Thursday, September 24, 2009

I'm going dark.

Life is just too much at the moment. My heart can't divulge any more crap to the general public.

I have so little energy and realize that any energy I have needs to be directed to finding my teeny-tiny little sunlit corner of life. This is hard to do when you're all kinds of fucked up, like I am.

So I'm going to stop writing on this blog indefinitely.

To my four or five readers, thanks for reading my bullshit over the last few years.

And to those who discover Sixty-Four Twelve by mistake or happenstance and decide to read my bullshit (like that actually happens), thank you for being here.

God bless you.

Because it is bitter and because it is my heart.

I don't know where to start except I am so fucking angry and disappointed right now.

I am furious.

You know what? If you are a man and you're just looking for some pussy, consider:

Women are people.

People must be treated with respect.

If you don't treat people with respect, you will hurt them, one way or the other.

Once they're hurt, it's very hard to undo the hurt.

To the pussy guy:

Do all of us a fucking favor. The next time you want some pussy, just say, "Hey, I really want to fuck you. Nothing more. I don't want to talk to you afterwards. I don't want to make any kind of future anything with you-- whether it be a weekend a month from now, a dinner tomorrow, a phone call to you. EVER. I just want to fuck you, then... nothing. I don't want to see you, hear you, touch you, talk to you, anything-- ever again."

Don't say instead:

"I'm at peace with you and feel so good about you."

"I can't wait to hold you in my arms, baby."

"I'm so looking forward to all the firsts-- our first kiss, our first dinner together, seeing you come off the plane at the airport."

Just don't say it. Don't.

Just keep your trap shut.

Because you know what? After 30 fucking years of hearing from my father: "Men will say anything just to get you into bed," and me not believing him, me being the eternal optimist, thinking he's wrong! How could anyone ever do that to me? I realize he's right. That son-of-a-gun is 100% correct, on the money.

In the meantime, I'm bitter and hateful and angry.

I hate this. Hate it.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Tenterhooks. Headache.

Weeks of phone calls, emails culminating in beautiful, magical weekend.

Hotel-- art deco, beautifully restored, swank. Room-- mid-century modern, fireplace, corner view, Egyptian cotton sheets. Accoutrements-- French champagne, bouquets of flowers. Food-- room service, fabulous Italian restaurant.

Man-- successful, warm, sexy, funny, intelligent. Me-- happy I've met him and I'm there with him.

Thirty-six hours of bliss, together.

Home. Me-- a week of pre-occupation. Him-- a week of travel, business.

Emails-- his-- two, one asking "How are you?" and "Everything's good" after his arrival in a particularly dangerous Central American country.

Phone calls-- his-- two, one after his plane landed in Atlanta after our weekend, the other the night before he left for Central America. "I've been thinking of you," I admitted to him. "I've been thinking of you too," he answered.

All's I can think is, and hopefully I might add, he continues to do so.

Thursday, September 03, 2009

Yesterday at Hamlet Hall...

... a momma bear and her two cubs dropped by to see us.


Sunday, August 09, 2009

Zombie Parades and Illiterates.

We've all met them-- those grim-faced, suspicious workers at government facilities. Their words are clipped, their sentences are to the point. They don't offer their opinions, they aren't expansive. They give only what you ask for and not one thing more.

Why are they like this? Why is it when you visit the DMV darned near every person who serves you is abrupt and stiff? Why is it at the Post Office the people behind the counter don't smile at you when you approach the counter? Why can't you engage the lady behind the bulletproof glass at the Social Security Office in a conversation about the weather?

I can tell you that the majority of these people were once friendly smiling workers who in the beginning of their governmental careers truly wanted to help every person that walked through the door.

Everyone is different; it could take a month, a year, two years maybe, dependent upon how resilient one is, but eventually serving the public becomes distasteful and some days it is impossible to serve the public without fantasizing about taking them outside and cracking their head open with a large stapler. And then walking away from their prone body, snickering. Because they are stupid.

Co-worker Kerri and I used to be happy, smiling workers. Eighteen months have passed since we started working in the same office and in this time we've noticed ourselves morphing into Bitter Government Workers. Our personalities are similar in many ways, so we've arrived in Bitter Town at approximately the same time, having been hired by the Hamlet just weeks apart. To Kerri's credit, she's a little behind me in the cranky department, because she's just a nicer person to begin with.

