In Which I Go Up My Butt and Around The Corner

I have often wondered what makes people write. I know, I know, there’s a lot of reasons: catharsis, expression, communication, revenge, dollas, whatever. Then there is writing for self and writing for an audience. You may know I have been thinking a lot about Pepys’s Diary in the past few months, in large part because I see parallels between what someone like me does and what Pepys was doing, specifically, relentlessly creating a record of the tedium of everyday life. I wonder how aware he was that his writings would fall into someone else’s hands after his death–was he self-editing at all? Did he go back and reread his old ones and think about his past self and how he felt before, and the mistakes he made? Did he experience the rush at finding that exact day or week that was a pivot point into a really good or really bad patch? Would he have killed for a search box like mine??

I think I have mentioned before I have nightmares if I stop writing all together. I had terrible ones when Strudel was first born in 2005 and I was lurking offline and was reading voraciously but too tired to say anything myself. This is the same when I was younger and painted as well, before I switched to words only. When I was 18 I had an intense dream about NOT painting, since I was slacking off quite a bit in the few months after I had gotten married. I dreamt I was in a waiting room and someone called me, but into the hall. There was row after row of paintings that stretched down a long hall and the woman who took me out there (played by Liz Phair, I am not kidding) said, “This is all the work you haven’t done.” And there they were, all these loud tacky paintings that were in my terrible style from when I was in my late teens and early twenties. DEPRESS. Just like everyone else, my brain is trying to kill me.

I have discovered something about myself in writing online for eight years. I have had breaks in between, which I think is good and necessary (though in one case was court-ordered and lame), during which I write offline. I write offline while blogging as well, when I get the urge. And I have found I still self-edit as if someone is looking over my shoulder. I don’t know if I can actually go to the bottom of my brain and write all the terrible truth from there, whether it is base or just boring. Memoirs–you may be reading them. I don’t have the gumption or self of steam to charge for this.

I see a lot of writing I have done as a shorthand for what I was having deeper thoughts about. Some phrases can send me back and I see the words as hypocritical (either a lie to myself or someone else), as a screen, or as a code that triggers something more complex and detailed. Some writing is a secret message to other people, but even the intended target can’t really experience all the layers to it. A friend of mine says she doesn’t understand what I’m talking about sometimes but enjoys it anyway, which is pretty nice. There’s a lot of levels of enjoyment you can get out of something like writing. Novels I read as a kid are a vastly different experience now–sometimes richer, sometimes shallow and disappointing.

I am getting meta this week because I am on a sort of a vacation and Nothing Hoppon. Another thing I have discovered is that I need a Baby Bear situation. Life cannot be TOO TRAUMATIC nor TOO BORING for me to write often and decently. Right now, life is TOO BORING and I am waiting for things and my brain is trying to slide out of my ears. I can barely read a book.

SO. Why do you write? How do you write? Does your brain try to kill you if you stop creating whatever it is you create?

Say You Believe Just How Easy It Is To Please Me

Today I am wearing a flannel shirt I have had since high school. I had quite a few then, because remember grunge? That was awesome. I stole it from my stepfather’s closet. I remember walking into JC Penney’s and seeing the sign hanging over the teen section: GRUNGE. Pre-shredded for your convenience. This shirt is the only soldier left from what used to be a whole army of shredded/plaid/hideous clothes.

One time I was in the car with my mom and she looked back at me in the rear view mirror and narrowed her eyes. “You are always wearing flannel shirts now,” she observed. “Do you want people to think you’re a lesbian or something?” I looked down at my thrift store flannel, which was covered by a plaid men’s hunting coat that had a pink triangle button affixed to it.

“YES!” I thought to myself. “I must be doing something right!”

Later that winter I got drunk for the first time at a party somewhere in the suburbs of Chicago. I was spending the weekend at my grandparents’ house and my aunt was home from college and offered to take me to this party on the condition I could keep my fucking trap shut (I could). My aunt was only five years older than I was, the baby sister of my stepfather. She was like a cool older sister to me, and introduced me to concepts such as The Cure and giant 80s hair.

