink tip of his tongue hangs out of his mouth.

And nothing compares to the contentment of a warm cat sleeping in your lap on a cold winter day.

Addendum: Don't go to some puppy mill for a purebred with the brain of a pea, or buy a gorgeous haughty cat out of the classifieds. You'll earn brownie points with both Karma and your own conscience if you adopt an animal that needs you to save its life. Double points if you spay or neuter them.

7) Just say no. No, I'm not talking about Nancy Reagan here. I mean, learn how to say no to the things you really don't want to do, if you can get away without doing them. So many of us say yes automatically, a sort of good-girl knee-jerk reaction even when people are blantantly taking advantage of us. It's nice to help people out, but there's a limit. Find it. Stick to it. Just say no. At least some of the time. You are allowed.

And what's so great about obligation and guilt, anyway? How many parties have you gone to that you really didn't want to go to, just because you felt you should. Especially those parties where your "friend" tries to coerce you into buying one of those super-duper non-stick cake pans in the shape of a bunny rabbit just in time for Easter. Really? Do you really have to? It was one of the greatest days in my life when I realised I was a grown-up, and nobody could make me do anything I didn't want to. Except for work, death and taxes... and going to Walmart.

8) Plant something. You don't have to become a poster child for Miracle Gro, but every spring, plant something, even if it's just a begonia in a clay pot. Maybe it's just the childlike joy of playing in the dirt. Maybe it's the higher-plane metaphysical joy of getting closer to growing, blooming things.

Nah, it's the playing in the dirt.

9) Smile at a stranger for no reason. Smile as if you really mean it. Most of the time, it will cause them to smile back; it will scare the shit out of the rest of them. Either way, it's a win/win situation.

10) Once in a while, give money to the guy on the corner. Maybe it's a scam when he tells you he came downtown to see about a job, and his car ran out of gas, and he just needs a few bucks to get back home.

Maybe he isn't homeless, this is just how he's chosen to make a living, because isn't standing in the rain with a soggy sign that says "Help a veteran" more glamorous than flipping burgers?

Maybe he's an alkie who's just gonna blow it on Thunderbird or Starbucks. Maybe he's a tobacco addict who simply can't afford the price of cigarettes anymore.

It's not our place to judge why he (or she) is out there. Sometimes, you just don't know what a dollar can mean to someone else. What's a dollar to you, anyway? Super-sized fries? A lottery ticket? If you're gonna throw it away, you might as well buy a lottery ticket in the Do-A-Good-Deed Powerball.

Sure, it would be better if we stopped and brought them a Happy Meal or some clean socks, but we all know we're not gonna interrupt our busy schedule to feed and clothe the homeless. It would be better if we all volunteered with Habitat for Humanity, or ladled soup at the Mission. We all intend to do those things, but do we?

So take the easy way out, just every once in a while. Meet their eyes. Really see them. Take a chance and give them something.

Monday, September 14, 2009

FaceBook Is Eating My Brain....

Oh, I remember when we first met. I was in my middle years, feeling like I'd done it all, seen it all... and then, there you were. The Internet.

You made me feel like a kid again - a kid struggling to understand long-division, true, but once I mastered AOL, it was love at first password. You had me at: "You've Got Mail."

Some said it was just an infatuation, a passing fad; but I knew our love was here to stay.

Still, the relationship has gone through some changes. AOL gave way to Yahoo; Yahoo melted into MySpace... and then FaceBook captured my heart.

At first I felt like I was cheating on MySpace. But Facebook just seemed to really understand my needs, what I really wanted from a social networking site. Namely, a vehicle for posting minute-by-minute updates on every move I make, every breath I take, every thought -- profound or inane -- that skitters through my addled brain.

I also desperately needed a way to keep in touch with 2,534 of my closest friends. Because I really need to know your Disney princess name.

I love FaceBook. It's brought me back in contact with friends I haven't seen or spoken to in a coon's age. But I am beginning to think I may need an intervention.

It's bad enough that I feel compelled to come up with something moderately witty before noon for my status message. A little sad that I've actually started to post a new status message late at night, only to think, "Wait... most of my friends are in bed. I'd better wait or they might miss it."

But it's the GAMES... those freaking games!

