snippets

On a long drive into the mountain. Weird things come up.

We pass a place called the “Lemurian Fellowship.”

ME: So lemurs have their own fellowship now?
HE: I guess. I’m Reformed Hedgehogian myself.

*******
Describing to MB the book I’m reading after he’s made all kinds of hideous assumptions about it and irritated me.

ME: So there’s an older man and he falls in love with a younger woman and she’s the most beautiful woman in the world and her name is Tracey.
HE: Oh? And what’s his name?
ME: To Be Determined Later.

*******
Discussing nursing homes.

ME: Mom will be one of those old people they end up killing.

*******
Idly singing a snippet of an old hymn while gazing out the window.

ME (in a dreamy voice): My mom used to sing that to us when we were little. (pause) And I was like, “Shut up, Mom.”
HE: Hahahahahahaha.
ME: Thought I was going a different way with that little story, didn’t you?

*******

ME: We need to accept the fact that as the years go by, we are going to become increasingly gross to each other.
HE: Haha. Yes, we need to have a frank discussion regarding our bill of rights and dealbreakers.

wall/post

We are suddenly indignant, a daily occurrence.

ME: Yeah? Well, here’s my wall!
(a gesture to a body part)

HE: Yeah? Well, here’s MY post!

ME: You know what? YOU can post on my wall!

(We call this foreplay at our house. Thrilling, huh?)

random snippets

We are at the stoplight at the bottom of the hill where, for a few months now, there has been a homeless couple panhandling at the corner. They seem in their early 30s but it’s hard to tell. The man seems to be in charge of 3 things: walking up and down the hill, holding the sign, and menacing cars. The woman seems to be in charge of one thing: sitting near the crosswalk curled over on herself. He goes to work — menacing cars up and down the same 30-foot stretch of sidewalk — and she curls over on herself. Watching this behavior, something suddenly occurs to me so I turn to MB and say, “Oh, I get it now. She’s stay-at-home homeless.”

*******

Favorite piece of movie dialog heard over the weekend:

HE: You’re shaking.
SHE: It’s the weather.

(What?? Well, sunny days do that to me, too.)

*******

Favorite parts (so far) of niece Piper’s novel “Cleo’s Adventures”:

Then the four of them rode a subway to Montana.

I also liked this dialog:

“Don’t be lazy, Jack. You’re a demigod, not a cat!”

“I wish I WERE a cat,” grumbled Jack.

And this opening:

When her mom told her she was sending her to Greek school, Cleo thought she said geek school.

I actually think that’s a pretty good opening sentence. Go, Piper!

She left me with a cliffhanger in the unfinished Chapter Four. It’s called “An Unplanned Swim” and apparently involves a hideous sea serpent in the Missouri River. When I asked her how a sea serpent ended up in the Missouri River, Piper said simply, “He just got lost and decided he liked it there.”

No complicated reason. Sometimes the most straightforward explanation is best, you know?

She has 24 pages so far. Oh, this is her second novel.

She is 10.

aerial view of the deep dark middle of nowhere

aerial-view-small.jpg
Not taken by me, I might add. Those are the Sierras, prominently featuring Mt. Tom.

Main Street runs horizontally across the middle of the photo there where all the buildings seem to be clustered. You’ll know your eyes have located Main Street if you follow it to the right and you see a big bend in the road. That bend in the road leads you up to Mammoth Mtn. ski resort. My inlaws’ house is north of Main Street — well, it’s actually west in terms of geography, but north in terms of this photo. (Let’s just say their house — in this photo — is above the line of Main Street.) If you see that large vertical line in the photo slightly to the left of center and move your eyes up and to the right, you’ll see a green field. That’s the football field at the high school where MB cavorted in his football uniform and did “manly things” — I have to take his word on that since I wasn’t there — that made all the girls swoon and I’m not just taking his word on that. They still swoon. Right in front of me. Please, ladies. Calm down.

