a-b-c! simple as …

From La Sheila.

A- Available or Single? Nope. I’m off the market. You’re all safe.

B- Best Friend. Yes, please. My last one went insane. Did we cover that?

C- Cake or Pie. Cake! Cupcakes! Not cheesecake! Gross!

D- Drink of Choice. Oh, I thought that said “Drink OR Choice” — which did seem really weird. Now I get it. Okay. So — I’m really into this hot chocolate caramel drink I invented.

E- Essential Item. Laptop.

F- Favorite Color. These days, I like brown.

G- Gummi Bears or Worms. Neither, thanks. Sour Patch Kids or those chewy sour apple thingies or some kind of sour anything. Sour treats for a sour laaady.

H- Hometown. Real or in my heart? Real: San Diego. Heart: Seattle.

I- Indulgence. Recently, it was the big day off I had last Sunday — after six solid weeks — where I sat and stared and listened to the sound of my feet rubbing together. It was awesome.

J- January or February. January.

K- Kids. Yes, “K” IS for kids.

L- Life is incomplete without …. MB MB MB MB. And MB.

M- Marriage Date. Groundhog Day.

N- Number of Siblings? 2.

O- Oranges or Apples? Uhm, apples. Peeling oranges is so exhausting, don’t you think?

P- Phobias/Fears. I’m kind of claustrophobic.

Q- Favorite Quote. Well, I do like “If you want to improve, be content to be thought foolish and stupid.” Epictetus. I’m content to be thought that all the time. THANK you, Epictetus! Look at me, always improving!

R- Reasons to smile. My niece, Piper. Picturing her playing little kid basketball without knowing how to dribble. That comment about witches’ houses. Kate P’s comment about the comment. Nightfly’s comment about my “access to an oversized dog anus.” Which will be giving me nightmares.

S- Season. Can it be fall all the time — ALL THE TIME?

T- Tag Three. No.

U- Unknown Fact About Me. If I tell, it won’t be unknown. Duh.

V – Vegetarian or Oppressor of Animals. Oppressor of Animals.

W- Worst Habit. Just your garden variety self-loathing, prolly.

X – X-rays or Ultrasounds. Oh, please. I don’t wanna play this one.

Y- Your Favorite Foods. Asian. I’m having some now. Chicken with Sizzling Rice from Mandarin Dynasty. Yummmmmy.

Z- Zodiac. Leo. I remember once this woman who had just met me asked what my sign was. “Leo,” I said. “Aren’t Leos arrogant?” she asked. “Why, yess,” I glowered at her and walked away.

boheme quote of the day

From my favorite born-again Christian lesbian customer:

What is the deal with witches’ houses? They are so freakin’ filthy. My knees never stopped being wet and she never stopped talking about fairy spells.

— upon telling me — in her delightfully deadpan way — about housecleaning for a Wiccan.

from the boheme notepad

Well, we all know I will randomly time how long it takes people to dress their drinks. Because I’m interested, you see. In an anthropological way. I want to know.

Today, though, I did something even more astonishing all in the furtherance of science: I timed a guy’s monologue, the one he delivered at me. Because — didn’t we cover this already? — I’m interested, you see. I want to know. But please don’t think that your local baristas or coffee mistresses are doing this to you. They’re not. And how do I know they’re not, you ask? Because, you silly, they’re just not interested like I am — and didn’t you kinda already sense that, deep down inside, when you leave with your large soy latte and a certain empty feeling?

Of course you did.

So, all right. The breakdown.

The Talker:

Male. Mid-50’s. Works in real estate. Gay, but seems straight. Salt and pepper hair. Untucked green shirt. Denim shorts. Skinny legs. Bad breath. Nice, he’s nice. Just ….

Topics covered:

— City Council
— Foreclosures
— Filipinos
— A seminar he went to. I think it was about seminars.
— How to prune roses
— Gay Seattle. He used to live in Seattle, but then, so did I. I still don’t think he knows that.
— His hatred of George W. Bush

Favorite quotes:

— “The gay population of Seattle is all smokers and winos and lardos. Take that away and there’s only about 42 people left.”

Okay. Hahahaha.

— “You gotta dump dog poo on your roses and then cover it with grass. You’ll have great roses. GREAT roses.”

