Please Excuse SJ, She Was Unwell Today

OOH LA LA, was it a day.

Conclusion: my wallet was indeed stolen. Someone wiggled into my sunroof and fished around until they found it, as I was at least intelligent enough to put it out of sight. But then Mr. Husband left the sunroof open, and that did me in. I know, I know, DON’T leave your wallet in the car. But I did, for I am a jackass, and now I pay (but not with my debit card, because I cancelled it right away).

Also today, the one reading out of six that I choose not to do over the weekend is the one that my professor assigns for small group discussion.

Small Group Discussion: noun. 1. A gathering in which a small group of people (usu. 3-5) meet to discuss a particular matter, often in an academic setting. 2. Three viscious sharks that merely LOOK like future librarians surround SJ and repeatedly ask for her opinion on said reading, which causes her to reply, “I agree with you completely. Um-hmm. Yep.” Rather than being drawn towards blood, these Sharkbrarians are drawn by the cold sweat of inadaquacy.

(See definition #2)

In fact, I couldn’t really think at all today, so even if I had done the key reading I’d be in bad shape. Damn you PMS! Why must I turn into the wild, three-eyed FUCKMONSTER once a month?

Other conclusion: Academia: 1; SJ: 0.

In Other News

Librarian Zen Koan of the Day: “If a patron has a need for source that doesn’t exist, IS IT STILL A NEED?”

Ooh, that one’s going to keep me up tonight.

In Which I Am Small Bad, and Pay For My Follies

So…took the little Girlie to the library today, mostly because I was IN ARREARS with them. Arrears. God, I love that word.

Anyway, bad arrearage. More library fines than I’ve ever had: $20 (don’t ask). By the time I got there they had tacked on another four dollars, just for fun, I guess. I took the stuff back along time ago, I think in July. You’d think they’d be happy I am so supportive of the public library system. Now that I am a library student, the ALA should completely waive my membership dues, since I have been so arrearful to the library in the past.

I wanted to check more books out but I can’t find my wallet…I am having one of those days where everything’s a little unravelled.

Walletless, and out twenty-four and change, I decided to stick around and read some books to Girlie, instead of doing naptime reading at home. Frannie eventually decided to read on her own, and flipped through an extra-large picture book.

R-R-R-RIP. Shit. It’s okay, honey, I know it was an accident.

If I was alone, I could have just shoved the book down my pants and run out the door or flushed it down the toilet, of gutted the tatty stuffed lion (that I don’t want to touch but Girlie can’t get enough of) and made like the book was Luke Skywalker. But I couldn’t do any of that, for I must Set An Example.

“Umm, excuse me, my daughter ripped this book, and I know you have that special tape back here, and I’m really sorry.”

“Hmmph.” Glasses on a chain, the real deal.

“Do you want me to take this book to the front desk?”

“No no no, give it to me, alright.” Dismissed.

The whole library hates me. The ref librarian hates me because I let Girlie rip a book (I only looked away for a minute!), the Russian-speaking librarian hates me because I don’t speak Russian (the only time he smiles is when he checks out a Russian-speaking patron, seriously), and the young librarian hates me because she knows I am an arreariffic deadbeat patron.

How ironic that I will be joining their ranks in two short years. I’ll be fucking damned if I’m going to go the public route, though, and spend eight hours a day with that sourpuss look on my face like they do…bad for the complexion.

Dreamy


asandler1.jpg

Okay, I don’t love me some Adam Sandler, the way I love me some Cadbury Eggs and the way I love me some latex kitchen gloves. But his new movie, Punch-Drunk Love (I would love to see how that gets translated in the foreign markets) is definately worth seeing.

Now I should mention all the disclaimers that people mention when they stupidly say “a movie is good.”

1. You have to like PT Anderson. This movie has that terrible tension of Boogie Nights with out the despair, and the coolness of Magnolia without the length or ridiculousness. (Well, maybe a different kind of ridiculousness.)

2. You don’t have to like Adam Sandler. Seriously. I thought The Wedding Singer was cute and very non-Sandler, but I was really skeptical going into this new one. The great thing is that Anderson starts the movie off slowly enough so you can get used to looking at him, and you can get that image out of your head of him going, “I’m crazy Newspaper-Head Man! Give me some damn candy.”

Plus it’s got super-cool Phillip Seymour Hoffman, Emily Watson, and Luis Guzman, and you can’t beat that with a stick, even if you fucking tried. Anyway, maybe it’s a love or hate thing, I don’t know. Me love.

In Other News

Bad ideas: Robotic Vacuums, Menopausal Tours, and Carrottop.com.