I'm not a gamer, never was in the "real" world. No D&D, no marathon Risk games, none of that. And for years the only thing I ever played on the computer was Solitaire, which, in the computer gaming world, is really lame. Kind of like playing Spin the Bottle when everybody else is playing Howard Stern's Orgy-Mania. (It's like Twister, only dirtier. Yes, I made that up.)

But then a FB friend kept sending me sheep. Chickens, cows, orange trees. I caved into peer pressure, and thought, I'll just try it. What harm can it do?

So I began my first farm in Farm Town. I thought it was just a little innocent fun, and I could stop any time I wanted to. But by the time I expanded my farm the third time and made a spreadsheet to calculate the optimal profit per field, I began to suspect I had a problem.

I hit rock bottom the night Farm Town went down for six hours and I couldn't get to my farm. My crops, I wailed, beating on the computer screen. My crops! I've got pumpkins coming in, you have to let me harvest!

I thought about finding a twelve-step program, but I was too busy plowing, planting and harvesting.

Then it happened. I reached Level 24. My farm could expand no more. I bought my mansion, my greenhouse, my river. There was nothing left to do in Farm Town.

I wandered the web searching for another fix, trying to recapture the thrill of that first level-up. YoVille. FarmVille. Mafia Wars. Sorority Life.

Sorority Life is my dirty little secret. The game is the pinnacle of crass materialism and anti-feminist smut based on the idea that women will climb all over each other in stilletto heels for a chance at a Guicci bag and a dozen cookies, slapping each other silly the whole time. Because they do. I'm so ashamed of myself.

But I have 402 sisters now, as well as 148 Hummer stretch limos, 74 lifetime tans and one yacht. And it pisses me off way more than is seemly when a rival smacks me upside of my head and steals $70,000 from me.

First thing in the morning, I log into FaceBook and head straight for Sorority Life, to bank my earnings, send Juicy Couture dresses to all my sisters, and make sure I haven't been put on the Burn List.....

Then it's off to Mafia Wars, where I check my properties for break-ins and send my family members wire taps, sawed-off shotguns and stolen Rembrandt paintings.

Then to YoVille, to feed my cybercat, punch the clock at the Widget Factory, and shop for a new dining room set. If I have time, I dance with a few friends before rushing off to Farm Town.

Once the flowers are watered at my Farm Town estate, I run over to FarmVille, where I have to milk the cows, collect eggs and harvest all the eggplants.

I've also got my own amusement park in Rollercoaster Kingdom, where it seems i do nothing but feed my employees.....

It's all becoming a big blur, more a job than my job.

What I fear is that one morning, I'm going to send Juicy Couture dresses to my goodfellas, throw grenades at my sheep and try to milk my sisters.

Someone stop me, before I farm again.

Why I Despise Kroger, and You Probably Do Too

I hate Kroger. I loathe that store with every fiber of my being.

It's not just that it's always crowded with slack-jawed sheep staring blankly at the 2,054 varieties of breakfast cereals as if the secrets of the universe are about to be revealed. It's not just the shrill whiny spawn of shrill, whiny psuedo- humans from the shallow end of the gene pool, clinging to the cart and beating on their siblings like so many monkeys fighting for the last banana.

it's not just the infuriatingly oblivious women chatting on their cell phones about whether or not their husbands are really cheating or trying to arrange Jr's next playdate while blocking the four-foot ailse of death with their buggies full of organic veggies, LifeWater and cottage cheese.

It's not even the cashiers whose conversations I am obliged to interrupt as the bagboy puts the bananas and twelve cans of soup into one bag... which will split open as soon as I lift the bag to put it into my trunk.

All of the above, I resignedly accept as a tradeoff for not having to forage in the wild for roots and berries. It's more than that.

The bagboys are akwats forgetting to put one item in my bags. I get home, unpack, and wonder where in the hell the pimentos got to. You know, the pimentos I needed for that dip I was planning on taking to a party which I am already late for. I have to dig through coffee grounds and garbage to find the receipt to confirm that yes, I did pay outrageously for those stupid gourmet pimentos.

Out to the car to search trunk and floorboards. No pimentos. Back into the house, rechecking the cabinets and countertops, even the freezer. No pimentos. Drive back to Kroger, shove my receipt in the face of a different cashier -- because you know the one from before is on break now, naturally -- and demand my freakin' pimentos.