We climbed into her red Fiero and zoomed off to a house whose owners had foolishly left for the weekend, leaving their young adult children behind. As soon as we walked in, someone stuck a Lynchburg lemonade into my hand, which I quickly followed with five more. I sat around with my aunt’s friends, trying to be cool and maintain since they were all at least college-aged. I didn’t want to be the kid who party fouled and everyone hated. “She’s cool,” my aunt kept saying, which was part assurance to the other party goers and what I suspect was partly a reminder to me. Be cool.

My head started spinning and I blacked out. The last thing I remember was someone passing me some pot and taking a deep inhale, another first. My aunt watched me with a glazed smile on her face. I suspect it didn’t have much of an effect, considering how trashed I was and the fact that it was my first time. I didn’t cough like a noob though, since I was regularly nicking smokes out of my mother’s purse and was just a few months away from buying my own packs.

[Aside: A year or so prior I had alienated some of my friends during a casual conversation late at night at the park by admitting that I would try pot if it was offered to me. I had made early decisions about drugs I would try and drugs I would not try, and I was sticking to it. A couple of years later the girl who had slagged me the hardest ended up doing acid at school every day for a month until she got caught. Life is like this sometimes.]

When I came to, I was standing in the kitchen eating bread straight out of the bag. I was starved. “You drank too fast,” one of my aunt’s friends said. “Classic beginner’s mistake.”

“What happened?” I said.

“You threw up in the bushes and a little on the patio. Someone hosed it off already.” She stuck a glass of water in my hand.

“Ah,” I said, feeling partly ashamed for being a guest who puked and partly amazed that I had disappeared for a while. Where had I gone? What had I said? Was I nice? I had a scratch on my arm, presumably from the bushes.

“Where’s my aunt?” I said. I was told she was off with someone whose name I didn’t recognize. I suppose I could have been introduced to him. A small circle of college girls surrounded me there in the kitchen, sizing me up, looking at my hair and my clothes. I looked down to see I was still wearing my coat with my pink triangle on it. Closer in to Chicago, people actually knew what it meant.

“Your aunt’s slept with almost everyone here, you know,” one informed me out of the blue. I did not know that. “Including the women.”

After a couple of awkward starts with high school boys, my secret was that I was dating my first-ever woman. She had a job and a motorcycle and an apartment, all facts which never ceased to amaze me. I was astounded that I seemed to have something in common with my aunt, who wore at least two inches of makeup daily, a string of messy-haired boyfriends who were often on BMXes, slathered herself with baby oil and broiled herself outside in the summer in neon bikinis, and would never be caught dead in the dykey coat I was wearing. She was like the poster child for straight young women everywhere, or so I thought. Were there different ways to be gay? I had no idea. The women I had met through my girlfriend seemed decidedly more wash and wear.

Could I talk with her about any of this? I didn’t think so. My mother had already told me I would grow out of being gay and being an atheist. I knew that what I did and thought and felt was supposed to be a shameful secret, and should be kept from my stepfather at all costs. Would my aunt tell him? I didn’t know.

Later as I was alone sobering up and dozing on a couch an older guy who had been kind of macking on me all night came in and made half-assed attempts to fool around with me, which I found amusing and somewhat annoying. One of the women who had appointed themselves my protector in the mysterious absence of my aunt stuck her head into the living room.

“STEVE. She is fifteen!”

“Oh, whoops,” Steve said.

“How old are you?” I asked him.

“Twenty-three.”

“BYEEE,” I said.

My aunt reappeared around 4 a.m., cheery and without explanation.

“Heard you barfed,” she said. “Hang on, I have to get ready for the drive home.”

My aunt whipped out some coke and did a few lines in the bathroom. “Want some?” she said, holding out a little straw.

“No, thanks,” I said. So much no. Coke was on my No list. She drove me home as the sun rose, Violator banging out of the giant speakers behind the seats of the Fiero and my mind raced as I tried to fall asleep. I had smoked pot! Some guy had felt my jailbaity ass up! My aunt was a gay coke snorter with friends who evidently resented her! That party, like most in high school, was an accelerated education in how weird the adult world could be, and different ways to have a double life, something I was already refining.

Fresh to Death in spite of unpoppable collar.
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Early Podcast

Hi Team,

Quick shout to say due to a prior commitment the Egg and I are podcasting tonight instead of tomorrow. I’ve gathered up some Q’s via comments, email, and even chat, but if you have been holding out, now is your chance.

