tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16832633205773369612024-03-12T21:26:03.923-04:00The ImperfectionistAlways never quite right.Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00071814380520488326noreply@blogger.comBlogger71125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1683263320577336961.post-29964553066647627452015-03-11T16:37:00.000-04:002015-03-12T11:33:56.439-04:00Saying Goodbye<span style="-webkit-composition-fill-color: rgba(130, 98, 83, 0.0980392); color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.701961); font-family: UICTFontTextStyleBody; font-size: 17px; text-decoration: -webkit-letterpress;">I went to the old Galbraith family house today for the very last time. Tomorrow it will belong to another family, ready to begin new memories and traditions.</span><br />
I thought I came to say goodbye to Mom, as she was the last to truly live in the house. But it was Dad to whom I ended up saying hello again. Upon going into the house, I immediately went to our parent's bedroom. I found a Mother's Day card beneath a drawer in their old dresser. The signature was clearly Dad's writing: "From your girls." He was not one to mince words.<br />
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I now wonder what led me to pull out that drawer in its entirety and find such a lovely albeit terse memento.<br />
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I also found a note pad with Dad's scratchings from a newspaper puzzle that we would race to figure out each morning before he went off to work and I to school.<br />
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Such a trivial thing, but such a shock to be given a piece of our past so cherished and brought immediately to the present.<br />
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Finally, in the basement by his impeccably organized workbench, a slip of paper fell to the ground when I opened a drawer labeled "chisels." It was a receipt from a hardware store for the paint we used to paint my old bedroom.<br />
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It was the last project he and I worked on together, as he died not a full five months after the date on the receipt. There are still spots on the ceiling where my roller hit with wall paint. Drove him nuts.<br />
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After my discoveries, I let down my guard and saw the house again as I saw it when I was a child. The giant beech tree outside my sister's and my bedroom window, the one that gave beautiful shade and beech nuts that would fall into our pool and inevitably clog the filter. The snow covering the section of our yard that, summer after summer, was home to our dad's vegetable garden. The dread of having to help him turn over the earth for that garden every spring. The bathroom sink my mom would fill when I was no older than three, to let me play in the water: "puddling" was her word for it.<br />
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So much of this was an unexpected surprise, an uncovering of raw emotion. I had only driven down to pick up a few last relics of our lives there. I think the house and it's ghosts wanted to reminisce. I'm glad I took the time to listen. </div>
Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00071814380520488326noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1683263320577336961.post-72125594251748421312015-01-01T13:30:00.000-05:002015-01-01T13:35:27.469-05:00For My SistersAh, how the proverbial Time flies. It has been over a year since my last entry and life around our house has changed and has stayed the same all at once.<br />
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[Warning: Sappiness ahead]<br />
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The biggest change: I lost my mother back in June. She battled her sickness for a long time, almost five years, and when her final moment came, it came quickly. My sister Laura was with her down in our little hometown in Connecticut, and then minutes later, my sister Marianne was there as well. It was the early hours of the morning when Laura called me in Massachusetts and our sister, Sharon, down in Georgia to give the news. </div>
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It was at that moment that we were a family more than we had ever been before. Because while we were parentless for the first time, our father having died back in 1991, we had each other. </div>
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This was big. Very big. Because four sisters growing up in one family, all with individual personalities but all raised to be independent, intelligent, and strong, are bound to have differences if not all out warfare. Which did happen growing up. And still does happen, even today, when we discernibly love each other, but are still susceptible to becoming pissed off at one another, because we are human. But no matter how far apart we drift, the DNA we share will continually bring us back. </div>
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And so, this is my sisterly love letter to Marianne, Laura, and Sharon. My sisters. May the new year clear our hearts of the sadness that is loss. And may we always understand and love each other, even when we don't. You know what I mean. </div>
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Happy New Year, everyone. And peace.</div>
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Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00071814380520488326noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1683263320577336961.post-10894563471018402982013-11-08T10:20:00.001-05:002013-11-08T10:20:59.368-05:00We Are THIS CLOSE to Becoming Known as "That Crazy Family" in TownThis is a warning to all you FaceTime users. Take note: it is not a pretty story.<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;"><em>Proceed with caution.</em></td></tr>
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It all began yesterday on a drive home from my son, Alex's, doctor's appointment. Normally I can't get any kind of information out of him, but I had him trapped in my car (another miracle since he got his driver's license). And so we had a great chat, discussing world news topics, what's going on at school, things he has seen recently that he thinks are hilarious. And then he came out with this, which I think is <strong>damned </strong>hilarious:<br />
<br />
"Hey--last weekend Fred* wanted me to answer my phone, so he FaceTimed me. But <strong><em>Dad</em></strong> answered and he was only wearing a towel. And Dad was making one of those faces like he was some old guy who had no clue what he was doing. Fred was so freaked out he hung up. What's up with <strong>that</strong>?"<br />