This is how it happens.

One day you realize that you are in no way in control of your work load.

Each citizen walking into the office needs something right now, wants to complain about something, or alternatively, they are there to pick a fight.

About ten percent of those you serve are in dire need of medication, the psychotropic kind.

A request from the public can be large or small, bad or good, do-able or impossible. Many times it is no one's responsibility because no one wants another piece of mangled, unmanagable crap on their desk and because you're in the service industry (don't kid yourself; government workers are in the service industry whether they like it or not) IT BECOMES YOUR PERSONAL PROBLEM.

These day-to-day requests are terrible time-suckers. Kerri and I both experience these kinds of calls at least once a day.

The guy who called a couple weeks ago and asked what permit was required to hold a parade in the Hamlet-- "A zombie parade!!!" he elaborated.

"A zombie parade." I stated. I heard Kerri choke on her hot chocolate behind me. Michelle cackled from the back office.

"Yeah!" he exclaimed. "Everyone dresses up like zombies and they shamble down the sidewalk. I think it'd be awesome for the tourists. They'd love it!"

"Alrighty. I'm gonna connect you over to Kerri, who will be able to tell you what kinds of permits you need for the zombie parade. Just a sec!" I said, transferring him to Kerri, whose face was a mask. She picked up the call.

"A zombie parade, sir?... okay, so will you march in the street?... well, I only ask because we'd need to block off streets and have traffic control down Hamlet Avenue... Okay. So you'd march on the sidewalk instead? What happens then?... You march into the park. Then what?" asked Kerri. She listened intently to the caller. "Well, sir-- typically when there's a parade of some kind, it's for a purpose, so I'm just trying to figure out-- so the zombies will 'shamble' down the sidewalk to the park, then at the park, the parade is over?... Will you have a barbeque or anything? Is this a fundraiser?... Okay. Well-- sir, I'm not sure you need a permit for the zombie parade. It sounds like you guys are dressing up like zombies and walking down the street, so you don't need a permit for that... Okay, you bet. Thanks for calling. 'Bye." She hung up.

"Shamble?" I asked Kerri.

"That's what he said." she answered. "That's ridiculous. I wonder if he'll actually get a zombie parade put together?"

"Are you crazy? He's already forgotten about it and is lighting up his next bong hit," I said.

Here's another example. Our office is located down a hallway behind the Hamlet PD. To get to our office, one must walk past the PD dispatch window which is encased in dark, bullet-proof glass. In the lobby of the PD, there are two large signs that state, "PLEASE PAY TICKETS AT THE DISPATCH WINDOW."

Naturally, people coming in to pay tickets wander through the lobby to our doorway, which has a sign on it that states, "IF YOU HAVE A TICKET, PLEASE PAY AT THE POLICE DISPATCH WINDOW".

They walk through our doorway and because of our many, many, many experiences with illiterates who amble (not shamble) through our doorway, we can spot a person who needs to pay a ticket from a thousand yards. We are talented that way, Kerri and I.

"Uh... I was at the Hamlet a couple of weeks ago... and I got this, uh..."

"Ticket?!?" I fairly screech at them.

"Yeah, this ticket... and I need to pay it. Is this where I pay?" Ugh. Another dullard who can't read signs.

"No. You pay at the dispatch window. It's that smoked glass window through that doorway," I say, pointing toward the window.

"But... there's no one there. It's dark!" they say doubtfully.

"Oh, there's always someone in dispatch. Just knock on the window," I instruct, for the five millionth time that day.

Then later that same day, another illiterate slob will shuffle through our door. Past the sign that says, "PLEASE PAY TICKETS AT THE DISPATCH WINDOW". And the second sign that says, "IF YOU HAVE A TICKET, PLEASE PAY AT THE POLICE DISPATCH WINDOW."

"Uh... I got this ticket yesterday... is this where I pay?"

"Nooooo... go through this doorway up to the smoked glass window. They can take care of you there," I say, my voice wavering upward an octave.

"No one's there," says the slob.

"Yes. They are. Just knock on the window," I say tensely.

"It's dark," the slob says doubtfully.

"TRUST ME. There's someone always in dispatch."

Combined, these little vignettes of constant idiocy and neediness knit themselves into a chain that wind around our necks. I shouldn't carry the chain home (like Jacob Marley, who forged his chain in life), but here it is-- Saturday night and I'm thinking and writing about it.

