Off in the Land of Conspicuous Consumption

Dear Goddam Diary, today my sister Morgan and I totally went to the mall! We went right after dropping Frannie off at school, so none of the stores were open yet. It was mostly mall-walking grandpas and stroller mamas with coffees. On our way to the coffee hut, she had a true confession for me.

“Dude, I have to confess to you that I have been watching The O.C..”

“That’s okay,” I said. “It’s supposed to be a good nighttime soap.”

“It is! All this stuff keeps happening! I couldn’t stop watching it if I wanted to.”

We passed the sunglass booths and the cell phone kiosks. I was pushing the strolly and Morgan walked alongside, looking in through the still-locked gates. Morgan has been watching more TV than usual as she is bored and waiting for her classes to start.

“I have never seen a group of people with such bad luck,” she continued, still deep in thought about The O.C. “Rehab. Arrests. Drama. They beat on each other. They should just move apart, because they are just bringing each other bad luck.”

“Then there wouldn’t be a show, would there?”

“Aha,” she said.

Also discovered at the mall: Hummer cologne. There are no words.

Oh, hell yes, there are. There are many words.

Motto: “Now you can smell like a gas-guzzling freak-jeep.”

Motto: “The scent you’ll be embarrassed to have on your dresser.”

Motto: “The Ladies will go NUTS for it.”

Okay, that one was kind of very bad.

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Just Call Me “Little Buddy”

The annual moms’ cocktail cruise, hosted by my marvelous friend Supa, was held on Sunday. This was my third year going. On the first year I had a few drinks and ended up pretty woozy. Last year I had one drink as I thought I was recovering from the miscarriage that turned out to be Strudel. This year I had no drinks and decided just to enjoy the ambiance. Supa is teetotalling (I am not, I just didn’t want to get tired), so we were sisters in sobriety, as they say.

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Figure 1: Gasworks Park, visible from the boat.

There’s not much to report this year, I’m afraid. As usual, I came armed with current events and celebrity gossip, but the other moms spent most of their time talking about their children. I love my girls to the point of throwing up, but when I get away from them I like to talk about other things. It’s fun to spend time with Supa though, no matter what the circumstances.

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Figure 2: Good advice in the head.

When I go on this cruise it’s kind of a culture shock for me. All the moms are homeowners, have money in the bank, and were chatting away about their recent European vacations. The reason Supa knows these mothers is because their children are all enrolled in the same private school, which has a somewhat different philosophy than her school. Their husbands have Important Jobs with Big Companies, and so do many of the moms. I have state health insurance and my most recent job experience (before the thrift store) is temping. This summer I did some…free stuff. My child is at her school by the grace of a scholarship. So it’s fun to me to go on this cruise and eat duck and listen to someone else’s set of problems.

One mom cracked me up. She was blonde and kind of uptight, with a prim ponytail and a twee skijump nose. She’s the type of Seattle mom who sticks in your memory as wearing a twinset and khakis, even if she’s not. There was a lot of talk about real estate and buying and selling houses in Seattle, and she told a story about her experience hunting for her current house.

“Well,” the prim mom said, after they had been discussing the endless tasks required to prepare a house for viewing. “Some people won’t change their houses at all. We looked at this house that was completely decorated in the most awful style.”

“What was wrong with it?” another mom asked.

“The whole house was decorated in hideous black velvet paintings. Ugh!” the prim mom shuddered at the memory. “The real estate agent told us they refused to take down their art.”

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Figure 3: My bedroom, right over my bed.

“One person’s trash is another person’s treasure, I suppose,” said another mom.

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Figure 4: Franny’s room.

Indeed.

In Other News

Franny’s haircut went splendidly yesterday. She sat very still. We didn’t end up with a pixie cut, but it looks one million times better. I tied a ribbon into it today and she looked very pleased. The lady asked Franny what she wanted to be when she grew up and Franny replied, “a haircutter,” which pleased the lady to no end. But this morning at breakfast, Franny reminded me that she wasn’t being entirely truthful with the hair dresser.

“I actually want to be a bellydancer,” she said. She’s been stuck on this one for a year now, ever since she went out to a fancy Moroccan place.

“Well, aim high, kid,” I said, as I sliced apples for breakfast.