Just north (in terms of the photo) and to the right from that field is another green field. That’s the ball field at the elementary school located at the end of my in-laws’ street. The street dead ends into the school, actually. It’s about a 3-minute walk to the school. I spend a lot of time there whenever we visit the deep dark middle of nowhere and the house is bursting at the seams because everyone in town is crammed in eating and talking and drinking and talking, which is basically all the time. It’s a social phenomenon, I tell you. Women and men alike come down from their mountain aeries or out of their cozy caves or their Unabomber cabins to worship and ovulate at MB’s feet. It gets a little old, although not for MB. I just roll my eyes at it all. Besides, I’m simply too busy having private anxiety attacks from the chattering crowds and the bossy shutterbugs and the pressing possibility that my FIL might soon be running around in his unmentionables asking me how I am, Trace-ums to have any time left over to worship and ovulate at MB’s feet.

So I must escape regularly. I have to to stay semi-sane. Socially, some people are bottomless oceans of chatter and others are those temporary puddles you see at street corners when it rains. I am a puddle and when the puddle runs dry, I need to fill it up by myself or with someone trusted whose presence is soothing to me.

Once I’ve escaped, I can walk the field or wander around the little cemetery that’s next to the field and just chill out. I can swing on the swings and breathe in Mt. Tom and feel myself open, soften. Mt. Tom is my friend. I love him. This is obviously taken in the late spring or summer because Mt. Tom is usually covered in snow. (He’s the mountain featured in the bottom 2 photos in this post . My MIL took those.)

Breathing in Mt. Tom is literally my salvation in the deep dark middle of nowhere. And I do love this little town. I really do.

Sometimes when I’m there, I think about all of you, pippa, and how much fun we’d have if you were there too.

But, to be completely honest, I would totally make you check to see if my FIL is fully dressed before we ever went back into the fray.

There’d probably be apple pie and margaritas, though, so it’s not all bad.

(I realize anyone can Google Mt. Tom and learn the name of our little town here. That’s fine with me. We just don’t mention the name of the town on this blog.)

the caboose

I remember waiting forever behind those heavy wooden doors. Pale skin, blonde hair, a poof of white dress. I was a whiteout.

A whiteout with knocking knees.

My bridesmaids were doing their slow-motion sashays to the altar. It took forever. An eternity of walking. I was antsy, waiting there with my dad. In that frozen moment, I decided everyone should just sprint down the aisle. Who invented all this endless strolling and promenading anyway? I could feel the sweat puddling in my armpits. Thank God poofy sleeves cover a multitude of sins. And nerves.

For several seconds, we didn’t speak, my dad and I. Finally, he whispered.

“How’re you doing, honey?”

I exhaled for the first time in 53 minutes.

“Good. I’m good.”

Sure you are, Trace.

My heart wasn’t beating; it was shaking like a thousand maracas. And, oh, the heat. And, ew, the sweat. How can someone be this hot and still be alive? I wanted to rip my dress off. Not very serene glowing bride of me.

I looked at my dad, all dashing and handsome in his tux. He smiled at me with a sudden playful gleam in his eye. Uh-oh. I knew that look. He was up to something. I cocked my head at him.

“Well ….. you knnnow …..” he began, glancing down at the short train of my dress.

“….. every train …… ”

He was reaching into his pants pocket.

“……. should have a caboose.”

Um, what? I thought.

“Um, what???” I said.

Dad was obviously having some ill-timed but catastrophic break with reality. I stared at him and furrowed my brow. It was my wedding day, for God’s sake. I was seconds from my own slow-motion sashay down the aisle. My brow should not be furrowed. I should glow and shine and emanate bliss from every pore. Psychotic breaks were not very shiny.

Just then, Dad pulled something from his pocket and held it tight in his fist. He opened his fingers and there it was, flat on his palm: a little red caboose.

For a second, I just stared down at his palm. It didn’t register. My mind shot in all directions like a firework. Why does dad have a red caboose? Why I am turning to liquid? What is happening, for the love of GOD??

I tore my eyes from the confusing caboose in Dad’s palm and looked into his face. Sometimes, my dad can still look like a little boy to me, and in that moment, he could barely contain his 9-year-old self. I saw him right then, that boy, waiting with me behind the heavy wooden doors. I stood there with two people, really: the handsome man who was giving me away and the impish boy who was giving me a caboose.