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Mark Sanford and "That Sparking Thing".

It'd be so exciting to hear a philandering politician tell the truth about what really happened when he cheated on his wife.

Governor Mark Sanford of South Carolina said all the predictable things at his press conference yesterday, but had he told the truth, it would have been more like this:

"I cheated on my wife because I was bored out of my mind. I'd reached the pinnacle of my political career and felt I was bullet-proof. I felt I could do anything I wanted.

"I'd planned on cheating on my wife for a long, long time. That's why I fed my staff little clues-- for weeks!-- about my love of the great outdoors, that I needed time alone, that I wanted to go hike the Appalachian Trail. See, I planted those seeds in their heads so when I did disappear for a week and no one knew where I was, they'd guess I was off hiking the Trail. Hell, they didn't know where I was!

"See, it's my staff's job to cover my ass. They hate to look like a bunch of idiots, so they told the press I was on a self-reflective mini-break, enjoying the trees and birds, feeding my soul with nature, hiking the Trail.

"Plus I figured that in feeding my staff those clues, it would give me enough time to schedule a flight to Argentina and get a discount on my flight for booking in advance. Have you looked at plane ticket prices lately? It's expensive!

"So me and Maria had an awesome time drinking, dancing, having sex, sleeping in. I didn't want to leave! But I did have to go back and sign papers and things. I thought I'd really pulled off this trip, like I had before.

"But I flew into Atlanta and I was really bummed that the press was at the airport when I returned. Shit!

"So there it is. That's the only reason why I called this press conference. If the press hadn't been at the airport, I would have totally gotten away with it! But they were there, so I had to spill this to you. Bummer.

"So here I am talking to you. Now that my trip has been uncovered by the national press, I'll go ahead and say all those tired old things I'll need to say to the American people and the citizens of South Carolina to try and save my political career.

"I was wrong to cheat on my wife; this lady in Argentina was a dear friend; we've been emailing casually for eight years; a "spark" between she and I happened just a year ago; we became lovers only after "that sparking thing" happened.

"I'll also tell you I'm really sorry I let you down, I'm sorry I've hurt my family. Yadda, yadda, yadda. You guys have heard this all before. I'm actually surprised you're covering this, because frankly, this isn't anything new!

"Lemme tell you something though-- I couldn't resist this woman. People, she was hot. I was thinking with my dick and it was awesome! I haven't felt so horny since I was a teenager! Yeah, my dick didn't care if I was found out. He totally overrides any rational thought. Dude, my dick just pointed the way to South America and off I went!

"I'm really embarrassed and kind of pissed that you all found out about my trip to Argentina, though. Trust me-- I wouldn't be having this press conference if you guys hadn't seen me at the airport.

"Now I gotta go home and try to repair my life here. It's gonna be hard, because my wife made a deal with the devil when she married me, and now this has all happened, she's definitely got the upper hand. I hope my totally fake humility will convince her that she should take me back, 'cause if I blow it and can't convince her to continue with the First Lady act, she could screw me five ways 'til Sunday.

"I'm kind of nervous about it all, but I'm pretty sure if I say and do the right things, I'll be able to make a big comeback and convince everyone I'm a stand-up guy.

"Then all of this will be just a blip on my career's radar screen."

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Genetic Superiority Rears Its Beautiful Head in Cannes

Redhead: Good Lord.

T-Bone: She is indeed the most intoxicatingly beautiful person alive. That dress is un-fucking-believable.

Redhead: How? I mean, honestly.


T-Bone: Brad looks like a schlub next to her. Flesh-toned chiffon-- don't wear it. You'll have corpse-pallor. But not Angie! She can wear it! She can wear anything! Doesn't matter what shape it is, what fabric it's made of, what color it is-- it'll look great! 'Cuz she's wearing it!

Monday, May 25, 2009

Vietnam.