This requires the intervention of a manager -- who, judging by the length of time it takes him/her to reach the front of the store, must have been stocking frozen foods in Siberia. He and the cashier shuffle around the register area looking for a jar of pimentos -- at one point i catch the manager looking into the trash can and i have to wonder, if my pimentos are in fact there, will he merely fish them out and hand them to me, with a glob of the cashier's gum stuck to the top?

Finally the manager sighs and tells me to go get another jar of my pimentos off the shelf.

Did you get that? He TELLS me to GO GET ANOTHER JAR.

Because I am late, and afraid that at any moment my head is going to shoot right off my spine and richocet around the store, probably landing in the cereal aisle where two snotty children will procede to fight over it -- I don't give him a lecture about customer service, but trudge off to find the pimentos.

When I return to the front, the manager is gone and the cashier is looking blankly at me as if she has just experienced a complete CIA mind-wipe. I remind her of our journey together around the register just a few moments before, searching for the pimentos.

She asks me if I have my receipt.

I tell her I handed the receipt to her earlier.

"When?" she asks. "You didn't give me no receipt."

Must...not.... kill. Must... not...

Finally she produces the receipt from her pocket, with a cheeky little smile and an "oops!" that makes me wonder what her heart tastes like.

She says I have to take the receipt and my new jar of pimentos to the Service Desk, where the entire crew of a local landscaping company is in line to cash their paychecks.... and they are as fragrant as manly men who spend a day in the hot sun playing with manure are bound to be. None of them speak much English, and the transactions proceed with all the speed of a large glacier racing uphill.

But the time I leave the store, my jar of pimentos clutched between two white-knuckled hands and my left eye twitching, the very sight of those pimentos makes me ill.

Sometimes, upon the discovery of yet another missing item, I have simply said "F--- it" and waiting until my next regularly scheduled trip to Hell's Supermarket. Now knowing how the game is played, I go straight to the Service (!!?) Desk.

"You bought the eye drops last Thursday," she says, eyeing me as if I look familiar from the post office wall. "Why didn't you come back that day when you first realized they weren't in your bag?"

"Because...." Gritted teeth. The sound of my own blood pounding through my ears. "It was eight o'clock at night and I was too tired to drive all the way back here."

"If they were left here-" dramatic pause for effect tells me she believes this is merely an attempt to scam Kroger out of a five dollar and forty-five cent bottle of eye drops - "someone would have put them back on the shelf by now. You really should have come back right away."

"Let me get this straight," I say. "You are telling me that it's MY fault for not dropping whatever I was doing and coming all the way back to this store to correct a mistake YOU made? Is that what you're telling me?"

"Ma'am, I'm just saying you shoulda come back as soon as you --"

"Call your manager. I WANT TO SPEAK TO YOUR MANAGER RIGHT NOW."

Thiis is the kind of relationship I have with Kroger. These are not isolated incidents. Crap like this happens all the time. Kroger hates me, and I hate Kroger. If Kroger were a little old lady crossing the parking lot, I'd run her over.

In recent months, I have been struggling to quit smoking. I go a few days, fall off the wagon, get back on the wagon, you get the picture.

When I finally got health benefits at work, I was thrilled to find out they would cover smoking cessation medications, even over the counter ones. I trot off to Kroger (which is also for some twisted reason I don't fully understand also where I have chosen to do my pharmacological business) and present my new card.

The tech looks at the card, looks at me, and says, "We can't bill insurance if you don't have a prescription."

"Even for an OTC item? Nicotine patches?"

"You have to have a prescription."

So I leave, condemned to smoking for another day at least.

I call my doctor, tell him what I need. His nurse says I have to come in for a physical. To make sure I am healthy enough to quit smoking, I presume.

I wait two weeks to see the doctor. He gives me a prescription. I take it to the Kroger pharmacy. They tell me to give them a few minutes. I go and do the rest of my shopping and return to the pharmacy where there is now a line of snuffling, sneezing, wheezing and generally miserable people in front of me. I am certain at least two of them are Alzheimers patients. I wait.

It's now been at least 40 minutes since I dropped off the script. When I finally get to the window, the tech says, "Oh, it's not ready yet."

The store is hot, and two flies have been dogging me from the moment I set foot in the store. I haven't had a cigarette all day, and my will power is crumbling rapidly.