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Irrational Asshole Fear #653

I wake up in the morning and I cough like I smoke a pack a day. Oh the delights of my annual October cold. I was really over it about a week ago, but the cough lingers on. Stupid germy university students! How I hate them. It is also troublesome that Mr. Husband seems to be immune to any cold that I get, and continues to walk around tra-la-laing.

Sometimes when I am walking around the house in the morning, opening curtains, hacking my damn brains out, I reflect on my seventeen hours of childbirth labor (pretty normal for the first time out of the gate) and how those seventeen hours culminated with me at the edge of my bed, in a squatting position, desperately trying to pass my adorable little parasite. For most women, myself included, this results in some pretty horrible hemorrhoids, usually temporary, praise Jesus. Basically, you push so hard you create a rupture and try to push out your own intestines, like those disgusting lizards that poop out their intestines to lure birds or whatever.

Anyway, I think about this when I’m making my first cup of tea; I wonder if someday I will cough so hard I will end up looking like a Martian Popping Thing, or perhaps a Naughty Animal Pooping Toy. Where will I buy pants?


In Other News

Right before we left for Canada, one of my chickens ran away, right after she started laying, crazy bitch. I think hormones (and the fact that I keep stealing her eggs) made her all loopy so she just up and left, leaving only three.

Today she came back, demanding food. I imagine she’ll go off tomcatting around again soon, as soon as she rememembers why she left in the first place. I never thought I’d want to trade places with a chicken.

Also, lookit the Goog today. Oooh, pretty.

Graduate School Haiku

It is ten o’clock

my printer pukes out many pages

I will never read.

You want art? Sorry, he don’t live here.

Addendum, 10:10

Who can deny me

the sublime pleasures found in

slapping pink bottoms?

Headlines tomorrow: Area Woman, Found Chained To Printer; Apparently Starved To Death Waiting For Print Job To Finish

What IS The Sound Of Two Bus Drivers Not Caring?

Oh so I take the bus to school now. Frannie is old enough now, and our schedules are more flexible, so I don’t have to drive and rush back home after.

Most of the time I like the bus, except when it’s too crowded, or the bus driver’s all shouty, or when some BI-ATCH has too much Ho Juice slathered on. Or when something happens like today.

I hopped on the bus and found a seat. Soon after, this guy gets on and tells the driver, did she know that one of the tires was completely shredded? The driver opened the front and back doors of the bus and just sat there. She didn’t make an announcement (“get off the bus, for this one goeth no further”), she didn’t respond to questions. Just sat there.

We all got off, slowly and with everyone all blinky and confused and tired. Yo ho, there was another 48 behind ours. I noted the shredded state of the tire on the old bus and moved on.

The new bus was full of the people who were already on, people who had accumulated at the bus stop since our broken-down bus had closed its doors, and now we were piling on, the disgorged contents of the broken bus.

We roll on, past the broken bus and broken driver. About five minutes in, “POOM!” the bus shakes and I have that feeling that comes from seeing sixty million movies where the wing rips off the airplane, and all the people and their stuff gets sucked out.

But no, it turns out that the insano driver had merely crashed into someone’s open car door. Again, no explanation, and this time he wouldn’t even open the back door to let us all out (again). I went to the Texaco and called Mr. Husband.

“Please! It’s a sign! I don’t want to get on another bus today!”

“Okay, hold tight, I’ll be there as soon as Girlie finishes her milk.”

I think bus drivers are secret Zen-masters-in-training. Once you get to the point where there is no flap that will unhinge you, you are immediately transformed into a Bodhisattva or one of those cute winged lions, ascending, leaving the bus to ghostride off the Aurora Bridge and burst into flames on the cement below.

In Other News

What the fuck is that jivey-ass Old Country Buffet commercial shit? It is getting Octobery, therefore my three months of righteous television disavowal have gone out the damn fenetre.

SO tonight I see this commercial for Ye Old Country Buffet, talking about waiters like they’re the fucking Anti-Christ. “Who wants a waiter?” I think it says. Fucking me, that’s who. I love waiters. Assuming you are patronizing the proper establishments, who else will feed you and act like they’re your best friend for forty-five minutes to an hour? I will take that over a fuzzy-lipped lad whose only job is to shave meat off of a giant wad of something unrecognizable until you tell them to stop.

Being Chauffeured To The Bottle; or O! Canada!

Well. Canada. Vancouver, to be precise. I always think that I’m going to a very benign place that could have been America had the proper butterfly been smushed by the proper dinosaur during the Jurassic Period.

But it is never that benign place. I am always surprised to find that it is indeed a foreign country (and my next place of residence should W. get re-elected).

