October 2010

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Halloween Whores

I guess I am dating myself by saying I missed the memo on dressing like a cheap hooker on Halloween. Seriously, have you looked at women’s costumes? The options range from slutty nurse to slutty police woman. I don’t generally do slutty (well, there was that one year I dressed as a Hooters girl, but I was in my 20′s so I don’t think that should count), so I’m stuck making my own costume each year. This year I’ve opted to be a non-slutty cowgirl. (Naturally, I believe my costume makes me superior to the women who wear the slutty stuff, so I will judge them and look down my nose at them for the next year. And don’t get me started on whether little G can play with their children, because you know that’s a big fat negative.)

I’m pretty sure the neighborhood kids already hate me, what with my giving them Halloween pencils and erasers instead of candy last year. To avoid another controversy, this year I’m going back to the candy, but each kid will also be forced to take a pamphlet on diabetes. You’d think the parents would appreciate that, but you never know with those slutty-dressed mothers. (You know how they can be – they probably feed their kids deep-fried Snickers every night for dinner.)

On a brighter note, I really think I’m a shoo-in for the Best Neighbor award this year.

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I did it! I made that 60-mile walk my bitch. (Okay, maybe I cried for two solid miles on the 2nd day, but we won’t get into that.)
As annoying as other people can be at times, they are also wonderful. People came out in droves to cheer us on, give us candy, and thank us for walking. All the kids at Sugar Hill Elementary lined the sidewalk to give us high-fives. Another school had its cheerleaders cheering, “Pink & White, Pink & White, Boob, Boob, Boob!” The best T-shirt I saw said, “Yes, they’re fake. My real ones tried to kill me!” There were signs everywhere saying, “You’re walking for me” or “You’re walking for my mom”, but here is my favorite.

And here’s my favorite cheerleader.

Perhaps my bigger accomplishment was sleeping in a tent and going only in Port-a-Potties for 3 days. Ack. Here is a picture of our home.

Pretty cute, huh? (Less cute when it’s 40 degrees out.)

And finally, why we walk – this is a salute to breast cancer survivors and those who didn’t make it.

3 days, 60 miles, thousands of walkers. $6.1M raised to fight breast cancer. Thank you, Atlanta!

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It’s 3:35AM and I’m up talking to you. I initially awoke because my foot strayed to M’s side of the bed and I nearly cut my heel on his Edward Scissor-toes, but now I can’t go back to sleep because I have so many things to tell you.

First off, I started working a contract job last week! It seemed perfect for me, as I can work when I want, wear what I want, and work independently building spreadsheets. I have agonized over formulas and charts and whatnot and the results, let me tell you, are hella cool. The problem arose today when I asked for the data to plug in. Evidently, the company doesn’t have it. Under different circumstances, I would employ the old PDOMA (Pulled Directly Out of My Ass) system, but since I’m not familiar with the company’s productivity numbers, that could be disastrous in this case. So what I wanted to do was throw a damn tantrum. But I’m trying to be a serene soul these days, so I instead bit my tongue and came home to bitch to M about it. Bless his heart, he was so excited that I was gainfully employed. (I told him it wasn’t a good idea.)

Next up is the Susan G. Komen 3-Day for the Cure. I will be walking this Friday – Sunday, 20 miles each day. Am I going to be able to complete the walk? Let’s hope so. I will be really embarrassed if old ladies are passing me while I’m collapsed on the pavement. I fear a shin splint, but I’m sure there is a range of other conditions/injuries/diseases (real or psychological) that I should add to my anxiety list. I need to work on that later today, maybe get on the internet and learn what could go wrong. But first I need to sleep. So goodnight. Or good morning, whatever.