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I practically had to pull off the road because my eyes were filled with tears from laughing so hard. We needed to get to the bottom of this<em>. Pronto.</em><br />
<em></em><br />
When Jay got home, our son was out, but I couldn't wait until he was back to spring this gem on Jay. The conversation went like this: <br />
<br />
Me: "Did you <em>know</em> that you answered a FaceTime last weekend from Fred and <strong>you were only wearing a towel</strong>?!!!"<br />
Jay: "HARHARHARHAR *SNORT* GUFFAW! OMIGOD!! I thought that was a text from Jason! My phone rang and I was just getting out of the shower when I answered it--I couldn't figure out what was going on!" <em>[Apparently he did not wear his readers into the shower]</em><br />
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Mind you, no embarrassment whatsoever. <br />
<br />
He explained that he totally screwed up his phone the last time he downloaded an iOS update, and now occasionally gets things obviously not meant for him sent his way. <br />
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Poor Fred. That kid will <strong>never, ever </strong>FaceTime Alex again. And I warn the rest of you: shield your eyes partially if you ever try to do the same. You just never know...<br />
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*<em>The subject's name has been changed to protect him from...well, you know.</em><br />
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Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00071814380520488326noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1683263320577336961.post-26252812040026419022013-10-29T13:41:00.000-04:002013-10-29T13:41:34.119-04:00Who Needs Enemies When You Have a Morning Like This?!It has been so many, many moons since I have last written. But this morning was a humdinger and after only two events I realized I needed to share, if only to give a laugh to someone or help another realize that life is good...especially if you're not Joanne.<br />
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The day started not that badly. The dogs let me sleep until my alarm went off, which isn't an all-the-time kind of thing. The kids got off to school without a hitch and Jay left for work without driving me nuts about why the upstairs office is such a mess, why there is only a 1/2 cup of coffee left in the pot, or how much he loves skiing and he wants to do it RIGHT NOW. THIS VERY INSTANT. <br />
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It was all good.<br />
<br />
<em>[Children take heed: The following is what happens when you: 1) Stop going to the dentist regularly once you are out from under your parents' protective wings and into the big, wide world of adulthood; 2) Ignore the</em> <em>dentist (once you <strong>do </strong>go) when they tell you that you have a cavity that needs to be taken care of.]</em><br />
<em> </em><br />
So after an uneventful early morning, my trip to the dentist happened. I had a toothache. In my experience, the less a dentist looks at your teeth, the worse the prognosis. And so it was. I heard the ominous words (cue the dramatic music), <strong>"This tooth cannot be saved."</strong> I knew the end of my business with regular dentistry, at least for now, was nigh. Onto the oral surgeon! Implants and bridgework galore! <em><strong>Groan</strong>. </em>I left the office feeling humbled, not because they were mean to me--actually the entire staff at my dentist's office is lovely--but that I was such an idiot to ignore one of the most basic things in life: Teeth!<br />
<em>(By the way, I know my very best friend of all time, Laleh, who is <strong>all about going to the dentist regularly</strong>, may actually be comatose right now, simply from the sheer trauma of reading this (that is, </em><strong>if</strong> <em>she has read this!).</em> <br />
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After such fun (<strong><em>such FUN</em></strong>), I felt the need for some retail therapy, if you count grocery shopping as such. I did my trip through the store, completely distracted by the fearful daydream of dentures, paid and left. As I was walking toward my car, I unlocked the doors, not really paying much attention to what I was doing. Once at my car, I opened the back door, and there you go, Bob's your uncle: the alarm went off. <strong>Loudly</strong>.<br />
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My thought process kicked in...finally:<br />
<br />
"WHY IS MY ALARM GOING OFF?"<br />
"WHY ARE ALL OF THESE PEOPLE STARING AT ME LIKE THAT?"<br />
"WHY CAN'T I SHUT IT OFF WITH MY REMOTE?"<br />
"I DIDN'T KNOW MY ALARM SOUNDED LIKE THAT"<br />
"I'LL OPEN THE FRONT DOOR AND START THE CAR TO STOP THIS DAMNED NOISE!"<br />
"<strong>HOW DID I GET THAT DENT IN MY FRONT DOOR?!!!!</strong>"<br />
"oh. wait. this is not my car."<br />
"STOP LOOKING AT ME, ALL OF YOU JERKS. I'M NOT STEALING THIS CAR. HAVEN'T YOU EVER BEEN DISTRACTED BY THE FEAR OF LOSING ALL OF YOUR TEETH?"<br />
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And then I got my butt out of there before the cops showed up. This is not the first time I have done something like this, I remind you. This was me, too: <a href="http://theimperfectionist23.blogspot.com/2012/04/warning-lock-your-car-doors-here-i-come.html">http://theimperfectionist23.blogspot.com/2012/04/warning-lock-your-car-doors-here-i-come.html</a><br />
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I am now home, waiting for something else just as fun to happen this afternoon. But in the meantime, even with my morning turning out the way it did, how can I not be happy when today looks like this? <br />
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And so, my long-winded message is this: find some good in today, even if everything is seemingly awful. It can help you laugh at the crappy stuff, and who isn't up for that?!<br />
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<strong></strong>Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00071814380520488326noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1683263320577336961.post-35673286777245409262013-04-25T10:43:00.002-04:002013-04-25T10:43:57.860-04:00Yes, I Have Mirrors in My House. What of It?An old errant habit resurfaced this morning, <em>viz.</em> not checking my look before I leave the house. After I had dropped the kids off at school, I decided to stop by the grocery store to pick up some noshes to keep book club satisfied tomorrow night, and then on to that Shangri-la we all know as Walmart to get Janie a white t-shirt, which she informed me (last night) she <strong><em>had to have </em></strong>by today. <br />