Areas of expertise include: Sexing (people and chicks), texting, sexting, gardening, cooking, fashion, the Kennedy Administration, Lord of the Rings, successful lying, pretending not to be a good liar, chicken husbandry, wine, and sucking dick for drug money. And that’s just ME. Egg knows stuff too.

ETA: If you are bored and knocking around, it is up!

In Which I Advocate For Sparkly Girlparts

The girls are going camping for two days with Strudel’s father and her grandfather. HOME ALOOOOOONE. Home alone. I dreamt I called in sick and did nothing, which I will NOT do. I had my vacation and now will Be Responsible. Plus I am going to Portland this weekend so there is my carrot. Confession: I used to fantasize about separate vacations and now I have them. Oh yes.

“They should take a shower before they go,” I said this morning.

“Really?” P. said.

“Yes, because they probably won’t get one while they are there. But they have to if they swim in a lake. Lake itch!”

“There is no lake on the island,” he said.

“Oh, right. Well.”

“Bay itch?” he said.

“Protect the vulvas!”

“WHAT?”

“PROTECT THE VULVAS!” I said. “They are little girls and you have to think about this!”

“It’s just two days and the bay is salty and…”

“VULVAS! WASH THEM!”

“Okay, okay.”

I am the Cassandra of vulvas.

Dear MF Diary: Cooking with Saffron and Saffron Tossing

I am about to take a two-week break on cooking as P. is using his vacation time to cover part of the girls’ break between summer program and school starting, and has volunteered to be the housewife. Strudel is a year too young for the summer program Franny was in, so it made sense to keep them both out, of course. I still don’t have coverage for early September when his vacation runs out, but I have a couple of leads. I may just end up taking the hit and taking unpaid time off.


Saffron soaking in milk.

I am enjoying my last bit of cooking this weekend. I decided to take a crack at one of my favorite Indian dishes, biryani. In restaurants here it is often referred to as “royal biryani” and has meat, nuts, raisins, veggies, and spices, and is served with raita or something like it.


Masala FAIL.

It called for making a masala in a mortar and pestle and I ran out of patience once the bay leaves were not pulverizing and the cinnamon sticks were taking forever. Eventually I ended up with a rough crumble that I soaked in the stock and strained out as I poured the broth over the rice for baking. It ended up pretty delicious–more like a home meal and less like a restaurant one. I made a simple raita with mint from the backyard to go with it. Cardamom, coriander, ginger, garlic, YUM.


Done.

I will cook something today and then it is all martinis and sexism for the rest of the month. Woo!

Chicken Update

Remember the lady who did not know that chicken maek bock? She brought Saffron back and threw her over the fence while we were out. Saffron was okay. I really hope she educates herself further on chickens, the sooner the better. Lucky for me a blog-acquaintance has offered to buy all three! Problem solved.

What’s Your Damage, Heather?

Act now, or at least before 8 p.m.-ish PST Friday (which is when we do the podcast), to get in on the opportunity to receive dubious advice from ladies who have over 9000 years of experience between them. You may comment or email sj at this domain.

Thank you!

Love Letters from the Mentally Challenged

This weekend, I put my spare chooks up on craigslist. Holy Recockulous Mistake, Bartman. Well, that was my bads. Next time I will go straight for the chicken board I have had luck with in the past. It turns out the purpose of craigslist is to entice hamtards to email you with bizarre, misspelled questions and then never reply to your response.

However, we did get one reply from a person who was legitimately interested in buying one of our chickens. She came, took the Easter Egger away, paid her moneys, and all was well. She did mention in passing that she had to get rid of one of her chickens earlier this summer because it turned out to be a rooster. Well, these things happen, yes? Ours was to replace it.

This morning we get a phone call from the chicken-buyer.

“This is not going to work out!” she said. “This chicken makes noise at 6 a.m.! There is a newborn next door! I think this is a rooster!”

SERIOUSLY? Are you for real. Are you? You are not. Did you get rid of your other chicken because it was cackling early in the morning as well?

