The giblets were hiding in the neck. WHOOPS.

Dear goddam diary, today Strudel, through a series of questions about her health, revealed that she was coughing up blood. Off to the doctor first thing in the a.m. for her. I would have gone to the doctor myself but New Years came and places were closed. I put my ear to her back tonight and I feel like I heard a rattle. I think I am having sympathy lung pains tonight.

Also, what’s a housebound psycho to do? Umm…make Thanksgiving dinner, I guess? Why not? I got a turkey on the HELLA CHEAP now that the holidays are over. And everyone’s sick but me, so there is LOTS of turkey left for turkey noodle soup tomorrow, and quesadillas, and pot pie…YUM.

I made sweet potato casserole for the first time ever. I mashed the yams with a little nutmeg, butter, salt, and pepper, drizzled on some maple syrup, sprinkled pecans, and of course, added marshmallows. I cannot believe I shunned this for years. It was never really part of my Italian Thanksgiving experiences growing up, though. If there were extra “odd” sides it would be rutabaga for my grandpa and some spaghetti.

So today was fixing people meals and fetching them drugs and drinks and in between that trying to get some work done. I don’t know how to tell you this…for the first time ever I went out in pajama pants to the bus stop. I have been like uncontrollably bleeding and have been all “Hold up dog let me find my jeans before we ho ho hospital.” School started on a two-hour delay so it’s not like I went out under the cover of sin-hiding darkness even.

AH JANUARY. I am starting to remember why I don’t write much in January.

Felted Mushrooms

Dear Fucking Diary! Today I found out I am out of practice at being a lady! I wore high lady boots to keep out of the very ungenteel puddles that keep getting left around everywhere and now my feet hurt. I have one pair of underwear left that is not in disgraceful whore-tatters and that I would not feel totally embarrassed about wearing in front of a new paramour, so I wore those out tonight just for fun! Was I on a date with myself? I might have been. Perhaps I should write empowering articles for Oprahmedia. The underwears were DIGGING IN and now I have red welts on my hipbones. My fishnets had runs and my coat kept flying open. But I was pretty happy anyway.

Today I like fog cutters, which in this instance is a gimlet with some homemade ginger beer added. I have outrage fatigue and am over snark. I do not like my mother, who was given my address by my stupid ex-husband, and came over to my house, unwanted and unbidden. It is unmannerly to be uninvited and to show up like that after 5+ years. Thinking that that kind of shit is okay is also affirmation of why I don’t speak to her anymore. My father told me he STILL has nightmares about her sometimes. I believe it.

This week I am learning about denial, and how it can lead to castigation of others rather than self-examination. I don’t want to hear about the grieving processes of those who feel I’ve wronged them, when it was right for me to get away from them. I feel like I learn about this over and over again. I am also feeling grateful for people I know who actively grieve about things and move on. VERY grateful.

In other words, universe, behave yourself. I am trying to behave. It’s one skip forward and two smacks back.

Cubist Cows Chewing Cubist Cud

Today I went downtown and saw Picasso. What a horrendous scene that was! We all jiggled and jostled around like salmons. I love seeing the masterworks when they come through town, but you can hardly get to them. I think there were way too many people let in with each wave. I know, I know, cha-ching.

The worst is the people with the audio guides. They stand in one spot, head tilted, slackjawed. Always at the same distance. Far enough away so they are not hogging it, but close enough so you feel like you are cutting them if you get in front to see the brushstrokes. I don’t get them. I don’t think I could cram an education into hour like that. Is it better than nothing? I just go to look, but I know Picasso already.

There were a lot of children under 10 as well. I have mixed feelings about them. I heard a lot of teachers or docents asking them what they thought the art meant and what they thought Picasso was doing. I know it’s very postmodern to assign personal meaning to objects or art, and I think that’s okay on an individual level. It cannot be helped.

I feel something different when I look at an artwork than when someone else looks at it. I just don’t know how helpful it is to ask children how they feel about a bunch of confusing bloogs and horrible monster women when there is actual historical context for Picasso’s work, as well as his own words and the words of experts about what he was doing. Can children really take anything from an hour’s visit to the art museum if all they are encouraged to do is impose their own limited experiences and knowledge over it?

Then I looked at Hockney titties and got a boner over the Rothko. It was a good day.

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?

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.

SnoMGBBQ Apocalypse ’10

HOKAY so we went out of town with a voucher that I was kind of talked into and only marginally excited about, from the Place Where Sensible Thought Goes To Die, the school auction. Sure, I love swimming? And waterparks? And spending money to stay in resorts? Dear God. WHAT.

