June Bugs Fly into My Face at Night

Ah, summer. Beach, bonfire, and BUGS. AND HUGE BEETLES. June bugs to be exact.

They are particularly horrifying because they are everywhere. Without fail, every year, I forget that these little sh things exist. It’s like, they PUNISH me for forgetting their existence each year. They seem harmless enough at first: small, brown, and rather harmless looking. Until they start flying haphazardly.

They are terrible, terrible air navigators. They fly like they’ve been drinking a lot or just hanging out with Lindsay Lohan. Somebody needs to take away their commercial pilot’s license because people are getting hurt.

Dear God, please no. No. NOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!!!

Dear God, please no. No. NOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!!!

They love to fly into lights because they are attracted to it, much like your average moth. The difference between moths and June bugs, however, is that moths have not been released from the gaping maw of hell in order to inflict evil and chaos upon the world. Sure, they go to light – a universal symbol of good – but I honestly think it’s because they want to smother it and create darkness. They want to kill lightness and the good in the world to live in blackness. This blackness they strive for mirrors their tiny insect hearts – bleakly beating black bug blood (that’s also a line from an Edgar Allan Poe poem*).

Interestingly, besides light, these June bugs are also attracted to my face. I must be unaware of my own holiness and emit my own light because these bugs’ flight paths get very straight and direct when my face is in the vicinity. It must be like a beacon, a lighthouse in the stormy seas of beetle existence. Much like regular electric lights, these June bugs feel the need to smother my light, my goodness… my face.

I didn't choose this life.

I didn’t choose this life.

I notice that they choose to make the most racket and fly toward my face most frequently at night. There is nothing more disgusting than waking up to the rustling of multiple beetle wings. Beetles whom, if given the chance, would like to fly into your face and swarm into an unseemly mass of horrors. And I thought hearing a mosquito buzzing around was bad enough. Nope, June bugs are louder and straight up go to your face intent on disfigurement.

june bug 3

 

Luckily, a blanket serves as an impenetrable fortress and allows me to sleep relatively easy. I can fall into REM sleep without worrying about beetles congregating on my epidermis. Thank God. june bug 5- Daughter

*It’s not though.

 

 

 

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I Guess I Should Write About Father’s Day

ward

A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away, I had the nickname “Ward Cleaver.”  I won’t tell you the circumstances under which these monikers were given, but I was surrounded by other guys with really cool labels like “Boomer,” and “Hook,” and “Spock.”*

*Yet another note to Daughter — Star Trek:  Live It; Learn It; Love It.

Since Daughter has made me well aware that her social/historical context spans approximately seven years (in other words, everything that happened before 2006 may be dated to either the Middle Ages, or World War II, or the Civil War, since, apparently, they all happened within a decade of one another within the last 100 years or so), I feel I must explain that Ward Cleaver (played by Hugh Beaumont) was the kind but stern father from the ancient television series, Leave It To Beaver.

You know, it was one of those situation comedies from the late 50′s in black and white, as were most shows back then.  Actually, I didn’t start watching the show until the 1970′s, but it was so goofy that I really enjoyed it.

Heck, to further date myself, I can even remember that one magical Saturday morning at some point in the 1960′s when the first family in our neighborhood bought a color TV!  We were all so excited that all the kids got together to journey over to their house to watch cartoons in color.  That experienced happened exactly once, as the family involved did not particularly enjoy hosting thirty children at 6:30 a.m. on a weekend morning.

It was mass hysteria!  Did I mention we were all hungry, too?

So, I regale you with this abbreviated account to relate that I’m one of those fathers, like Ward, who prefers quiet to loud, eating in to eating out, and simply hanging around the house — you know the type — my Spouse calls me a “Stick in the Mud.”

Which leads me to today, after receiving the obligatory, but heartfelt, wishes for a good day from my family, I was allowed to have a coffee and read the paper in peace.  I was able to watch the US Open (in which I will never play) and fiddle with Daughter’s car while everyone else went to the pool.  Tonight I caught the last part of the NBA Finals and, yippee, a new Masterpiece Theater is on later (while we simultaneously DVR Falling Skies).  And the weather was so nice I was even able to work in the yard for a bit, in my never-ending struggle to master our suburban landscape.

It was a good day.

My family is relatively healthy, relatively happy, and mostly under one roof (Son comes home tomorrow).  All the animals (dog, cats, birds) have been fed tonight, and we can pay our bills tomorrow — at least for this month!  I don’t worry so much about next, yet.

eddie

As Ward Cleaver would tell you, it’s a lot to be thankful for, but I know that Eddie Haskell is always lurking around the corner, and mischief and misfortune can pop up at any time around here.

But not today.  It was a good Father’s Day, indeed, but let’s get back to normal tomorrow, shall we?

Just don’t hassle me, man.

- Dad

I Will Not Be Playing in the US Open

merion

On Friday morning, I rushed through what little work I had at the office, so that I could make a 9:51 a.m. tee time.  The problem with that plan was I failed to adequately prepare the night before so that I could make a quick getaway.

Yes, the previous evening I loaded my clubs in the truck, somehow found my golf shoes in the Hoarders-like domain that is our garage, and even remembered to throw a ball cap into the cab to further discourage the ongoing process of my ears turning into cauliflower.  What I failed to address, however, was that I was almost completely out of gas.

So, there I was, sitting at my desk on a conference call I was hosting that started at 9:00 a.m., and trying to figure out how I was going to stop by the service station and still make the course.  I was kind of listening to the phone discussion but decided to hand off to a co-worker and bail without saying anything.

I guess I’ll find out Monday if anything important happened but, because it’s work, my guess would be no.  Plus, no one called my cell phone subsequent to the meeting — always a good sign.

I don’t know the capacity of my truck’s gas tank, but I do know I had never filled it with anything close to nineteen gallons before; not even on the last major road trip with Daughter.  Now I know.  It takes nineteen gallons.

First bullet dodged.

Next, a quick scamp down the freeway to the links.  What would traffic be like?  It was now 9:27 a.m.  What the heck,  along the way I managed to eat a day-old doughnut that someone left in the kitchen at work, so I was sure to have that necessary sugar rush to get my round started.

As Fate and the Traffic Gods would have it, traffic was somewhat light, and I thought good thoughts and tried to remember if I’d ever missed a tee time in my life and, if I had, did the world stop spinning?

I couldn’t remember, so I pressed on, rolling into the clubhouse parking lot at 9:38 a.m.

Second bullet sort of dodged.  It would have been nicer to have more than thirteen minutes before teeing off.

Final potential barrier:  What kind of line would there be in the Pro Shop?  I knew a tournament was scheduled for the north course, but as we were playing the south, I hoped for the best.

No lines, mon!  Paid my money and skipped over to the first tee, where three of my equally scurrilous co-workers were waiting for me.

It was now 9:50 a.m.  I had made it.

“All right, you go second.”

“Are we ready to hit right now?” I asked.

“Yep, and you’re second off the tee.”

No worries, I thought to myself.  After all, these guys I’m playing with really suck aren’t that good, and I played about a month ago, so that’s good enough warm up for me.

The first player in our foursome drilled his tee shot about 50 feet (not yards).  That was simply confidence inspiring for me.  These dudes really are bad.

I took approximately two practice swings to loosen up, stepped up to the tee box, and shot a bullet right down the center of the fairway about 25o yards (not really, but it was something over 200 anyway).

This game’s got nothing on me!  I felt pretty good, and eagerly looked forward to yet another my first a low-scoring round.

My approach shot to the green was, of course, short and left.

Then it came time to chip and putt.  The below illustration gives you some idea how the rest of the round went.

putting

Just like Tiger Woods, the Dog Scientist had trouble gauging the speed of the greens. Plus, he was looking forward to eating lunch later.

I probably hit the driver as well as I’ve ever done so in my life.  Translation:  I had only one really crappy, embarrassing tee shot that disappeared laterally into a water hazard almost twenty yards to my immediate left.  Everything else was in the general vicinity of a fairway.  Sometimes I even hit the fairway on the hole we were playing at the time.

But as the old saying goes, “Drive for show, putt for dough.”  You could also add, “If you can’t chip, what good does putting do for you?”

After about three or four holes that featured (for me) amazing, consistent drives, and absolutely horrific chipping and putting, I settled in for a wonderful round of gold with my friends.

The highlight of the day turned out to be lunch after the ninth hole.

“I’ll have a hot dog and a bag of jalapeno chips, please.”

“I just put them on the grill.  It’ll be about five minutes,” the attendant said.

Five minutes, I thought.  I don’t have five minutes.  We’ve got to get to the tenth tee and quick, before that group of guys behind us jumps in front. 

“Just throw it in the microwave.  That’ll work,” I said.

And when she handed me that steaming, tasty dog, I loaded it up with relish, ketchup, mustard, onions, sauerkraut, and peppers.

Man, it was good, and fueled me plenty for the back nine.

After the round was over, the results were:  Three lost balls, one hot dog and bag of chips consumed, one bottle of water drained, one near-death experience because a jerk behind me almost hit me with his tee shot, and My Humility Soundly Restored.

As we sat in the clubhouse post-match, we tallied the scores and determined that I had the lowest number which, technically, means I won.

But winning is relative, as is my chipping and putting.

The US Open?  I’ll leave that to the professionals.  Turns out that Merion Country Club (where the tournament is currently being played) is five minutes away from Daughter’s Lesbian Cult College.

That’s the closest I’ll ever come to getting in, I suppose, and I’m okay with that.

Namaste!

- Dad

Daughter’s Dentist is My Dentist, Too!

dentist

“Nah, these tools look worse than they really are. They don’t cause searing pain; just bad pain. But we’ll give you drugs, if you’re good.”

Oh, what tangled webs we weave when raising children.

Daughter’s recent post on the perils of dentistry was interesting, to say the least.  Though it’s antithetical to her Grand Plan to rule the world via this blog by attracting more Followers (and more and more and more), I sincerely hope our Tooth Doctor is otherwise engaged and doesn’t know of its existence.

Because he’s a really nice guy, and cool, if that’s possible.  Well, he’s about as cool as a dentist can be, I figure, but not Spock-cool.

*Note yet another Star Trek reference, Daughter.  Get with the Program.

spock

“I could have been a dentist, but I chose to be an actor. I also recorded some really, really bad albums back in the day.”