We called the enemy ghosts. "Bad night," we'd say, "the ghosts are out." To get spooked, in the lingo, meant not only to get scared but to get killed. "Don't get spooked," we'd say. "Stay cool, stay alive." Or we'd say: "Careful, man, don't give up the ghost." The countryside itself seemed spooky-- shadows and tunnels and incense burning in the dark. The land was haunted. We were fighting forces that did not obey the laws of twentieth-century science. Late at night, on guard, it seemed that all of Vietnam was alive and shimmering-- odd shapes swaying in the paddies, boogiemen in sandals, spirits dancing in old pagodas. It was ghost country, and Charlie Cong was the main ghost. The way he came out at night. How you never really saw him, just thought you did. Almost magical--appearing, disappearing. He could blend with the land, changing form, becoming trees and grass. He could levitate. He could fly. He could pass through barbed wire and melt away like ice and creep up on you without sound or footsteps. He was scary. In the daylight, maybe, you didn't believe in the stuff. You laughed it off. You made jokes. But at night, you turned into a believer; no skeptics in foxholes.

"The Things They Carried" - Tim O'Brien

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Phoebe.




So this is what happened:

My sweet cockatiel Phoebe has been laying eggs. Lots of them.

A week ago, I began to get a worried after the fourth egg. I was concerned that laying eggs over and over and over again would be depleting her tiny little four-ounce body. I've been keeping a close eye on her recently.

Yesterday morning (which seems like a million years ago) I uncovered her cage and immediately noticed that she was not her usual self. Usually she's chirpy and active in the morning; instead, she was lethargic and quiet.

I gave Phoebe her breakfast. She took a couple bites and that was it.

I noticed her feathers were puffed up, which is a bad sign. Along with the puffiness of feathers, there were other indications that she was "egg-bound"-- meaning an egg gets stuck and cannot pass out.

I did the Puritan Work Ethic Thing: I went to work and hoped she could pass the egg (her eighth!) and she would feel better.

Arriving home from work, Phoebe was obviously deteriorating. She hadn't passed the egg.

I went into crisis mode and called an emergency vet and described her symptoms to the nurse on-call, who thought Phoebe was egg-bound too.

Typically when a small bird is egg-bound you must get them to the vet within an hour's time or it is likely they'll die. The strain on their body is too great, then they go into shock. After going into shock, it snowballs from there-- they stop eating, they stop drinking, they have difficulty breathing.

So I got Phoebe into a little travel cage lined with towels and took her to the animal ER.

Phoebe was placed in an incubator right away, as the oxygen would help her breathing. An hour later, the doctor came into the little waiting room and said, "I suspect she's egg-bound." She asked me, "How old is Phoebe?" I answered, "I have no idea. She just showed up on my porch one day, fully-grown." "Oh my God!" the doctor said. "She found you!"

Indeed she did.

A nurse came in an hour later (Entertainment Weekly and People long since read and re-read). "This is what we recommend she have done," said the nurse, handing me a list/invoice.

The list included an x-ray (to determine if indeed she was egg-bound), a tiny little IV for nourishment/water, overnight stay, morphine for pain, etc.-- a bunch of things, totaling a little less than $600.00.

I started crying. I said to the nurse, "There is no way I can afford this. I can afford the initial exam ($100), but not the rest. Can I do a payment plan?" The nurse said she'd ask (whoever it is that decides these horrible things).

Another hour and a half. Entertainment Weekly and People. Again. And again. Checking out the art on the walls. Brochures for dog drugs and pet insurance. All. Read. Several. Times. Over.

The nurse returned. She doesn't say no, but what she does say is, "We will give her a morphine shot for pain, but that's all we can do." I said, "Okay, give her the shot. I'm going to take her home."

So I got the drugged-up Phoebe, paid the bill and left. I placed Phoebe, in her soft, towel-filled box, in the passenger seat. I got behind the wheel and burst into frustrated, angry and bitter tears.

Was she egg-bound? Was her body depleted? I didn't know if she would live or die. I didn't know anything about her condition. I did know, however, that I just spent $104.00 to remain completely ignorant.

I drove home and took Phoebe upstairs. I gave her a little warm bottom-bath hoping it would help her pass the egg.

I put some peanut butter on her beak so she could eat something. No dice. There is nothing sadder than a sick animal who lets food dribble off of their mouth without tasting it, or showing interest in eating it.

This is how much I love Phoebe-- I put a little lubricant on her "vent", hoping it would make the egg come out easier, if indeed that was the problem (because I still didn't fucking know).

I held Phoebe in my hands where she dozed for an hour or so, between my breasts, near my heartbeat.

I put her in her cage, making sure the room was quiet and dark. I banished the cats. I covered the birds. I shut the door. Phoebe needed rest.