So we went for a midweek overnight to an indoor water park here. And you know, it felt great. The first night at least. It was nice to get out of town, and not to be trapped in the car with the girls for as long as it takes to go to Portland. However, what was ostensibly supposed to be a quick 90-minute jaunt somehow stretched to two-plus hours.

There was a little melodrama on the way down with Strudel (I have no idea where she gets THAT from) where she thought she was going to barf. I was worried because Frannie had the barfs earlier that week, like for real twelve times in one day barfing stomach virus keeping her out of school thingie, and I thought surely Strudel was next. We decided to press on instead of turning back. If it was a false alarm, why lose the trip? If it was not, then I figured I could sit in the hotel room with her and watch the Comedy Channel. It was a false alarm, hooray.

Day one was pretty splendid. It was WARM in the waterpark and getting colder outdoors all the time due to the impending arrival of snow.

And here it is, this morning.

Then I realized that everything I needed was right there in one ridiculously large building, and it was like what I hear about cruises–overpriced, meh food, trapped in one place. Then bedtime came. Foolishly, I decided to have some dessert fondue before bed and snapped awake at four, indigested and queasy. I snuck over to the living room area and quietly turned a light on to read my magazine for a bit and just generally be upright.

Strudel woke up shortly after me and though I got sleepy again, she could not go back to sleep. She was WIRED! She was EXCITED! She has a LOT OF TROUBLE USING AN INDOOR VOICE! Basically she could not accept that we needed about three more hours of sleep. At home if she cannot sleep, she jabbers away to herself in her room, but there was no escape in the hotel. Finally, after drifting in and out of sleep for hours, we dragged ourselves out of bed.

That morning, things started to get to me a little. I didn’t go to bed super late, but everything felt surreal, as it does when you are sleep-deprived. There was an animatronic “storytime” nightly in the lobby that Franny declared “creepy,” which is an example of a trait I love about her. It featured a byootyful Indian Princess named “Yellowfeather” and some talking trees. I seem to recall something similar happened to me once in high school, but it did not take place in a resort.

The show kicked on again in the morning as I was getting a latte and it was much worse, somehow, with no audience. Sometimes stuffed robotic raccoons (double ugh) would come to life in the corridors and begin to sing. Every surface, including the trash can rims (covered with molded-plastic cute woodland creatures), was perfectly in theme and embellished, reminding me of staying at a Disney resort years ago, where even the light switches had mouse heads on them.

I popped into a wizard-themed shop and spoke to a man with a goatee wearing a metallic-gold cape. “Is this where you can buy wolf ears?” I asked him. No, he replied, that was at a “kids camp” here.

“I used to wear them,” he offered. “But They made me stop. Sadface.”

The waterpark rules sign read, in bolded letters, “DO NOT POOP OR PEE IN THE POOL.” It was nice to be warm, and I finally got to wear my rowr rowr 60s style teal halter suit (+15 to vanity and moxie) but I was happy to get home.

IN OTHER NEWS

I am still cooking (shocker, I know). Now that my list of recipes are winding down, I have picked up more hours at work! Hooray! I am almost a useful and productive human being again.

Last night I made three ounces of candied peel from oranges, lemon, and a citron.

It’s going into this gorgeous mincemeat, which contains real meat.

We’ve been hanging out all week, since Strudel is off. SeaFed came at me with charts and graphs of why he should have Franny all week (congrats, you win the crazy-off THIS TIME, SeaFed) so she is gone and dour about it as usual.

I took Strudel to the library and when she came home she made a “book puzzle.”

I hope the snow melts a bit. There is a goose downtown with my name on it for tomorrow, and I don’t know if I can get down there!! Happy Fangsgiving, I’ll be back with pictures, triumphs, and FAILURE.

How Many Wonders Can One Cavern Hold?

DEAR MF BUMFACES DIARY,

Since you didn’t ask, I’d like to, you know, be having sex regularly. I sort of feel like Ariel at the bottom of her little treasure hoard, looking up, except instead of combing my hair with a fork, it’s a vibrator. What do hoomans use these mysterious things for? It doesn’t grow shut, does it? Please say no. But if sex happens, I get too distracted to write. For some of us the top of Maslow’s pyramid is very, very VERY far off and minuscule.

Today I printed out all the things I am going to do and make in October. Thirty-nine recipes, ranging from Fricandeau of Beef (whatever that is, right?) to a cherry sauce for pudding. This does not include “normal” workaday meals that have more of a footing in this century, like tacos or Some Stuff I Found. I keep this month’s calendar on the fridge where it acts as an aid to memory and a whip.

Last month and August went well–two calendars all scratched off. I like cooking in this house. I kind of keep to myself, as you do in Seattle, but this street is encroaching on me.

My neighbor called yesterday, not the Recycling Bin Hermit.