And that impish boy was about to lose it. Oh, the glee! The childlike GLEE was practically bursting from his face.

Suddenly, it hit me too — the sublime silliness of it all — and we both started giggling. A grown man giving his daughter away and a grown woman waiting to walk to the altar stood behind the heavy wooden doors giggling over a little red caboose.

Hm. Maybe neither of us was mature enough to be doing this.

But I didn’t care.

Dad can be like a little boy, but Dad’s no dummy. As I took the caboose from my dad and smooshed it against the handle of my bouquet, all my nerves melted away. My knees quieted. My body cooled. I swear, even the sweat puddling in my armpits instantly dried.

All because of an aptly timed red caboose.

And when the heavy wooden doors opened, I walked with my dad arm in arm, little red caboose clutched tightly in my palm.

My Beloved looked perfect. Sublime. And nervous. I held my gaze on his and, in a split second, decided I wanted to give him some of what my dad had just given me.

So I smiled. Then I winked a wink just for him.

He smiled back and I knew he was okay, too.

It was all okay. We were okay.

Every wedding needs a little red caboose.

Because all these years later, everything we’ve been through, we’re still okay.

Happy Anniversary, my love.

snippets (one rated hard r, but it’s married hard r, so that’s like g, right?)

So I’ve put up a warning before my married hard R snippet. Seriously. I put the post up and some random new person I shall call Slappy emailed me about it, so I took the post down, but now it’s back up with a “warning.” (Happy, Slappy??)

Maybe Slappy — and Slappy’s husband — would be happier if Slappy engaged in said married hard R behavior.

Just a piece of advice from me to you, O Slappy dearest.

********

BABY BANSHEE: (shaking her little butt for me) Do the bootie dance, Tee Tee!
ME: (shaking my butt with her) Okay.
BABY BANSHEE: (bending over into the perfect number 7) No, Tee Tee! Like this!
ME: (bending over into the perfect number 7) Okay.

*******
I finish describing a really boring dream to MB. There is nothing I can say to make it more thrilling.

HE: (a yawning silence)
ME: I know. I’m literally embarrassed by my subconscious. I woke up and was like, “Seriously? That’s the best you can do??”
HE: It’s like dreaming you were writing a note reminding yourself to buy stamps.
ME: I know. What’s the point? Why bother dreaming?
HE: Really. At least awake there’s TV.
ME: Well, thanks, hon.
HE: Sure.

********
MARRIED HARD R!! ALERT!! DON’T READ!! WE’RE GODLESS ANIMALS!!

We are walking out to the car. I suddenly start making huge ridiculous “O’s” with my mouth. MB sees me. I smile and keep going.

HE: What are you doing?
ME: Exercising.
HE: What?
ME: For later. You know.
HE: Oh!
ME: Yeah. Happy birthday, baby.
HE: Better stretch it bigger.
ME: Hahahaha.
HE: I’m serious.
ME: Hahahaha. I know.
HE: I love you, baby.
ME: Oh, I know.

********
MB and I have strict regulations on whom the other is allowed to marry/not marry in the event one of us cacks it in an untimely fashion. We review these regularly just for, you know, a little bit of threatening fun. There are beyond-the-grave consequences for stupid choices here, you see. Sometimes, there are specific names involved; sometimes just a type.

This, after a long list of women from deep dark middle of nowhere (aka his hometown) who openly pine for MB:

ME: Basically, you have to find yourself a fresh hag. No rehashes.
HE: So no rehags?
ME: Hahaha. Right. No rehags. Get a new hag.

********
At the bookstore. A dad and little boy — about 5 — who was really exploring his testosterone.

BOY: Whey I grow up, I want my OWN family where I’M the dad!
DAD: Okay.

Later:

BOY: Daddy, do you think there are man ladybugs?
DAD: Well, calling them manbugs would sound funny. They’re ladybugs.
(Uh, Dad? You’re not listening.)
BOY: Well, there SHOULD be manbugs! I WANT there to be manbugs!

Me, too. You go, kid. Fight the power. Hooray for men!