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Mind you, I am not the type to get all duded-up to drop the kids off at school, so I was less than public-ready when I started my rounds. This fact only occurred to me as I was walking into Walmart and caught my reflection in the sliding glass door. My sweater was rumpled and the jeans I was wearing were so baggy that the crotch was hanging out just above my knees, giving my legs a nice, stout, Oompa-loompa look. The look was finished of by a pair of beat-up Ugg <strong>slippers </strong>(not even actual shoes/boots), lending a quality of super-sized, gout-ridden feet. So pretty.<br />
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I bee-lined through the store, grabbed what I needed, paid, and booked it the hell out of there. Back in my car I winced as I caught a glimpse of myself in the rear-view mirror. No make-up, hair finger-raked at best. I was (OK, I'll admit it: I <strong>still </strong>am) rocking an awesome haggard and haggish (i.e. looking like a witch, not to be confused with the Scottish offal delicacy) vibe. <br />
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And to think that as a child I was embarrassed when my mother would wear her around-the-house CVO's in public. I've got it <em>all over </em>her.<br />
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I'll never learn. It will happen again. And I bet this makes <strong>lots </strong>of people feel better about their own look they're rocking today.Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00071814380520488326noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1683263320577336961.post-67834117646148674752013-04-24T18:12:00.001-04:002013-04-24T18:12:49.836-04:00Teeth Brushing MusingsAs I was brushing my teeth this morning, I was thinking about lots of things that, for me, have brightened the last couple of weeks. Even in the darkest moments, it's nice to be able to smile, even if it is for a brief moment. It helps you realize that there's always a bit of good out there.<br />
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Here are a few things that I'm grateful for (to my family and friends--forgive me--you guys are a given):<br />
<ul>
<li>Anything written by P. G. Wodehouse. In addition to every story being light and frivolous, reading his work makes you want to say things like, "Right-ho!" and "Jolly good!"</li>
<li>Pansies, forsythia, and anything blooming after such a bleak and snowy winter.</li>
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<ul>
<li>How our small community has embraced helping out one of its own, Taylor Sack. Taylor is a high school student here in our small Massachusetts town and suffered an injury to his spinal cord in a skiing accident back in February. People here have done everything from organizing fundraisers to helping Taylor's family remodel their house so it will be a better living space for him once he arrives home. One of Taylor's fellow classmates made a video for him to see how the work is coming along: <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t1knd-q0Gjw">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t1knd-q0Gjw</a> The outpouring of love is just amazing. Makes you believe in humanity. <em>[cue me sobbing uncontrollably]</em> Here's a little more of Taylor's story: <a href="http://www.taylorsack.org/">http://www.taylorsack.org/</a> . </li>
<li>The announcement of a new venture for a great musician, Tim Shiel. He has begun recording with another talented artist, Ben Abraham, and together they are named <strong>Telling</strong>. Here is their first creation made available for our ears: <a href="https://soundcloud.com/#tellingmusic/stella">https://soundcloud.com/#tellingmusic/stella</a> Love it. I can't tire of it, and I'm looking forward to hearing lots more. </li>
<li>Peanut Butter and Jelly as <em>the </em>flavor trend of the moment. Salted caramel is so yesterday. And what a great excuse to indulge in my all-time favorite combo, while staying in vogue.</li>
</ul>
Maybe one of these things will bring smiles to others, too. Maybe not. I just hope everyone can find something, anything to bring on a little joy. Good luck to all finding your own bit of sunshine.<br />
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Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00071814380520488326noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1683263320577336961.post-50643928610807429842013-04-16T17:01:00.001-04:002013-04-16T17:11:14.014-04:00How Sloshed Paint Became My Madeleines (à la Proust)After getting a dose of today's morning news, I, like so many other people in the Boston area as well as nationwide needed an escape. I did not want to minimize the horrifying course of events that happened at yesterday's Boston Marathon, but was in dire need of a mental escape if only for a few hours. <br />
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What to do? Exercise? Yard work? Bake? Binge stress eat? While the thought of a chimichanga washed down with a pint of Ben & Jerry's at 9:00 AM sounded quite appealing, I turned to the mindless and yet cathartic task of repainting all of the white trim in the main downstairs section of our house. <br />
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Supplies gathered, I began to prep the paint. As I was stirring it, some sloshed over the side of the can. Automatically, I grabbed my paintbrush and brushed the excess paint up the side and over the rim back into the can. And <em>voilà, </em>a Proustian moment emerged. I was transported back in time to my early teens, on a bleak Saturday in late winter/early spring. I was helping my dad paint a room. I was often dragged into such projects when he was forced to take on menial chores during the winter months that did not permit him to be out in his gardens, puttering endlessly. My present-day self clearly remembered him showing me how to hold the brush and drag any excess paint back up into the can, just as I had done not a few seconds ago. <br />
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Back in my kitchen as I worked on the trim, my brush strokes brought back different memories of other techniques he had taught me, though now I take them for granted as if they were an innate part of me. Things like giving the brush a wiggle when the bristles aren't moving where you want them to. Or how to remove a lone bristle from a wet painted surface with the tip of your brush. Or how to fan your fingers across the ferrule to get better control. How to paint with confidence.<br />
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And he was suddenly here with me, giving me comfort on a day when we all could use some.<br />