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Divorce Should Probably Be Settled Via Deathmatch

So, I have had a harrowing couple of days corresponding with my ex-husband. I should know better than to even try to engage with him, especially as I went into things so irritated in the first place, because of Franny’s poor hair. If I go in angry, he throws up a blockade of SJ YOU ARE ALWAYS SO UNREASONABLE. If I go in reasonable, he says “okay” and then does whatever he wants anyway. I wish he would be a wall of “I am not going to move for you,” like I try to be, rather than a bunch of lies and bad rhetoric. I know how to deal with that. But how can you communicate with someone who has trouble keeping their own lies straight? It’s enough to make you want to hear one lie, told well, all the time.

So I am going to dump our last bit of correspondence here, and get irate about it, and then I am not going to have to see that fucktard until Thanksgiving. This is the last bit of energy that I am going to spend on this. Back to jiggly bikini girls, etc, etc.

In my last entry, I posted my email that I sent to him in regards to Franny’s hair. The replies were a lot less illiterate than his usual screeds. The ideas don’t sound quite right either…it doesn’t sound like his usual chain of “logic.” Either college is actually working, or perhaps That Poor Woman is proofing for him.

After my first email:

>I’m more than happy to talk about your concerns with Franny’s hair, >or anything else concerning her life and well being any time you’d >like. What I’m not willing to do is engage with your name calling >and personal insults, it does neither us, nor Franny any
>good. If we are to have any lasting compromises over the years, a >bit of respect would be in order. At the very least, an absence of >hostility.

>Seth

This sounds good on the surface, doesn’t it? Like he actually cares about her and the way we communicate, but I can see through this for what it is, which is a dishonest way of saying “fuck you.” If you communicate with someone like this, you know what I’m talking about. This drives me CRAZY. He always falls back on the very popular “the child, THINK ABOUT THE CHILD” when I have issues with him or something he’s doing to or with her. I don’t really see how me calling his cousin a bridezilla or asking him to think before he does something stupid to our kid via email is affecting Franny. Maybe I’m missing something. At least, I am aware that I am angry. I don’t think he can acknowledge when he is, so I get stupid emails like this.

I reply, and I know I’m pushing water uphill at this point, but I can’t seem to help myself sometimes.

>Seth:

>I have permanently lost respect for you, so sanctimonious >finger-wagging will always be a waste of time.

>I know that I am unlikely to get anything useful back here, but I do
>want to know, in the interest of preventing future pain for F.

> Now, she told me she doesn’t like the color and would rather that >it were still blue. Tell me the truth: if I dye her hair back, will >you take her back to a salon to have chemicals used on her again?

>SJ

Okay, I know I shouldn’t have said “sanctimonious finger-wagging,” but that was what was happening here. A finger was wagged. Sanctimoniously. I needed to call it as I saw it, even though I knew I was doing the equivalent of trying to teach an intoxicated donkey a quadratic equation.

I got a reply! Surprisingly, I SUCK.

>In the future, if you want a useful reply you can cut out the >useless rhetoric. In the interest of resolving this conversation, I >think it is inappropriate for you to keep dying Franny’s hair >ridiculous colors. Of course she wants her hair different colors, >but in my opinion she’s a bit too young to make those decisions. >She needs to appreciate her natural beauty for what it is and learn >to be herself before making all these changes, which she’ll have >plenty of time to do when she gets older. If you’re concerned >about chemicals on Franny’s head, I would suggest not adding any more chemicals yourself and leave her be.

Sweet! I got a lecture! THIS after me dying her hair for the last year and a half we lived together, with nary a peep from Seattle Federline. THIS after we discussed me continuing to dye her hair after I left him, and he said, “I think it’s fine. Thanks for running it by me.” As usual, he misses the point. I was concerned about the fact that the process hurt her, and I was afraid he was going to have it done again. I am taking this final email as evidence that he just might. The dye I use on her is artifical, yes. But the color is deposited via a conditioning base. It is like hair stain over her natural blonde hair and does not burn.

I can’t let this lie, though: “in my opinion she’s a bit too young to make those decisions.” If that’s so, then why did he make the decision to take her to a salon and have her hair done dishwater? I think that sends a nastier message than me dying her hair “ridiculous colors.”

A few people have been encouraging me to redye her hair, and Franny tells me she wants her hair blue again and is dissatisfied with the results of the professional job. I think I hit on a better solution last night. I was telling this story on the annual mom’s cocktail cruise that my friend Supa has, and a friend of hers listened to everything and said, “Sounds like it’s time for a pixie cut.” I think this is the best idea I’ve heard, and at breakfast Frannie was enthusiastic about it. The ugly, fuzzy dishwater hair at the bottom will go away. I will not redye her hair, and if she asks me why I will tell her that it’s because I’m afraid that her dad will take her to a salon again to have her hair bleached.