Hm. But I don’t have any roses. Plus, I don’t have a dog, so basically, I would have to borrow or, well, probably steal some dog poo — because who’s gonna want it back, really? — from a neighbor’s pooey dog, then get some rose bushes or maybe get the rose bushes first so the poo isn’t sitting around, breathlessly anticipating the arrival of rose bushes to poo on, then go mow a neighbor’s scraggly lawn, because I don’t have one of those either, and scoop up the grass trimmings and the dog poo and plop ’em all on these great new rose bushes I now have even though I don’t have a yard to put them in. Still, it seems like really good advice.

— “And the Filipino lady said to me after we closed escrow, ‘You so nice. You find somebody. Girl. Boy. Whaeveh.'”

Monologue Length (Minutes):

42:02:66.

Sweet Lordy.

Oh. And on a related note: Kenya’s Robert Cheruiyot won this week’s Boston Marathon in 2 hours, 14 minutes, 13 seconds, with The Talker a close, chatty second.

I figgered it out

Chris Richardson from American Idol has some really weird hair issues. Strange, scanty goatee. Sprinkled-on hairline. Bizarre. Freaky, even.

So tonight, I sat and stared and tried to figger out, you know, what’s wrong with him. Because these are the things that consume me.

So here you are, Chris:

chris_richardson.jpg

And then it came to me. That sprinkled-on hairdo, that eerie buzzed coastline against your fleshy forehead ocean — you’re a living, breathing Wooly Willy! See?

woolywilly.jpg

And I’m simply desperate to take that wee magnetic wand and reshape your iron powder coastline.

But — don’t be scared, Chris. I’m very good at Wooly Willy.

quote

From Philip Yancey, my spiritual crush man, who, by the way, looks like this ….

yancey4.jpg

(Okay. So he’s Disco Stu from The Simpsons. “Disco Stuuu has a quote for youuu.”)

….. comes this:

Why am I a Christian? I sometimes ask myself, and to be perfectly honest the reasons reduce to two: (1) the lack of good alternatives, and (2) Jesus. Brilliant, untamed, tender, creative, slippery, irreducible, paradoxically humble — Jesus stands up to scrutiny. He is who I want my God to be.

From The Jesus I Never Knew.

Which you haven’t read yet why? Yancey is a life raft for me. His honesty means everything. READ it. Read anything he’s written. You won’t be sorry.

tracey stalin: the rising menace

Okay. So the p*orn was back up today.

And at closing time — which is opening time for the wine lounge — the lightfooted artist made an appearance, fiddling around with the arrangement in The Misfit Room. He bounced up to me, a kind of John Leguizamo look-alike, smiled and said, pointedly, “So — has anyone said anything about my art back there?”

Oh. I see. Overlord has been talking. Neat. Thanks. I feel so safe. He obviously knew something — everything, I suppose. So I was truthful(ish) and vague.

“Um, a few.”

He just simpered and walked away. Then, of course, I really knew that he knew. Because if he were asking with the best of intentions, out of mere curiosity, he would have said — I think anyway — “Oh? Really? What’s the response been?” or something like that.

So — goodie! The regime and reputation of me, Tracey Stalin, your blog hostess, continues to expand exponentially.

tracey stalin, your blog hostess

As I’ve mentioned before, my teeny new coffeehouse Boheme shares space with a wine lounge. Now the wine lounge is huge, actually, but there are restrictions on where my customers are allowed to sit — basically, NOT in the wine lounge. They can sit on the front sidewalk patio; they can sit at one of the two– yes, two! how cute! — tables inside my itsy-bitsy foyer area, or they can walk through the wine lounge, down this little hall, past another large under-used room that is begging to be a wi-fi room, frankly, and plop themselves out at a table in the bamboo Eden of the back patio. It’s really beautiful out there and helped quite a bit by the presence of all the tables and chairs and umbrellas I inherited in my purchase of, uhm, the entire contents of The Beanhouse! Before we moved in, that patio had maybe two measly tables — which just means that we’re basically the saviors of everrything here!

Hooray for us!

Still …. self-congratulation aside …. it’s weird, always having to explain to people that they can’t sit in the cool cool space that is the wine lounge. “Oooh! This is so nice! Can we sit in here?” “No. Uhm, sorry.” “Oh.” I do understand to an extent because of open shelves of wine there. But then — I DON’T understand my Overlord’s lack of initiative in protecting his big ol’ stash of wine. He hasn’t purchased any locks or put in any cabinetry. He hasn’t installed any alarms or video cameras. It’s just “Don’t let people sit here. We have to protect The Wine.” Okay. But DO something to protect it, dude.

Which is utterly tangential to what this post is really about. Awesome. I’m actually starting on a tangent.

