I need to get back into the groove of having a desk job and writing words for fun. IT’S COMING, OK.
Author Archives: iasshole
“Sometimes it’s a Boat, and sometimes it’s more of an Accident.”
My friend Kelly is visiting with her daughter from Idaho, which is where I got delightful Jennifer Antelope from. It was fun having her view it in her final resting place (for now).
Last night we went to Pasta Freska.
Pierre joined us for dinner.
Appearing on my telephone pole tomorrow
The Plan of a House The Body in Bed
MAN I am dead I tells you. I’m okay with starting a new job this week, really I am. I like money. What I didn’t expect is to walk for a half hour to pick up my girls every night. This is totally great, but in addition to waking up at 6 and keeping up on yoga, I am just tired. I’ll catch up.
The stressful thing is starting a new job and having summer camp end two weeks before school starts. I forgot about this bullshit. What to do now?
Goethe decides I am done with yoga.
Mère takes a bath. She was under the weather for a couple of days and I was worried about her. She slept smooshed up against my ribs last night which she never does–usually she’s between my feet. This is better than that sick cat who hides under the porch, how sad is that?
Goethe LOOOOVES her mother. Mère finds her daughter annoying. I find all of this hilarious.
I uhhhh drunkenly syndicated my blog on Kindle. I guess my point in telling you this is that it’s so easy a person who has consumed half a bottle of rosé and a small glass of whiskey can do it. Jennyalice told me to do it this weekend when I was in San Diego, and as it turns out she’s a pretty good boss. “Drink more mai tais,” she said. “Wear my underwear,” she said, handing me a spotted pair with a proper butt part since I packed drunk. I have always wondered what it’s like to pack drunk. Here is the answer: hot pink bandeau bra with silver zebra stripes, bikini top (note lack of actual for real bras) and assorted XXX-tra fancy thongs. Apparently I thought Squid‘s mom’s house was some kind of porno set.
Anyway, I hope the syndicating will be worthwhile to someone, since sometimes I write long and sometimes I write short, and I hope the average of that feels like value. I’ll have the link up when I get it. Apparently they have to look at my blog and assess its value and make sure it’s a really real thing or something. I’m still going to finish my first date series, don’t worry.
Also, this is kind of funny, ha ha, I signed a book contract for the Victorian cookbook in San Diego. Remember that? There’s more to it, and also less to it, but suffice it to say that I have a manuscript due January 5th, 2012.
Toddcrash
I’m going to call this one “Todd” because I think that’s a good generic boyfriend name. Like my clump of roosters, The Todd Nebula. I dated a Todd once, and I will have to call him Todd as well in a different story so I don’t reveal him as the real Todd.
I met Todd at a cafe and I was on the outs with my current boyfriend, so when he asked me out, I said “sure, why not?” I was in that perfect window to say yes to something like that–a week on either side, and I might not have. I think I was excited that he had a car (or access to his mother’s), was a couple of years older, and didn’t really know anyone from my high school. At this point I was making a big push to get to know other people and older people. He talked a good game and hadn’t lost his job yet, so I couldn’t tell that he was kind of a scrub. I also didn’t know what a terrible, terrible driver he was.
We hung out that night, but I was with a friend. Todd and I got along well and he was the first person I had ever met who was a casual and persistent hugger, which is a daily part of my life on the West Coast now (ugh), but at the time was kind of novel and foreign. He asked me out for the next week and I agreed.
Since it was the 90s (this is my all-purpose excuse for my youth now: “It was the NIIIIINETIES!”) we decided that our first date was going to be to get piercings. What? Yeah. You know how when you start dating someone if things go well there’s a lot of tab A into slot B, or some configuration of slots and tabs going on? Let’s get piercings so it will hurt to have sex and there will probably be crust and weeping. And the piercing experience we would have would have been like this, because the 90s had not yet arrived in my shitty town. God I was stupid…er.
It was February and snowing, but I think it had melted into awful grey sludge that day, or at least wasn’t snowing heavily. He picked me up and we drove across town while trying to banter and get to know each other in that first date way. He tried to hook a left in one of those “yield to oncoming traffic” lanes…but did not yield. A car going at least 40 slammed into us on the front/right side of the car, breaking the axle and crumpling the front end. It all happened so quickly and unexpectedly I didn’t really have time to react, so I think maybe I tensed up less than I would have if I was braced for impact. My knees slammed into the dashboard and bruised heavily, but as stupid as I was then, at least I was wearing a seat belt.