Last night I slept, not knowing if Phoebe would be dead on the bottom of her cage in the morning.

I woke up at 5:15 and looked at her cage, shrouded in blankets, and didn't to know what was under there. Phoebe wasn't making a sound.

At 5:30 I climbed out of bed.

I lifted the cage cover and there she was. Sitting in her food dish. Looking at me.

She was still sick, but she was alive. I have her another bath, gave her breakfast (with veggies she normally likes) and did the Puritan Work Ethic Thing-- I went to work.

All day today was a struggle-- a real bugger.

I asked the Hamlet firemen for a syringe (thank you, Larry!) so I could get some baby food on the way home and feed Phoebe that way.

I didn't think she'd be alive when I got home.

I opened the door to the apartment and it was silent inside. Usually Phoebe greets me, chirping like mad when I walk in the door.

I went into the bedroom and looked around the corner.

Phoebe was sitting in her dish, alive. She chirped softly at me.

And guess what? On the floor of her cage was egg number EIGHT.

For the first time in ten years, I got on my knees and thanked God. I was so fucking relieved. I instantly got a headache too. Isn't that weird?

Phoebe is not out of the woods yet.

I attempted to feed her with the syringe (which she hated).

I removed the egg from her cage and put it in the little dish in my kitchen with the other eggs-- a new arrival-- company for the seven brothers and sisters.

I covered Phoebe so she could rest.

Monday, April 06, 2009

A Bad Visit.

To start, I stupidly, unforgiveably, brought her food she couldn't eat.

Secondly, I couldn't understand a blessed word she said.

Then I wasn't strong enough to move her into a comfortable position in bed.

Lastly, I couldn't read her writing when she tried to put on paper what she wanted to say.

I stood over her bed and held her hand, her calm face looking up at mine as I cried.

"Mom, I have to go. I can't understand a word you're saying. I can't understand you, Mom. I'm sorry. I'm so sorry," I said, bending down to hug her. "I'll bring you soup next time, I promise, Mom. I love you."

"I love you too," she whispered.

That I understood.

Monday, March 30, 2009

16 Messages.

A foul bundle of voicemails awaited me this morning.

Thursday afternoon, we were released early from work due to a wicked blizzard that was bearing down upon us. Friday was a snow day. The display window on my phone warned me of the expected irritants when I sat down at my desk today.

Sighing, I dialed my access code.

"SIX. TEEN. MESSAGES. MESSAGE ONE. THURS. DAY. MARCH. TWENTY-SIXTH. AT. FIVE. OH. NINE P.M."

Nasal, creaky, annoying voice. "T-Bone, this is Mavis up on the hill. We are completely snowed in. Can you send one of those plows--"

Delete! The snow melted on Saturday.

"MESSAGE TWO. FRI. DAY. MARCH. TWENTY-SEVENTH. AT. SEVEN. THIRTY-ONE A.M."

Hippie chick. "Hiiiiiiiii, this is Saaaaaaffron... my address is, uhhhh, 421 Main Street... I'm wondering if the plowwwwwwws--"

Delete! Melted. Saturday.

Messages three through ten were hangups: delete! Delete! Delete! Delete!

"MESSAGE ELEVEN. SUN. DAY. MARCH. TWENTY-NINTH. AT. TEN. A.M."

A man this time! Young. Sounds handsome.

"Uhhhhh... hi T-Bone? This is Troy? Me and my fiance are getting married at the park this June? I'm-- (chuckle) well, WE-- are wondering if the facility--"

Pound sign! Forward to Joyce, extension 2565.

"MESSAGE TWELVE. MON. DAY. MARCH. THIRTY. AT. SEVEN. FIFTEEN. A.M."

"T-Bone? This is Dave. I'm at the shop and we really need to know about use tax. Regional won't approve our addition--"

Pound sign! WHAMMO! Forward to Kerri, extension 2551.

Remainder of messages-- hang ups.

Delete!

Delete!

Delete!

Delete!


Mondays suck.

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Ozzie

When I think of him, I glow inside.

We talk, we giggle, we gossip, we sympathize, we discuss, we tease.

His messages on my phone, his emails in my inbox-- these simple things are little gifts left on my world's doorstep.

He's irreverent, genial, warm; all are drawn to him. His star-like qualities attract men and women alike, and they want to be in his orbit.