Our dentist’s office is filled with numerous signed photos from some of the biggest musical acts from the 70′s and 80′s.  I don’t remember all the details, but he used to be in the promotions business and he hooked up with all these famous people along the way.  And he’s big into side enterprises — he’s created natural energy drinks and some other things that taste awful, but the point is, he’s like a shark.  If he stops swimming, he dies.

He’s got a really positive energy and drive that I appreciate, when he’s not trying to convince me to replace some of my yellowing naturals.  He has been pushing me for years to get some caps on my front teeth.  The exchange goes something like this:

“You feel that?  That should be smooth.  You shouldn’t be able to feel anything when I do that with this instrument.

Resisting the urge to reply “then don’t do that,” instead I ask, “Are they in imminent danger of falling out?”

“Well, they could crack and fall out at any time.  No way to know.  If they do break, however, you’re stuck.  It becomes a lot more complicated for me to fix.”

“Are you available on the weekends if I have a dental emergency?”

“Yeah, they’ll page me.”

“Doctor, I’m just not there yet.  I’d like to think about it some more, and are dentists real doctors?”

“Yes.  Yes, we are.”

“You know I have no cavities.”

“Yes.  Yes, I do.”

“Shouldn’t that count for something at my age?”

“No.  No, it doesn’t.  I’ll have my wife come in now and clean your teeth.  See you next time, if not sooner.”

And then his lovely wife breaks out the chainsaw and dental rope and removes six months of oatmeal shells from between my teeth.  She’s actually a wonderful hygienist, and the only problem we ever have is that I have difficulty talking with her with my mouth full of instruments.

But she doesn’t seem to mind.  Apparently she is fluent in American Garble.

And if that’s not enough, this dentist is the only one my Lovely Spouse will use.  Period.  And she has a deep-seated aversion to dentists.  Heck, I refer him to my co-workers, for crying out loud.  He’s that good.

But what Daughter doesn’t realize is how fortunate she is to have dental coverage at all.  I know about that all too well.  From the age of seven or eight until I was, oh, twenty-five, I experienced exactly zero professional care or even exams of my chompers.

So I considered it a beneficial change in my personal fortune when dental care entered my life again.  Though I was very appreciative, I felt terrible for the hygienist who got stuck that day cleaning my teeth that first time after eighteen years of abstinence.

“I’m really sorry about my teeth,” I said.  “They are probably the worst ones you’ve ever seen, right?”

“Are you kidding me? she replied.  “We get some kids in here younger than you who have subsisted on soda and chips since they could eat solid food.  Most of them don’t have anything left in their mouths by the time they’re out of their teens.”

Okay.  I’m starting to feel pretty good at this point, so I countered, “You know, the dentist told me because I’m missing a wisdom tooth, it’s probably a good idea to get them all pulled now, before they start causing problems.  I asked him if there were any issues now, and he said there weren’t.  What do you think?

I really, really didn’t want to have those teeth removed.

“Make a point of keeping them clean, and you should be fine,” she said, and she was right.  That conversation took place twenty-eight years ago, and I still have those wisdom teeth and no cavities.

So, Daughter, suck it up.  Be thankful for what you have, and no matter what, please brush your teeth after every meal.

I think we’ll cut you some slack on the flossing, however, but you have to commit to trying to understand vague Star Trek analogies going forward.

- Dad

Dentists are Socially-Sanctioned Torturers

My day started with the horrible realization that I had a dentist appointment. I hate all doctors. Not dislike. Not would-rather-avoid. Hate. And not without reason. There have been multiple instances where doctors lied, misled, or were completely and unforgivably wrong about something that had a huge medical impact on my life. Basically, the doctors I have experienced are like Marvel Comics supervillains. Except worse because they’re real.

*Me coming into doctor’s office with a crooked nose*

Me: “Is my nose broken?”

Doctor: “No, of course not. The x-ray shows nothing. Your nose is fine. Go home.”

 the next day

“So, this is the doctor’s office. Your cartilage in your septum is torn and you need to have emergency surgery to fix it tomorrow morning or risk breathing obstruction.”

“…okay.”

— the next year 

*Me coming into doctor’s office for excruciating calf and shin pain*

Doctor: “I think that you just have shin splints. Not stress fractures. Shin splints are more painful. It is highly, highly, highly unlikely you have stress fractures. Especially in both shins. That just doesn’t happen. Just suck up the pain, you’re not making it worse by running on it. Take some ibuprofen and just run through the pain. I mean, if you can’t handle it, obviously stop. But mostly just focus on pushing through the pain because it’s just pain.”

the next day after an MRI

Doctor: “So, you have double stress fractures in both shins.”

Me: “…okay.”

I guess you could say I have some trust issues with doctors. Dentists, however, have a less horrible reputation in my life. But it doesn’t mean I like them.

Dentist: “How often do you floss?”

Me: “…when I remember.”

Dentist: “Yeah, you need to do that.”

Besides shaming me about my oral hygiene, the dentist also cleaned my teeth. Teeth cleaning is a  nice, harmless idea in its conceptual form but in reality, it’s one of the worst things to happen in and around my face (besides breaking my nose). Seriously, those little pointy things are the worst. My entire body tenses up when they clean my teeth. “Scritch. Scratch. SCRAAAAAPE.” Dear God, it makes me want to rip all the teeth out of my mouth and call it a day. Ugh. *shudders*

Can’t I just brush my teeth and floss once a year? Isn’t that enough? Why do I allow this masked torturer to relentless assault my teeth with miniature knives?

On top of the fact that the dentist lady was displeased with my flossing frequency, she also said that one of my wisdom teeth – which is currently wedging its way out of my gums like a desperately single girl shoving her way to the bridal bouquet cake –  is probably going to have to come out. It is also inconveniently sitting rather close to a large nerve making it more complicated to eventually remove. Stupid teeth.

Who needs teeth, anyway?

I can live on juiced vegetables and smoothies. Chewing is so overrated.

- Daughter

Insomnia: Smoke Alarm Chinese Water Torture

I have problems sleeping and I’ve written about it before. It is one of the most irritating feelings in the world lying awake at night knowing you have to get up in five hours and being unable to sleep. It must be similar to what Lindsay Lohan feels like when her drug dealer dies and she has to find a new one – grumpy and restless. However, I thought that I’d gotten over my problem. I thought that maybe I found the right combination of activities and habits to make bedtime something I looked forward to rather than something I actively dread.

I’m more like a toddler when faced with the prospect of going to bed now: “I DON’T WANT TO. YOU CAN’T MAKE ME. NO. NOPE. NO. I’M GUNNA STAY UP FOREVER.”

Yesterday, I took all my normal precautions to avoid insomnia: I exercised for an hour, I sat outside in the sun for a while, I read before turning off the light, and I took one of my mom’s herbal remedies for sleeplessness (it also gives me magical powers).

It was all for naught.

The first problem occurred when my fan malfunctioned. I cannot sleep without background noise. My preferred background noise is provided by a tower fan. It’s just loud enough to block out any weird creaking my house makes at night but soft enough to allow me to sleep. But, it has developed a very high-pitched, intermittent squeak. I tried to ignore it but it was too much.

I got out of bed and turned off the fan. The deafening silence that ensued was better than the squeak but then the silence gave way to dogs barking, cats meowing, various forest creatures walking in the yard, birds tweeting, the house creaking and settling, and the wind rustling the plants and trees outside.

2 sleep

This symphony of the night was not conducive to sleep. Exacerbating the problem was my paranoia that every unexplained sound was an ax murderer who was outside of my window, peering in, waiting for his chance to strike. I started to get anxious thinking about all the different ways a person could break into my house and kill me. I would literally jump and have a mini heart attack each time something resembling a sound occurred.

Eventually, the sounds dissipated. Ah, problem solved. BUT NO. PLOT TWIST. The silence that occurred thereafter made my ears ring. I started listening to my own breathing and thinking about horrible things that happen in very quiet moments in horror films. Oh, great. Yeah, I’m definitely not sleeping ever again. 

3 sleepEventually, I got tired enough that the silence was almost soothing and I felt the sweet relief of sleep come over me like a warm blanket on a cold winter’s night or a nutella crepe.  Unfortunately, a piercing beep occurred at the moment just before unconsciousness. The smoke alarm had chosen that moment to say, “BATTERY’S DEAD, FOLKS!!! LET ME PLAY YOU THE SONG OF MY PEOPLE.”

It was incredibly loud and beeped every thirty seconds. The predictability was insanity-inducing. I would have a build-up of anxiety as I waited for the beep and then a small release of tension when the horrible noise filled my ears and echoed in my cerebellum.

image (11)

 

My mom got up at one point and I thought it was because of the smoke alarm. But it was just because the dog needed to go outside. She  walked into the hallway where I was under the impression she would attempt to dismantle the alarm but instead, she walked into her bedroom – clearly intent on making me suffer through my insomnia-induced madness.

I crept into the living room and shut the door. It blocked out the assaulting noise of the smoke alarm. The Mama Cat, who normally hates me and ESPECIALLY hates when I wear fuzzy socks, followed me out and kept me company as I finally, FINALLY fell asleep on the couch.

5 sleep Where I slept until noon. Naturally.

6 sleep

 

- Daughter

 

Types of People at the Gym

So, I’ve noticed some distinct types of people who frequent the gym I occasionally work out at. It turns out that most of these people are slightly terrifying each in their own way, but ultimately harmless. I decided that describing each of them would be less fun than illustrated them so here is my “web comic” (complete with horrible touch-screen finger-scribble-font!!!!) about the weird types of people at my gym. And probably at yours.

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As for my type? I think I fall comfortably into the “Former Athlete” category of gym-goers. But one day, I hope to be in the “Amazingly-in-Shape 40-year-olds” category.

- Daughter

Falling to Earth

broken

“Why don’t we just shoot it? It’s all broken down anyway.”

If you read my post yesterday, you would have discovered I was feeling pretty good about myself.

Focused.  Engaged.  Relevant.

What a freaking difference twenty-four hours makes.

Today, I felt like sh crap.  And it all actually started last night, after a day filled with lots of physical activity, sunshine, and dehydrating wind.