“Hey, SJ,” he said. “I would come over and knock but I am still in my pajama pants.” He works from home, too. If he knocked, he would probably get me in my pajama pants too, or possibly in my new latex lederhosen that I just got off layaway. (Don’t ask.)

He invited me to his birthday party, and then later when I was digging up my yard came out in his pajamas anyway. They were blue and fuzzy and covered in moons. While we were talking a little brown dog came over to us and then meandered on.

“That dog sticks its head into my door when I am roasting chickens,” I said.

“Oh, yeah, he belongs across the street. The lady there told me that he’s some kind of breed that’s irretrievable, he can’t be called and he only comes home when he feels like it.”

“Sounds like my first husband,” I said.

His owner crossed the street and came over to me.

“Hello,” she said. “I should have introduced myself to you the other day when you told me my headlamps were on.”

“It’s fine,” I said, and it was.

I’d like to have old Moon Pants and his son over for supper, but they’re vegetarians, and it’s hard for me to find a night when I am not reducing adorable baby animal faces &tc into a nice glaze.

Tonight I make Fowl a la Marengo! The story goes that Napoleon whooped some ass in Italy and then snapped his fingers for a post-battle repast. What could be scrounged up was tomatoes, crawdads, white wine, mushrooms, eggs, and some chicken. Sounds like dinner to me. HOWEVER. Beeton tells us this story in her usual breezy “let’s have a little historical grounding shall we” fashion:

The following is the origin of the well-known dish Poulet la Marengo:—On the evening of the battle the first consul was very hungry after the agitation of the day, and a fowl was ordered with all expedition. The fowl was procured, but there was no butter at hand, and unluckily none could be found in the neighbourhood. There was oil in abundance, however; and the cook having poured a certain quantity into his skillet, put in the fowl, with a clove of garlic and other seasoning, with a little white wine, the best the country afforded; he then garnished it with mushrooms, and served it up hot. This dish proved the second conquest of the day, as the first consul found it most agreeable to his palate, and expressed his satisfaction. Ever since, a fowl la Marengo is a favourite dish with all lovers of good cheer.

Isabella, I am on to you. You explain all this, which sounds like a very nice meal indeed, and then your recipe OMITS the white wine. Really, can you imagine a French dish prepared in Italy without white wine and with only a “very small piece of garlic”? TSK. Even Frances Crawford’s recipe in French Cookery Adapted for English Families [1853] calls for wine in. FRANCES. FUCKING. CRAWFORD. I see. You took this recipe from Alexis Soyer. Well, I will do it your way and omit the tomatoes, eggs, and crawdads, but I will not omit the white wine. I am also suspicious of the need for sugar. It is challenging to rejigger dishes like this one. Presumably Victorians did prepare it this way, because the recipe appears in some of the most popular books of the time. I will find a way to keep it true without being dire.

FOWL A LA MARENGO.

949. INGREDIENTS – 1 large fowl, 4 tablespoonfuls of salad oil, 1 tablespoonful of flour, 1 pint of stock No. 105, or water, about 20 mushroom-buttons, salt and pepper to taste, 1 teaspoonful of powdered sugar, a very small piece of garlic.

Mode.—Cut the fowl into 8 or 10 pieces; put them with the oil into a stewpan, and brown them over a moderate fire; dredge in the above proportion of flour; when that is browned, pour in the stock or water; let it simmer very slowly for rather more than 1/2 hour, and skim off the fat as it rises to the top; add the mushrooms; season with salt, pepper, garlic, and sugar; take out the fowl, which arrange pyramidically on the dish, with the inferior joints at the bottom. Reduce the sauce by boiling it quickly over the fire, keeping it stirred until sufficiently thick to adhere to the back of a spoon; pour over the fowl, and serve.

I should probably crosspost this to The Queen’s Scullery but without the sad sex TMI. DIGNITY. ALWAYS DIGNITY.

Oy with the Poodles Already.

Since we moved in 3 weeks ago, the neighbors or someone has been putting their recycling cart in our yard and driveway. I have not met or seen this person who lives next door, all I know this that they have a tiny and loud dog. It happens about three times a week. I have been patiently and perplexedly moving it back. It seems they think we are very stupid, because they keep moving it in closer and closer until today…

Someone knocked on my door a few minutes ago, which I could not answer, because I was on the phone with Seattle Public Schools, but when I opened the door to see if there was a package, there was the neighbor’s bin, right on my doorstep. What kind of wacky sitcom-like misunderstanding is this? I walked back over and knocked on their door: no answer, only yap dog.

I had to resort to The Note.

“Hello, We are your new neighbors. We thought you should know someone keeps moving your recycling bin with your address on it into our yard. This is becoming a nuisance, so could you make sure your bin stays out of our yard? Thanks.”