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Cleaning up, I mused at how, when teaching me his painting tricks, he probably never thought they'd resurface in my adult mind some thirty-odd years later. I'm sure to him, they were just ways to make the job easier. But for me they resulted in a fond and nostalgic memory. <br />
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He's been gone from this life now for twenty-two years, and yet because of a rainy afternoon of painting so long ago, he was here today. The small, insignificant things we do can touch lives just as much as the eventful, grandiose ones. Let's hope we all give a warm memory to someone when we don't even realize we're doing it. You never know. You may have already done it many times.<br />
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And finally, on a lighter note:<br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhcmN9hODN6CSDk6cnCSnTzWwhMT3K43d79eyxDEOhzoztN2GqRkBSP0ObwNqyzUkDt6XsjIgNr4fJ2MNxPV9WIGX0nS7fW8UfiFSd6hCUpILrvuRhggWvJT1orouJdreq15G2_Ublc5lod/s1600/photo+(44).JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhcmN9hODN6CSDk6cnCSnTzWwhMT3K43d79eyxDEOhzoztN2GqRkBSP0ObwNqyzUkDt6XsjIgNr4fJ2MNxPV9WIGX0nS7fW8UfiFSd6hCUpILrvuRhggWvJT1orouJdreq15G2_Ublc5lod/s320/photo+(44).JPG" width="240" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Guess who helped paint today?</td></tr>
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Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00071814380520488326noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1683263320577336961.post-90885748762062087802013-04-16T08:46:00.001-04:002013-04-16T08:46:36.717-04:00Speechless My heart cries for all of those who were affected by yesterday's atrocities. <br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjY_QW6Nhh_esikA6qCk8PudhBO0Hm6casRe4l58qlftZCFfZ2_ShR9h7tVf2atJfBgn5z7a5n5qJu4Rt-1vajOJ3lvCE2NduZkld4VHyn7xgcEZBHLHVYa39PUpiq7a_xghx_Qb0P09eUr/s1600/1280-boston-ma-smart-city.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="180" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjY_QW6Nhh_esikA6qCk8PudhBO0Hm6casRe4l58qlftZCFfZ2_ShR9h7tVf2atJfBgn5z7a5n5qJu4Rt-1vajOJ3lvCE2NduZkld4VHyn7xgcEZBHLHVYa39PUpiq7a_xghx_Qb0P09eUr/s320/1280-boston-ma-smart-city.jpg" width="320" /></a></div>
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You will always be a beautiful city, Boston. No single act will change that. Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00071814380520488326noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1683263320577336961.post-45186460109641440682013-04-10T12:53:00.001-04:002013-04-10T13:45:43.048-04:00Confessions of a Hair SpazI am a hair abuser. I have subjected myself to more home color treatments and hair "trims" than I'd care to admit. You'd think I'd learn. But I committed another no-no just this week.<br />
<br />
Turn the clocks back in time:<br />
<br />
It all started when I was eight with a full-on epidemic of hair loathing. My towheaded curls had darkened into a mass of thick, unruly, mouse-brown frizz in the course of a winter. No amount of sun during the next summer could ever lighten that sad color. I was fated to have hair of mediocrity for what seemed like the rest of my existence.<br />
<br />
Cut to the summer I turned seventeen. My sister, Sharon, convinced me that it would look awesome if I frosted my hair (this was the early 80's, mind you). If I remember correctly, she had never tried this on anybody else, not even herself. I was her maiden voyage into the world of DIY hair alteration. She <em>was </em>a nurse, after all, so who better to trust? The result was not quite what either of us expected, as she went kind of heavy on the strands at my temples and I looked like a frosted version of the Bride of Frankenstein: The Teen Years. I think the span of time after that debacle has been psychologically buried in a post-traumatic amnesia kind of way, since I can't remember how we dealt with the results. I think I may have just resorted to looking stripey for a long time. <br />
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Oddly, even with the results of my first hair-altering experience, I kept experimenting. And through my late teens to early twenties, lots of different colors sprouted from my scalp, none ever close to my natural color. And all done in the confines of my own bathroom-salon. <br />
<br />
I went through a good, long span of time after that when I would only have my hair colored/highlighted professionally. That was good. My follicles needed time to regroup after being abused by ammonia every six weeks. But then with pregnancy and babies came very little time spent doing anything for myself, and also the definite banning of all hair coloring. My mouse-brown came back with vengeance. Oh, the glory of blah-ness. Eventually I welcomed L'Oreal back into my routine because there was no time to get to the hair salon. The worst was when our son was only a year old and I decided to give my look a boost. I was going to go platinum. As I was rinsing my hair in the shower after keeping the bleach on for what seemed like five hours, images of gorgeous blond locks played in my head. Jay walked in, caught a glimpse of me and started laughing uncontrollably. <br />
<br />
"WHAT?!!" I bellowed. <br />
<br />
"You look like a clown!" he spat out, in between choked-back tears of laughter.<br />
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It was true, my hair had turned bright orange. That was a baseball cap day until I could get to the drugstore for some emergency supplies. Ironically, that wouldn't be until later, because we were meeting my hair-frosting sister and her husband for brunch in only a couple of hours.<br />
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I could go on with tales of mortifying hair blunders, but I will stop for surely the reader has gotten the idea that I would have learned by now that such enterprises should be left to the professionals. Deep down, I know this. But there are moments when the anti-social me really needs a root touch-up and has no desire to spend two hours making chit-chat with a person with whom I am only fairly acquainted. That was me earlier this week. And so this was guiltily purchased:<br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhpw30grJYGZetlhsnmK9HGBf0jF1pItZbfqYkXZPBS5llH_i_gHecLQc_Sy9CrCzp4UJTBv_7pR5gJ2TxWO_yZ3JfmDJVqcZ5JYGwE1Wj2lT877FtioAt_5epcImDMt4TihDEdhH18L2jX/s1600/photo+(43).JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhpw30grJYGZetlhsnmK9HGBf0jF1pItZbfqYkXZPBS5llH_i_gHecLQc_Sy9CrCzp4UJTBv_7pR5gJ2TxWO_yZ3JfmDJVqcZ5JYGwE1Wj2lT877FtioAt_5epcImDMt4TihDEdhH18L2jX/s320/photo+(43).JPG" width="240" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">When will I learn?</td></tr>