I fell into bed, not exactly in a fit of exhaustion, but darn tired and unable to read a few bedtime story pages before extinguishing the nightstand light.  Unfortunately, as so often happens to me these days, I slept soundly for a total of approximately two hours before waking up, completely penned in by a geriatric cat and multiple throw pillows.

No worries, as I’m fairly used to it by now, but it is very annoying, to quote Daughter.

To compound matters, both my knees seem to have developed nighttime personalities.  They don’t hurt, exactly, but they feel funny — that’s the best way to describe them.  They are weird enough that they keep me awake, after I wake up in the middle of the night.  To calm them down, I try shifting around, lying this way and that, and in desperation I usually prop a pillow under both of them, hoping they will be satisfied.  Really it’s my brain trying to convince my knees to knock it off at this point, and haltingly drift back off to a troubled slumber.

It’s not Zombie Terror sleep when I do finally manage to fall off, but the broken pattern makes me feel mostly dead when I wake up.

Then the real trouble begins on the morning after.

My feet feel like waffle irons, or like they’ve been roasted by a George Foreman Grill, a la Michael Scott.  My right knee is swollen which, I suppose, is better than experiencing the previously described amorphous midnight sensation.  The inflammation issue with the knee throws off my hip, leaving me with a cruddy limp and a painful twinge whenever I walk.

And my eyes.  They are red and sore like I’ve been stranded in the Sahara for days without a hat and sunscreen.

All this after about five hours running around as a referee yesterday.

Man, it sucks.  Big time.

Normally, I would just take it easy today, and engage in the type of leisurely Sunday activities that would allow my body to heal — drink some hot tea, read the paper, watch some golf, and take a nap on the couch.

No such luck.

I foolishly bravely signed on to officiate several more games today, which meant one thing to me:  Medication.

Compared to just a few years ago when it was nothing for me to suit up and work outside ten hours per weekend day, now it has become a carefully planned activity, not as complicated, perhaps, as the D-Day Invasion, but not as simple as taking regular aspirin and heading out the door, either.

Though I begin each day with a small regimen of vitamins and other witchly concoctions helpful mixtures developed by my Spouse, today I had to bring out the heavy artillery, and several rounds of it.

First up, a large, strong cup of coffee.  This comes after I’ve already have several cups of tea with a booster of oatmeal.  If I’m feeling really crappy, I’ll eat part of a scone, as well, after splitting it with Daughter Number Two (DNT).

Next, Extra Strength Tylenol; at least two, but maybe four, if the first two don’t take the edge off.  And I’ve got to time the dosage, as well.  Too soon, and it wears off in the middle of the afternoon.  Too late, and it does no good at all.  I’m a dead man walking, trying to look sprightly and alive.

Third, it’s liniment, or Cramer Gesic, or Atomic Balm.  And I spread it liberally over every part of me that hurts or is sore, and some areas that aren’t, just for good measure.  I smell like a medicine aisle at the drug store, but that’s a small price to pay for the illusion of relief that topical creams bring.

Fourth come the eye drops.  Whatever is available in the medicine cabinet — allergy drops, sensitive drops, cleansing drops, soothing drops.  It doesn’t matter.  Any of these choices help the sandpaper scratching the inside of my eyelids.

And last?  Sunscreen.  Lots of it.  I now use so much sunscreen that beach babies are envious of me.  Their overprotective mamas have nothing on Yours Truly.  I slather the stuff on like tomato paste on pizza crust.  If a part of me is exposed, it gets covered.

So, I’ve cunningly deduced that these preparations are the “Man-Equivalent” of my Spouse getting ready to go out, anywhere.  I guess you could say all this stuff is “Man-Make-up” and “Man-Drugs,” but that would be “Man Stupid” of me to classify it, as such.

In reality, I’m simply getting carried away with the “Man-” quotation marks thing.

So after all this preparation, I managed to make it through the afternoon, on a day I was hoping would end shorter than it did.

The last game I refereed late today was for the championship in that particular age bracket.  Unfortunately, it ended in a tie after regulation, and it was still tied after two overtime periods.

I was running on fumes at that point, but I had a game to finish.  Fortunately, it was decided by penalty kicks which required exactly zero running by me.  Just blow the whistle and write it down.

I could do that, but little else.  And the game did, in fact, finally end.

Now the biggest decision left for me in the few remaining hours of consciousness is whether or not I should try to play basketball at lunch tomorrow.

I guess I’ll have to see if I can walk first before deciding.

In the meantime, I’m going to squeeze in a couple more Tylenol and have a heart to heart discussion with my knees about their sleep patterns.  I figure if they don’t behave, I’ll call out the Zombies to take care of them.

After all, we share the same bed.

- Dad

More Morons

moron

Maybe the title for this piece is a bit harsh.

But in my mind, whether one qualifies for the label “moron” almost completely depends on whether that person exhibits a loss of context, a loss of balance, or a loss of what most of us consider to be rational thinking.

Allow me to provide a couple of examples from my most recent experiences from the last eight hours.

I spent the afternoon with Daughter Number Two (DNT) running around various soccer fields in my capacity as a referee.  The beginning of summer is the start of youth soccer tournament season, and many weekends I officiate, as it keeps me off the streets and earns me foo-foo coffee money.  Since Daughter and my Lovely Spouse were otherwise engaged, DNT was doomed to  accompany me hung out on the sideline while I worked, where she read books, played on my phone, and constructed straw crucifixes out of dead grass and other trash.

She didn’t complain once (a trip to In-N-Out first didn’t hurt), and seemed happy to spend an afternoon in the sun watching other people yell at her dad.

She is not a moron; just a pre-teen.

In between games while I was sitting with the other miserable referees, I detected a strong odor in the air.  Although no one was in my immediate vicinity, I was downwind of a couple of my compatriots, and I soon figured out that one of those guys was the source of the stank.

Which one is it, I wondered?  The nattily attired older dude who looked like he just stepped out of a Viagra commercial or the younger guy who looked like he just stepped out of a run-down Laundromat?

Let’s just say looks can be deceiving.

It turned out to be the posh guy.  He simply hadn’t washed his uniforms in God knows how long.  That’s the only logical explanation for such extreme rancidness.

He is not a moron.  He is just filthy and oblivious — and handsome, but not in a “Man-Love” sort of way.

Finally, after I finished six long hours of officiating, I stood in the middle of the field after the final game and shook hands with both teams and coaches.  That last match was a hard-fought affair that ended in a zero to zero draw.  I called a bunch of fouls, made a number of very carefully considered “no calls,” and stayed on top of the pace of play from end to end.

For this kind of thing, I generally know if I’m focused and doing well, because I’ve been doing it so long.  I continue to referee because I enjoy it, and I think I’m pretty good (most of the time).

Today I was “on;” no question about it.  But that doesn’t mean I don’t occasionally miss a foul or make an error in judgment.  I am, after all, a Muggle.

As one of the coaches was walking away afterwards, he asked me to explain a call I made against one of his players.

“He just got completely taken out by the defender,” he said.

“I thought he fouled first,” I replied, though it was such a bang-bang incident among many, I very well might have got it wrong.  Who knows?

But in my mind, his perspective missed the forest for the trees.  Of the thirty or so times I blew the whistle during fifty minutes, I’m pretty sure 29 of them were completely on the button.  Probably all thirty, even, but I can’t be completely sure.  But both teams sure as hell received a full $27 dollar’s worth of effort from me (my game fee).

It’s not the World Cup, for crying out loud.  Deal with it.

What about saying something about all the things I got right?

Nope, and for that coach to ignore the entirety of the game to focus on one insignificant negative part (in his mind) is simply crazy.

And for that, I consider him to be a moron.

The beauty of this particular moron is that, because he’s a moron, he doesn’t realize I’ll be right back out there tomorrow, probably working another of one of his team’s games.  Heck, I’m also doing the championship match for my last game of the day.

I wonder what he’ll think if his team makes it to the final and he sees me in the middle?

I know what I’ll think — moron.

- Dad

Civil Disobedience!

convict

I’ll admit it.  I occasionally break the law.

True, it’s in little ways, but still. . . .

This morning on the way to the Salt Mine work was a good example.  I typically treat myself on Fridays to (what I consider to be a well-earned) coffee.  I always try to leave home a few minutes early to make up for the stop, but I rarely do and I inevitably end up arriving at the office somewhat later than normal.  I used to feel a twinge of guilt about it, but no longer — probably save that for another post.

Anyway, today was no different.  I stopped in to obtain my cuppa and returned to my small beater commuter Miata, where I positioned that java cup in one of my empty high-top basketball shoes.  If you don’t have adequate cup holders, I have found that using your shoes can be a great alternative.  However, you need to be prepared to explain to whomever does the laundry why one of your socks always seems to be a bit “browner” than the other one.  In fact, on my really uninspired days, I seriously consider formalizing this invention and taking it on Shark Tank.

Heck, it can’t be any worse than Daughter’s HeadHelmet or FaceHelmet, or whatever stupid name she calls it these days.  After all, it is trademarked (not really; at least I don’ think so).

headhelmet

Actual recent photo of FaceHelmet in use. Two-year manufacturer’s warranty included at a small additional fee.

So with drink firmly planted in shoe, I left the miniscule parking lot and drove off in the direction of the interstate on-ramp, otherwise known as the Muggle Commuter Bottleneck.  It’s a metered affair, which is Urban Planning Speak for “We’re going to make you wait here under the illusion that delaying your merge into the broader highway really and truly cuts down on congestion.”

And like most Muggles, I duly line up in one of three lanes and (mostly) patiently wait my turn to join the rushing maelstrom.

Except for this morning; this glorious overcast June Gloom Southern California morning.  Because today, as I veered to the right and onto the access lanes, I was met by — nothing; no one; no cars queuing; nada.

Just three red lights, staring me down.

I had to make a command decision very quickly.  Do I obey the law and stop, thereby wasting the modest momentum that 78 horsepower generates in my little piece of crap car, or do I dutifully pause at the light and wait for the meter to do its thing?

It is the type of moral/ethical dilemma at which I excel.  That is to say, I’ll make up for whatever wrongdoing I commit now by counteracting it with a goodly act later.

Well, a quick glance in the rearview mirror to confirm I was, indeed, alone in my splendor, and a moment later I simply floored it through the light.  “Flooring it” may not quite be an accurate description of what I did.  Rather, I continued to accelerate at a moderate pace and seamlessly merged with the traffic ahead.  After all, my tiny little car doesn’t have the “oomph” it once did because it bears the burden of almost 185,000 miles now.