This post is really about my role today as oppressor and censor of artistic expression. Okay?

So — no sitting in the wine lounge. Whatevs, weirdos. But then there’s that large nebulous room beyond the lounge. I have business groups that meet there a few times a week and the wine lounge sometimes has private parties there in the evenings. But most of the time, it just sits there, all forlorn, with sparse leather chairs and giant wooden vases and random clusters of peacock feathers. “It’s like a furniture museum,” MB says. It’s a sad, lonely room to me, as if it’s not fulfulling its purpose as a room, as if it belongs on The Island of Misfit Rooms shaking its feathers and moaning about how no one loves it. Sometimes, though, my customers, shifty wine thieves that they are, actually pass through the lounge, brazenly ignoring the open shelves of wine in a move that I can only assume is part of some larger looming con, and wander through that Misfit Room, giving it a wee bit of love, en route to their pre-approved plop: The Bamboo Eden.

With me so far? No? I literally cannot imagine why.

So the other day, The Misfit Room suddenly became a pseudo art gallery when some lightfooted fellow began adorning its walls with mixed media pieces in preparation for a fashion show he’s having. I love mixed media, but these pieces just didn’t grab me, from my cursory glance at the first few. And I’m too busy most of the time I’m there to have realllly looked at them.

But this morning, before we opened, MB came rushing infrom The Misfit Room and announced, “Okay. So there’s p*orn in the back room there.”

“What do you mean?!”

“I mean — p*orn.”

I ran to The Misfit Room. And there they were — a couple of mixed media pieces showing completely naked women, ah, being involved with their southern hemispheres in a loving and solitary way. The word “pleasure” was prominently displayed alongside these haphazard, decoupaged nudies. So the whole effect was very subtle, you see.

Okaay.

And in a split second, I thought of, well, many things: my customers — of the kids that come through, of my elderly customers, of, I guess, the more family-friendly vibe I want to have when I’m open for business. What the wine lounge does during its hours of operation is its own deal. But my motto basically is: If my niece Piper can’t see it, I don’t want it around.

So — I took the pieces down. Intending for them to be down only when I’M open, not permanently.

And I got in big big trouble with The Overlord.

He came in — on his day off — and saw the pieces in the back. I know this because they were moved when I next saw them. The Overlord acted weird, didn’t say anything, and left. MB left. The Overlord came back a few hours later after MB — who towers over him and frightens him — was gone.

Overlord approached me.

“Can I talk to you?”

“Sure.”

“It’s about the art.”

“Okay.”

“You shouldn’t have taken it down. It’s art. You can’t just take it down. That wasn’t courteous.”

Have I mentioned how many times already we’ve spent our early morning hours cleaning up the destroyed patio and lounge after their private evening parties?

He continued:

“You should have talked to me first.”

“Well, I can see your point there, but you weren’t here and I felt I needed to make a decision about what’s appropriate for my business. I didn’t even know those particular pieces were there and I just thought some of my customers might be offended.”

“Well, that’s art. That’s what art does. That’s an art gallery right now.”

“Okay. Hm. I’m confused then. I thought this was a business. I know I’m a business and I feel I need to consider my customer base. The wine lounge is, obviously, an over-21 crowd. The coffeehouse isn’t. And those are definitely over-21 images. So which is the priority — the art gallery or the businesses? Which comes first?”

(Peeps, I’m sorry. He really set me off with that “courteous” comment. I’ve done nothing but bend over backwards to BE courteous, to be a good roommate, and the same cannot be said for him and his partner. So I felt a little feisty.)

“Well, they both come first. Everyone comes first.”

“How is that possible? Not everyone or everything can come first. How does everyone come first?”

“Well, we’re all working together here.”

Uh-huh. Annoyed with this line of nothingness, I switched gears.

“Um, well, I have lots of kids who come through here and I just don’t feel those images are appropriate for kids.”

“I’ve never seen that many kids in here.”

“Well ….”

“And art is supposed to be controversial”

Is it, dude? Is that the entire purpose of art? To provoke, to be controversial, and nothing else? I musta missed something in school. And I don’t think the definition of art is even relevant to the discussion. But — wait. Let’s say it is. So if I punch you right now, dude, that’s art, right, because it’s provoking? Like, maybe it’s performance art. Maybe I’m a performance pugilist and you are my canvas and it’s all very provoking and controversial. Wow. You know, I think I’d really like to become a performance pugilist because have lightning-fast little hands. Who knows? It just might be my calling.

