More Misspent Youthisms

The scene: Public High School, 10th grade.
The year: 1992.
The place: West of UGH and North of gott im himmel.

Sometimes if I was really lucky and could get a ride with some charitable driving upperclassman, I would abandon any pretense of being interested in my future and would tag along to Chicago. Chicago! Where the streets were paved with perverts and decent bagel shops! I used to drive 90 minutes to buy fishnets. NINETY MINUTES. And that was if traffic was cooperating. In this city the ragman comes along three times a week with his distinctive cry, “DILDOS! PORN! FISHNETS! OTHER THINGS THAT WOULD MAKE GRANNY SAD!” There’s none of this 90-minute perv-commute business.

I don’t remember who I was with or what the circumstances were, exactly, but I very excitedly bought a pink triangle button to pin onto my coat. This was it! I was going to take a stand! I was going to be super activist girl and drag my high school into the 20th century.

I walked in the next day and thought that all sound would stop and everyone would turn and look at me. I would be under a spotlight, that was it, the line would be crossed and there would be no turning back.

Instead, there was a whole lot of nothing. No one knew what it meant. Even kids who I suspected were gay, and were teased for being so stared at it blankly. It blended it with all my other rock buttons and rude slogans. The sign is meaningless if no one can read it.

I think that was probably the beginning of me realizing I didn’t really have to broadcast anything about myself. I didn’t have to label myself or hang a banner. It’s very liberating to realize that most people don’t care, or conversely, it doesn’t matter what people think the truth is or isn’t. I wish I still had that pin.

Now I am going to think about that shirt all day

LAST NIGHT I DREAMT (zzz, I hear you saying)… NO REALLY. I dreamt I got zapped into the body of a 15-year-old hardcore Christian girl. Well, she was until I was zapped into her. I think I decided to pass and see what life was like there. I missed swearing and I did not like my pastel capris or the house we lived in, which was a tiny farmhouse that had all these add on rooms that had been slapped up as there had been money and need. I had a sister and she was nice and did not spit at old people admiring her cuteness like a hobo like my real sister did when she was 6.

I think what really clinched my desire to pass was that I found this shirt that I used to wear every day ten years ago that said “The Joy of Sax” on it that was from this saxophone bar and grill in Singapore. I wore that thing until it was THREADBARE. And there it was! brand new, black, stiff even. I put it on. I was IN TROUBLE. Maybe this wasn’t such a good deal after all.

This is the morning report

WELL. 2011 found me up betimesish, mental, and writing terrible, maudlin love poetry that should never ever see the light of day. Have I ever done this before? I have not. I hesitate over the delete button, however, because my future self derives perverse enjoyment from mocking my weakened, pitiful, inferior past self.

I had (have?) an upper respiratory infection (Merry Fuckmas) that has lasted for about 9 days. I slept through most of Christmas but managed to see the present opening and say “Mmmhmm” and “Oooh” and “You’re welcome” at the right moments. It still hurts when I breathe a little but I think I’m on the mend. Look ma, I’m writing. I tried to get an appointment to my clinic but I was too late, and damned if I’m going to show up at the ER on New Year’s weekend. So looks like it was viral, rather than bacterial? What do I know about these things.

I did not cook for Xmas. I did not cook my final Victorian meal. I didn’t mind, really. I’ve had plenty of practice. I am gearing up to write my final essay on The Queen’s Scullery. I had planned on it earlier this week. It’s okay. I did really well this year with meeting all of my goals and life happens.

At 11:45 last night I was swigging my familiar friend Theraflu (I’ve been rotating drugs so as not to build up a tolerance just like our pal ELVIS) and lay down in bed, waiting for the clock to strike. The neighbors were out full force, banging on pots and pans and shaming my indolent self, who is at least 20 years their junior. Moonpants got into the act a few minutes later and was outside bellowing HAPPY NEW YEAR!! Or at least someone who sounds just like him.

I am happy about something! My vacuum cleaner died this morning. This seems very auspicious to me. I hated that thing for six years. However, it exhaled some kind of horrible stink on expiring that still hangs in the air. An awful melange of burnt rubber and rot. Further examination revealed that it is not simply the belt, or a hair jam. Some kind of spindle has completely fused. Can the patient be saved? NO. Good.

The bad news is that I am wrestling with cleaning the couch. There was some serious confusion in Goethe’s mind about where the litterbox was when she first came home. The beloved Lund Bjuv took the hit. She seems to have gotten over this confusion but the couch has not. I would make a Faustian bargain not to have to tear this thing apart again, but I am glad it’s IKEA “crap” instead of a quality couch, which would be ruined by a cat pee assault. I have hit the unwashable parts with enzyme stuff, and the cover has taken a trip through the washing machine. Hooray!