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"It's only for a quick touch-up," I reasoned to myself.<br />
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As I was applying the stuff to my scalp, I caught myself wondering when the day was going to be when I go to rinse this goop out and all of my hair falls off with it. Coincidentally, as I was rinsing my hair, a rather large hunk of blond was left in my hand after running it through. Uh oh. I am now waiting to see if more keeps coming out. Hopefully not. But if you happen to see me looking rather stylish in the latest millinery, you'll know why. And maybe I will have learned my lesson. Finally.Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00071814380520488326noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1683263320577336961.post-44848620693206342632013-04-07T12:25:00.000-04:002013-04-07T12:25:35.472-04:00Who's Been Writing On My Calendar?In our house, we all know that the calendar on our fridge is my domain. My life source. I am the chief writer and recorder of all upcoming events and obligations, and the only one who really uses it to check what's on the weekly docket. I've even got fine-point Sharpies in every color imaginable to make such dull work tolerable (I just reread this sentence and realize now how sad my life sounds...and, at times, is). That is, if they aren't dried up, or stolen from their "secret" hiding place.<br />
<br />
I'm always befuddled by the fact that nobody else has the capacity to go straight to the calendar when enquiring about a date or time of a game/meet/appointment until I direct them to said organizational instrument. Probably my fault for being up-to-date with the answers to every one's questions rather than answering with a vapid, "Dunno. Go check the calendar." Consequently, there <em>is</em> the drawback of me being the first-blamed if any game/meet/appointment is missed, if it happens to <em>not </em>be written down.<br />
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Sometimes Jay or one of the kids will write something down if it is of great importance to them, usually without letting me know about the event (unless it's a birthday or other deal, where I'm expected to deliver in a big way). Today I noticed such a thing, though I don't think anything is expected of me...hopefully. It was this, written in Green Sharpie: <br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjcpC1AwJV5qGiwFtaZWvFzNAr_2W5eJMnTTONxWHxXgBJYqpjMLoJbD_WLqdnFvjTae18-ATFQTTNgZQCV2k7EAcKJy1wsTS3b4q5-tDEDyW62NE4XrARGIh7Or4t_QTXruih7FZXUx_Py/s1600/photo+(42).JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjcpC1AwJV5qGiwFtaZWvFzNAr_2W5eJMnTTONxWHxXgBJYqpjMLoJbD_WLqdnFvjTae18-ATFQTTNgZQCV2k7EAcKJy1wsTS3b4q5-tDEDyW62NE4XrARGIh7Or4t_QTXruih7FZXUx_Py/s320/photo+(42).JPG" width="240" /></a></div>
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First: I didn't have my bulgy-eyed-look-inducing readers on, so I couldn't quite make out what these apparent hieroglyphs meant. I <em>could</em> decipher that Janie's name was involved, but what evidently was a time looked to me like a chef's hat or sideways muffin. Seriously. My eyes are that bad. What I did know was that this was Jay's writing. What I didn't know was why he was writing down that Janie was doing some sort of cooking thing on Thursday. And since when did he start getting creative and using rebuses to get his message out there? I finally realized what it meant after rooting around the kitchen for ten minutes, looking for my readers. <br />
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As I write, I don't really know what my point of this post is today, other than sometimes the littlest things can throw you off and ultimately give you a good chortle (love that word, <em>chortle</em>). And I'm still not sure what Janie is supposed to be doing on Thursday at 6:30. Here's hoping you have a good week, and get to where you need to be without too many mysteries.Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00071814380520488326noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1683263320577336961.post-76109588747591950402013-03-26T15:40:00.001-04:002013-03-26T15:40:22.835-04:00Move Over, Shirtless Running Guy!I've been trying to get some new shots of Shirtless Running Guy for the spring season. I think he's got new shorts and running shoes to show off. Unfortunately, he's being elusive. Nothing surprising, and I <strong>will</strong> prevail.<br />
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In the meantime, somebody new has emerged, piquing my interest. It is <em><strong>Purple-Hooded-Cape Dude</strong>.</em> I have seen him walking down my street a total of three times now. I have to say, for small-town Massachusetts, donning what appears to be a velvet purple hooded cape is making a pretty bold fashion statement. Good for him (I'm pretty sure this person's male--if not, sorry lady, I thought I saw a beard).<br />
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Today he walked past my house and drove the dogs into a manic, foaming-at-the-mouth frenzy. Immediately I jumped into action. With camera (well, actually phone, as my camera battery is deader than dead) in hand, I furtively moved through my back yard, pretending to search for dog bits to scoop. He had stopped and was crouched, his back to me, searching through a bag in front of my neighbor's house. I stood behind the cover our shed, peeking around the corner, waiting for him to be on his way so I could get a full shot of him in all his purple glory. As he got up and headed off, I ran to the other side of the shed, rushing toward our fence and the mass of sharp brambles ensconcing it. I got as close as possible, shoving my camera through the thicket while simultaneously shredding my arms (because shirt makers don't make sleeves long enough or I have freakishly long arms). And all I got was this:<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhqLQvutHyjxoNfLrLVNbRN4otOPcr_L0IUTGOb0aDDkVi5jwzDrls8EHOC7LXhplguOlT9O0kpMSnHghLyl74ch4HBe-B-xIXKfhsj1BoLAmC5e_Q_0e0GD_xzw7dyuSrJSQZydf_tHbJ6/s1600/photo+(41).JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhqLQvutHyjxoNfLrLVNbRN4otOPcr_L0IUTGOb0aDDkVi5jwzDrls8EHOC7LXhplguOlT9O0kpMSnHghLyl74ch4HBe-B-xIXKfhsj1BoLAmC5e_Q_0e0GD_xzw7dyuSrJSQZydf_tHbJ6/s320/photo+(41).JPG" width="266" /></a></div>
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Curses! A big, fat nothing. Makes him all the more intriguing, no? So now I have a new subject for my covert photography. If you're from my town and know this mystery person, let me know. I'll say hi and introduce myself. Maybe he'll let me take a proper picture to post. Otherwise, the pursuit<br />
