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The Little Engine That Couldn’t

April 28, 2008

My husband’s parents have been married for 33 years now. Meanwhile, my parents have both been through what seems like a plethora of relationships. While Adam was raised learning what you do in a relationship, I was raised learning what you do not do (by example). And somehow, this combination works for us.

My parents divorced when I was a very little girl. I believe I was at the tail end of 3, nearing 4. Even at that age, it was so difficult.
At some point during the split, my father accepted a job some distance away. Prior to the divorce, I remember my father being my main caretaker. My mother worked full time and was a full times student with classes at night. So my father took care of me at night while my mother was in class.

So the new arrangements which involved my father living separately from us were very difficult for me.
Within a short amount of time, my father was offered a very important promotion an hour and half away from where we lived. He took the promotion and made the move. The move began the first of many shuffled road trips.
Since I am, and was, very prone to car sickness the rides were increasingly difficult to me. The ride there was always exciting because it had usually been about two weeks since I had last seen my father. However, the rides back were quite arduous.
When they would meet, my parents always exchanged me in the parking lot of a local Shoney’s. While they generally got along, they needed neutral ground for them and the parking lot there seemed to work. So after a long weekend with my father, usually filled with dinner at Showbiz Pizza and other fun activities, I was ushered back to the parking lot and exchanged from car to car again outside of what is possibly the shittiest buffet restaurant in the world.
For years my mother drove an older Oldsmobile with velor upholstery on the seats, said upholstery held heat like a kitchen in July. I always felt it cooking my legs.My mother knew that the ride was difficult for my brother and I. After all, it was difficult for her too. So she tried her best to cheer us up with enthusiastic cassette tapes that played children’s songs and stories.
The songs were sang by chipper children with voices so high pitched dogs would howl from miles away. I usually ended up crying long, lonely tears. Because there I was, stuck in the back seat of a two-door car, roasting on the velor seats, body aching from nausea induced from a combination of car sickness and broken-family syndrome, and forced to listen to ‘The Little Engine That Could’.
Can I please tell you how much I hate that story? How much I hate the moral of the story? And not because it lacks meaning. More so, because to me, it represents that trip back home as child, after being exchanged from parent to parent like a shared commodity.

I had to listen to that damn cassette tape for years. Mostly because my younger brother loved it. The narrator was a lady with a voice that could have cut through the strongest of titanium. It was raspy and sharp. And I swear, she would draw the story out for what seemed like hours. And the whole time, I would attempt to hold back tears and vomit, hoping the damn cassette tape would spontaneously combust or be eaten by the tape deck. All I knew was that if I had to hear that damn engine complain ONE more time, I was done.
Why is this significant? I’m not entirely sure that it is. To you, anyway. But I had sort of blocked these trips out of my head. A few days ago, Allie brought me a book from her many piles and asked me to read it to her.
Of course, it was The Little Engine That Could. And I couldn’t read it.
I just threw the damn thing away (when she wasn’t watching), and asked her to pick out a new book.
It’s so stupid. But it’s almost as if the story represents that period in my childhood for me. And I can’t hear about it or read it without feeling like my legs are on velor seats and my body is wrecked with nausea. And how did I ever forget memories so vivid? And why does that stupid book trigger it for me?
To top this off, I can’t eat at Shoney’s restaurant. Aside from being scared that I’ll come down with food poisoning, it just represents something else for me. I feel like if I go to Shoney’s I’m going to be exited out of my car and put into another for my visit. No Shoney’s for me.
Tonight my husband wanted to eat at Shoney’s, and it was total no-go for me. (And seriously, Shoney’s? how nasty.)
Things like this are sometimes hard to explain to him. Not because he doesn’t listen, but because he doesn’t understand what it was like.

Luckily, I tell very humorous recounts of random encounters with the counterparts of my parents and their families. I have thousands of funny stories about meeting a new person one of my parents was dating and how strange they were or what they were wearing. Or I have a funny outlook on most things of that nature. For him, it’s like a set of stories to hear about. But for me, it was reality.
I suppose it’s just funny when you think about it. How two people from completely different background and families can fall in love and it just works.
I’m so grateful for that.

(also, I tried to fix the spacing on this entry like 8 times.  But Wordpress would not allow it. Sorry it runs together.)

The Ship is Sinking

April 16, 2008

Today, I sat down intent to write an entry. I had a few different things I wanted to blog about, but when I sat down and began typing it all ran together in a manner similar to discount buffet food all piled on one plate. None of it tasted good, so to speak, and it all seemed at least second or third rate. Not that anything or everything I crank out of here is first rate, but when I reread something and it automatically sounds like crap to me, I hit the Save button and save it for a day when I can attempt to make a mountain out of a molehill.

The truth is my life is busy lately. Really, it’s busy all of the time.

A busy life is nothing new to any of you. We’re all often being pulled in a blunder of directions. But the problem is that sometimes the pulling from multiple, distant directions becomes so strong, so rapid that while we desperately need to fall over from exhaustion and strife, we remain standing. Wobbling, but standing.

That’s me today, and that’s me lately.