"How can it possibly take so long?" I ask. I know I'm losing it but I can't stop myself. All I want to do is go home. And smoke. A lot. "It's not like you have to count it or mix it or even label it -- it's over the counter nicotine patches, for Christ's sake! You just take them out of the cabinet here and you take my insurance card and then you let me the hell out of this store."

Everyone in the pharmacy is looking at me now.

The head pharmacist says snippily, "If all she wants is patches, then go get them out of the cabinet and she can take them up front to ring them-"

"I already explained to you that i need to pay for them here to use my insurance," I tell her. "My insurance pays for this!"

"If insurance is going to pay for this, then you have to wait your turn."

"How much longer is it going to take?"

Snotty smile. "Could be as long as another hour."

I left the store, my head filled with visions of carnage that would make Quinten Tarantino proud. I did not get my patches yesterday. I don't know if I can stand to go by and try again today. I'm still too pissed off.

If I lived even a mile closer to the nearest Publix's, I would shop there, and tell Kroger to piss off. But Publix is a good thirty minutes from my house, and in the summer time, ice cream would puddle before I got to my driveway.

I love Publix. The people who work there are kind, smiling, eager as puppies to cover me with slobbery kisses. I can get sushi there, and the seafood guy will steam fresh shrimp just for me while I shop. They have scones in the bakery, and I get a nice meal of samples as I wander through the store. I go in and come out smiling, so unstressed and relaxed that I always tell the cashier and bag person how wonderful they are, and how much I love shopping at Publix.

Sure, things cost a little bit more there, but it's worth it, to me, to not be pushed to a homicidal rage every time I run out of milk.

Or pimentos.

Please God, let Publix open a store closer to my house. It may well one day save a life.

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

The Eight Stages of Termination

There are distinct stages of termination realization -- I can unequivocably claim expertise in this area because I've lost three jobs in three years. I don't like saying I've lost a job, because it's so inaccurate. I mean, I know exactly where my jobs were and still are.... it's just that someone else is there doing them.

The First Stage sends a rush of stunned tears welling into your eyes. You don't dare blink for fear those traitorous rivulets will go streaking down your cheeks and make room for more. Lips tremble. Hands shake. There's a queer hollow feeling in the pit of your stomach as it shrivels into itself like a black hole collapsing. This is accompanied by disbelief and denial, a desperate hope that you have not heard correctly, or that this isn't a termination, but a poorly expressed promotion of some kind.

As the full knowledge begins to sink into your numbed brain, you enter the second stage. Now, if you are at home alone, for example, you can slide directly into Stage Three: hysterical sobbing. But for me, having all three of my terminations coming in the workplace, where you are exposed -- naked -- in front of the world as the rug is pulled from beneath your feet -- well, then Stage Two is one of the worst.

Often you have to stammer some kind of response to the person who has just sentenced you to peanut butter and jelly for the foreseeable future. What do you say, anyway? Thank you? I'm sorry? Please, please, PLEASE FOR THE LOVE OF GOD DON'T DO THIS TO ME?!!?

It's all you can do to hang on to the last shred of your dignity as you stumble to your desk, blindly cramming all the personal belongings that will fit into your purse and inevitably missing some of them that you will never see again.

The last two times, I was escorted by supervisors to my desk. This is adding insult to injury with the unspoken suspicion that you might be capable of either theft or sabotage if you are not watched carefully. Maybe they are worried you might have an automatic rifle hidden under your desk, i dunno.

This time, it was assumed i would simply not be at the office, and therefore was told not to return to the scene of the crime. But not having gotten the message until the next morning, there i was at my desk. The woman whose messages I returned told me DO NOT REMOVE ANYTHING FROM YOUR DESK. But i was damned if i was gonna leave the more important items sitting there. Even so, I felt like a thief as I gathered what I could.

Stage Two also includes downcast eyes and averted face, trying desperately not to meet anyone's eye. You don't want to see the look of confusion and the question in their faces. Or worse, you don't want to see THEIR failure to meet your eyes because they KNOW you've been fired. It's like a scarlet letter on your chest or a mark of Cain on your forehead. Suddenly you have the plague and even your friendly coworkers want you gone quickly for fear you're contagious. Even the most sympathetic looks are an anathema to you, because the slightest hint of pity will cause you to plunge into Stage Three. When one of those sympathetic eyes do meet yours, asking what's wrong... This triggers more sniveling tears as you was forced to whisper those hateful words that you will be repeating to everyone: "I've bbbbbeeeen.... TERMINATED." Snivel, sniff, sniff. Wipe tears from your cheeks.