continues.Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00071814380520488326noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1683263320577336961.post-46372150990731438112013-03-20T10:17:00.000-04:002013-03-20T10:17:09.318-04:00Nasty Stuff!I have to warn all gentle readers that my post today is going to be gross. Some may label the following as TMI, and with good reason, but some things are too nasty to keep to one's self. Best to get that out of the way right now rather than have folks ticked off at the stuff I am about to write. <br />
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Onward.<br />
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You know that side of us we <strong>all</strong> have, the one where we are secretly (for me not so secret after writing today) intrigued by super-gross stuff? Like how I couldn't stop scrutinizing the <strong>humongous </strong>hunk of earwax that unexpectedly fell from the depths of my ear canal the other night. It was like nothing I had ever seen before. Freak show stature. And I have no idea where it came from (besides the vicinity of my inner ear). Remember, I warned you. Anyway, even if it is the remotest bit of our personalities, there is a bit of us that is attracted to the grotesque like moths to a porch light. <br />
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So...now on to the true subject of today's musings. We have had a big mystery going on in our house. Our ski gear basket has had a funky odor emanating from it. Looks pretty innocent, doesn't it?<br />
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The smell, which kept getting worse daily, was heinous. I try to keep up on things, and believed the odor couldn't possibly be due to something slipping by me. And so, every time Jay reached for a hat, gloves, or anything else looming deep down in there, he would make a face like he was going to lose his lunch and exclaim with increasing vehemence, "SOMETHING DIED IN THERE!" To which I would reply with equal gusto, "NO, THE SMELL IS BECAUSE YOU KEEP PUTTING WET STUFF IN THERE!" Which even he could not dispute, because he is totally guilty of said act, as are our kids. I thought I had found the culprit, a hat which reeked of the telltale odor: <br />
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Alas, even after removing the hat, the smell remained. <br />
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Finally, last night, our daughter, Janie, was getting ready for a soccer game and pulled from the basket her very well-hidden string bag: <br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiCb2aFaE7XX-G13IIpSnvAkspM4DVJt8Jcs6k6L3510rHIIceki1nDAJ5xZXbLSJpsotd-mf1uXPct4gc5kJEpQvErbdZ3m1V7N-erlIIV1oO874u6Ff6YVlSNBIrmQeOAg-W0m3esXFW4/s1600/gross+lunch+2.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiCb2aFaE7XX-G13IIpSnvAkspM4DVJt8Jcs6k6L3510rHIIceki1nDAJ5xZXbLSJpsotd-mf1uXPct4gc5kJEpQvErbdZ3m1V7N-erlIIV1oO874u6Ff6YVlSNBIrmQeOAg-W0m3esXFW4/s320/gross+lunch+2.jpg" width="240" /></a></div>
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(I need to mention that this basket is <strong>deeeeep</strong>.) <strong> Lo and behold, joy of joys, the gut-wrenching mystery odor bloomed to its full, head-on, knock-your-socks-off, beastly stench-of-all-stenches!</strong> BUT! The mystery was not completely solved, for, what was inside the string bag that caused it to erupt such a foul stink? Aha!! It was <strong>THIS</strong>:<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEghYBSd5HE0KNN8sdUl3cMxrfb-pS_rCalU5UJJ3k1eQZp8jYQ-ouwEUTY8nB1o5baH996BL7bOrIpd9p4A_fWprpBPJoQ6kQR2rU95lx_BWbHHPvLmH4MkrZiClbbPudj7CFhcC7Ex4pZo/s1600/gross+lunch+3.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEghYBSd5HE0KNN8sdUl3cMxrfb-pS_rCalU5UJJ3k1eQZp8jYQ-ouwEUTY8nB1o5baH996BL7bOrIpd9p4A_fWprpBPJoQ6kQR2rU95lx_BWbHHPvLmH4MkrZiClbbPudj7CFhcC7Ex4pZo/s320/gross+lunch+3.jpg" width="240" /></a></div>
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Pretty. Neoprene lunch bags may hold in liquids quite well, but grandly let polluted air escape. The end of the mystery? No, for the best was still to come. Janie, with much repugnance thrust the lunch bag at me. Gingerly, I unzipped the wretched thing, to discover <strong>THIS </strong>(hold on to your hats, and other things):<br />
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Ah, the culprit. A liquefied one-time solid, festering in the dark, warm innards of many layers of synthetic fabrics. I do believe it was once a sandwich. And I know for a fact that it had been thriving in there since she brought the bag home from a day-long soccer reffing class which she attended back on February 16th. That's a over a full month of break-down time. Scrumptious. <br />
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Mystery finally solved. And it is not Jay's fault for dumping wet ski accessories, nor a dead something-or-other. Simply the fact that our daughter refuses (like any teen kid) to empty her gear bags out at the end of the day. <br />
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As for the gross factor, the liquid-filled baggie is up there on the "It's Like Watching a Train Wreck" list of stuff I have to take pictures of and marvel at (be happy I didn't take a pic of my ear wax clump). And kudos to the makers of zip-lock bags. If it weren't for them, this could have been a <strong>lot</strong> worse.<br />
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<em>In memory of Dana Fields. You touched our lives in so many lovely ways, you wonderful woman, you</em>.<br />
<h4>
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Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00071814380520488326noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1683263320577336961.post-83638984993849025342013-01-30T12:50:00.000-05:002013-01-30T12:50:00.567-05:00A Canine Take on the Family Bed TheoryI am running on nothing more than fumes and lots of caffeine today. And in this compromised state, I am officially admitting defeat to my husband, Jay. <em><strong>Yes, Jay, I now agree that it was not a good idea to allow our puppy of seven months full access to our bed at night.</strong></em> There you have it. You win, I give. And that's in writing.<br />