Update! 8/27: The note seems to have done it. The recycling bin is now over on the other other side of their gate, about as far as it can get from our yard. Let’s see if it stays there. I cannot believe I had to explain to my neighbor that it was their bin. So now they will either hate us or hide from us forever, I reckon. Good times.

“Are You a Killer?” “I Don’t Like Labels.”

Sooo, the honeymoon is over here with this new house. I am not sure there was ever really a honeymoon in the first place. Moving into the 80s split level is like marrying a person you find really plain and who has kind of a boring sense of humor and spends a lot of time agreeing with you.

HOWEVER you can take his metaphor to its tragic conclusion and split your boring spouse like a tauntaun and decorate their innards with GLITTER!!

Let’s make a LIST LIKE NERDS, after which will will argue about how we organize our books, ok??

Pros:

Everything is BIGGER. House, yard, storage space, even the dishwasher is bigger. I cannot think of one thing in this house that is smaller. Nietzsche looks smaller in it, but that is an illusion, I suppose.

No neighbors! Our duplex neighbors weren’t bad, in fact, they were very nice, but we always worried about noise. Let me tell you my girls spent 17 minutes singing selected duets from the beautiful modern operetta “NO U” and I did not shoosh them once.

Cons:

There’s a couple of things going on here. We will not mention the complete lack of hot water, which is temporary, of course.

The fridge is kind of a menace. It’s one of those modern side-by-sides with the glass shelves. You would think glass shelves might be a good thing, but using it is kind of like the experience of driving a PT Cruiser.

You don’t have the top down/angle view of the food like you do in the traditional fridge. This has lead me to conclude that I am just not finding things because it is hiding behind the melon or something. I spent ten minutes looking for the leftover chicken the other day.

P. came home as I was rootling.

“Whatcha doin?” he said.

“Looking for the chicken I cannot find fucking anything in the fridge EVER.”

“Ah…I ate it,” he said.

“AHA!” I said. “I CANNOT SEE IT BECAUSE YOU ARE OPAQUE.”

Otherwise the kitchen has a lot of storage and though the stove is electric like the last one, but it works a LOT better than the one at the old place, which was one of those flat top Star Trek bullshit ones where only half the burner got warm sometimes.

Also, something bad happened in this house with animals. Now that the initial carpet-cleaning goodness is wearing off, the small of animal urine is being revealed. I am taking steps with Febreze and whatnot. Now I know what probably everyone else in the universe knows. When an ad says “No Large Animals” this may be a sign that the owner has had a bad experience with large animals.

As a renter, and as the owner of a place where some past dog let it go on the wooden floor whenever and wherever it felt like, and it was often apparently allowed to completely dry in situ, creating giant blackened lakes that are probably great if you think your dog is like the second coming of Helen Frankenthaler or something. And to this point, Nietzsche has not ever once ever gone potty in the corner ANYWHERE. She is being a complete champ here in this medium-stinky house as well, and goes outside or uses the litterbox every single time, so at least there is a finite end to the smells.

One of my favorite things about my room, besides the fact that it adjoins the loo, keeps Imelda and the Bandito together, overlooks the pear tree in the front yard, and has a giant porny closet door mirror, is my SURPRISE VIRGIN!!! hiding behind my two doors in my room.

Presh to Death

Ananka and I were out at Greenlake doing our usual thing, walkity walk, bitchity bitch. She was kind enough to come see the new house and give it the stamp of approval. The general consensus seems to be that the new house will be good for parties, like snobby wine kind.

We decided there was too much blood in our caffeine stream, so we made a pit stop to refuel. I was catching Ananka up on various dramz in line when this woman who had been waiting behind us interrupted.

“Excuse me,” she said. I was in my own bubble, as usual, and thought we were blocking the pathway or something. I turned. “I’m sorry to interrupt your conversation, but my daughter wants to say something to you.”

What, where, who the fuck was this. I put on my neutral face. Was this woman familiar? She was not. I looked down at her little daughter who was in a stroller and was nibbling on her finger. Did I know her from my Strudel’s preschool? No.

The child paused for a long moment, looking up at me. She held her hand out. “HI,” she finally managed. This is the thing she wanted to say to me?

“She is interested in your hair,” her mother said. “I do my hair red sometimes but she wants me to put pink in.”

Ahh…ok.

As we were leaving, I asked Ananka if she thought the exchange was…a little weird?

“Yes, totally,” she said.

“How rude,” I said.

“I think it was less about the kid and more about how she wanted to let you know she dyes her hair sometimes.”

“Good call,” I said. I need a shirt that says “I AM NOT HERE TO MAKE FRIENDS OK.”