Aiiight, back to dumb stories about boobs and the myriad ways I accidentally offend people.

Title: Reply Requested

SeaFed:

I am saddened to see that you took Franny to a salon to have her hair professionally dyed. She told me that the procedure hurt her and that you had this done at the request of your cousin. I am sorry that bridezillas seem to run in your family but remember you can say no to people, especially as it relates to using painful chemicals on a four-year-old. I am sorry that having Franny appear as a cute accessory is something you value over Franny’s comfort.

Now, she told me she doesn’t like the color and would rather that it were still blue. Tell me the truth: if I dye her hair back, will you take her back to a salon to have chemicals used on her again?

With great disgust,

SJ

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Before

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Teal

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After

This is just so STUPID. I need a lie-down. I am gratified to see it looks better on film than in-person. In person it looks kind of grey.

OMFG Dudes

Britney Spears totally had her baby! That fucking nitwit got her elective c-section after all. I was in labor for 47 hours. Where was my GODDAM elective c-section??? And tummy tuck, aka the “Mend It Like Beckham?”

Come to think of it, I just want the drugs. The name has not been released yet. I am voting for “London”…Victoria Beckham named her child “Brooklyn”…so’s we can have a cross-Atlantic chav/white trash cultural exchange. WHO’S YOUR DADDY NOW, TERRORISTS?

ETA: Yes, we have comfirmation…the child shall be called P.M.S. Federline. LE SIGH.

In Which I Haul My Giant Can Back Into the Kitchen

Weekends around here are just jam-packed nowadays, usually with good things. One thing that happened was both good and bad all at once: I quit my job already. It was kicking my ass, and I automatically got a nasty cold that my companion brought home that I probably would have shaken off otherwise. I didn’t quit because it was kicking my ass though, I quit it because it turned my tiny family upside down and shook them vigorously, poor things. My companion spent most of the day when I was gone trying to shovel food and a bottle into an extremely angry Strudel piehole, and when he wasn’t unsuccessfully feeding her, she was screaming or passed out. Then, as an added bonus, she woke up every hour of the night each day I worked, probably to see if I was still there or if I had abandoned her again. Worst. Mama. Evah.

So now I am back to full-time boob ranching and hauswoofery, barefoot and sarcastic. I am sorry that our experiment failed, because I really wanted to take the sole financial burden off my companion. In a year he went from bachelor royale stylee (“I sleeps on me futon and goes camping when I please, yarr”) to having a little baby and a babymomma and a stepdaughter. But there’s a light at the end of the tunnel: my companion got a call from Giant County Library System and they want to train him as a sub. He gets up to nineteen hours a week! And no benefits! DOPE! Thanks guys! However, this tiny little bone that he has been thrown should help a lot, because it’s the only thing cooking right now. After being trapped with a baby banshee, he is EXCITED about the OPPORTUNITIES working a part-time second job will afford. Mainly, keeping his hearing and sanity.

Also, we just booted another financial burden. I sent the final payment off to my lawyer this weekend. Peace out, camel-humping dickbag!

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On Saturday we went downtown to bonk around and look at things. My companion was holding Strudel in the sling so I could poke and fondle things at will.

“Hmm, lookit these,” I said, pointing to a pack of fancy-schmancy fine-mesh underwear. Long-time readers may remember that I am a member of the thongconverted. I suddenly realized that I hadn’t bought any underwear in a year, and I still am at least fifteen pregnancy pounds out from cramming myself back into my old thongs. And the larger bikini underwear I bought to get me though pregnancy now sags attractively in the rear. HOTT!

“Those are nice,” said my companion. He says this about almost any underwear, which is something I like about him. He has some trauma from a few years ago involving teal underwear with chartreuse piping or some such nonsense, so he only draws the line at that color combo.

I pulled a pack off the rack and walked on to another part of the store.

“EXTRA LARGE?” my companion said as he trailed behind me. “YOU’RE WEARING EXTRA LARGE NOW?”

I spun around and leaned in toward him. “Jesus!” I hissed. “Why don’t you say that a little louder?”

“Sorry,” he said, sotto voce and slightly mortified, “but you told me you were a large.” He finished this somewhat accusingly.