********

ME: We’re gonna have our special date this month, Banshee.
ORIGINAL BANSHEE: Yay! What are we gonna do?
ME: Ohh, let’s see. I think we’ll sit on a wall and spit, how’s that?
OB: Tee Tee!
ME: It’ll be awesome.
OB: TEE TEE! I don’t wanna sit on a wall and spit!
ME: Really?
OB: REALLY!
ME: I’ll bring green beans.
OB: Well, I like green beans.
ME: I know. So do I.
OB: But I still don’t wanna sit on a wall and spit!
ME: I’ll bring broccoli.
OB: I like broccoli.
ME: I know. So do I.
OB: (torn) But …. but …… I STILL don’t wanna sit on a wall and spit!
ME: (heavy dramatic sigh) Okaaaaay.

my favorite christmas cd

Phil Driscoll’s Heaven and Nature Swing.

For those who don’t know him, which is probably many to most of you, Phil Driscoll is an amazing trumpet player. I mean, the guy is a virtuoso on that thing. It literally gives me shivers of joy how gifted he is. He also sings, with the raspy world-weary kind of voice that I have such a soft spot for. So put that all together, throw in some traditional Christmas songs, do a bit of a big band/jazzy twist on them, and you have Heaven and Nature Swing.

My favorite Christmas CD.

It’s a tradition now. On December 1st, I whip out the CD and play the first song, “Joy to the World.” I then dance around like a crazy spastic person and that way, the Christmas season is kicked off properly, you see.

Love the bass. Love the trumpet. Love his voice. The whole thing just makes me so happy.

I dare you to listen to this number — loud — and NOT find yourself about to burst from joy.

This is Driscoll’s version of “Winter Wonderland.” Every year, I make MB dance to it with me and every year, he has to put up a bit of a fight until I vanquish him at last. Haha. Such a fun version. I love his little laugh at the end. Gets me every time.

I even forgive him that he gets the lyrics wrong. It’s “love knows no season, love knows no clime,” not “crime.”

Ah, well. I can’t help but love him. He gives me so much Christmas joy year after year.

Thank you, Phil Driscoll!

the pee fight

A Dom Squab — domestic squabble — we actually had on Friday night. I might have been a tad hormoniacal.

HE: I was getting the pee willies. I had to pull over and pee in a bottle.
ME: Really?
HE: Yes. It was bad.
ME: I’m sorry, babe. (the pause that ruins everything) Where’s the bottle?
HE: In the car.
ME: In the car?
HE: Yeah. I had too much stuff to carry. What was I supposed to do?
ME: Uhm, dump it out somewhere? Bring it up here and dump it in the toilet?
HE: I wasn’t gonna carry it up here with me. Besides, it’s in the car, sealed up.
ME: So there’s a bottle of sealed pee in the car??
HE: Yeah. No big deal.
ME: There is sealed pee in our car!!
HE: I’ll get it tomorrow. I don’t want to go all the way down there.
ME: Well, give me the keys and I’ll go get it.
HE: No, I don’t want you to have to do it. It’s my pee.
ME: But I don’t want it to be in the car!
HE: Why is it such a big deal?
ME: I don’t know! It just is! There’s PEE in our car! What if it spills out?
HE: It won’t.
ME: You don’t know that! It’s just freaking me out! We have bottled PEE in our car! Like we’re officially hobos!
HE: I can’t believe this. This is the dumbest fight ever.
ME: No, it’s not. It’s peeeeeeeeeee!
HE: (after staring at me for a moment in gobsmacked silence) Okay. Fine. I’ll take care of it.
ME: I said I’d do it. I will. I would do it.
HE: You’re not doing it.

(leaves — not happily — and returns a few moments later)

HE: Okay. It’s taken care of.
ME: Thank you. What did you do with it?
HE: Dumped it on the grass.
ME: (drily) Now all the neighborhood dogs are gonna smell that and follow you around when they put two and two together.
HE: This is the stupidest thing ever.
ME: I know. I’m sorry. Thank you for taking care of the pee.
HE: (sighs) You’re welcome.

cyber wooing

Glee’s boy choir version of Katy Perry’s “Teenage Dream.”

So.