Xmas Steve came, and he was wretched. He even sampled some of the girls’ gingerbread houses. Strudel was VERY unimpressed by her corncob pipe. (“I CAN’T SMOKE WITH THIS THING! SMOKING IS STUPID!”) Franny hated her thrift store soccer trophy.

My favorite present was from my seamstress.

A Mondrian lozenge rendered in the medium of “pillow.”

Rancho Asshole Xmas Tally.
Members hit by vomiting: 2
Members hit by colds: 4
Members hit by upper respiratory infections/pneumonia: 1
Number of times I said “FML”: 4,002

Happy New Year!

Gettin That Money

Whoa I am so sick. I slept through half of Christmas. Due to some scheduling problems that were beyond my control, I am home alone with Strudel today, trying to work, and trying to keep her happy. Her father was supposed to be with her, but his vacation got shifted–and here we are. No one’s fault. I was raised by a television and I did fine (quiet, you) but I hate neglecting her all day. I think it’s going to be a laptop movie day.

My head feels like a balloon on a string, I am eating when I remember to, and it hurts to breathe. Franny told me it was “the most boring vacation ever” because I inconvenienced her by not being able to take her out for the second half. The only perk here is that I am having really weird dreams when I am able to sleep. And how was YOUR Christmas?

Xmas Eve Eve Eve?? Eve eve

Man, am I tired of this year.

I mean, it was a good one, but I’m done with it.

I feel like a shut in right now, as well.

I guess this is just winter sometimes?

….

I need to get out more…

Yet there is so much to do HERE.

How to find balance?

Poor overburdened Xmas Ficus.

Are We There Yet, Papa Smurf?

JESUS is Christmas really next week? Fuck. I have been thinking about my friends who I love and appreciate, and I keep drawing blanks on presents. I think I will be a last-minute Lucy this year.

I’m having that thing right now where my head is just kind of hissing inside when I stop to think because I am so busy and engaged otherwise. I have been preparing a lot of offal this month–kidneys, pickling lamb tongues, and so on.

Much like my winter mania, sickness has hit the land early. Franny cannot remember anything right now, and Strudel is a little plugged up and cannot hear. Comedy ensued last night, as Franny asked me the same questions repeatedly and Strudel shouted “WHAT?” every time her sister spoke.

“Mom, what are you making for dinner?” Franny said.

“WHAT?” Strudel yelled.

“I told you, a roasted turkey breast,” I said.

“WHAT?”

“Oh yeah.”

“Jesus Mary Etc, it’s the lost dwarfs, Deafy and Forgetty.”

“Mom!” Franny protested.

“WHO lost a DOOR?” Deafy Dwarf shouted.



In Other News: Hello Goethe.

And Hello Matilda.

They huddled in the crate behind their mother, who was petite and bright eyed and looking at me critically, as cats do. No yowling or desperate clawing from this bunch like the other cats in other crates, though I wouldn’t have blamed them if they did.

“So, what happens to their mom when I take them?” I asked.

“Oh…she goes into the adult cat room. And waits for someone who wants an adult cat.”

I looked at the adult cat room, overstuffed with adult cats sleeping, playing, eating, and generally looking like a fuzzy used-car lot. I pictured the mother in there, too, after we had gone.

Hello Mere.

We are both happy AND sad, all at once. I am okay with complicated feelings.

Lesson Number Two: Don’t Get High On Your Own Supply

“The following receipts are not a mere marrowless collection of shreds and patches, and cuttings and pastings, but a bona fide register of practical facts,–accumulated by a perseverance not to be subdued or evaporated by the igniferous terrors of a roasting fire in the dog-days,–in defiance of the odoriferous and calefacient repellents of roasting, boiling, frying, and broiling;–moreover, the author has submitted to a labour no preceding cookery-book-maker, perhaps, ever attempted to encounter, having eaten each receipt before he set it down in his book.”
–William Kitchiner, Introduction to The Cook’s Oracle.

Hey guyz what’s going on in this thread? Thank you for your kind comments on my previous post. I will tell you that I often post in a time warp. I worry about discussing things that I am still het up or uncertain about. I think it’s one part typical internet caution, but I am a pretty cautious person anyway. Sometimes I have trouble saying what I am thinking right away because my gears are grinding. I can certainly make snap decisions if forced but I would much rather say that I will sleep on it. And a lot of the time I dream about outcomes. I like to do this work while I am asleep.