He is guileless; his charm is not bait, laid in a trap.

As his attention focuses on you, all others fall away.

And for me, most of all, he is a complete surprise.

First Day of Spring.


Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Natasha




Come taste the wine,
Come hear the band.
Come blow your horn, start celebrating;
Right this way, your table's waiting


No use permitting some prophet of doom
To wipe every smile away.
Life is a Cabaret, old chum,
Come to the Cabaret!


Start by admitting from cradle to tomb
Isn't that long a stay.
Life is a Cabaret, old chum,
Only a Cabaret, old chum,
And I love a Cabaret!

Sunday, March 08, 2009

The Children's Hour.

I've been dating him for nine months.

He's everything on my list-- handsome, romantic, courteous, polite, funny, responsible, sweet, kind, easy-going, hard-working. He loves his family. He gets along great with my family. He loves me.

You may be thinking, "But what, T-Bone?"

The fact is, I don't mesh with his younger daughter.

He was just divorced recently, separated from his ex about a year ago. So naturally his kids-- especially the younger one-- feel pretty rotten about it.

The younger one is very suspicious of me and my position in her Dad's life. I think she's certain I'll steal him away from her. Obviously this is not the case, but children tend to think in terms of black and white.

In the early months dating, I made myself very scarce to the children, making sure the girls had complete, uninterrupted time with Daddy. I wanted to make sure they understood that they were first in his life, that I was a newcomer and wasn't there to steal him away.

I felt that if I were to eventually become a part of their family, it would be done gradually and that it was his responsibility to explain this to his daughters.

It has been explained, yet the younger daughter still treats me with a great deal of suspicion. Only when prompted, her lackluster, bland "hello" greets me. She shows little interest in engaging in conversation. When she answers my questions, they are "yes" or "no". She never looks me in the eye, except when I happen to catch her glance as she walks past me.

Like I mentioned, he's everything. But with being everything, he also has a daughter who I can foresee will be a problem.

It's not just her; it's him, too. They have a strange dynamic, an oddly strong (and in my view unhealthy) connection.

One night, children at their mother's, he and I were having "grown up time". In the middle of a very intimate sex act, his cell phone rang.

He flipped open the phone, saw it was her calling and answered the call.

Reader, this was my "Aha!" moment.

So we're at a decision point, he and I. He and I have discussed this at length. Things decided upon during these conversations: I've never had children, so I don't know what's going on with her; I don't spend enough time getting to know her; she has always been this way; she's this way with all of his friends; I need to join them on more family outings; etc., etc.

Basically, what it boils down to is that it's me that's the problem.

To him, the case is not-- why is she so clingy? Why is she so suspicious of me (although I'm a regular gal and her Mom is a drunken slut who's been living with some gangsta guy even before the divorce was final and she's already pregnant with his baby)? Why does she call Daddy three to five times a night when she's with Mommy (and why does Daddy answer the phone each time even if I'm giving him a blowjob)?

So I asked for two weeks off to think about things. He understood and most graciously let me go.

I'm not sure what I'll decide. Not sure when I'll decide it either.

Not sure I have the energy to try to win over a child. Not sure I need to, either.

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Cats and Those Things Upon Which They Vomit.

Oriental rugs.
Sofas.
Pillows (decorative and bed pillows).
Carpet.
Inside shoes.
Kitchen countertops.
Diningroom chairs (the padded kind).
Afghans.
Blankets.
Books and magazines.

Cats and Those Things Upon Which They Never Vomit:

Tile.
Glass.
Plastic.

Saturday, February 07, 2009

C'est Moi, C'est Moi, 'Tis I!

That's correct. I've not lost my fingers with which to type, nor lost my mind with which to think. I've simply had a long stretch of bullshit that's sucked away time that I'd normally use for writing on my little corner of Blogger.

Here are some highlights!

My car: my car engine bit the dust with 57,000 miles on it. Ironically I'd just paid off my car; the Powers That Be decided that now I no longer had a car payment, I could certainly afford a brand-new engine with all the money normally used for a car payment! In an ironic twist, the Powers That Be also decided to test my memory-- I remembered I had purchased an extended warranty for the car. The night my car died, I looked through the warranty paperwork and found it was set to expire ten days from the car's date of death. Whew. I was able to get an "new" engine installed with only 14,000 miles on it, paying only the $100.00 deductible, all under the expiration wire!