What value!

Back to my sad story. . . .  After driving straight through the light, I felt bad for about one nanosecond, and figured I saved approximately two tenths of an ounce of gas in the process, thereby justifying my legal waywardness.

And for the sake of complete openness, I must admit this time was not my first.  I have occasionally committed the same crime in the past, but only when the opportunity presented itself.  I would never take advantage, after all.  That would be wrong.

I’m sure one day I will suffer the consequences for these misdeeds but, in the meantime, I will “Live, Baby, Live!”

And just so that you don’t lose complete faith in me, I did hold open the door for someone later in the day, and I let someone jump in front of me in a line, as well.

I figure I’m even.  I’m sure the local constabulary does not.

I’m okay with that.

- Dad

First Day Back at Retail

Today was my first day back at my old retail job. I’m a little disgusted at how easily I transitioned back into my job as a saleswoman. My voice automatically raised three octaves and my face was plastered with a Chesire cat grin the entire shift. I guess my spirit animal is a sleazy car salesman. Or a performing monkey. Or an insignificant cog in the machine of humanity.

I had a wide range of customers today – from Chinese immigrants who responded to everything I said with “NO ENGLISH” to regular picky old ladies who complained about the mason jars which were “the wrong shade of blue.” At one point, I looked around and smiled: Yeah, okay I can do this. 

This brief burst of confidence was quickly taken care of by the fickle retail gods, however. As I worked on unloading a particular box, it fell. And jars filled with pungent martini onions that were soaking in vermouth shattered on the ground. Ah, yes. Retail.

- Daughter

Zombie Screams in the Night

zombies

We live in a sickeningly standard suburban subdivision somewhere in Southern California.

Though I am very comfortable here, our older children like to pass judgment on our lifestyle, with quips such as, “So this is what the middle class does on weekend mornings?  Sit around and drink coffee on a terrace with other middle class coffee drinkers?”

Mind you, this criticism spews forth between sips of their own double latte peppermint soy lemon twist, purchased courtesy of Yours Truly.  Somehow the irony escapes them, or it is just conveniently ignored — whichever takes less effort.

“Yes.  Yes, it is, and if it’s the one thing in my life in which I splurge, you’re just going to have to deal with it, because I enjoy sitting in the sun, with the dog, and talking about pretty much nothing at all while I drink my drink.”

After that exchange, everyone usually quiets down and silently munches on the remnants of a blueberry scone.

But if the days are filled with the commonplace pursuits of trying to maintain a 42-year-old wood frame house with cracked stucco, the nights around here can be downright scary.  I’m not talking about the poltergeist frights we experience in our home with almost alarming frequency, I’m referring to the utterances from those of us in the Here and Now who live here.

Let’s start with Dandy Dog.  As I have mentioned previously (somewhere) in this blog, it was several months after adopting him that we even discovered he could bark.  It was a revelation when we realized we had a real dog on our hands and not just some kind of mute Ninja Warrior ready to tear any delivery person limb from limb who dared approach our front door.

Well, he is that, of course, but he can bark with the best of them.  In fact, he has developed a broad range of vocalizations to suit many of the occasions that are important in the life of a dog.  Though I won’t try to recreate the variety here (i.e., bark; ruff; baaaark; baaaruk, ruff/ruff, etc.), he’s got phrases for:  1)  Mom, take me on a walk; 2)  Mom, take me in the car;  3)  Mom, throw a ball for me; 4)  Mom, I’m ready to go on that walk now; 5)  Mom, I’m ready to go in the car now;  6)  Mom, you’d better be taking me in that car, etc.

There are no vocalizations associated with anyone else in the family, of course.

But there’s one not listed that we didn’t even know about until early one morning several years ago.

It was around 2:00 a.m. when I was awakened by what I thought was the howling of the Great Pumpkin.  It was an unearthly, hollow wail that scared the living sh daylights out of me.

“Good, God, what is that?” I sleepily asked my similarly frightened Spouse.

“It’s the Dog.  It must be the Dog!” she cried, and it was the Dog.

He wasn’t so much having a dream, as he was sleepily howling in unison with an emergency vehicle siren off in the distance somewhere.  We didn’t actually figure it out at the time that night, but during several subsequent howling episodes we were able to link the two:  Siren = Howl.  Everything stops until the episode is complete when the siren fades away.

It still freaks me out when it happens at night, but at least now I know some Dark Cloud is not descending to ferry me to Hades.  That, I’m sure, will come later in life.

And when Daughter was just a Little Thing and prone to cutting her own hair, she came running into our bedroom one evening crying bitterly, and clearly frightened out of her gourd.

“What’s the matter, Sweetie?” I asked.

“There’s a terrible sound coming from the room next to me.  I think it’s a monster.”

“What?  Let me go check.”  And I walked three paces down the hall, only to be met by the buzzsaw snoring emanating from the vicinity of the room where my Mother, who was visiting, was sleeping.  “That sounds like a Sherman tank in there,” I thought, “And I don’t even know what a Sherman tank sounds like.”

I returned back to our bedroom with, “Sweetie, that’s just Grandma.  It’s nothing to be frightened of.”  But clearly she was having none of it, and we had an extra visitor in bed that night.  Daugher eventually calmed down and feel asleep, but we turned the bedside fan on “high” to drown out the lumber mill across the way.

However, all of these incidents pale in comparison to the otherworldly, phantasmagoric bellows that are emitted by my own Person during my nightmares.  I couldn’t tell you what I dream about, but it must be bad, if I am to believe the descriptions from fellow family members about the noises I make.

These nightmares are absolutely legendary in our household, and are often a continuing source of jokes and levity.

Apparently everyone loves a good scare,  except for my wife.  It seems that during one of my nighttime bouts, rather than “gently rouse me from my slumber,” she chose to cover my mouth with her hand in a desperate attempt to shut me up.  No doubt whatever nightmare I was having at the time only became worse since it was infused with a sense of being suffocated.

Of course, I eventually woke up, disoriented and out of breath.  I knew enough to realize her hand had been on my face.

“What were you doing?” I wondered.

“Just trying to keep you quiet, dear.  I was gently covering your mouth.”

Hunh?  What was that again?

We relived this entire episode tonight, as Daughter mentioned that she herself heard the Zombie Screams from the Underworld last evening, as I was having another bad episode.

“Dad, it was loud and really weird, and scary.”

“Did you or your Mother try to suffocate me to stop it?” I asked.

My Spouse answered, “I didn’t try to suffocate you that time.  I gently placed my hand over your mouth.”

As I explained to my Lovely Better Half, no one “gently places a hand over someone’s mouth,” just as no one ever ”gently kicks someone in the groin” or ”gently punches someone in the face.”

But they all had a good laugh about it anyway.

Just wait.  A night will come, I don’t know when, during which the moon, stars, and emergency vehicles of the night will all align, and Dandy Dog and I will howl in a somnambulant chorus, scaring the bejesus out of everyone and proving, once again, that what goes around comes around.

I just hope I don’t wake up from dreaming I ate a marshmallow to find my pillow gone in the morning.

- Dad

The Cannibals Among Us

cheetah

I came to the realization today I’m surrounded by Stone Cold Killers.  I even sleep with them or, rather, they sleep with me.  At least some of them.

Their names?  Rambo, Tigger, and Sandy (aka Mamma Cat or Big Bad Mama — no offense to Angie Dickenson).

I’m talking about our damn cats, of course.  Our  geriatric, whining, skittish felines who, between the three of them, total 52 years on this earth and, sometimes in a sandbox, if we’re lucky.

But more on them in a moment.

Hunters and Hunted were all around me today.  It started early this morning when I went out for a coffee.  As I was pleasantly enjoying my solitude drink, a flashing movement across the street caught my attention.  There, on top of the gas station awning, perched a gigantic hawk with a feathery mass clutched in his talons.  While we frequently see crows ganging up on and chasing hawks here, rarely do we witness the aftermath of a kill.  It looked to me as if the world was short one less blackbird.

Chalk one up for the raptors.

This particular hawk didn’t seem to have the best grip on its now-expired prey, and I just waited for him to drop the whole mass on some unsuspecting customer below filling up his Mugglemobile.  Alas, just a few feathers slowly drifted down, and when I returned my gaze after being momentarily distracted, the hawk was gone, and it had taken breakfast with him.

I have to admit that watching the birds is more interesting than the cop who usually parks over at that station  and entertains himself by ticketing drivers rolling through the right turn red light right in front of him.  After all, it’s the ticketing part that’s best, and he typically pulls folks over several blocks away so I don’t get to see the Shock and Awe involved with the standard traffic stop.  Bummer.

A bit later after I returned home, I busied myself with washing my filthy, neglected, road-worn truck.  (Note to Daughter:  If you want to use the truck again, try becoming familiar with a vacuum cleaner — you can practice on the interior.  And don’t let it interfere with any eyebrow appointments you might be planning, thank you.)  As I was finishing up, I was summoned by my Spouse.

“Come quick!  The cats have caught a locust.”

“I’m still wiping down the truck.  I’ll be there in a minute.”

“But it’s huge.  I’ve never seen one this big.  It’s huge!”

Now you have to understand, two of our three cats have essentially laid waste to all the fauna that inhabits our pixie-sized SoCal yard.  Well, let me qualify that a bit.  Tigger and Rambo are able to (but not necessarily do) catch anything that moves slower than them (lizards and skinks), is not taller than them (lizards and skinks) since they can’t really jump anymore, or is dumber than them (some birds, apparently, lizards and skinks, and some insects).

Basically our two cats retired from the Plains of Africa years ago.  They may dream they’re cheetahs, but they move like hippos now.  They prefer being fed to hunting, but occasionally the mood strikes them (or an insect wanders in front of them), and the slow-speed chase is on.  Our third cat (Mama) prefers to hide, sleep, and randomly bite/scratch Daughter, when the opportunity presents itself — it’s entertaining, if nothing else.

Back to our story.

When I finally made it to the side of the house to gaze upon the locust leviathan, there was nothing left to see.

“What happened?  Where’s this locust?” I asked, not even marginally disappointed.  I’ve seen all this before.

“I think Tigger ate it,” my Spouse replied.