The passenger in the other car was not so lucky. She was not wearing a seat belt and I could see the horrible spider web in the windshield where her head had cracked it. An ambulance came to take her away. I kind of hung back since I wasn’t the driver and there wasn’t much I could do. I was adrenalined out and not thinking, so I actually asked the cop if I could smoke IN HIS PATROL CAR. “Are you even OLD ENOUGH to be smoking?” he asked me. Answer in my head: “As long as you can work the lighter you’re old enough.” What I said out loud: nothing. Real answer: No.
So, 20 minutes in, the date appeared to be over. The cop wanted to take us home, but Todd had other plans. “Let’s have him drop us off at my friend’s house,” he whispered. Uh…was this normal? Don’t you usually go home after a car crash? I didn’t know. I did know if I told my mother about any of this, it would become my fault somehow and I would never be allowed to go out with Todd again, so when I came home that night she was in bed and I said nothing. I wonder what it’s like to have a mother you can actually share life events with?
We went to the friend’s house, where there was a small party in progress, and now we had a story to tell. I sort of felt like we should go home and have a quiet thinking period about the girl and her smashed head. All of this made me uneasy, the moving on and partying but that was my time to learn what I was okay with and what I was not. That’s important at 16 if you’re dating or not, I know. More on this time to come, whenceforth he will be known as Car Crash Todd.
First Date: First and Only Time at Linda’s
“Yeah, my brother, he’s a Juggalo,” he said.
“What, REALLY!” I said.
“Yep. He’s getting with this other Juggalette, she has TWO children, with TWO different fathers,” he said. “She’s a total whore.”
“Oh yeah?” I said. “I have two children with two different fathers.”
Awkward.
First Date with SeaFed: Second Base, Third Base, Homerun
You know what’s even more fun than a bag full of rabid hamsters? Dating rules. You know what’s actually fun, though, for serious? BREAKING DATING RULES. SeaFed was a flagrant violation of at least one of the top ten “dating rules” (and probably three or more actually): do not date coworkers, or more elegantly put, don’t get your meat where you get your bread. I was never good at keeping kosher.
I interviewed for the job on Halloween. It was a record store with a good rep, which is to say they played their music loudly, their clerks ranged from stoned, asleep, to Jack Black-snotty, and the selection was good. I had only worked in one music department before, as a Best Buy Smurf, but I have always had a good hustle and talked a good game, so they were willing to try me out. My future (male) boss, who was interviewing me, was dressed in drag for Halloween, not even drag-queeny, but with an unappealing shade of coral inexpertly smeared across his small lips and leaking into his perpetual stubble. He briefly mentioned that there was a jazz section upstairs and that it pretty much belonged to one clerk–SeaFed.
On my first day I was introduced around to the other clerks. SeaFed came breezing through the breakroom pushing his bike and my boss, now in his regular uniform of a threadbare tee shirt and holey jeans, introduced me to him. “This is SeaFed. He runs the jazz department and thinks that American jazz from 1955 to 1968 is the only legitimate form of music, so heads up on that.”
“Hello,” he said, and winked at me. He had a nice voice. He still has a nice phone voice, albeit with that grating Seattle/PNW accent. You don’t put a dagger in a bag, you put the “dayger” in the “beg.” The stuff that goes on pancakes is see-rup, not “sir-up.” The accent is subtle, to me, but I hear it.
When we were scheduled together for the first few days I tried to figure out what his deal was. He was always flirting with me, but he seemed to be always flirting with everybody–customers, our boss, other clerks, men, women, trash cans, it did not seem to matter. He just oozed charm.
I came home and told my roommate about him. “He has the most intense blue eyes,” I said. “Hmmp,” she said, which is what she usually said about guys I was interested in until she found a way to sleep with some of them, then I presume she found more to say to them, at least. (More on her during another first date story.)
I started to get the vibe that he was gay for some reason. And this is not a “ha, ha, I thought my ex-husband was gay when I first met him” part of the story, obviously. I just did. I had to ask around, because I was curious about him. A couple of co-workers were of the opinion that he was straight, and while they could not recall him dating since starting at the store six months before me, they did remember him talking about girls or something. I decided to flirt with him more, just to see what would happen, and since I was only dating a couple of people very casually at the time.
After a couple of weeks, he asked me out, in that low-key way that the very young work things out. “Soooo you want to hang out or something?” he asked.
“When?” I said.
“How about tonight?”
“Sure,” I said, pretending to be calm.
He gave me his number and told me to call him at 10 that night. WHOA THAT WAS SERIOUS, MAN. You have to be completely cool to start a date at ten. I had been in Seattle for three months and had been 18 for only a couple of weeks. Having a very late-night date felt very big city and grown up, so obviously I still had the bruise from where I landed when I fell off the turnip truck.