So. The above represents three stupid weeks of worry.

I moved to a new apartment, which I've christened "The Haven". Funny-- I moved from The Hamlet and have moved Next Door; more on that later. Frankly, the apartment is not very haven-like at the moment with unpacked boxes stacked against the walls and unhung pictures, but I know I'll be happy here. It has all the accoutrements a grown-up needs-- heat, a refrigerator, a washer/dryer and a fireplace! Another exciting development-- with the money I save in rent and utilities, I purchased satellite TV! I moved the second week of January and doing so in such close proximity to the holidays was a challenge, but it was well worth it. The Haven is quite small in comparison with the Hovel, having under 600 square feet. I've been obsessing about the organization of my stuff and have been purchasing magazines filled with cute storage suggestions (baskets, amoires), but as it stands right now, the Haven is a work in progress.

This deducted a month of worry and effort, still ongoing.

Mom: we moved Mom to a skilled nursing care facility, as she now requires 24-hour care. We shopped around looking at different facilities, interviewing their staff, sniffing around hallways for that horrible pee smell, trying again and again to convince these places to take Mom as a new resident even though she was Medicaid pending (a term I loathe and will fill me with dread every time I hear it for the remainder of my days). We finally found a place for Mom, her spot totaling 50 square feet (I am not kidding).

Advice to you from T-Bone:

Never get sick, never get old, and never run out of retirement money, especially all at the same time. You will find yourself in a Kafka-esque parallel universe where you will be asked for hundreds of tiny, seemingly insignificant receipts from Walgreens, five year old cancelled checks, bank statements, tax returns, deeds for sale of property, etc., etc. You will be on a weird schedule for paperwork submittal that makes absolutely no sense. No matter what you submit, it will be wrong and they will need more information. You will be told different things each time you call Medicaid and depending on the person you talk to, those different things you are told will increase exponentially with each phone call and each meeting.

While you are doing this, you will attempt to go through your parent's things deciding which items go with her, which items will be donated, which items will be thrown out, and which items will go into storage. You will realize your parent has more clothes than you thought she did, and in an effort to pare down the wardrobe, you will bring the items from her closet one by one for her decision to throw out, keep, donate, etc. She will whisper, "Keep it" to every single item except three shirts, and you will be frustrated. "Mom," you will say, "You can't take all of these things. There's no room!" and she will respond, "I don't care. I want to take it." You will then schedule a nighttime raid with your sister to go to Mom's after she's in her new place and divide stuff up yourself!

Here is where I thank The Redhead for her perserverance and tenacity while spearheading this operation for Mom's benefit. It seriously rivalled the landing at Normandy. Thank you, Redhead.

So Mom's in her place now, and she was finally Medicaid approved.

Length of time for this event: about three months.

So, I have some other stuff to share, but that's another post. You'll hear from me soon, dear readers. Thanks for checking back.

Saturday, January 03, 2009

Resolutions.

From Craigslist (spelling, punctuation and screaming font all copied directly from ad):

AM STILL TRYING TO FIND MS. RIGHT FOR ME!!! I WANT TO LET ALL LADIES KNOW THAT AM A "BIG" OR "FAT" OR "OBESE" MAN, WHICHEVER IT IS!!! IF U DONT LIKE MEN IN THIS CATEGORY THAN THATS UR CHOICE!!! I DONT JUDGE PPL, BUT PPL JUDGE ME FOR MY WEIGHT, THE WORLD CAN BE SO CRUEL!!!! AM JUST LOOKING FOR A CARING LADY THAT IS A NON SMOKER AND WANTS A BIG MAN AND WILL LOVE ME FOR ME & NOT JUDGE ME!! PLEASE, PROVE ME WRONG BY SHOWING ME THAT THERE ARE STILL SOME CARING LADIES IN THIS WORLD!!! AM NOT RULING OUT LOSING WEIGHT BECAUSE I TRULY DO WANT TO GET HEALTHY AND LOSE WEIGHT, BUT RIGHT NOW I AM WHO I AM!!! I NEED A GOOD WOMAN TO LOVE ME AND HELP ME GET OUT OF ISOLATION!!! LET'S BRING IN THE NEW YEAR'S TOGETHER!!! IF SERIOUSLY INTERESTED, PLEASE EMAIL!!!