My point is, she died the day I posted it, Sunday. Usually I like to tell you what’s happening so you know, and I’ve already processed it, but it was really fresh. So, even more so than usual, I was appreciative of your comments.

Hey, speaking of crazy, disorganized babbling, my winter mania has kicked in. I don’t know if it will last, but I am going with it. I am the only person I know who loses weight in the winter, and gains weight in the summer (MMMM fruit and cheese and wine and pie). Is it okay to go with something like this if it results in a positive outcome? I hope so. The pattern’s held for at least ten years now, but skipped last year for some reason–I suspect that working downtown exposed me to too much light, ha ha. I just have to be careful to get enough sleep. The nice thing is I have the energy to get a fuckton done. Such as…

Cleaning up after the cocaine bear visits!! Just kidding. I am purging my house of fleas. The fellow at the pet supply told me there was something about this summer that made it the worst for fleas ever. I bought a giant bag of diatomaceous earth and have been treating my whole house for the last couple of days. I am hoping one big push will get the fleas out. I was using the really quality stuff that you put on your pet’s neck and near the end, it seemed not to be working.

So Monday and yesterday I pulled apart the girls’ rooms–cleaned all bedding and stuffed animals, dusted the rooms, and now I am moving on to main rooms. I have “dusted” myself into my bedroom currently and when I get hungry I will have to vacuum my way out.

I have 27 more “official” Victorian recipes to cook, as in, they are printed out on the December calendar on the fridge. But I find myself scribbling more things onto it daily, so I reckon I will end up with about 40 more recipes by December 25th. I am trying to make that my absolute cut off date, with the week between Xmas and New Year’s totally clear. HA HA. I can feel the lie as it issues out of my fingers. I’m sure I will be tweaking stuff that week, in addition to closing shop for new articles at The Queen’s Scullery. I put a new banner up there yesterday, and I am kind of in love with it, though I am a total Photoshop flâneuse.

I am diving into the research portion of things and it is all getting very tangled. I am attempting to give as many recipes as possible their due credit. I have turned again to Katheryn Hughes’s biography of Isabella Beeton as a jumping-off point for where Beeton gaffled her recipes from. Hughes is causing me actual physical pain by scoffing at my beloved William Kitchiner, saying that Beeton never even credited him, which is patently false, AHEM: “Indian Curry Powder, founded on Dr. Kitchiner’s recipe.” Hughes claims he was not ever a medical doctor at all (okay, yes, his educational background in Scotland is rather hazy). Apparently his writing style, all full of IMPERATIVE EXCLAMS!!, something that may be familiar to readers of this screed and a habit that further endears Kitchiner to me, is unacceptable to Hughes:

Given Kitchiner’s off-putting emphases (there are few sentences that are not spattered with italics or capitals), it is grimly pleasurable to learn that he died at the age of forty-nine, having failed in his boast to demonstrate that good diet prolonged life beyond its usual span.

Fiddle faddle to you, Ms. Hughes. I believe his biographers’ hunch that he was poisoned.

There are further problems. Another of Beeton’s major sources stole HIS work from a French chef. It feels a little bizarre to be testing and tweaking every recipe I am including in the book–kind of the antithesis of what the Victorians were up to with their borrowing, modifying, and editing. There is one thing Hughes and I agree on. Beeton was not a woman who saw the business end of a kitchen knife or tammy too often. I look at recipes now and am like NOPE. This is not going to work at all.


Chicken Croquettes in a nice Béchamel.

Frying in duck fat.

I went to school conferences yesterday and the word was about what I expected. Strudel participates in the school-wide writer’s workshop program. For most kindergartners this means drawing pictures, but she is writing and insisting on reading things like Lemony Snicket. We argue about the literary merits of The Magic Treehouse series (barf).

It turns out she wrote a story about cooking with me and eating. “I LOVE EATING MY MOMS VICKTORYAN FUD.” There is a drawing of us sitting at the table, with flowers and plates. I am the same size as Strudel but I have pink hair. I really hope the girls, when they consider their childhoods, can forgive the bad parts in favor of the parts where we cooked together, and there was good hot food on the table, and the feeling of snug domesticity and beautiful surroundings that I always wanted as a kid.

So now you know what’s banging around in my head. Don’t we all feel better now? WE WILL NOW OPEN THE FLOOR FOR QUESTIONS.

The life aquatic with Franny Zissou.

Goodbye Nietzsche

“Her body is here, but she’s gone,” Strudel said, when it was over.

She purred until the sedative knocked her out. I really can’t say enough nice things about vets who make housecalls.