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M and I may get divorced. Okay, not really. (I have been known to exaggerate.) But here is what I posted on his computer:

So you can see how serious I am, right?
It all happened when M sold the bankrupt company and went to work for the parent corporation. He gave up the office he’d been leasing and decided to (cue scary “dun, dun, DUN” music) work from home.
“EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEKKK! Not the dreaded [dun dun DUN] work from home!” I know you’re saying. But, yes, it’s true. He’s been here about 3 months now and I just don’t know how much more of this togetherness I can take. I think he is secretly trying to motivate me to get a job. (You know how he delights in ruining my life.)
I am open to any and all suggestions on how to evict a husband from a dining room. So far, I’ve mapped out some very well thought out plans on my own. Last week, drawing inspiration from “The Brady Bunch” (as I often do when in a quandary), I put a sheet over my head and pretended the place was haunted, but he didn’t fall for that. Tonight I plan to put a dead animal (whatever I find on the roadside) in the air conditioning vent. If that doesn’t work, I’m out of tricks. I may have to resort to having a conversation with him. But surely we can get this resolved before I have to take such a drastic step. I think my relationships work better when I expect people to read my mind, and then when they fail to, giving them a guilt trip for being so self-centered and disconnected with my needs. Good policy, right? But you’d be surprised how many folks disagree, what with all this honesty-mumbo-jumbo going on these days. So write me and tell me what to do, internet people. Surely some of you have faced this horror before me!

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I can’t be happy about Columbus Day, despite the good sales. Columbus brings back a sore memory for me, which remains a point of contention between Mom and me some 19 years later.
It was December 1991, and the “Circa 1492: Art During the Age of Exploration” exhibit at the National Gallery of Art in D.C. was receiving excellent reviews, so Mom and I hopped in the car and headed up there. Per my norm, I slept the entire way – a habit of mine that many drivers haven’t appreciated over the years. (People can be so selfish!) The day we arrived, I think we went to bed approximately 6pm in order to be well rested for our museum visit the next day. This was necessary, as my mother is a type AAA personality and insisted that we be the first to arrive in the morning so we could contemplate the art without the bother of sharing our space with other people. (She is not what one would describe as an admirer of “the masses.”)
The morning of the big day, we rolled out of bed way too early for me. Being a sophomore in college on winter break, I thought this was an extreme form of torture. I’m sure I bitched about it, but this story is not about my character defects; I’d much rather talk about those of my mother. So anyway, she took me to Hardee’s for breakfast where she ate some sort of biscuit. Since I’d rather cut off an arm than chance a Hardee’s biscuit (I have a delicate stomach), I had nothing and insisted I was fine.
Fast forward to the part where I was forced to stand in line outside TWO HOURS before the museum doors opened. As I recall, I was 8th in line – which means that some people are even more hard-core crowd haters than Mom. Oh, and I almost forgot the most important part – D.C. was experiencing a record-breaking cold front; I nearly froze to death. When the doors finally opened, it felt wonderful to be inside the heated museum. In the first room was the piece I was most interested in seeing – Leonardo’s Vitruvian Man. I took one look at it and felt nauseous. I turned to Mom and told her I felt sick, then everything went dark. I woke up on a bench with a doctor tending to me and my mother proclaiming, “NO, we will NOT leave this museum! We drove all the way from Alabama to see this!” I was unable to respond but I could hear the conversation, with the doctor asking if I’d eaten and Mom screaming, “I TOLD HER TO EAT!!!” The museum guard told her the cafeteria didn’t open for another couple of hours, but she demanded to talk to someone else. Finally, a museum worker agreed to get me something to eat, and when I was able to walk we went down to the cafeteria and I ate and drank.
“I cannot believe you humiliated me like this. I TOLD you to eat something!” she lectured me. When we got back to the exhibit, it was so crowded we had to elbow our way back to the Vitruivan Man. I don’t think she has ever forgiven me. How selfish of me to ruin her experience! However, I can honestly say if the doctor hadn’t caught me when I fell, carried me to the bench, and began probing Mom for answers, I’m quite sure she would have just stepped over my crumpled body to view the exhibit and then come back to gather me later. (I’m not being ugly to my mother; she would most likely agree with this statement.)
So you can surely see why Columbus Day is a source of irritation for me. And if you can’t, perhaps you should check your history books, as 1492 is the year Columbus “discovered” the New World, thus the topic of the exhibit. (By the way, you probably shouldn’t play “Are You Smarter than a 5th Grader?”, as I don’t think it would work out for you.)
P.S. If you’re good, perhaps I’ll tell you about some of my other museum adventures with Mom, like when we ran down the halls of the Louvre screaming, “Ou est la toilette?!”, or when I set off the alarm at the Guggenheim in Venice, or when we got into a fight at the Shanghai Museum and I had to walk back to the hotel. Always a lovely time when we’re together!
Happy Shopping!

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