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Backtrack to the beginning of last week and the beginning of this whole debacle. Jay left for a week long business trip on Tuesday. Now, until that very day he left, our über-cuddly and therefore irresistible puppy, Willa, slept downstairs with Pippet, our other less-than-cuddly dog who normally wants nothing to do with us at night. The night Jay left, Willa was unusually, shall I say, "spirited" (read: spazzy) at her normal bedtime. She refused to stay downstairs, repeatedly climbing past the gate we had blocking off the bottom of the staircase. And of course, Pippet was close behind, not wanting to miss out on anything. The end result was both dogs on our bed, which I allowed because Jay was gone, and because I'm spineless when it comes to dogs being cute (which <strong>of course</strong><em> </em>they were). Pippet eventually realized that nothing interesting was going on, that being upstairs was a waste of her precious canine time, and she removed herself to back downstairs. Willa remained sleeping near me the entire night, being all cute and cuddly, even when she had pushed me to within inches of falling straight to the floor. Repeat this scenario for the next five nights. And thus, a monster (albeit an outrageously charming one) was born. <br />
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Enter Jay back into the story. Oy. The first night he was back home was full of grumbling and exasperated sighs, due to the fact that his side of our bed was shanghaied by a warm ball of white and brown fur, snoring and snorting away happily within inches of <strong>his </strong>pillow. I made out his under-the-breath grousings such as, "This is <em>not </em>going to work," and "This is <em>ri-<strong>dic</strong>-u-lous.</em>" I moved Willa to her bed that I had supplied on the floor near my side of our bed, and after a couple of attempts by her to get back onto our bed without success, she fell asleep on her new digs and remained there for the night.<br />
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The new sleeping plan worked for a couple of nights, and then Jay left for another trip last night. Back up on our bed came Willa, ready for sleep, this time sans Pippet. She went right to sleep, so I thought things would be copacetic if she slept there <em>just </em>for the night. I would get her back to her floor bed when Jay got back the next night. Well....Willa had different plans. At 3:00 AM she decided it was the perfect time to start pacing the bed and chewing one of her bones. She then jumped off the bed and went downstairs. Shortly thereafter I heard the sleigh bells ring on the back door, which she uses to inform us of her desire to go outside. <strong>Fine</strong>. I went downstairs and let her out. At this point, Pippet thought it was time to wake up for the day, and was found standing bright-eyed and bushy-tailed at the closet door where her food is kept, waiting for breakfast. Letting her know aloud that no such thing was happening at that hour, I headed back upstairs, leaving both dogs staring at me expectantly from the kitchen. They were on my heels by the time I got to my bedroom, (only after trying to wake both of our sleeping kids by crashing open their bedroom doors) and were both on the bed before I was even close to getting back in. What ensued was like a circus in a two-person tent; elephants, trapeze artists, you name it. Around four o'clock, after a WWF-worthy wrestling match, they finally fell back to sleep, Willa lying on my back, one of her toys in my face. I don't think I ever fully got back to sleep. Which is why I feel as I do, and why this is what my two dogs look like at this hour:<br />
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I will not post a picture of what I look like after our rough night, as I don't want to induce nausea on any kind readers hearty enough to have gotten this far in this long, drawn-out story.<br />
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And there you have it: my tale that would make any dog trainer cringe, and will make Jay just about as smug as he can get. My wrist is slapped, I know I did not make good choices (wow...I feel like I'm in kindergarten). I am now accepting my sentence of biting the bullet and making sure both pooches sleep where they are supposed to sleep, and everyone is happy. I'm thinking I may need some dumb luck.Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00071814380520488326noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1683263320577336961.post-16206431647324611992012-12-24T11:31:00.002-05:002012-12-24T11:31:46.439-05:00Peace.<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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Peace on Earth, everyone. Spread some love to one another.</div>
Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00071814380520488326noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1683263320577336961.post-61322621295711740932012-12-18T13:27:00.002-05:002012-12-18T13:27:40.517-05:00Spray Paint. The Be All, End All.I bought, what I thought at the time, were beautiful mixed greens Christmas wreaths back at the beginning of December. I swear, not 5 minutes after I hung them, one began to dry out, so by the time this week rolled around it was brown and crispy. I am not about to go out and buy a brand-new wreath just for another week of showiness. The old brain cogs began spinning....what better way to fix that problem, or for that matter a <em>myriad</em><strong> </strong>of problems, than to pull out the best fixer-upper ever, <strong>spray paint</strong>?<br />
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Yeah, I know it's pretty much one-dimensional in color, but at least it has the appearance of something still fairly thriving.<br />
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And I'm not exaggerating. This is how brown it was. See that little patch under the bow? That was the entire wreath not an hour ago.<br />
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I've seen wreaths this brown hanging on peoples' houses in April. December 18th is pushing it. Added bonus: the wreath is so lacquered-up with paint now, those needles are going nowhere.<br />
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So...dried-out wreath? Hit the hardware store! Nobody will ever know the difference. At least from a distance. In their car. In the dark.<br />
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<em>Damn...the mailman just delivered a package to the door where the sad sucker is drying. Now he knows, too. I'm sure there was a lot of WTF-ing and "That lady is WHACK" going on in his mind.</em><br />
Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00071814380520488326noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1683263320577336961.post-41549211226826945742012-12-10T11:34:00.000-05:002012-12-10T11:34:23.126-05:00A Word of Warning: Don't Let Those Labels Fool You!I was on one of my tri-daily trips to the grocery store (no lie--that happens way too often for me) this morning when I saw something I <strong>had </strong>to buy, simply for the label attached. The product was a bottle of dish washing liquid. It must be considered ultra-fancy dish washing liquid because this was the label that was on it:<br />