P. said we would call her back, but no. JUST NO.

9:06 AM P: i picked up because i figured it was her when it came through as blocked and i thought either something had happened to Saffron or she wanted another chicken
 me: Hmmm
 P: you know, something reasonable?
 me: How did it finish, the conversation?
 P: why do i always think people will be reasonable?
 me: You can’t make someone take their chicken back.
 P: i said i’d call her later
 me: DON’T
  Let her figure it out. Moron.
9:07 AM me: CHICKEN MAEK NOISE
 P: yeah i guess
 me: What a dumbass
 P: but in spite of her being an idiot, i wonder if we take the chicken back, could we turn around and unload it on backyard chooks to somebody who actually wants a chicken?
9:08 AM me: Yeah, but she can’t have her money back.
  *crosses arms*
 P: oh yeah, i’m all about the idiot tax
  *nods head decisively*

Dear MF Diary: Pillaging the Countryside

Today P. decreed it was berry-picking day, and he is sort of like a human Farmer’s Almanac that someone drew porno comix on part of and another part got some fish sauce on it, while part of it is torn out and replaced it with a stack of free recipes they give out at the grocery store. But if you can find the right page, you’re golden.

We were out for about an hour and got enough for two pies and a mess of jam. He is laying in supplies for the long, hard, 45-degree winter that we will have here in the middle of the city with a store within two blocks.

Later I fucked off with Ruby and we watched Julie & Julia. When I was on blog break this spring, Ruby had a one-off book club/dinner party wherein we discussed the book and ate an AMAZING five-course meal that was recipes from MtaoFC. I can say, YES, braised cucumbers are incredible. And I like aspic, which, I am pretty easy sell on cute animals being shoved into molds, so that was nice. As a result, attendance at this movie was fairly compulsory for us.

It is tempting to flippantly dismiss the movie the way many people have by saying, “Well, it is half good.” This is true, but the Julia half is REALLY good. I tend to think the other half is not the actors’ faults, though the script has some explaining to do. I really think they should have gone for gold and done the Julia bio. All the other half did was reminded me what an insufferable whiny brat the author is, which Ephron’s script really downplays, especially in regards to her job.

It was fun to watch a reenactment of Julia’s relationship with her husband of many years, whom she was madly in love with. Of course there is a bunch of revisionist type history out now, saying well, no, Child wasn’t a saint, in fact she was a homophobe, and I think it’s pretty shit that Child denounced Julie, saying that she was not taking the book or the practice of cooking seriously. It’s fairly lame to make a statement like that about how one’s cookbook is used–it’s not like Julie was using it as a doorstop or something. Has anyone else cooked their way through all of MtaoFC?

BUT as I was enjoying the interaction between the onscreen Childs, Ruby leaned over and whispered, “Julie is divorcing Eric, you know?” I did not. It kind of colored the whole rest of the movie, in a way, which was no big deal. At the end the little wrap-up text rolled by saying when the Childs died and that the author lived in Queens with her husband. “Why does it say that,” I demanded. “They broke up after the movie,” she replied. Ah. Well, the first divorce is always the hardest.

Ruby always makes me laugh with her crazy ideas.

“So the back-to-school thingie is happening soon,” she said, by way of feeling out whether I was at all interested, and specifically, interested in going to the party with her.

“Wait, you want to PAY MONEY to go to an irritating party with assholes we hate?”

She started laughing.

“Hey, misery loves company,” said our other lunch companion.

“Let’s just go back to Gainsbourg that night,” I said.

I love September and am actually looking forward to it.

It is also important for you to know that my short-term memory has returned, after taking a year off.

In Other News: “There is Nothing Between Us and The Grave Except Food.”

Strudel is very fixated on the idea of death lately. I can remember being in the backseat of my grandmother’s car at her age and being struck with the realization that everyone I knew was going to die, and my grandmother was probably going to go first. My eyes filled up with tears at the thought.

Strudel wants to talk about it a fair amount now, and I sense she is looking for some kind of hedge to get us out of it. “What if I do this or that? Do we have to die then?” She looks for assurances that I will be very old when I die, and I tell her yes, yes. This is a more worthwhile lie than Santa.

“Would you rather die, or become a tree?” Strudel asked me, as she was putting one of her puzzles together on the floor of my room.

“I would rather become a tree.” I replied.

“Me too, but I am going to be Stoic.”

“What does “stoic” mean to you?” I said.

I recalled I had used the term earlier while we were berrypicking and her father was whining about getting small blackberry slivers in his hands. “How do you stop that from happening?” he said. “You just have to be stoic about it,” I said.