Keep in mind that in our idyllic community and neighborhood, we have several retirement homes within a short distance, and senior citizens are everywhere, holding up traffic, arguing with cashiers, and looking perplexed at the post office.  Why, a local credit union a short distance from our house was robbed a couple of years ago by the so-called “Geezer Bandit.” Not only did this Oldster successfully abscond with a substantial amount of money, he made his getaway in an RV.

Yep.  An RV.

How hard can it be to track down an RV?  Just saying. . . .

So, our elderly cats kind of fit in with the rest of the AARP landscape around here.  We always rescue their prey if we make it in time.

“How do you know Tigger ate the locust?” I asked.

“He’s throwing up now,” my Spouse replied.

And if we don’t make it in time to make the save, we always make it in time to clean up afterwards.

- Dad

Warning: This Post is Not ADA-Compliant

wheelchairOne of my co-workers is a Disney Freak — annual Disneyland membership; knows the in’s and out’s of all the special park perks; owns lots or really freaky cool Disney paraphernalia, etc.

But she’s got nothing on my Spouse who, if given the opportunity, would live in either Disneyland or Walt Disney World (or both, simultaneously).  She is a bona fide Disney Commando, while I am a part of the greater non-Disney Diaspora, forever shunned because I cannot relate to the Chosen Disney People Thing.

But I’m okay with that and, now, back to my co-worker.

Last week Disneyland staged a one-day, 24-hour promotion where the park was, get this, open for 24 hours straight.  tMy co-worker was all over this event like stink on sh the fanatical Disneynoid she is.

Upon her return to work afterwards, she regaled us with not stories of how wonderful everything was, but, oddly enough, how incredibly crowded it seemed, even to her.

“Eureka!” I exclaimed.  Finally someone else who thinks the place is more suited to Tribbles than Muggles.  And from a Disneywonk, to boot.

Her displeasure brought to mind my own Disney Experience that took place early last year.

Fair Warning:  It’s semi-Shameful, but True.

As Daughter will verify, our family mostly dreams of vacations without actually taking them.  Just like we spend time searching on Zillow for homes we’d rather live in than taking care of the one we’ve got.

However, we do occasionally manage to launch a holiday excursion about once a decade, and Orlando, Florida it was in the early part of 2012.  At a Disney Resort, no less.

For context, during this period Daughter was still semi-happily ensconced in college in Philadelphia and Son was beating the sidewalks looking for employment somewhere north of San Diego.  Daughter Number Two (DNT) was the sole offspring from our particular gene pool in attendance, so I guess it technically wasn’t a “family” vacay, since two siblings were missing.  However, we invoked the Greater Family Substitution Clause and were accompanied by Spouse’s Sis and her Son, for a grand total of five.

Rather than bore you with the nitty natty details of the Magic Kingdom, I would rather bore you with describing how unseasonably hot it was last February.  I’m talking Sweat Monster, shirt-drenching, record breaking heat and humidity.  For someone (like me) well suited to zero heat and balmy SoCal weather year round, it absolutely sucked was terribly uncomfortable.

But our small platoon led by Daughter’s Mother would not be intimidated.  During our four-day stay, we laughed in the face of hardship and fatigue.  In fact, we considered the weather to be just another theme park challenge that could be met and overcome through funnel cakes and really overpriced fast food.

And it worked, for the most part, almost.

I think it was the afternoon on Day Three (could have been Day Four — it’s all rather hazy now) when DNT “hit the wall.” For lack of the appropriate medical terminology, she was physically fried and started experiencing such excruciating pain in her legs that she was having trouble with basic locomotion.

It was the full Monty for her:  pain, tears, fatigue, exhaustion, and more leg pain.

To be completely fair, DNT has experienced this same pain semi-frequently growing up, and a basic cause and effect diagnosis has so far escaped all the doctors and specialists she’s seen over the years.

So we were faced with both a situation and a dilemma.  We were stuck deep inside the park and short of carrying her myself what I estimated to be approximately twelve miles to the shuttle busses, we needed an alternative.

I was too mentally exhausted to be of much help, as my brains was fried from the “fun” of the first few days of the trip.

Cue Power Commander, Stage Right, aka, Daughter’s Mother.

I’ll paraphrase the conversation that ensued:  “Look, she can’t walk, you can’t carry her, she’s in agony.  Let’s just get her off her feet.”

“Well, she is off her feet,” I said.  “She’s sitting here on the grass in the shade crying.”

“Not helpful.  I’m getting her a wheelchair.  The kid can’t walk.”

“Can we do that?” I asked.  “Is it allowed?”

“Short of calling an ambulance, I don’t know what else to do.  I’m going to go get one.”

And she did, and we plunked DNT into the chair after giving her some time to recover.

Then we thought, well, we’re here, and she’s stopped crying, and we have locomotion; shouldn’t we just carry on and see how she does?

In the face of this misery, what ensued was sheer wonder.  No, DNT’s legs didn’t miraculously heal themselves, though we plowed her with pain meds (I think) and ice cream (I’m pretty sure).

No, we discovered the real key to the Magic Kingdom was the wheelchair.  Suddenly, we didn’t have to wait in line for anything any longer.  We had our own special lines, and we had our own special viewing areas.

And therein I discovered the three primary stages of temporary disablement:

1)  Guilt – Is this bad?  There are some truly disabled folks here.  Even though DNT can’t walk, aren’t we horrifically bad people for taking advantage?  That’s what we’re doing, right?  Taking advantage?  Are we going to hell?  Have we cursed DNT?  Even if it kills me, I will carry her back to the bus in order to avoid the shame.

2)  Joy – Once you get past the guilt (after all, she’s stopped crying and isn’t in so much pain), you start to appreciate the easy access capability to everything.  I liken it to those (very) few occasions when I (mistakenly) fly first class.  Though I don’t belong in the privileged cabin, I look down my nose at the rabble filing past me to the oblivion of Coach, knowing that somehow I was cheating the devil and, yes, ma’am, you’d better believe I’d like another mimosa before take-off.

3)  Entitlement – “Can’t you see I have a child in a wheelchair here?  Geez, clear a path!”  It was remarkable to me how quickly I transitioned from Stage 1 to Stage 3.  Probably took an hour.  Ninety minutes at most.

Half a day in a wheelchair enabled our ten year old kid to finish out the last part of her Disney Adventure, without having to endure really traumatic pain while doing so.  She recovered enough overnight to be able to kind of walk around the park the next day without too much difficulty, but we kept the day short to preclude a reoccurrence of the same phenomenon.

A Podiatrist recently cautioned me about the lure of wheelchairs.

“A lot of guys come in here, trying to get off their feet and into a chair.  Let me tell you.  Once they do that, they never go back to walking.  The chair’s too easy.”

Don’t I know it, brother.  Don’t I know.

- Dad

Picking Classes or Medieval Torture?

It’s summer! Carefree and happy days ahead!

No. Not when you have to figure out what classes you are taking in the fall. I just finished a hellish semester of school and to be honest, I am burned out after that one semester. I mean, part of the reason why it was more difficult than starting a Lindsay Lohan Appreciation Club is because I took a year off and forgot how to be an Academic in that time.

I wish I could be a studious kitten, too.

I wish I could be a studious kitten, too.

 

My professors continually berated me for my colloquialisms in my formal writing and were generally unhappy with my academic performance. I tried, I really did! But academia just does not hold a candle to my true passion in life: writing funny things on my blog for my millions of readers’ mom’s enjoyment. I like to think that my writing has grown because of my blog but to be honest, it has introduced an informality into my prose that I just can’t seem to shake. I hope my future employers are okay with emoticons and an excessive use of cat pictures to illustrate points.

I digress. I only have two classes to go before I get my Bachelor’s and I’ve been scouring classes online using search keywords like “finger painting” and “watching reality tv” and “lesbian cults.” So far, I have found no classes matching those search terms, which is a shame.

Picking classes is sort of like choosing which way I want to be tortured. US history or the stretching table? Linguistics or … I don’t know any other torture devices from the Medieval period, I apologize. (Maybe I should take a class in it?)

I really do like learning but I don’t like being told how to do it and when. OKAY, MOM?!!

Yeah, I was that kid in kindergarten who was told to draw a cat and I drew the best damn dog I could muster with my rudimentary fine motor skills. I’m just a rebel, I guess.

I am resigned to my fate and know that I must complete my college education so I can get a job or something like that. Although being 30 and living with my parents does sound tempting, I do feel the pull of independence tugging at my heart-strings (but not my wallet-strings). Sorry, Dad. I know that you will miss me calling out your hypocrisy and making you feel smart when I can’t answer obscure US history questions but my stay at home is not going to last forever.

- Daughter

Bar Stories: What is Wrong with Us?

On Saturday night, I went out with two of my friends to celebrate their successful completion of college in four years. (More than I could do, ladies! Cheers to you!) I agreed to be the Designated Driver because I wanted my friends to drink while I soberly judged their life decisions as they grew more and more inebriated. We were all excited to be together and have a good night.

I slathered on some make-up to create the illusion that I am a beautiful Greek sculpture just radiating natural female beauty. Then, I put together an outfit that I am pretty sure made me look like a three-year-old but I was too lazy to pick out another outfit.

Maybe she's born with it.. but maybe she's actually a statue.

Maybe she’s born with it.. but maybe she’s actually a statue.

I curled my notoriously difficult hair and the results were so-so. Some curls were Shirley Temple status but other “curls” only had a pathetic kink in their otherwise straight orientation. The lack of uniformity in my curls was not going to stop me though! Thank goodness for dark lighting in bars.

We went to a rooftop bar that we had been to previously and waited in line with the teeming masses. After a relatively short wait, we took the elevator to the roof. When the doors closed, a fellow bar patron asked what floor it the ROOFTOP bar was on.

I couldn’t help myself and answered, “The rooftop bar is on the fourth floor. Duh.”

The guy was a good sport and cleverly deduced that the rooftop bar was probably the highest floor and pressed the correct button. Both of my friends basically melted from embarrassment and probably wished they had chosen a friend who could be trusted in public places.

As we moseyed through the bar, we set up shop in a place where we thought people would approach us and engage us in witty conversation. We sat down on some barstools and chatted amongst ourselves happily. However, when we turned around, the once-crowded space of which we partly occupied was completely cleared out. You could practically hear crickets.