I transferred SeaFed’s phone number off the back of my hand to the mirror with my eyeliner, so I wouldn’t lose it in the shower. I got ready, showering, dressing, and putting makeup on very carefully. At the appointed hour I called–no answer. I called back a few minutes later–still no answer. I left a voicemail. After an hour, I realized I had been blown off and gave up.
I saw him at work the next day and was cool to him. “Uh…so,” he said. I gave him the eyebrow of mild indifference. “Sorry about last night. Can I make it up to you tonight?” He smiled his sexy “I’m not exactly Jude Law, but Jude Law isn’t here, is he” smiles and I broke yet another one of those dating rules–don’t give someone who dogs you out another chance. He didn’t even have a good excuse as to why he blew me off. It was 10:30 at night–I can’t imagine he was so busy. Nor did he claim emergency. I am a recovering dumbass so I decided it didn’t matter.
We were set for him to pick me up at my place and he arrived right on time, pressing my buzzer, which made my heart leap. “This could be fun,” I thought. I emerged from my building to see his friend in the front seat. “Maybe SeaFed’s dropping him off,” I assumed.
NOPE. The friend, who was an asshat I saw a lot more of after that, unfortunately, was along for the ride. I told myself we were just “hanging out,” as he’d said, and this wasn’t a date as I’d assumed. We picked up a bottle of wine and went back to his house. Was I supposed to be doing this, going back to the house of a man I barely knew with his friend? Probably not. Luckily for me, typical SeaFed in those days was more unthinking and tuned out than malicious.
I chatted with both him and his friend for a while and got very tipsy. The friend told embarrassing stories about SeaFed. I didn’t know it at the time, but being a superior pompous ass was kind of his trademark. He told me that SeaFed used to smoke American Spirits because he misread the label as “non-addictive” instead of “no additives.” I hardly noticed when his friend disappeared off to bed (it turned out he was living with SeaFed for a bit), since SeaFed was the one who was interesting to me.
He moved fast. I stood up, probably to get some more water to mitigate the after effects of the red wine. He stood with me, and leaned in to kiss me. He was assertive, but not rough. I was relieved he was taking the lead because none of our attempts at dating had gone the way I had expected real actual dates to go.
Before him I had fuckbuddies and people I pined after who would sleep with me once and a while and the kind of relationships you had in high school–I had higher standards for the way we would get to know each other, for some reason.
The sex was okay. On the scale of all the sex, it rates a “hmm…meh.” On the scale of first date sex, I think we can say it was your pretty typical tipsy young people hetero first date sex. No one achieved enlightenment, but no one ended up with an accidental wang in the ear. He was your typical pasty skinny white boy thing, with extraordinarily large and well-defined thighs from all his bike riding. No other tattoos or identifying marks.
After it was over, my crotch felt funny, and not in a typical “I just had ill-advised sex, I know, because I can see my bad idea pants on the floor from over here, and boy condoms are still kind of irritating” way. I put my hand to my baby cannon and kind of gave it the once over…HO my labia piercing was missing. It had gotten knocked out during the humpenation in the humpery.
“Oh no!” SeaFed said when I told him.
“It’s okay, it never really healed right,” I said.
If that’s not sexy, I don’t know what is. You bring a girl home and she tells you that her genital piercing never really healed right. Rawr! After that, we saw each other most nights.
I’m going to San Diego
Hello! I know it’s in my sidebar and all, but I know some people RSS and some people tune sidebars out all together, assuming they’re ads. I just wanted to say I’m going to Blogher this year and I’m doing the Friday-Saturday thing.
If you are going, and you feel like meeting me, come up and say hello. I’m not going to pretend like “OH I AM BUT A SHY GEEK WHO FALLS DOWN ALL THE TIME LIKE BELLA SWAN AND SPILLS FAYGO DOWN HER FRONTISPIECE.” I don’t. I glow slightly. I’m hella outrageously cool, and so smooth you will not even notice my looking down your shirt, unless I want you to notice me noticing. It’s INSANE, the size of my taint. I got the job offer I wanted today, and even the interviewer said I had a SICK interview hustle. I could have taken a nap during that interview, I was so calm.
Seriously, though, I am a psycho extrovert and I love talking to people, and if I want to talk to you I will approach you as well. Except NOT YOU, histrionic mommyblogger who literally cold-shouldered me when I came up to say hello last time I was there. You can get bent. Everyone else is cool.