Mundane Nags From Clammy Climates

CHILDREN, MAN. Are you feeling me? I’m about to go positively Bombeckian on your ass.

Nietzsche is still leaving me occasional piles of existentialism around the living room. I am trying to take care of her, since she is very old and sick now, but still very sweet. Her purr box works and she still sits in my lap while I read when I lift her up. Most mornings I carry her down to where her litter box is and she goes. Some mornings nature calls before I get up and the stink waves come into my room and wake me up. I tried having a litter box upstairs, but it didn’t work–I was too faint of heart to be woken up every morning by the worst cat shit smell I have ever smelled. I think I would rather be woken up by a crying baby than a smell, seriously.

So I was laying in bed this morning, and I thought I smelled it. “Here it comes,” I thought. “It will only get stronger now, I might as well get up.” I put on my dealing-with-early-morning-crises robe, which is, naturally, covered in poodles. My cat sat on the edge of the kitchen, looking up at me eagerly. “FOOD HAS FOOD THYMES ARRIVED AGAIN?” I was roused by an imaginary smell. I dream of litterboxes now, I really do. I picked her up and gave her a little squeeze and she purred. “Let’s go, Lady,” I said, and carried her downstairs, setting her near her box, which I keep as tidy as a country club sand trap now.

The children were getting dressed in their rooms, miraculously not squabbling through their doorways and across the hall. I was downstairs anyway, so I popped into the downstairs bathroom. Holding my pee on waking up from anywhere between 5 minutes and two hours is not something that ever occurred to me would happen until I spawned. It is relatively rare now that the girls are older–that was more of a baby thing, really. It cannot be just me who does that, right? Please?

Since this is a split level, everything is pretty much mirrored on both levels, and it is rare for me to use the downstairs loo. I inhabit the upstairs, which is close to the kitchen, important for emergency ramen fits. I can look outside my bedroom window and see the weather, and the naked janky pear tree, and what my neighbors are up to. They are disappointingly respectable, even Moon Pants.

So of course I usually use the upstairs bathroom that connects to my room, which makes it the Better Bathroom, somehow, in the children’s minds. I keep it cleaner because guests are more likely to use it. I remember as a child, wanting to be in my mother’s bathroom, but why? My bathroom is even almost the same ghastly color scheme–a peachy pink Formica with gold faucets and fixtures. Both were probably built at the same time, on opposite sides of the country. I wanted to be in there because it smelled like her; her perfumes and makeup and things were in it. Sometimes she was in it, and I would hover around below her, taking water, fragrance, or hair spray shrapnel as I noodled around on the floor.

The downstairs bathroom was a bit of a scene. No toilet paper. Still no hand towel, which I noticed last weekend and then forgot about, because Hey, it is not really MY bathroom. Someone else will notice and replace it, surely.

“Girls,” I said, looking in at them through their doorways. What a delight to be able to yell at both of them at once. “There is no toilet paper and no hand towel in your bathroom. How are you…making it in there?” Blank looks. I tried again. “What do you do in the middle of the night if you have to use the bathroom?” I asked Franny.

“I use your bathroom,” she said.

“YOU,” I said to Strudel. “What do YOU do when you poop and you wash your hands? Where do you wipe them?” I KNOW, I KNOW, a LOT of generous assumptions there, especially with the number of abandoned solitary brown trouts I find still.

“Okay, girls. Upstairs is MY bathroom. You may use it when you are upstairs. When you are down here, please use THIS bathroom. You are responsible for the toilet paper and hand towels in it.” I gave them both meaningful looks, the one that says “RIGHT NOW before you forget PLEASE.”

Strudel trudged upstairs and I pricked my ears to hear what she would do as I changed out of my robe and into some clothes for the day. I heard her walk into my bathroom and open the cabinet.

“What are you doing?” I said.

“Getting toilet paper,” she said, in her sensible reasonable tone, not impolite, just patient.

“That is extra for when I run out,” I said. “Do you know where I keep the household toilet paper?” She shook her head. “It’s in the linen closet.” Blank stare. “The closet you hide from your sister in.”

“Oh.”

“Yes, and it is next to the hand towels.”

So the bathroom is reprovisioned, for now, until the toilet paper is used up and someone makes off with the hand towel because they need a cape for their stuffed badger. The road to civilization is long, long, long, and really, no one cares but me up in my sparkly upstairs domain which you can see the floor in, and my shiny bathroom with the barfy fixtures that you can see your face rendered in appalling disco gold in. And sometimes I think, why should I bother, if they are happy living in relatively-minor levels of filth and chaos? Really, I am the odd one here. I don’t have an answer to that.