Good luck, Jim. Seriously. I am not trying to be facetious, nor am I being sarcastic in saying that I do sincerely hope you find that girl who will love you just as you are.

But Jim, may I please give you a bit of advice in your search for your lady?

Please don't ask that she love you just as you are, then stipulate what you require from her, i.e., that she be a non-smoker.

Because if you find someone who loves you just as you are, then... she's gonna love you "fat" or "obese". Please don't say you won't "rule out" losing weight. You want someone who'll love you when you're fat and she'll also love you when you get in shape.

What you're asking for in your ad just doesn't make sense, Jim.

Pot? Kettle.

Thursday, September 25, 2008

The Eulogy.

Ed delivered the eulogy. His bright blue eyes peered at the mourners over his reading glasses.



"Everyone here today is asking themselves, 'Why?'



"When I was in college, I had a professor that challenged us to take a glass and fill it with water. Try to hold that glass straight out in front of you for twenty minutes. It's hard, isn't it? Try holding it in front of you for an hour. For a day. It gets harder and harder, and sometimes, it's just impossible to hold it there.



"Now, take that same glass of water and hold it out in front of you for five minutes. When it gets too heavy, put it down. Rest for awhile, then pick it back up. You can hold the glass of water again for five minutes. It's too heavy? Put it down again. You'll find that you can hold that glass of water out in front of you for as long as you want, as long as you put it down when you get too tired. You'll always be able to pick it back up and hold it again.



"It's the same with problems that life hands to you. Don't carry those problems with you all the time. Just put them down when you can't hold them anymore. Pick them up again when you can.



"There isn't a person here today who isn't asking themselves 'why?'. There isn't anyone here who could have said something, done anything, to stop what Brad did Monday morning. But I can tell you, here today, if it gets so bad, if it gets so hard, just put it down the glass for awhile. Pick it up again after you feel strong enough to do so.



"For us who are left behind, you know that life has great sorrows.



"I'll remind you, though, that life also holds great happiness. Do not lose sight of that."



He sighed deeply and said:



"Happiness and good things... well, folks, they just have a way of dropping out of the sky."

Sunday, September 21, 2008

Sunday Nights.

On Sunday evenings, fresh out of the bath and in my nightgown, I'd saunter down to the basement and to Dad, who was usually hunched over his drafting table, measuring, drawing lines, writing meticulously on plans, whistling to music on the radio. A cigarette burned in the ashtray and a cup of tepid coffee was at arm's reach. I'd hover next to him and watch him work, hypnotized by his confidence and flair while working on drawings. He bristled with energy.

"You brush your teeth?" he'd ask without looking at me.

"Yeeeesssssss," I'd answer, sometimes lying, sometimes not.

He'd place his pencil on the table, turn to me and say, "Let's see."

I'd pull my lips back over my teeth, a rictus, and Dad would grip my chin firmly. With his thumbnail, he'd scrape my teeth and inspect his thumbnail. "Very good," he'd say, turning back to the drawing board. "Did you finish your homework?"

"Yeeeeessssss," I'd answer, dreading what came next.

He'd stand up and stomp up the stairs to the kitchen. I followed after him, bracing myself for the inspection. He'd sit down at the table and shuffle my papers, looking over my homework. I was always amazed at the speed with which he checked my work, which seemed so hard to me. He would grab a pencil and check the incorrect answers with a big, sharp checkmark that indented paper three pages underneath.

"Do those again," he'd order, and stomp downstairs.

I'd do them again.

Stomp, stomp, stomp. Shuffle, shuffle. "Okay. This looks good, except for the math. See this, this and this-- they're still wrong."

"Daaaaaaaad--"

"Just do it. I'll stay here while you do."

He'd get up from the table, wander into another room or get a glass of water. He'd smoke. He'd pace. Minutes would pass while pressure built in my head, struggling to line up neat columns of numbers, nervous he'd catch me counting on my fingers. He'd stand behind my chair, arms stretched out on either side of my head, his palms pressed to the table. I could hear him breathing loudly through his nose. I was trapped under his blue gaze, adding numbers slowly, uncertainly, my writing shaky and sloppy and the paper bruised with the smeared erasures that had scrubbed the paper thin.

"Okay. That's good," he'd say, "But you need to recopy it. It needs to look neat."

"Daaaaaaaaad--"

"Just do it. I'll stay here while you do."