And for those who could not give three shits rolled in glitter about any of this, I will be writing my part four of SeaFed/Shark Week tomorrow, which will be our first date. UGH, where the magic started. Then I will write about other first dates.
Monkey chow out!
Now you’re mine, you’re mine again, say you’ll never leave me
Four Stories About SeaFed, Part 3
Three. “Hey, Oswald, over here!” BLAM! 1998.
I never really got along with SeaFed’s sister. Well, that’s not strictly true. I liked her from the date of my marriage in April of 1996 until June of 1996 when she spent half her time at our post-elopement party talking shit about some of the more flamboyantly-dressed guests, who were indeed invited by her father and therefore belonged to her side of the family. There was some Vegas show producer guy there with his showgirl girlfriend who was an old friend of the family, nice of them to come, and she looked WILD. I felt very plain next to her. SeaFed’s sister, whose name Franny could only pronounce as “Auntie Jaguar” for years, much to my delight, talked much shit about this woman. This was Seattle, for the sake of chucklefuck. You were raised blocks from Broadway, Jaguar. Get a grip.
Of course, I should have said something to her right then, like, “YOU SHUT YOUR WHORE MOUTH about your father’s party guests,” but of course I said nothing. I think I was a little intimidated by her former-sorority girl tan/bikini/snooty thing she had going on. She was only three years older than SeaFed so I figured we were in it for the long haul.
Things went downhill from there, of course. Jaguar decided to pursue a graduate degree in education, with dreams of becoming a small-town public school teacher in the Mountain West. At the time I was convinced that public schools were failing, had failed, and that I would never send a child of mine to a public school (EMPHATIC FIST POUND) and whenever she asked me what I thought about this or that public school blib-blab, I would tell her, amplified times 50 to needle her.
The first time we had one of these debates was on a family trip to Santa Fe. When all the kids were in their early 20s or so, in college or just out, and too poor to do anything is the point, my father-in-law used to graciously fly us to famjams where we would be trapped by his and Jaguar’s whims once we got there. Want to go to the Georgia O’Keeffe museum? TOUGH NUTS, we two want to go fly fishing. What the fuck is fly fishing even? No habla fly fishing. Are there hip waders involved? I will not be appearing in those outside of the privacy of the Fuck Fort.
This, of course, is all just a ridiculous detour to get us to Santa Fe in the Amazing Year 1998. SeaFed’s parents flew us down to a bed and breakfast along with Jaguar and her boyfriend, someday to be husband. I wrote about their wedding once, and how I tried to ruin it by having an opinion about my participation in it. (New Mexico is also referenced therein.)
SeaFed and I were sharing a room, of course, and it did not have an ensuite bathroom. That was a first for me, but we were given a key to the loo in the hallway. Jaguar and I had the epic public vs. private argument on a walk through town to dinner, and I think I had just read some article in the New Yorker and thought I was seeeew smart as usual, but I think it had been let go during dinner and with the onset of drunkenness. For repressive WASPs, they could really belt back the liquor. Maybe that’s a hallmark of repressive WASPery, I dunno. Give them enough to drink, and they might even become moderately expressive and/or emotive. Good times.
I was 20 then, months from turning 21, and would often be served wine with dinner when I was obviously with family and had a pretty convincing “I am a serious respectable married lady, don’t let the blue lipstick fool you, ok” face. SeaFed drank wine though dinner, which made him louder and even more doofusy than usual, and instead of dessert split a rather large brandy flight with Jaguar’s boyfriend. After dinner we kids slipped away from SeaFed’s parents and grandmother and went to a nearby bar. I remember I was in my martini phase at the time, and always drank them whenever I was on vacation from school, so I ordered one of those, which, handily, was another way that seemed to keep me from being carded. SeaFed had a martini with me, and then switched to beer, and had a few more beers. I did not, since I had long since learned that if I tried to keep up with him, I would be very sorry.
We walked back to the bed and breakfast, or rather, I ran, since I was jogging a lot at the time, and SeaFed swayed. The next morning was checkout time and I bustled around the room packing.
“I don’t feel so well,” SeaFed said, lying abed.
“How surprising,” I said, unsurprised.
“I need the bathroom…” he said, fumbling for the key to the bathroom in the hallway. Too late! “HOOOOORF,” SeaFed horfed into the sink in the room. I took my bag and let myself out of the room, closing the door with a little “snick” behind me.
“Where’s SeaFed? We’re about ready to go,” my father-in-law asked me in the lobby.
“He’s not feeling so well,” I said, and shrugged.