All right. Look. To me, it’s a question of appropriateness. And, I’m sorry, those pieces are not art. They are exploitative. They are p*orn. They are a cheat by a guy who thinks he’s an artist and is trying to shortcut his way to attention.

He was still talking.

“And people make their own choices. They can choose not to go in there.”

“But they don’t even know the pieces are in there until they get there. When they come in during the day, they’re coming into a coffeehouse, not an art gallery. That’s the expectation.”

“Then you have to tell them there’s provoking material in there. If it’s bothering you, it’s obviously doing its job.”

Oh, so I’m an uptight prude in this scenario? Great. Thanks. But why are we suddenly an art gallery? I thought this was a business. I really did. But I open up a coffeehouse and suddenly p*orn breaks out?

Grrrrr — I’m frustrated, peeps. I’m seeing my desire to have a family-friendly environment colliding with The Overlord’s desire to be all things to all people. G-rated? Good. R-rated. Good. X-rated? Good.

It’s all good.

No. NO. It’s all bad! All BAD! NO to everything! Tracey Stalin hates it all! Art-hater and oppressor of creative expression that I am! Away, you non-conformists! Away, you revolutionaries! To the gulag with you! Tracey Stalin decrees it!

stuff ‘n’ thangs

Several years ago, on a nearby quirky boulevard, there used to be a little shop that went by the stately name of Stuff ‘n’ Thangs. Whenever MB and I cruised by, we’d howl at the sight of that giant sign with its loud puffy letters twisting the English language and practically screaming out: Yo, yo, YO! Check it out! We got us some Stuff! And den we got us some Thangs! YO! Check it OUUUT! However, despite the friendly sausage-shaped letters of their signage, we never actually stopped to check out their stuff or their thangs since there were usually people loitering by the door who definitely did not have a friendly sausage-shaped look about them.

“Please, let’s go in there,” I would still whine.

“You’re not going in there,” he would counter.

“PLEASE! They have thangs. I need to know what thangs are! I wanna see some thangs!!”

A long weird look.

“You’re not going in there.”

Reasonable people suck.

So “Stuff ‘n’ Thangs” remained elusive, its contents secret, always calling in a voice that only I could hear — I guess — always holding the promise of sequined tube tops and gold chains with rhinestone letters and those nylon head beanie thingies. Or whatever merchandise actually classifies as “stuff ‘n’ thangs.” Maybe it was books of poetry. Maybe they sold encyclopedias. Coulda been, you know, Hummel figurines. Coulda been.

And I will never know.

But still — I can try to keep the idea of Stuff ‘n’ Thangs alive.

So.

Stuff ‘n’ Thangs is now my title for any posts I write that include a series of totally unrelated random things — you know, for example, most of my posts.

So stay tuned for some Stuff and maybe even some Thangs. And don’t worry. Together, with hearts beating steadfast in eternal hope, we will get to the bottom of what the hell that really means.

chocolate milk

Jacob, 8-year old chocolate milk drinker comes in today with his dad, a pastor for The Salvation Army. Dad sits on the patio for a bit, talks to friends. Jacob is bored and wanders back inside with his milk. He and I start chatting. We talk about how, apparently, he’s a smartypants, how he’s very good at math, how he reads at a 7th grade level, what his favorite books are, which leads to Harry Potter, of course. I tell him my birthday is the same day as Harry’s. His big brown eyes get even bigger.

He goes back outside with his chocolate milk.

Minutes later, he’s back, standing in front of the espresso machine, looking up at me. His freckles look like flecks of coffee with cream.

JACOB: Hey, uhm, whatever your name is, can I talk to you some more?

SELF: Well, my name is Tracey. And, sure.

JACOB: So, can I tell you a secret?

SELF: If you’d like to.

JACOB: But it’s a real embarrassing secret. Do you promise not to laugh?

SELF: I do.

JACOB: Uhm … I have a really big wart on the bottom of my foot.

I don’t laugh. I ask him questions about his wart. He explains it all at length, with great relish, because he’s 8 years old and a boy and that’s what you’re supposed to do. He’s braving the whole wart experience quite well, I think, considering at one point in his story there is a “huge pocket knife!” involved. This elicits horrified “oohs” and “acks” from me, which he seems to really enjoy. He finishes the wart story, satisfied, I guess, that he’s covered everything. Then I grab some paper and we play a word game I know until dad comes and tells him it’s time to go.

JACOB: Bye, Tracey!

He waves to me.

SELF: See ya, Jacob! Have a good spring break!