You don't want to enter Stage Three until you are absolutely safe from the eyes of world because it isn't pretty. I managed to save Step Three until I was hidden in my car in the parking lot. I couldn't start the car yet, because I was too busy sobbing in full force. It's always sobbing, not crying. Crying is too timid and lukewarm a word to be truly descriptive.

It's either the kind of sobbing pulled from so deep inside you that there is no sound but for the occasional gulp of breath in between gut-wrenching facial contortions. Or it's the type of crying that comes with moans of pure vowels, like an animal in a trap. I started with the former and ended with the latter. Either way, you are pitiful pathetic mess, not caring that snot is running freely from your nose.

Step Four begins when you can manage to put the keys into the ignition, and leave the parking lot. You are trying to stop crying, and begin to snivel and whimper. You may slip back and forth into the hysterical sobbing, but all of it is accompanied by the first thoughts you can actually begin to form. Most of these thoughts are "why? why me? what did i do? Why don't they want me?"

I really thought i was doing well at my last temp posting, the one that was terminated early. I had gotten a raise in the first two weeks, and told that they were very pleased with me. Then BOOM. Why did they let me go? I was told only that I was "still asking too many questions." Or it may have been that the week before was that terrible drop in the stock market that had scared the crap out of every corporation on earth.

Stage Five begins with the childlike disbelief as you turn that reason for your termination over and over in your mind, trying to bend your brain around it. I began to whimper, "But i thought i was supposed to ask questions? Everybody told me, you can ask the people around you, we're glad to help. You can't possibly get all of this stuff down right away."

Stage Six begins when your attempt to understand start to gel into anger. What do they mean, i asked TOO MANY questions? What was I supposed to do? Just make stuff up and get the caller off the phone and let them call back an hour later when they realized the problem still wasn't fixed? I'm not stupid, after all. The people who trained me said I was catching on quickly, faster than most of the other people they had trained... In Stage Six, you are crying in anger and outrage and disappointment.

(All i can figure is that maybe I was trying to hard, refusing to give up when the standard troubleshooting failed to resolve the problem. And because, in my belief that I should be learning as much as possible not only about how to solve the problem, but what caused the problem in the first place, maybe I was asking too many questions.I had said just the day before to Rhonda that i hoped I was doing okay, that I hadn't gotten any feedback yet about whether my stats were acceptable... and Rhonda's response was: "Don't worry. If your stats are bad, they will tell you."

Maybe I was naive to think that someone would say, You know, Belinda, you're not doing this right. If I had known that firing could come so quickly and so unexpectedly, I would have keep my mouth shut about anything and everything. I wouldn't have asked where the bathroom was. I would have just wandered around till i found it. Maybe that was what I was supposed to do. Shut up and fake it. sigh)

Stage Seven begins when you have to force yourself to stop crying, because you have no kleenex in the car or your purse, and you can't breathe. A numb sort of resignation creeps over you, and a bone-deep fatigue begins to pull you down. All you want to do is find a dark hole to crawl into. Your only motivation to keep moving is to get to your bed where you can clasp your pillow like a life-preserver and curl into a fetal position.

Stage Eight is spent in that fetal position, pillow over your face, the pillow case soggy as you are tossed back and forth on waves of tears. You may even backslide all the way to Stage Three and have to start all over again.

I have now settled into a fatalistic cynicism, broken only by bouts of hysterical sobbing that is now rooted in panic about what the hell I am going to do. (I know I keep repeating "hysterical sobbing" but there is really no other term for it. It is sobbing... and hysterical.)

Sure, there are occasional bursts of a soul-deep self loathing as I wallow in total rejection, a growing certainty that I am worthless, incompetent and useless, of being judged as not good enough. Doubts that in my personal life and my art as well, I'm unwanted and worthless, second-class. A fuck-up. Again those outraged cries of "but this is not who I am.... I am not the kind of person who gets fired. I'm smart, I'm competent, I've always been the good girl that gets things done....how in the hell did i get HERE?"