But we would not be deterred! We went to another part of the bar and again, chattered away among ourselves but not more than five minutes later, we cleared out THAT section of the bar, too.

The three of us thought that the first time had been a mere coincidence but twice seemed to be pushing it. We each took a few minutes to make sure that we were not emitting some terrible smell or had somehow gotten tattooed with Nazi insignia without our knowledge. Alas, no. Nothing of the sort.

We decided that if we cleared out another part of the bar, we would just call it a night and leave. So, we carefully chose a place where we were close to lots and lots of people. But wouldn’t you know it, not five minutes later AGAIN, we cleared out that particular section of the bar.

Now, I know you’re asking, “Why didn’t they just go up to people and talk to them?” Normally, I wouldn’t have a problem with this as I enjoy talking to strangers because I like people these interactions make for great blog posts. But let me tell you, people gave off DON’T-TALK-TO-ME vibes that night and there were crowds of people, yes, but they were chatting in closed circles. I wasn’t about to tunnel my way through these close-knit circles and then pop up in the middle and exclaim, “TALK TO ME, MY PEOPLE!” As much as I may have wanted to.

It was at this point that we left but we wanted to salvage the night. So we tried one more bar. And wouldn’t you know it, it happened again. And so, only two hours into the night, we headed home, defeated.

We told ourselves that weird people were out that night and it was just an “off” night. We tried to console ourselves that we were cool and nice and friendly but it was no use, we hung our heads in defeat.

Can’t win them all.

- Daughter

I Survived a 3am Hippie Drum Circle

Take a bath, hippie.

Take a bath, hippie.

My first time back at the beach after four months of being stuck in East Coast Winter Wonderland Wasteland was supposed to be a moment of everlasting glory and wonder. Sunshine and happiness would embrace me in a warm, summer hug. The dark blue water of the sea would dance in the sunlight and joyful gulls would swoop down from the sky to steal my sandwich. This dream was turned into a nightmare, however. When I did finally set foot in the sands of California, my experience was marred by hippies.

I am partly to blame for the nightmare. My friends and I decided that a 3am drum circle at a “clothing-optional” beach was definitely the event of the year. So, we all dragged ourselves to the beach in the early, pre-dawn hours and pretended to be morning people. We wore clothes to the beach despite having the option to go unclothed because we are normal, corporate people. The type of people hippies hate and probably cannibalize. (Just kidding, hippies don’t like meat.)

Despite the luminescence of the full moon, it was extremely dark and difficult to see as we made our way to the drum circle. It was a half-mile hike down cliffs where loose nails, treacherously slippery rocks, and strung out hippies attempted to keep us from our slightly dirtier, higher brethren playing upon the instruments of our forefathers. Alas, their attempts would fail in the face of our vaguely conscious determination.

As we walked onto the beach, a passing homeless man yelled at us: “WELCOME HOME!” I found this ironic. Ironies noted and cast aside, we continued walking toward the nucleus of the drum circle. Half-dressed, high people ran by us toward the freezing Pacific where they jumped into the water and waves crashed over them right before another sort of wave rushed over them – that of regret (the water of the Pacific doesn’t joke around, she’s a frigid, frigid lady). A man walked up to me and asked if I had a spare bobby pin – presumably to complete his crack pipe or something. I didn’t and he wandered off with a glazed look in his eyes.

Do these flowers make my face look fat?

Do these flowers make my face look fat?

We eventually made it to the actual drum circle and began to mock the hippies by singing Taylor Swift  and Katy Perry over their chorus of Kumbaya. Not truly loud enough to the point where they heard us, just loud enough to amuse ourselves. We were subverting the hippies with our mainstream cultural references. We also mined our collective memories for pro-war songs and came up with, “Welcome to the Jungle.” Basically, we were the Drum Circle Trolls. I mean, I can hardly take a drum circle seriously on its own terms much less when any toddler set loose in a well-stocked kitchen filled with pots and pans could make a better rhythm.

A woman seemed to be leading the singing and she was actually quite good considering she had multiple chemicals coursing through her body. She had a nice voice and a welcoming hippie vibe that almost made me want to talk to her. However, I decided I didn’t want to have to check for lice later, so I kept my distance.

How everyone dressed at the drum circle.

How everyone dressed at the drum circle.

Yeah, so I’m not as hippie as I thought. I will keep my clothes and my corporate coffee, for now.

- Daughter

Wax On, Wax Off… Not a Motto Applicable to Eyebrows

During the last four months of college, I completely neglected my eyebrows and other facial hair. I had nobody to impress, after all. But when I came back to San Diego, I felt like a lowland gorilla. I was a few days away from being followed around by Jane Goodall. It was a serious situation.

Before waxing appointment.

Before waxing appointment.

Luckily, my mom came to the rescue and gave me the business card of her trusted eyebrow lady. I went to the appointment relaxed and ready to say goodbye to my faint mustache and unibrow. I’m not Frida Kahlo so I don’t feel like I can pull off  the whole facial hair thing.

You go, girl.

You go, girl.

I lounged in the chair of the salon as the waxing lady made small talk. The conversation was interrupted by a burning sensation underneath my left eyebrow. Now, I’m no eyebrow wax amateur, I knew this burning was par for the course. As she deftly removed the wax, I felt more pain than usual but wrote it off to misremembering the intensity of the pain after not waxing for four months.

To add insult to injury, as she was waxing off my cool handlebar mustache (just kidding, it was mostly a Frida-like mustache – very feminine, very in this season), she asked if I wanted my lower lip waxed. Oh great, now in addition to my  ’stache and unibrow, I’m growing a BEARD??? Of course, I replied, “Yes, please.” 

Finally, the hair-ripping was over and I gazed into the mirror.

Mirror, mirror on the wall,

Who is the hairless-est of them all? 

You are, my Queen. But there is one who will overtake your hairlessness. She lives underground and her name is Snow Naked-Mole-Rat White. 

As I looked into mirror more closely, however, I noticed a patch of red below my left eyebrow. The waxing lady asked, “Oh, do you have sensitive skin? It’s quite red up there.”

It took all of my self-control not to retort: “No, I don’t. You just suck at waxing and ripped part of my face off in addition to giving me third degree burns.”

As I left the salon, I immediately put huge sunglasses on my face and there they have stayed. Don’t get me wrong, I’m grateful I have groomed eyebrows and all, I just wish it didn’t come at the price of facial disfigurement.

Luckily, some concealer and dark lighting makes it less visible. And I can’t even see it when I’m in a pitch black room! So, that’s something.

Now, if only I could convince my father to take care of those giant caterpillars trying their darnedest to meet together to form an even bigger, monster caterpillar.

- Daughter

 

Two Out of Three

sprinkler

“I fixed that one last week. Apparently not. . . .”

The Suburban Trifecta — 1.  Yard Work  2.  Sprinklers  3.  House Work

During the Middle Ages, there were several waves of the Black Death that swept through what was eventually to become Europe.

You remember.

It was the only part of that World History class you found vaguely interesting.  The Plague was transmitted through the flea bites from infected rats.  It killed quickly.  And the dying was horrific in its symptoms and pain.  Perhaps a third of the population of the “civilized Western World” (whatever that means) was stricken and perished during the course of a couple hundred years or so.

To loosely quote Dr. Ray Stantz (Dan Aykroyd) in Ghostbusters, “It was really nasty.”

Well, my friends, I have found the modern-day equivalent entrenched firmly in middle class suburbia:  Pine Needles.

For context, please refer to my previous post, which describes the Apocalypse Now-fueled denuding of the hillside next to our house.

What has been left behind is an innocuous-looking bed of inviting pine needles.  If you were on a camping trip somewhere in the Himalayas, you would fondly gather up these needles to create a soft, snuggly bed on which to rest your exhausted body before you made the final ascent up Everest (Hillary Step or Bust!).

Snap!  There are no pine trees anywhere near Everest, dude.

And those downey-looking needles?  Poison, pure and simple.  Harry Potter Poison.  Smokey Bear Poison.  Corroding Cans Under the Kitchen Counter Poison.

It’s some bad shi stuff, as I’ve come to discover.  You see, now that we have managed to cut down all the shade trees on the hill, we have to go through the incredibly stupid follow-up process of re-planting ground cover to take the place of all the lumber that’s gone.

And to re-plant, I must remove alllll the pine needles.  All of it.   And it’s a bunch.

Unfortunately, what I’ve discovered in the process is the layer of pine detritus has killed every living thing underneath, so that when I rake it down to the bottom, all that’s left is sorrowful bare dirt and rocks.

It’s pretty crappy looking, I tell you.

And in order to ward off the neighborhood jack-booted storm troopers (the local HOA Nazis), I must re-plant.  Soon.

I figure it will take me one more day to completely clear out the needles, and then I can do my Dog Scientist best to attack The Sprinklers.

You know.  The second part of the Trifecta.

It turns out that the tree morons who removed the pines felt morally obligated to destroy the sprinkler system at the same time for no extra charge.  We’re talking broken pipes, broken heads, missing heads, missing pipes.

Mass hysteria.

In fact, when I turned the system on, what I would term “sprinkling” never actually happens.  Dribbles happen.  Leaks happen.  Nothing happens.

But not sprinkling.

So, the better part of my afternoon today was spent raking pine needles, gasping in Suburban Horror at the proto-earth I revealed in the process, and cursing silently to myself when I discovered yet another broken sprinkler component.

It’s a life, but not much of one.

My only solace today was that I was so freaking busy trying to take care of Items One and Two specified above, there was no time to address Item Three (House Work) and complete the Suburban Trifecta.

That’s not to say there isn’t a daunting amount of work inside the house patiently waiting for me.  There is, and it is truly daunting.

After all, I figure that, at best, we are engaged in what would be termed a “Holding Action” in the military vernacular.  I am neither strong enough nor organized enough to pursue the causes around the house and actually complete all the projects that await.

In reality, the house is actually pressing its advance on me.  Every time I turn around, something else seems to have gone wrong around here.

The foot soldiers in this fight are termites, and the nuclear weapons are the plumbing fixtures.

Everything else is somewhere in between.

Since Zillow seems to be one of the Favorite Search Engine Tabs on our family computer, I am resigned to the fact that our house will, in fact, be perfect one day in the future.  And I know exactly what day that will be.