Standing but wobbling. Slightly dizzy, yet still able to make out the goals in sight. An obvious suggestion to the madness is to eliminate some of projects in my life that are not necessary. One might argue that I should take a blog break.

But the thing is, what started out as a personal diary for me has now become a third arm. It’s just a functioning part of me. And I’m okay with that. While writing this, I stopped for a moment, preparing myself to analogize various parts of my blog with my hand, but I don’t even know how to do that right now.  All I know is that I would equate a recent influx of email filled with either hateful words or unsolicited advice to my middle finger waving rapidly in the air. That is one relationship that is partially visible.

At some point, being bogged down a bajillion things is ridiculous. When I’ve lost my car keys for the fourth time of the day and find myself dropping the f-bomb like I’m getting paid for it, well, that’s when I usually call it a day. I used to handle stress a lot differently.

When I was in middle school, one of my best friends and I spent massive amounts of time writing really catty, yet hilarious poems about whatever or whomever was pissing us off. As angsty preteens, we had at least a 5-subject notebook full-until my mom confiscated it. Back then, finding words to rhyme with whore in order to complete a stanza usually took up a lot of my time. I wish I had time to write angst-filled poetry right now. Not that I would, but having the option would be nice.

If possible, I would probably massacre 80’s Lady with adjectives in a beautiful poem dedicated to the new level of idiot status she has managed to achieve. As of today, she is officially the bane of my existence.

In the next few weeks (when my time is once again plentiful) you can look forward to these things,

  • An update about 80’s Lady latest antics
  • A semi-new design
  • Other things I haven’t thought of yet, but decided a third bullet would look nice and added it for fun.

Anything making you crazy or busy? An insane relative? A demanding job? Your next door neighbor that tends to go out to get the newspaper naked?

More Hyphenated Last Named Gone Wrong & Moving

March 7, 2008

Moving is rather routine for my husband and and I. We flip houses, so the house we live in is generally on the market.

One might think that by now, I should have mastered moving down to an organized science, and I suppose to some degree I do. If one did think that, one would be very wrong. :)

In fact, I’m probably the worst mover ever. I pack everything the week before the move date. Not during the whole 30 days we have to move, but in the last 5-7 days.

The thing is: Moving just sucks. And I know I should be able to provide a synonym from sucks for you so that you don’t think that I’m in the third grade. However, ’sucks’ is the only word that truly conveys the way I feel about moving.

It’s not so much leaving this house.

Okay, maybe it is a little, but this kitchen is one of my true loves.

(by the way, that toaster is pink if you can’t tell. haha. I know….I know.)

Really, it’s the ridiculousness of lugging stuff back and forth. Packing and unpacking. Backaches and headaches. You get the picture.

I’m just hoping that the deal for the new house closes before we have to be out of this one, for sure.

Anyway, enough boring house talk, here are more hyphenated last names gone wrong:

And the grand champion of pure filth:

All Booked Up And More Hyphenated Last Names Gone Wrong

February 23, 2008

I have been a gal of few words this week. And trust me, it isn’t because I don’t have much say. heh. But certain family businesses are about to undergo the world’s largest audit and I’ve spent most nights going back through all of the books to make sure everything is in order and easily accessible. Anyway, since I haven’t time to do a lengthy post about the latest drama in my life.  Hopefully, I will be able to bring you the latest ridiculous happenings tomorrow, but until then, here are more hyphenated last names gone wrong:

Do you know anyone with a ridiculous name? Because I once had a friend who had a step dad named ‘Harry Johnson‘.

Caution: Danger Up Ahead

February 8, 2008

I strained my back today.

Now, you are probably thinking I was doing some intense activity like kick boxing or walking around lifting cars off of people. Unfortunately, for both you and I, that is incorrect.

In fact this mild, yet traumatic, event occurred when I was shaving my legs in the shower.

That’s right. You read that correctly. Your eyes didn’t go awry. I had a shower-shaving induced back injury.

Leg shaving has now become a hazard of sorts. Maybe a sport should be made of it. I can just see it: Extreme Leg Shaving!

Am I going to have to start doing stretches before I get in the shower? Maybe do some lunges? A warm up jog around the house? A few jumping jacks?

This is the most ridiculous thing ever.

Please tell me I am not the only person to suffer an injury in such a funny way.

I Heart My Body Day: The Nose

February 1, 2008

Kelly issued a very inspiring challenge yesterday. Those responding are supposed to,

“Take a picture of a part of your body that you have been critical of in the past.
Paste that picture on your blog; do it with pride.
Tell the world all the reasons you love it.”

For the longest time, I hated my nose. It was the bane of my existence as a youngster. I went to bed stressing out about my nose, and I woke up doing just the same. At that time, I was almost positive the sun was rising and setting in tune with my internal hate clock.

Luckily, I have since come to terms with it. It might not be Kelly Ripa’s awesome nose. But it’s mine. And I love it. Plus, it was homemade (by my very own DNA), and in this day and age, that is a bonus.

I’ve come to terms with it since then. Here it is (highlighted by a deformed pink rectangle in case anyone can’t find it..haha):

i hate, i mean love,  my nose

You should go participate too. If you do decide to participate visit Kelly at the link above to let her know, and keep it clean. Nobody wants to see your labia. Well, no one visiting for the challenge purposes. But judging by everyone’s google analytics searches these days, i’m sure someone might visit just for the other purpose. haha! :) just kidding.