“Well, I was,” I said, “before I had Strudel. And I will get back there someday. I did the first time.”

The funny thing is that he knows I look a little different now, and I have kept him apprised of the weird changes that happen post-pregnancy. But I guess in some ways I look just like myself because he looked so shocked that I was buying a larger size.

I guess the fact that he embarrassed me in the middle of the busy store is payback in a way. Last winter, we were riding the bus together to different places and he got off first. As he was getting off I reminded him, loudly, across the bus, that he was out of Preparation H and he should stop by Bartell’s and get some more. I saw him close his eyes and shake his head as he stood by the bus’s back door. “Why am I with this woman?” the look said.

So, Saturday, in the middle of the crowded department store, he unwittingly exacts his revenge. Well played, my friend. Well played.

In Other News

Did you people know that it is a super bad idea to attempt to wash a disposable diaper? With your regular clothes? And if you do this, as you take the laundry out of the wash, weird little pebbles, like soft sand, will explode out and fall all over your feet and the floor. Because modern diapers are filled with weird absorbent gel.

You might ask yourself how a dirty diaper came to be in the washer the first place. I suspect I can trace the problem back to the hamper as an open receptacle in the dark, sometime around two in the morning. Good lord. Well, now we know what happens, people.

Part 4: Is This Justice?

Where was I? Oh, yes, I was telling you about my alien-invasion-stylee pregnancy. I think I had left off at the ultrasound, in which we discovered that I would not have to name my child “Demonicus” or “Linda Blair”* on account of the fact that the baby did not have horns or a tail (visible).

The rest of the pregnancy was uneventful, as they say, inside my body. Strudel grew her funny little pointy eyebrows like her dad’s and her widow’s peak like her dad’s and her ability to completely lose her shit when presented with any new way of doing things and become as obstinate as a donkey up a minaret, why…just like her dad does. To be fair, after pitching a fit, she has also has his ability to change her mind and accept new things with open arms a very short time afterwards. My modus operandi around here is to introduce one of my new and crazy ideas, jump into the nearest foxhole, and then wait five minutes.

Sometimes I feel like we didn’t so much make a baby, as I acted as a host for his clone, if you know what I mean.

Outside my body, life was eventful as hell. I told you recently that Seattle Federline, my first babydaddy, was trying to pry money out of me last December. At this point I had really run out of money to litigate, and had been told I would need another $15,000 to finish the investigations and take it to trial. I approached him about settling and he agreed to it. He knew I was pregnant again / still because I had told Frannie, and we decided to keep my pregnancy a secret. For me, my initial decision to lie on the court paperwork was because of the fact that in Washington State, a woman has to declare if she is pregnant on the divorce papers, and if the husband is the father. At the time, Sea-Fed had an unreversed vasectomy, and I had gotten pregnant after I had moved out of the house we lived in. I saw no need to bring it up. This is no justification, but it certainly made me angry that I was supposed to declare a pregnancy, even if it was physically impossible in more ways than one that it was the husband’s, while the husband does not have to declare if he has impregnated other women. Don’t tell me that’s not important, either, because supporting another child will affect his income and ability to support other children.

While I was pregnant there was quite a flapdoodle in Washington about Shawnna Hughes, who was denied a divorce even though she was pregnant with a child who was not her husband’s. When Hughes got pregnant her husband was in prison for beating her. As my lawyer told me, in this state it is presumed that the child is the husband’s despite such things as vasectomies and not wanting to touch somebody’s groadie ass for 1 million gold doubloons. So this was a hot-button topic at the time. As an aside, I am not the first woman who considered lying on the court paperwork.

Anyway, Sea-Fed was trying to shake me down for some money, and if I don’t trust him with my kid you know I don’t trust him with the secret of my new pregnancy. So I made one of the biggest mistakes of my divorce: I told my lawyer that I was pregnant. He immediately said that it was going to have to come out in court. Papers would have to be signed. My companion was going to have to declare paternity and Sea-Fed was going to have to deny it. “Fine,” I said. “They will. Just get me divorced already.” “It’s not that simple,” he replied. “It’s illegal to get divorced in Washington State if you’re pregnant.” Illegal? Crap. That meant I would have to wait three more months, until Strudel would be born in March, to finalize.