Mr. Husband and I did it up ultra deluxe cheap-ass style. “But it’s a remodeled HoJo,” I said to myself, flipping through the “Inexpensive” hotel section in Frommer’s. “But hydrogen is sooo floaty,” said the makers of the Hindenburg.

It turns out that HoJo’s definition of “suite” is something smaller than my bathroom. The downtown area we stayed in is…gentrifying, to put it nicely. Parking was, of course, non-existent, and required frequent trips to the meter. Which involved stepping over people who decided even to forgo the 8-dollar-a-night YMCA that was down the street. Or stepping around very friendly hos who wanted to pat my daughter and tell me how cute she was, every time. And the way our room smelled, man. I thought that someone had sprayed some of that very aggressive ol’ lady perfume, you know, like Giorgio or Red or Liz Claiborne or something right before we checked in.

“Well,” I told Mr. Husband, ever optimistic, “we will leave the window open and have some dinner and come back and it will be gone.” After eating and hitting Chinatown, which is one-stop shopping for pressed duck, bamboo ear cleaners, and psychotic amounts of Hellooooo Kitty tchochkes (confession: I barely restrained myself from buying a overpriced Sweet Hamu pen with a little jewel dangly, oh God, how I love Sweet Hamu) we returned to our room. It still reeked.

As it turned out, there was a secret “air freshener” somewhere in the room, and housekeeping wouldn’t divulge its location.

“Oh my Jeazus,” said Mr. Husband.

“Me too,” I said. We looked at each other and nodded. After six years, you do not need to discuss a hotel walkout.

“I’ll get our money back,” he said.

“I’ll pack up.”

The Ramada (motto: “36% Better Than Howard Johnson’s”) across the street did us a little better. You could, if you chose, swing a dead cat around in it, and the smell was closer to Old Potpourri than Scary Grandma.

On a POSITIVE note (this is the only place I will say ANYTHING positive in this whole story) the Aquarium kicked the llama’s ass. And, HOLY FUCKING SHIT, there is a store in Vancouver called The Gay Mart. The name alone beats the fucking gaylordy pants offa Seattle’s The Pink Zone. I’m sorry but it’s true.

When we came back we got caught up in a Brazillian vortex of epic proportions, involving various hotel-induced credit card freezes. I went to the bank, clutching my birthday checks that were about to be converted into food.

Me, at the grocery store bank branch: “Gimmie some damn money.”

Antoine, “Personal Banker,” quietly: “Uhhh…did you realize you’re overdrawn?”

Me, expecting to hear some trifling amount: “How much?”

Antoine: “Uhhh…A hundred and fifty.”

Me: *whimper*

I left, without groceries, to meet with my accountant. After many phone calls, we figured out that both hotels had frozen money in our account, leaving us shit out of luck. My accountant drove us back to the store, to demand my birthday money back from Antoine.

My Personal Banker told us to “bounce” a check to the grocery store. “Oh, I’m sorry,” said Antoine, “but they just came to pick up the checks. I can’t do anything for you. I suggest you write a check, if you’re certain those freezes are going to fall off.”

So the hotels have a vice grip on imaginary money for FIVE DAYS, even though we didn’t even STAY in one of the hotels, and the other one was paid in full, in cash when we checked out.

The moral is to buy a yurt and never go anywhere, and burn your own feces for fuel. This is one of those nights where I wish I could resurrect fucking Franz Kafka and fuck his fucking brains out, because he was such a genius, you know what I mean?

In Other News

I am twenty-five today.

Something Stupid

I start my blog again…and then I leave. I am off to B.C. for the weekend, for rest and relaxation that will involve schlepping along textbooks and a gabillion toddler accessories.

Some people think that you don’t become an adult until you’ve crossed that final barrier, passed the torch, etc., etc., ad nauseam, and have SPAWNED.

But I think that children are perhaps Barbie replacements? I had about twenty Barbies and they all had various costume and accessory needs that were only SOLD SEPARATELY. I had the Barbie Horse, which needed a Barbie Horse Trailer, which was towed about the kitchen by the Barbie RV. I even had a Barbie that winked one of her big blue eyelids when you mashed a giant button in the middle of her back.

I had a hand-me-down set of Donny and Marie dolls and a Ken doll who my friend humiliated by taping a pen cap to his No-No place and leaving him for my bewildered mother to find later.

I have taped things to my daughter, but that is besides the point. The point is that all of Frannie’s little accessories are fucking sold separately (booster seats, pom-pom hats, vaccinations, and so on) and it doesn’t matter how much stuff you buy her, she keeps needing more.