It’s going to be the day before we put it on the market to sell.  Talk about your Pyrrhic victory.  Talk about your Sisyphean task.

Time to go get a foo-foo coffee and think about all this.

- Dad

See a Pattern Here? I Don’t.

spark

“Changing spark plugs is not Rocket Science. Most Muggles can perform this procedure quite easily, given the proper tools and motivation.” — Anonymous Dog Scientist

Nothing at all profound happened to me today, which is the case for most days.

I got up (late), ate my oatmeal, and drank my tea.  I then ran an errand this morning that is supposed to result in a surprise birthday present for someone in about two months.  Stopped and had a coffee by myself.  Came home.

Oh, while I was drinking coffee on the outside patio I was able to observe the local cops lie in wait at a gas station across the street, a perfect vantage from which to pull over Miscreant Muggles for minor traffic infringements.

There was another guy pacing around with his drink near me.  He was unshaven and wore a white t-shirt and jeans.  Of course I was unshaven, too, so there was nothing remarkable about that.  He was staring at the police cruiser and asked me if I knew what was going on.

“Nope,” I replied.  “In fact I’m waiting here until they leave because the plates are expired on my truck.”  Lest he think I was a Malcontent, I added, “I’ve paid all the fees and everything (which I had), but I don’t have the sticker yet.”

“Then you should probably leave now, while they’re hassling that other dude.”

He had a point but, after all, I hadn’t finished my coffee, and I was happy enjoying a brief interlude of solace in the morning sun before I headed back to the maelstrom of suburban life, with its broken sprinklers (we now have at least two to worry about) and HOA Nazi’s on the prowl (“Your palm fronds are dead.  Why are they dead, and what are you going to do about them?”).

So as sound as his advice was, I decided to finish my coffee and take my chances.  It wasn’t as if I was like Steve McQueen in The Great Escape riding a stolen motorcycle toward the Swiss border, I was simply in my truck with an aged-out sticker, and I was sure because of the angle at which the cop had parked, he wouldn’t be able to see my rear plate.

I was right, and I drove all of three minutes home with just the slightest of headaches beginning to form.

Because the notion of thrift had been deeply ingrained in me from a very early age, it is nearly impossible to actually take an entire day off and relax.  I must, absolutely must, accomplish something practical, or I have sinned grievously.  Even though I now know that’s a crock and will probably lead to an early grave, I still feel obligated to make the best use of my time most days.

Except when I’m at my place of employment, but that’s another story.

I thus figured I would spend a couple of hours in the early part of the afternoon catching up on the deferred maintenance for my poor truck.  It had not only endured two heavily laden, nearly non-stop coast-to-coast drives within the last five months, it had also suffered through the worst part of a Philadelphia Winter and had been subjected to unknown indignities by Daughter at the same time.

An oil change was the least I could do for it, and I was going to throw in a new air filter and plugs for good measure.

Since I’ve drained and refilled oil a bazillion times with countless vehicles in my life, that part of the service interval was almost a complete piece of cake.  The main challenge was keeping myself from becoming covered with petroleum products while preventing those same products from gracing one of the few unblemished areas of the driveway remaining, and removing the oil filter itself, which I apparently welded on last August the last time I did this.

After a few moments of consternation with the filter, I managed to loosen and remove it without losing any of my digits on the knife-sharp tin cover surrounding it.

I would have liked more oil to have drained from the sump, but I’ll keep an eye on the level the next few weeks since I fear this engine might be burning a bit of the brown stuff, rather than leaking it.  That would be just my luck, but it did pass smog on Tuesday so all is not lost yet.

Next, I changed the air filter.  Fortunately I had to remove only two snaps and one screw to access it.  Unfortunately, it was filthy and appeared as if I neglected to change it last go round.  Oh, well, worse things can happen, I suppose (like the engine burning oil).

Finally, I was ready for the last bit in this three-part play:  The Changing of the Spark Plugs; or, Where’s Roger Rabbit (it’s actually Who Framed Roger Rabbit, but the way I mis-remembered it at first works better in this context).

The first step in changing the plugs is locating the plugs.

I could not locate the plugs.  I could open the hood.  I could see the battery.  Shoot, I’d even already changed the oil.  But those damn darn spark plugs were nowhere to be seen.

And as I discovered, not being seen was the key to solving the mystery.  I zeroed in on several assemblies that looked suspiciously close to some kind of fuel injection / spark plug thingies (that’s a Snap-On technical term), but I couldn’t be sure.

One lunch break and a quick internet search later, I determined I had, in fact, located said plugs — they just didn’t look like anything I’d ever seen before.  And to make matters worse, a couple of them seemed to be completely inaccessible without essentially removing the top part of the engine first.

“Houston.  We have yet another problem.”

As I scanned several on-line forums, the prevailing wisdom seemed to be to leave the job to the professionals and to wait to the factory-prescribed 105,000 mile change interval.  With that in mind, I’ve got about three years and 40,000 miles before I really, really have to worry about completing this job.

But then I found a post which very clearly illustrated how I could, in fact, take care of this procedure in about an hour.  Plus, a number of other posts made extremely chirpy claims about how much better their trucks ran when they replaced the plugs.

Cue guilt feelings.

But since I had already reached my two-hour work allotment and had managed to change the oil, filter, and air filter (i.e., accomplished something), I did what any self-respecting mechanic would do at that point:  I went inside and took a nap.

After all, those plugs aren’t going anywhere anytime soon, and Tomorrow is Another Day.

- Dad

Graduation, Sort Of.

grad

“Where’s the tassel? I’m missing the tassel!”

It doesn’t seem that long ago that I was sitting through my high school graduation, way back in the late spring of, gulp, 1977.  My graduating class numbered all of about 200, as we sat in folding chairs in the middle of the football field that evening in late May or early June.  I can’t remember what month it actually occurred, to tell you the truth.

But to give you an idea of the zeal and academic purity of my youth, I had actively shunned as a high school senior several full athletic scholarships that would have paid my way through at least one top tier institution and multiple other institutions of more questionable standing.  Instead of those full rides offered, I was able to snag a merit award of approximately $100 a semester at the specific big school I wanted to attend.  In the end, I even had to turn that one down, too, as I really only could afford community college right out of the high school gate.

On the positive side in this regard, I can happily report that today, many of my tendons and ligaments are mostly undamaged, and I can walk and run relatively pain-free most days.  I don’t think that would have been the case if I had pursued college athletics.

At least that’s what I tell myself now. . . .

And though I finished very near the top of my high school class in terms of grades, it wasn’t nearly enough to warrant serious attention from anyone remotely associated with an institution known for post-secondary excellence.

So there I sat, rather dismally watching the parade of my peers (though I didn’t consider them as such, really) walk by to receive their full and partial scholarships, while I settled for a now-bruised, haughty idealistic perch that would eventually translate into many minimalistic weekend meals when I eventually made it to my four-year school.  Those Saturdays and Sundays in the future were frequently punctuated by collecting bottles (glass ones; not plastic) around campus to redeem for deposits (food money) as well as by other degrading necessary financial activities I won’t go into here.

It was a life.

But I do take solace in the memory of the speech given by our class valedictorian on that long ago evening.  He was not a bad guy, I suppose, and I never even knew he was the cream of the crop in terms of grades, but his address that evening — wow.  It started off weird and went downhill from there.

One thing I am certain of is that I cannot remember a single thing that he said.  Maybe that’s because what was unique, after all, was not what he said, but how he said it.

At first we all thought he was simply nervous.  He stuttered and rambled and warbled and intoned in the most whacked out of ways.

We sniggered and looked at one another, but as he carried on, it became clear (at least to many of us) that whatever was going on up on the dais was more than simple anxiety.

I mean this dude never sounded like this.  Ever.

Eventually I think most of us there witnessing the spectacle came to the conclusion he was sloshed or high or both, as well as frightened out of his gourd.

These things happen, I supposed, but what did I care?  He was on a full ride somewhere, so screw him I mentally wished him good luck and was thankful it was him up there and not me.

The rest is history.  I know where I wound up (here), but I don’t have a freaking clue where he is now.

I bring all this admittedly ancient history (and histrionics) up because today I had the opportunity to attend the college, not high school, graduation of one of my co-workers.  He has been attending one of those schools that specialize in catering to working adults, and I personally know that this guy has killed himself to complete his studies over the past three years. *

*Note to Daughter:  It is possible to complete your studies.

And as I took my place this afternoon on a hard metal folding chair among many friends and family members in a room that was not exactly an auditorium and a little too hot, the unfolding scene around me was like a bad circus.  The pianist who was providing prelude music played a little too long for the liking of the Dean, who looked over to her multiple times to try to get her to wrap it up, which she eventually did.

The Dean himself was Sikh, I think, as he wore a turban and looked like a Sikh.  He had a teleprompter, which for this occasion, which was akin to bringing a refrigerator on a picnic, instead of a cooler.  And he still stumbled through his (thankfully) brief remarks.

Then the procession of the graduates began, and they were accompanied by recorded music.  I can’t be 100% sure, but I swear it was exactly the same recording that was used at Daughter’s graduation a few years back.  After the students had dutifully filed in, one of the school officials popped up and fiddled with some equipment and the music abruptly halted mid-stream.

Perfect and, yet, appropriate.

As I scanned both the graduates and the audience, I realized it was a very diverse crowd.  In attendance were all shapes, sizes, colors, and clothes.  The only similarity was that everyone was both proud and happy, and they all had iPhones (except for me, of course).

There was a bit of confusion when the diplomas were being handed out, as the founder of the school who had been released from the nursing home for the afternoon actually draped the graduation stoles (google it) over those so honored.  The problem was that, being 95 years old or so, he couldn’t reach up to put the darn things around the students’ necks.  So the graduates had to genuflect (I really wanted to use that word today) directly in front of him so that he could kind of lean over and drop it on them.  Unfortunately, rather than ending up around their necks, the stoles frequently wound up around their mouths, and another faculty official had to jump in with each student and straighten out the entire affair.

It was entertaining, if not a little awkward.

The entire ceremony only lasted about 40 minutes, and then the assemblage adjourned to the adjoining cafeteria for a reception.  I begged off at that point, but not without wishing my colleague congratulations and complimenting him on not wearing his graduation cap like a yamaka.