I went away then, and I got angry. I talked to everyone I knew about it, some of whom thought what my lawyer said was fishy. I emailed the reporter from our local weekly who was on the Shawnna Hughes story and told her what happened to me. The reporter is a law student and told me that what my lawyer said wasn’t true. She met with me and interviewed me for another angle to the story, but it did not go to press. If I was angry before, I was livid after this.

I called my lawyer and confronted him. He backtracked and attempted to talk circles around me. “I need this to be over,” I told him. When I told him I wanted to settle and finish before I went bankrupt I remember him saying something stupid like, “But is this justice? Is justice being served here?” I snapped, “No, but he’s not drinking himself to death fast enough, so I have to end this.” My lawyer sent me a letter that said it was reiterating what we had discussed on the phone, but not once did he commit what he said about “divorce being illegal in Washington state while pregnant” to print.

So my lawyer and Sea-Fed’s lawyer played pattycake with each other via a volley of incorrect and misfiled paperwork. When I would call him up to ask him what was going on, and tell him to finish already, and that I didn’t believe what he was telling me, he would take pains to remind me that he’d been “a family law lawyer for over twenty years,” so who was the expert here? He would vacillate between being a condescending expert or total fuckwit depending on what resulted in more billable hours. My bill, which I had paid down to a reasonable amount because I did temp work until I was 35 weeks along, trebled in February due to intentional lollygagging.

As far as I was concerned, the jig was motherfucking up. I wasn’t going to get my divorce before I had Strudel, so I had pretty much stopped caring. I just wanted to throw the brakes on before my bill got any higher. In late February I sent my lawyer a letter firing him. He came after me two or three times after that, basically saying, “Are you sure? Are you out of your mind?” I admit that being married to a sociopath for eight years can make you feel like you’re a little barmy at times, but firing my lawyer actually brought on an excellent amount of clarity.

I remember the last phone conversation I had with him. It was a Friday night and I was out to dinner at Chinese food, the awesome “American” kind with the florescent orange sauces, when my cel rang with a blocked call. “It’s my lawyer,” I said to my family. “Sorry.” I answered it.

“Yeah,” I said.

“SJ. Shifty McLamepants here. I just wanted to make a final confirmation that you no longer need my services,” he said.

“No, I’m done.”

“We can finish really quickly once you have the baby.”

“I don’t think you understood me. I wanted to get divorced before I had the baby,” I said. “Now I don’t care.”

“This just doesn’t make any sense.” He said this repeatedly throughout our conversation. Doesn’t make sense that I am tired of paying you $150 an hour to drag your feet? That’s a tough concept, I know. He was badgering me and I was having trouble getting off the phone with him. “If you’re concerned about the money, I can finish this for free.”

“It’s too late for this,” I said. “I’m at dinner with my family and I’m labor NOW, so please, I’m done.”

“You’re in labor now?”

“Yes.”

“And you’re out to dinner?”

“Yes.”

“Huh. Call me if you change your mind.” He hung up.

What can I say? I had to have honey walnut prawns one more time before I got housebound for a while.

And what can I say about lawyers and this mess? Your best bet, unless you have multiple thousands of dollars, is to avoid this mess. I was thisclose to leaving my husband when I found out I was pregnant. One crappy millennial New Year’s Eve party and I get stupid, drink champagne and sleep with my husband. A total ugh. I knew something was wrong with him back then, but I didn’t know what…I didn’t have the word for it.

My very illegal advice is this: if you are pregnant by a robot monkey, and you know something is very wrong, you know you have a narrow window of time where you can get out before your pregnancy is discovered. Go, and file for divorce remotely. Don’t feel bad about taking your kid away from their father, because this person is incapable of having feelings for your child anyway. Tell your kid that her father died saving a box of kittens from a burning battleship. Because that will be easier than putting your kid in the possession of a monkey robot with cold, dead eyes a couple of times a month until the kid is eighteen or makes another choice. You can give your kid a more loving environment as a single parent than by sharing her with something that has the emotional life of a rubber plant.

This is the lesson I took away from my divorce. My ex took away a different one, after I brought up his thieving, drug dealing, and child neglect in court his conclusion to me was, “Well, I’m never telling anyone my secrets like that again.”

Sociopaths Walk Among Us, and unfortunately they don’t respond to the sign of the cross or normal human emotions. Most of us assume that other people have normal emotions and a conscience. And sociopaths are good at faking being normal to the outside world. Protect yourself by learning the signs.

And if anyone who wants the name of an awesome lawyer who will lie to you about the law and run up your bill like mad in the Seattle area, email me.