Random Confessions About Myself (Read ‘em and Weep)

January 25, 2008

-I am the worst car passenger ever. I get car sick and anxious. Both of which lead me to giving the driver of the vehicle continuous instructions about how I think the driving process should go down. It irritates my husband to death. I’m all, “BRAKE!! BRAKE!!! That light is red!! OOPS, PEDESTRIAN!*bump*”

- Sometimes in the grocery story, I stick my tongue out at children. Then, when they rat me out to their mothers (and they all do) I put on a straight face on and concentrate on the items in front of me as if it didn’t happen. Honestly, I learned this game from my mother. She used to do it all the time. I can’t help it. It’s so fun. You have to try it!

-When I was in the first grade, I pulled the fire alarm in my elementary school cafeteria. The firetrucks rolled up soon after my innocent mischief. In my defense, it said PULL. What’s a girl to do?

-I adore all things science. I’m very serious about it.

-I’d rather be beaten with a bag of hot nickels than wash dishes. Seriously.

- I was a really prissy child, and that is completely opposite of how I am now. Once, while losing control riding my bicycle, I was given the choice between hitting a car or rolling down a dirty hill. I chose to hit the Buick, because I was not getting dirty. That is so far from who I am now.

- I went to not one but TWO New Kids On The Block Concerts. Danny was mine. All mine.

-Once upon a time, I smoked cigarettes like it was my job. If I look back and simultaneously make use of the broad definitions of job, I guess it was.

-I love to write ranty, rhyming poetry. I’ve been doing this since middle school, and I can’t stop. (I’m feeling one coming on tomorrow since I missed out on Haiku Friday.)

-I met the lead singer of the Goo Goo Dolls once in an airport. I was wearing zebra pajama pants, and I only had a barf bag from the plane for him to autograph. (It was empty! I promise!)

Okay, okay. Enough about me, it’s your turn….confess something. Come on, it’ll be fun!

PS. About the voting.

Drama in the House

January 21, 2008

We had a crisis with Gary today. Many of you may know that my daughter has a favorite beloved baby doll named Gary. A female baby doll named Gary. :) Here is a picture of Gary in case you are not familiar with her:

gary

She is a water baby. For those not in the know about water babies, their insides are filled with water(heh. obvious, I know, but someone might’ve needed an explanation). Which is nice as far as squishly cuddlyness goes, but is not as nice when Gary’s neglectful mother (Allie)and grandmother (that’d be me) leave her in the car for the past two days when it was under 32 degrees.

I finally dug Gary out of my car. Sadly,her poor insides are solid ice. I hope she forgives her neglectful caretakers for their actions.

She is now an ice baby! :)

As long as I’m making a post revolving around a baby doll, I’ll keep rolling with it.

You see, Gary is quite the issue in our family. Many members of our family (in the in-law form) continuously rain on Allie’s parade by trying to teach her that Gary is boys name.

Big freaking whoop, I say.

If she wants to call the doll Gary, I let her call the doll Gary. It’s not like she doesn’t understand that boys and girls are separate entities. She knows. She just felt like naming Gary, Gary. But they can’t let it go. grrr..

Nevertheless, everyone keep Gary in your thoughts, as she is currently in a frozen state. :)

Labor Time=Big Mac Time

January 13, 2008

One time, while patiently waiting in line for my food at a fast food restaurant, I heard a bout of commotion coming from behind the register, toward the drive-thru window. All I heard was, “YOU WANT WHAT? YOU ARE?”.

My first reaction was great! this place WOULD get robbed when I was in here.

(As if I was some exemption to robberies and my presence was enough to ward off thieves.)

However, it turned out the fast food restaurant was not being robbed(maybe I do ward off thieves)…

Instead, the commotion was because a lady IN LABOR was going through the drive-thru demanding a cheeseburger. That’s right–IN LABOR. You read that correctly.

I will bless you with the fact that she was not driving. Her mother was.

You could hear the girl screaming for the hamburger as if the fast food minions were in opposition to giving it to her. “GIVE ME MY DAMN BIG MAC!” I didn’t understand the screaming, because it’s not like the minions are against providing fast food to people in labor.

On to the big picture, while this particular fast food joint was a stone’s throw away from the hospital–my last thought when I started having contractions was, “Damn, i want a big mac!”.

Between you and I, in the midst of contractions my mind was more focused on the many violent atrocities I could inflict on the man who did this to me. I had visions of punching bags and Samurai swords–not of big macs. Now, yelling GIVE ME MY DAMN SAMURAI SWORD! would have made lots more sense.

So what about you? If you have children, were you craving a hamburger while in labor? OR were you craving a Samurai Sword ( i know you were). If you don’t have children, but plan to, which choice is more likely for you. ( i know it’s the weapon, and you do too).  If you do not plan to have children at all, which do you prefer on a daily basis? :)

Insane in the Membrane

December 30, 2007

That’s right folks, I’ve went crazy.
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