For a little over an hour, then, I was presented with a reminder of the journey continues for many of us.  The emotions and pride in that room today were real, even if the degrees conferred don’t exactly rank up there with Stanford and the Ivy League.

And it seemed to me the ceremony was more about focus and dedication, rather than the end product itself which in many respects is how it should be.

It was a good lesson and reminder for me that, once again, Hope Springs Eternal, and there are a lot of more important things to worry about than work, money, classic Alfa Romeos, and the NBA playoffs.

Well, maybe not Alfas.

- Dad

Out of Shape… Still

I’m in my early twenties but my injuries are already healing slower than they used to and older anatomical issues nag constantly – like what I imagine I will be like as a wife (sidenote: stereotypes are bad, but are sometimes funny). Every time I run, I feel the ghosts of these  injuries past.  It’s sort of like those ghosts in Pac-Man that bear down on you until they consume you and you die what I can only assume is a slow, painful, and pixelated death. Those very ghosts bore down on me today. Old stress fracture sites, old ankle sprains, terrible knees – they all combine together to form a perfect storm of misery. It almost makes me regret that the words “contact sport” were ever in my vocabulary. (Just kidding, sports = the best.)

2cat

So, anyway, today, I tried to run up a hill, into the wind and, well, it wasn’t so successful.

At first, I felt like I was in a Nike commercial. This was my hill, I was going to get over it. I was going to conquer this hill. But then the hill kept going. And going. And then, I made it!!  Over the  first crest from the vantage point of which I could see the many other hills that lay before me. And that’s when my commitment to getting over the hill faltered like a fading star in the night sky. Nah, it was more like an asteroid on a collision course with some other galactic body. CRASH AND BURNNN.

I slowed to a walk and of course, other runners chose that particular time to appear out of nowhere and pass me. They all gave me judgmental looks and I stared right back, defiant. Nope, I didn’t. I just looked at the ground. Dignity in failure is not one of my strong points.

1cat

I’m supposed to sign up for a half-marathon soon because clearly, I’m masochistic and want to slowly grind my joints into a fine, chalky powder. I hear once you’re mostly powder, you can’t feel pain anyway!! So, that’s my goal. My “hill,” if you will.

- Daughter

Somebody’s Drunk in the Kitchen

I have a recipe that I hold near and dear to my heart. It was passed down for centuries in my family. It represents health, community, and spiritual well-being within my clan. Not really. I just found it this year on a Google search. But that doesn’t make for a very good story.

Anyway, during the last four months of college, this particular recipe has been a staple. It became comfort food. What is it, you ask? Kale and shrimp. It doesn’t sound impressive but this recipe is seriously magical. And, the best part of it is that it is impossible to screw up.

Unless you’re me.

I have made this recipe probably one hundred times. There are less than ten ingredients. It takes a maximum of thirty minutes to prepare and make. You’d think I’d have it down pat.

Mais, non.

I was so excited to cook this meal for my family because for once, I knew what I was doing. I confidently sauteed the kale and shrimp. I disregarded the directions a bit because I added more kale than the recipe called for. Ah, well, I should make more sauce to balance it out!! So, I added more vinegar to the sauce. Worst. Decision. Ever.

Immediately, the steam coming up from the pot turned into a noxious gas that made my eyes water. Well, maybe it’s one of those foods that tastes better than it smells! 

Nope, it wasn’t. I put a small sample in my mouth and I might as well have taken a shot of vinegar. Now my mouth was burning in addition to my eyes.

Luckily, my mom came to the rescue and was able to water down the sauce to less terrifyingly-vinegary levels. Nobody died after eating it so I guess I made something edible. Checkmate.

- Daughter

Unpacking < Packing

I felt very optimistic when I woke up this morning. I set up my mom’s juicer and juiced the sh heck out of vegetables and fruits indiscriminately. The resulting juice was the color of toxic waste but it actually didn’t taste that bad considering it was mostly kale and carrots. I felt like a hippie as I drank this disgusting-looking liquid but there are worse things in the world than feeling like a hippie.

This juice thing is supposed to replace my go-to beverage in the morning: coffee. I made the impulsive decision to stop drinking coffee and today is day 1 of what I foresee to be a very Poor Life Choice(tm). I already got a migraine-like headache from the lack of caffeine and felt distinctly less energetic and jazzed about life. To be honest, my will power is only so-so currently. We’ll see how long this lasts before I break.

After I was thoroughly juiced up and sans-coffee, I started the process of unpacking. It felt like forever as I opened box after box without any visible progress or improvement. I looked at the clock, expecting it to be a few hours later than when I had last checked, but no, it was only THIRTY MINUTES past when I had started. I dramatically laid on the bed with my hand on my head and re-enacted the scene from Gone with the Wind when Scarlett O’Hara says, “I’ll think about that… tomorrow.”

I didn’t realize I had so many clothes until I opened up those nifty vacuum-seal bags they were all stuffed in. Every time I broke open the vacuum seal I wanted to yell out, “RELEASE THE KRAKKEN!” Instead, I sighed as the small bag suddenly expanded with overflowing garments and sheets.

It was kind of like the OPPOSITE of Christmas morning: I didn’t want to open any of these bags or boxes and unleash the hellfire within. But, I persisted and now the unpacking is about halfway done. My room looks less like a storage locker and more like a room where somebody might sleep.

And tomorrow, the unpacking continues. As does my misery.

- Daughter

Road Trip Diaries: Homeward Bound, Part VI

Dad’s Version  of the Events:

Day Five:  The Final Frontier.

These have been the Voyages of the Crew Cab Pickup, Frontier.

It’s five-day mission:  To explore strange, new roads; to seek out new family members and their new idiosyncracies; to boldly go where Daughter and I have never gone before . . . .  Whooooosh!!!

That “whoosh” was not the sound of the warp drive engaging.  Rather, it was the Mistral-like trade winds that buffeted us in the face every mile of the way since we left Dallas early Sunday morning.

And today was different, in that the hot, humid Texas heat was replaced by the searing, dry New Mexico and Arizona heat.  Why do people live in such places?  I’ll never know.

All I can say is Thank God for modern air conditioning and cruise control, which meant for us that our daily distance was more a function of our bladders and bleary-eyed fatigue than any sort of truck-dependent mechanical factors.  For the past couple of days, I reminisced to myself about the long-distance drives of my youth, in a Chevy Vega, no less.  You see, I had plenty of time to think to myself, since Daughter was usually good for one solid driving stint per day, with the balance of her other time spent napping, staring at her iPhone, and standing Tarp Watch.

But back to the Days of Yore, it was no air conditioning, no cruise control, no problem.  In my foolish, youthful long-distance driving zeal, I even used to roll up the passenger window during those incredibly hot and long summer journeys, thinking what I lost in perspiration was more than made up by improved aerodynamics.

What a bunch of crap that notion was!  No way, man.  It would have been better to have driven naked with all the windows down compared to what I actually put myself through otherwise.  However, I find those past experiences a useful context to judge how easy it is for me now.  Instead of worrying if I’ll blow an engine or have a flat, I’m more concerned about how far off the Interstate the next Starbucks happens to be.

It’s really sickening, when I think about it, but I will leave the pain and denial in my life to my gardening adventures (that damn clover!), while I prefer my driving to be comfortable and relatively stress free.

Never one to leave well enough alone, though, I induced stress on this latest trip by initiating a series of questions (historical) and transportational (practical) to gauge both Daughter’s general level of awareness and as well as her basic competencies in both areas.  Of course, best of all, it also offered me the chance to impart generational wisdom.

The results were mixed.  On the one hand, Daughter is a very intelligent and sensitive young woman, who has much to offer to the world which, one day, will award her a Pulitzer Prize.  On the other hand, she has a hard time figuring out miles per gallon and doesn’t react very well to the question/phrases, “Well, what would you do if I weren’t here?” and “That’s just an observation; not a criticism.”

In the end, we made it home safely today; we’re still talking to each other, though I don’t understand a lot of what she says; we still enjoy each other’s company (most of the time); and we both have an inherent dislike for Left Lane Bandits and Other Morons of the Open Road (of which there are plenty, and increasing daily, it seems).

Years from now, when my great, great grandchildren ask me about this trip and the most important lesson learned, I will slowly wipe away the spittle from my lower lip, adjust my diaper, and look deeply into the eyes of whichever kid I can focus on and grumble, “Never use yarn to tie down a tarp in a pickup truck bed.  It really sucks and doesn’t work for shi very well.”

Thanks, Daughter.  Now I have something to look forward to!

- Dad

——–

Daughter’s Version of Events: 

We made great time today because Dad fell asleep for a long stretch of the trip and after a quick risk assessment, I took liberties with the speed limit. The speed limit on a two-lane interstate is mostly a guide anyway, n’est-ce pas? As usual, semi-truck drivers and people who must have been in and out of R.E.M. sleep behind the wheel were great dangers on the road. But, to be fair, I’m also a hazard to myself because I get very competitive with semi-trucks who try to pass. They put on that blinker and it signals me to speed up while waggling my finger angrily at the driver. Usually, this is enough to discourage the driver from careening into my lane. It gives me a sick sense of pleasure depriving trucks the ability to cross into my lane in front of me. Maybe this is because I inherited the jerk gene. I hear it gets passed down through the Y chromosome only…

Today, other drivers were not a huge issue. I had bigger problems to worry about, like the giant dust devils that appeared out of nowhere and swept across the road without warning. Dad was asleep when one decided to cross the road right into the truck and I was temporarily thrown around a bit. Luckily, the truck was weighed down my pounds and pounds of my belongings so there was no way I was going anywhere. I was briefly terrified which helped to keep me awake. Maybe I should just watch horror films while I drive. I would be distracted, sure, but I’d be awake!

We also passed a lot of border patrol stops today and my father tested out some new material he must have been working on:

“Okay, Daughter, try not to look too Mexican. Think about being white.”

“PUT DOWN THE BURRITO.”

Graci- I mean, thank you!!”

When we finally got home (the last hour was torture), I immediately forced my younger sister into indentured servitude and had her carry boxes from the truck. It turns out she is stronger than me. She’s only 11 but she has the bicep strength of an adult Slovakian wrestler.

My room is currently full of unpacked boxes and I am full of the promise of new tomorrows!! No, wait, I’m just full from dinner.

- Daughter

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