* That’s right, “Linda Blair.” Not the name of the character from “The Exorcist,” but just “Linda Blair.” I can hear myself now: “LINDA Blair! You get yor butt back into this trailer TOOT SWEET!”

Sing Your Life

“And make no mistake, my friend
Your pointless life will end
But before you go
Can you look at the truth?
You have a lovely singing voice
A lovely singing voice”

–Steven Patrick Morrissey

So, remember that job that I was telling you about, that job that they had only previously hired men to do? Well, I got it. I am sorting donations at a local thrift store. It is hard and brainless work, but not necessarily work you would need a man to do. In fact, I would say that women would be better suited to it, because women are generally less-squeamish about the stuff I keep encountering, or at least less immature. On Sunday someone donated a pack of adult diapers. I have had two babies “via hoo-hoo” as they say in medical parlance, and I realize that I am probably looking down the barrel of wetting myself someday. It happens. But there was an awful lot of “hur hur hur-ing” when they discovered the diapers.

Some stuff is pretty hur-worthy, though. Last night we discovered a “light bondage kit,” which included a tiny whip, some leather pasties with a tube of glue with which to attach the pasties, and “erotic oils.” Whenever the guys find stuff like this there is a lot of elbowing and snickering and a few of them will glance at me, to see what my reaction is going to be. But I am pretty unflappable, as you may guess. They were debating about where to put the kit when I chimed in. “Housewares, definitely housewares.” A more sensible guy I work with stepped in and said we just couldn’t sell things like that and took it away to pitch out.

Yesterday was a Special Bonus Day, because we also found a vibrator, too, one of the classic “tube” kinds that take batteries and have a screw-on base. “It came with its own little bag,” said the young guy who found it. “I hope it won’t be missed,” I said. This time we could file it under “housewares” for the pricers to find, because our man the voice of reason wasn’t around.

This job is different than I thought it was going to be. Can I tell you I have never made minimum wage, even before I had my degrees? And now I am. I have always somehow done at least a dollar or so better, even as a punk kid. Last summer I was doing contract writing for $18 an hour, and now I am making less than half that. But we are so scraping by here that even this crappy job will make a difference.

Another thing that surprised me about this job is how it is having an immediate emotional impact on me. I think I am having some hormonally-induced mood swings from being away from Strudel for so many hours, but seeing all this stuff is also screwing with me, too. Sometimes I open a bag and realize that I am seeing someone’s entire shoe collection, I can just tell. Which they won’t need anymore. Because they are dead. It makes me think about the mental state of the person who had to gather up all those shoes and make the decision to bring them to the store. Was it their mother’s shoes? Was it a person who volunteered to do it because everyone else was too bereaved? Were they perhaps saying, “Hooray! The old bat’s dead, now I can help myself to her Kandinsky prints!”

Or I open a box and see a cross-section of someone’s clothes and items that look exactly like stuff that an old friend I lost touch with would have worn and liked. Or I find a collection that looks like stuff you would take to a lover’s house to make your stay there more comfortable. You know, for “your” drawer. And then one day it goes badly and you break up, and then you take their comb and stupid CDs and cardigan to the thrift store, because you don’t want to think about their ass anymore.

I guess what I am trying to say is that I am being affected by other peoples’ memories.

Also, the sheer amount of stuff we get in…Christ. I think every time I work we fill up about three Dumpster-sized bins with clothes alone. And I don’t go out to the front much, but it seems to blast right out the door again. I have long boggled over the facts and figures about how much we in Western “developed” countries own and consume, but now I think that we could probably stop making stuff for about ten years and this country would still have nice, suitable crap circulating. For me, thrifting started as a fashionable thing, when I was in high school and had a lot of money to blow. And in Illinois holy shit, people will not touch western wear with a ten-foot lassoo, so, hey, more for me. Later, in college, it became a matter of economics and I only shopped new when I had to. Now it is starting to seem like a responsible political choice. I never thought I would become one of THOSE people, but there I am facing down a pile of decent (and not-so-decent) clothes, some of which still have the tags on them, that is three times as tall as I am, every time I go to work. Holy shit.