I think there’s probably a market for parents who would like to save up, or take out a loan, and buy One Giant Pack of Shit For Baby (“Baby” not included). You rent a storage locker and choose between “boy” or “girl,” lay out the 100 grand (or whatever it is nowadays to raise a kid) and you get a giant shrink-wrapped pack of everything from diapers to sippy cups to Baby’s First Birth Control, so I don’t have to stay awake and fucking worry about her fourteen years from now. You could visit the storage locker once a year, and get that year’s set of clothes, books, potty chair, etc.

I think this could catch on…we prepackage everything else, right?

Alright, I’m out.

In Which I Am Akin To A Goddam Library Book

What’s the deal with getting “checked out”, anyway? I got checked out today, and let me preface this blab by saying that this is a Rare Occurance Indeed, for I am Very Weird Looking. (I think a boyfriend said once, “An acquired taste.” I would have shitkicked him instantly had he not been so good at fixing my car and giving me head. What CAN you do?)


Anywho, I got “checked out” in the most ridiculous fashion today. I was walking on campus past the giant George Washington statue that is supposed to make you feel all reverent or democratic or SOMETHING when these three boys were PIMP-ROLLING by (seriously) and one of the guys says to the other two, “Hey, man, check her out.” “Who?” “Pink,” and nods “subtly” at me, because I have pink hair right now. (Honestly, I guess I like this identifying feature better than a third arm or a hump on my back.)


And they didn’t say it like you would if you were a grocery store manager with too-tight pants and you are talking to a checker: “Fran, check her out, she’s next in line” It wasn’t like, “Whoa, dude, what a freaky-looking person, check her out.” It was like “Check her ooowwww-t,” like I expected Jimmie Walker to show up any minute and start fucking high-fiving them.


The funny part is that I was only about six inches away from them. So I heard the whole thing clear as day, and saw them nodding at me. Isn’t the point of whispering and “checking someone ooowwww-t” that they DON’T KNOW you’re checking them out? You’re BEING SUBTLE, perhaps?


Maybe not, maybe the point is that I should hear them, and scramble off for a freaky menage-a-quartre in a conference room in Kane Hall.


Getting checked out is funny. I wouldn’t call myself flattered; perhaps it would be more like what Mr. Husband calls “being humored.” I don’t know what that means either.

In Other News

I cannot stop listening to the new Emenem album. Seriously. I keep rotating it with a certain Frank Sinatra album just so I can stay sane. You know it’s bad when you accidentally say “Glock” instead of “gun” in front of “normal” people. Eheeheehee. In addition, I also told someone on the bus the other day that “The Emenem Show” is our generation’s “Fear of a Black Planet” with a straight face. Yawhawhawhaw!

Sunny, Chance of Showers In Evening

POOOOOOR Mr. Husband, he worked all day long yesterday. This house is sixty years old so it is crooked on the inside (adds character) and crooked on the outside (makes water drain badly).

All day I could see him outside the kitchen window, scrubbing away at the cement. Then he got all of the appropriate tools out, and hauled about a dozen bags of dry cement. Those bitches are heavy, man- you ever pick one up? They’re about as big as a smallish pillow, but they weigh eighty pounds! When it was sunny and warm in the afternoon I helped him haul bags too. He would dump a bag in the wheelbarrow and add a gallon of water, which would produce an even heavier substance. While Franny played with her ball on the back patio, I watched him sweat and his biceps strain.

“Ugh,” he said. “I bet guys who do this all the time are seriously buff. I shoulda rented a mixer.”

The sun was setting as he ran the trowel over the now-smooth surface of the cement. By the porchlight I could see through the “cream” floating on top to the sand and lighter grit underneath; it was like being at the very edge of the seashore and peering through to the sand below.

It was dark. Franny was playing with a little hand broom and he was setting a tarp up over the works in case it rained.

“I’ve got to go rinse these tools off.”

“Okay”

He disappeared around the corner to where the hose is- this was what I’d been waiting for. I rooted around in my pocket and pulled out all my coins…aha, a beautiful shiny nickel. I could see in the porchlight that it said 1998. I leaned out over the wet cement, and gently pressed it in, heads up.

“What are you doing? Did you write your name?”

“No, I…erm…”

“Let me see…A nickel! What is wrong with you woman? I worked on this ALL DAY LONG!”

“Uh, well, you know, it’s the funniest joke ever. Think about it.” I touched his arm. “Everytime someone comes over…”

“I know,” he said crossly. “They will try to pick it up.” He sighed and started to put the wheelbarrow away. I walked Franny into the house and he said to my back, “Sometimes you’re more trouble than you’re worth.” Then he laughed.