Yesterday, MB sent this song to my email while he was at work. A YouTube love letter of sorts. And from the very first sentence, I was doubled over with tears of laughter at the insane funny-sweet of the whole thing. The man knows how to get me, that’s for sure.

We’d watched this episode of Glee the other night and I’d commented how much I loved this version the guys did. Great arrangement. Lush harmonies. He’d obviously made a note of it. The lyrics are pretty darn girl-specific, so the image of giant manly MB saying these things to me ….. well, I was gone. Toast. My laptop almost crashed to the floor, I was shaking that hard with laughter. How can I resist a man who sends me — his wife of a jillion years — a teen anthem to declare his love??

And the messages we started to send each other, quoting the lyrics and commenting on them. I had tears streaming down my cheeks.

Here’s a smattering:

HE: You think I’m pretty without any makeup on

(The image of MB with his bearded face plastered in makeup — well, it’s just too much, I tell you)

ME: Yes, thank God you’re pretty.

HE: We drove to Cali and got drunk on the beach.

Remember?

ME: Um, when?? You got me drunk is what happened here, Casanova, and then drove me to “Cali.” I need to be drunk to be anywhere near “Cali.”

HE: Hm. That explains a lot.

ME: Yep.

HE: Let’s go all the way tonight.

ME: Hahahahahahahaha!! Well, let’s pray about it, ‘mkay?

HE: Yes, let’s. Oh. I’m getting a word from the Lord.

ME: Hahahahaha. I’ll bet you are. You know, I’m glad to hear you think “this is real.” I was gearing up to ask you where this relationship is headed.

HE: I think we both know.

ME: Cocky.

HE: I’m going to let that slide.

ME: Yes. I’m sure you will.

HE: Look, it says we can build a fort out of sheets.

ME: Ooooh, that sounds fun! Do I have to do laundry in order for this to happen?

HE: No. Laundry is anti-fort.

ME: But dance until we die? Can we stop dancing before that happens?

HE: Yeah. I don’t really have an interest in dancing until I die. We can skip that part.

ME: Phhew.

HE: I’mma get your heart racing in my skin-tight jeans, be your teenage dream tonight

ME: Hahahahahahahahahahaha!!! I can’t bear it. You’ve killed me. You win. And where are these skin-tight jeans, btw? I would pay real dollars to see this.

HE: Oh, you’ll see.

ME: Really?? Hahahahahahaha!! My heart is already ….. well, not exactly racing, but jogging. Or something.

HE: That’s a start.

ME: Also, I like how you’re going to “LET me put my hands on you.” Hahahaha. Yes. Mother, may I?

HE: You may.

ME: Try and stop me.

HE: Why??

ME: See you soon.

HE: I’m coming home now.

ME: Oh! I’ll prepare the fort.

Uhm, yeah. This is now my favorite song.

(An aside: Menfolk? I highly recommend this tactic. Very ….. effective.)

yee-haw

‘Member when I told you I was taking my big nasty 2-day exam 2 weeks ago? And how I was all a’quiver with fear and, let’s face it, nausea?

All my friends who’d taken the exam recently had failed. The news was getting bleaker and bleaker. I was going to slit my wrists from anxiety.

My results were due today at 5 p.m., but they came in yesterday at noon, which was nice, actually. Caught me off guard. Spared me another 30 hours of anxiety.

And, well, I passed.

With High Honors.

Pippa, I got that email with my results and burst into tears. Then I ran around my house screaming and clutching my head like a fat crazy black lady who’s just won the Showcase Showdown on The Price is Right. If Bob Barker had been in the room with me, I swear I would have mowed him down. I’m not kidding. I was crying so hard, so blind with tears, I’m surprised I didn’t plow myself into a wall and knock myself out.

I called MB sobbing and — with 2 family members with cancer right now — I had to preface the news, “These are good tears. I’m fine. Nothing’s wrong, blah blah blah.”

The man had to pull his car over, he was laughing so hard, so happy for me.

“I knew it! I KNEW you’d do it!”

“I didn’t.”

“I did.

And on and on like that. I love that guy.

Frankly, thank God I passed. No WAY did I want to do THAT again. Shiver.

But is it wrong to say “Yay, me?”

Too bad.

Yay, me.