The downside, other than the fact that it is actual work, ugh, is all the detritus, tangible and airborne, that comes in with donations. There is a copious amount of dust and mold, of course, but there is always a bunch of fiddly crap we can’t do a thing with. Broken stuff, odd plastic or metal parts that don’t appear to match anything and aren’t really even recognizable. A coworker ran across a used tampon. An appliance that looks good, except for the fact that it is filthy, such as the George Foreman grill that came in on Sunday covered with burger schmutz. Stuffed animals with dried puke on them, bedraggled and dirty. We all know that a lot of people seem to be just trying to avoid making dump runs. We probably throw out about one-third of the stuff we’re getting.

Another sort-of downside to this is that the satellite radio station is almost always set to ’80s mix. So I am hearing the catchy-ass stuff that was on the radio when I was a kid. It’s fun to sing along but last night, when I was rocking out to “Living on a Prayer” I realized that that bad, awful Bon Jovi Song has become my life. And when a schmaltzy Bon Jovi song could be “your” song, it’s time to change your life.

Well, it’s a living, sort of, until we can save up to move to a cheaper part of the city.

The High Cost of Living

After about an hour of sleep tonight, I was awakened by an enormously-loud crashing sound on the street below, followed by horrific screaming. I knew immediately that this wasn’t some of the ordinary drunken Friday night yelling I often hear from the street or from the open-air hallways of my building. I tried to shake the confusion out of my head as I reached for my cel phone to call 911. It was a woman, and her shrill screams came in through my closed back windows. “Help me! Please! God, somebody HELP!”

I live on Aurora Avenue. Aurora is Seattle’s name for Highway 99, part of a system that ran from Mexico to Canada until Interstate 5 took its place in the late 1960s. In Seattle it is known as a pretty seedy street that forms a significant part of the red-light district. Shadier parts of Aurora are home to drug dealers, all-weather hoes in tight pants and parkas, and motels with hourly rates. I usually feel insulated from all that mess in my apartment. We are on the fourth floor of a nice, modern building, with gorgeous views of Lake Union, downtown, and Mount Rainier. We exit at the back, on a quieter residential street where the neighbors say hello and goo-goo over the baby. Our neighborhood borders one of the nicest neighborhoods in Seattle, Wallingford, which is chockablock with kids and dogs and cute coffee shops. My part of Aurora doesn’t see a lot of action; it’s just a divided highway that can zip you from here to there quickly if traffic’s moving.

However, this is a part of Aurora with a higher speed limit, so the one thing we do see is accidents. I knew something horrible had happened on the street below. Between the haze of early sleep and the effect of the bone-chilling screams, I could barely get my words out correctly when the 911 operator answered. “Something’s happened on the street. A woman is screaming on the street. I think there’s been an accident,” I managed. He took my address and asked what I could see. I can’t even see Aurora from my windows as there is an open-air walkway at that end of the building. The operator promised someone would come right away and asked me to call back if things changed.

I hung up and went back into the bedroom. My cel phone read 12:45. My teeth were chattering and I was shaking. My companion moaned and mumbled a few words to me. I suspect he didn’t even wake up. He slept through a wicked altercation that my neighbors had in my old building a few months ago as well. The screams continued and the street was otherwise eerily silent. I couldn’t stand it anymore so I got dressed and went out barefoot to the open hallway overlooking the street, leaving him in the apartment with the baby.

Some of my other building neighbors had gathered and were watching the street. Others had called 911 too. I looked straight down over the edge to see what happened, but the woman in the apartment across from me pointed across the street. I could see a man sprawled out on his back, in light-colored clothing, not moving. My neighbor told me he was a pedestrian hit-and-run and speculated that the man and the screaming woman were trying to cross the divided highway, which is sadly a common way to get killed in Seattle. The woman had stopped screaming and my neighbor told me that she had run down the street. A minute later the police came, followed by fire trucks and an ambulance, and the police cars blocked off the street. The EMTs loaded the man into the ambulance, but did not turn the sirens on or drive off once they had secured the man in the ambulance. The screaming woman returned and I could see a couple of police officers talking to her.

“That was a loud crash,” I said to my neighbor. “Someone has a messed-up car now.”

“Yes,” she said, “I’ll bet his windscreen’s messed up. It’s all too bad. It’s not the driver’s fault if someone’s crossing the road at a place like this. If they would have stopped it would be okay. As it is, it’s a hit-and-run felony.”

I don’t know if the man’s alive. I hope so. It’s sad–there’s a safe place to cross Aurora about a block up from where they got hit. I hope I can sleep now. I have been woken up by trucks taking out trees and telephone poles on the street, as well as fender-benders, but I have never woken up to the sound of a person screaming at the top of their lungs like that.