“I don’t know what it means!” Strudel said. “Some day we will all be below the ground, and no one will know where you are, or where to find you, and you could be under a sidewalk and people would not know.”

“Oh,” I said.

“I will never NOT love you, but when you are dead I can not call you.” she concluded.

P.wned

A couple of nights ago P. and I were squabbling over, I swear, the order eggs should go into the fridge and how to tell if they were older or newer. For some reason I was getting louder and louder until I was shouting! Over something SO STUPID! I took a breath and I heard a voice though the window from outdoors:

“HEY, WHO’S WINNING?”

It was our hobos who always wander the neighborhood, chatting to us and being friendly. I was so embarrassed my mouth snapped shut.

“Who does that? Who SHOUTS through WINDOWS like that?” I said a couple of minutes later.

“They are probably from the Midwest,” P. said.

It took a couple of seconds, then the ice burn sunk in. GOOD DAY SIR.

This Fall I Don’t Know If I Survived

“SJ COME HAVE SOME WHITE WINE OVER HERE,” my neighbor, Elsa, shouted at me from the open picnic tent they erect every summer and spend most days under. Strudel and I were just getting home from her school and it had been a long tense day of no new work coming down the pike. There’s nothing like being the most expendable person at work with nothing to do due to corporate bottleneckery.

The tent is an oasis, containing shelves, a radio (which blares classical, smooth jazz, or Edith Piaf depending on the day), patio furniture, a miniature Swedish flag, and loads of booze. Also, Elsa and her partner Steven. It is carpeted with green close-cropped Astroturf.

Elsa went into the house to get wine and something for Strudel. Elsa turns the color of toast in summer and with her white-blond hair and clothes is very striking.

“How are you feeling, Steven?” I asked. About a month ago Steven had a giant brain tumor removed.

“GREAT!” he replied, in his rich booming voice. “Much better. I’m just taking it easy.” He lit a cigarette. Steven retired from radio voice-over work about a year ago and has been a regular fixture in the yard since then. He and Elsa are usually drinking and shouting and watering their lawn and grilling.

“Here, honey,” Elsa said, pouring about half a bottle of white wine into my giant glass. She brought a box of raisins and a tumbler of root beer for Strudel, who shunned the mysterious dark beverage in favor of rootling around the raisin box with her grubby fingers.

Steven made his way up, slowly, and moved towards the house.

“Poor Steven,” Elsa said to me, quietly. “Our living room looks like a pharmacy with all the chemo drugs. And he never got his vision back in his left eye. Did you see all his scratches?”

I recalled then that I had seen a scratch on his head and one on his arm.

“Yes.”

“His balance is all off and he fell on the stairs out here the other day,” Elsa said. She told me horrifying stories about steep medical bills and the limits of insurance.

As usual, we traded news and gossip about our neighbors. Elsa mentioned that the old lady who lived in the house across the street from ours (before the house was knocked down and replaced with three townhomes) hated everyone who lived in my duplex on principle.

“Isn’t that funny?” I said. “We took her roses before they bulldozed everything. I thought it would be nice to keep part of the old neighborhood.”

“And they look so nice,” Elsa said.

“Elsa is the neighborhood patrol!” Steven said, teasing her.

“It’s not gossip if it’s true,” Elsa said.

“It’s ALL TRUE,” they said, almost in unison.

Talk soon turned to what I was up to, and Strudel’s dad.

“P. LOOKS JUST LIKE GEORGE CLOONEY!” Elsa declared, pouring me more wine. “Don’t you think so, Steven?”

“He’s a very handsome guy,” Steven said.

“Are you two going to get married, do you think?”

“I doubt that,” I said.

“How long have you two been together now?”

“Uhh…Six years,” I lied. It’s funny how no one really knows we broke up a year ago. How do you explain these things to people?

“Well, that’s great!” Elsa said. Eventually George Clooney came home from work, set his backpack down, and had a beer with us.

Finally we made our excuses and went home so I could make dinner.

Elsa and Steven seem like such summer people to me. Suddenly they look much older, and I worry about them this winter when the weather will chase us all indoors and everyone on the street becomes strangers again.

It’ll Be a Breeze

This is a nice cover, but a little fast for my taste. My sister and I used to argue about this. She thought the song was about a break up, and I thought it was about death and leaving the person you love the most. Today I found out it is about being in a coma.