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Now. Don't get me wrong. I'm sure this can be a great gift in the right context. And by no means am I one to look a gift horse in the mouth. But I can <strong>totally </strong>see Jay wrapping a bottle of cleaning product, putting it under the tree and calling it a day.<br />
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And so, Jay, this post is written especially for you. Products with names such as Palmolive, Pledge, Clorox, Comet, etc. are not gifts you want to buy. The hedge trimmers for my birthday years ago were plenty to satisfy the <strong><em>"HUH?" </em></strong>category of gifting<strong><em>.</em></strong> Just in case you were wondering. And while I know you are always stymied when it comes to holiday shopping, your smile is the only gift I truly need. Yup--I went there. Got all mushy-like. I must be listening to too much holiday Muzak while traversing the grocery aisles. Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00071814380520488326noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1683263320577336961.post-13878792324817350492012-11-28T14:25:00.000-05:002012-11-28T14:25:09.590-05:00This Cold Heart is Filled With SapI should be cleaning my house in preparation for this weekend when my sister will be here for her yearly pre-Christmas visit. Sorry, Sharon, the house has to wait. And while I'm at it, sorry in advance for the smelly-dog-couch (not that any amount of cleaning will take away its peculiar odor). It's just that my brain sparked a musing and I need to get down <strong>pronto. </strong><br />
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While on a quick trip to the grocery store to pick up some cleaning supplies (namely furniture polish--why is it that I only dust my furniture with polish on the average of once a month [if <em>that</em>], but when I go to look for the polish it is gone? Are Jay and the kids doing on-the-side cleaning that I am not privy to? If they are, they're doing a good job of hiding it. Snort. Sometimes I crack me up.).<br />
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Anyway, at the grocery store there were those holiday fixtures, the Salvation Army volunteers, ringing their bells and playing Christmas music. I put a dollar in their bucket (plug for a Jay Vocab Word: <a href="http://theimperfectionist23.blogspot.com/2012/06/of-buckets-and-sauce-poopies-and-sweet.html">The Imperfectionist: Of Buckets and Sauce, Poopies and Sweet Peas: A Language All Our Own </a>) on my way past and suddenly got so choked up and emotional that I couldn't even wish them a Merry Christmas back without my voice cracking and me feeling the need to inhale sharply. I got into the store and realized I had <strong>actual tears</strong> in my eyes. Good god. I'm turning into a sap.<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">They get me every time.</td></tr>
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Now, as Jay would tell it, I am a cold-hearted robot that has no feelings. This is because I don't cry at the usual things. The kind of stuff that makes him sob. Sappy movies. Doctor Who. Our wedding. I can't help it that his empathy gene is stronger than mine (though maybe I could have at least faked a couple of tears by screwing up my face a bit when we got married). One exception: we <em>both </em>cried during the ceremony at our friends' daughter's bat mitzvah this past spring, much to the surprise of many people who only know Jay and me to be the merry pranksters we normally are. So sometimes I <em>am </em>able to match him in the getting-all-emotional department.<br />
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And today furthered that fact. I do believe I am becoming a softie. A chump. I also cry at parades. I can't watch the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade without a box of tissues beside me. And that's not even being at it live. Small impromptu parade-like things do it, too. I remember the year our high school girls' soccer team won some kind of state thing, the fire trucks and police cruisers drove through town with their lights and sirens on, escorting the bus to the school. I was sitting in a parking lot waiting for our son to finish basketball practice and saw the whole thing. Yup, I got all messy-sobbing, simply because it was so overwhelming. Happily, I was alone in the parking lot, having shown up too early. That could have easily put the "UNSTABLE" stamp on my forehead with the other basketball parents for good, but c'mon, isn't that stirring? And no matter how many times it is played from November 30th to December 25th, hearing the Boston Pops' version of <em>Sleigh Ride </em>makes<em> </em>me catch my breath and well up<em>. </em><br />
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<em>So.....</em><br />
No matter how much we think we are all tough-skinned and aloof and what-not, there is always at least <em>one thing</em> (and maybe eventually more!) that can hit us right <strong>smack</strong> in the heart! <br />
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And now that I've aired those thoughts, I'm going to clean. Here's my advice: find that thing that makes you go all mushy and embrace it! Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00071814380520488326noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1683263320577336961.post-28277402617372430462012-11-13T19:06:00.000-05:002012-11-13T19:06:07.792-05:00The Pros of Highly Affordable Furniture, or, Safety Pins, Though Safe, Can Still Be Handy Carving ToolsI miss writing. My days lately have been a series of 24-hour spans of what constantly feels like playing catch-up. I think it's a combination of spending too much time fawning over our new puppy and now, the looming holidays which are putting me into a cleaning/organizing frenzy, though if you took a look around our house, you'd question the second half of that statement. It's just all of those little annoying things gnawing at me that eventually cause me to stop in the middle of whatever task I may be doing and, say, clean out the hallway closet or as I did today, attempt to beautify the messy monstrosity my daughter calls her desk.<br />
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Every time I step foot in her room, the surfaces of her desk, bureau, nightstand, and every shelf in her bookcase feebly call out to me for help, gasping from being buried under so much crap. I looked at her desk this morning and cringed. The majority of it was covered in every color of nail polish conceived in the last five years by Loreal, Maybelline, Revlon, and a host of others. And Scotch tape. Everywhere. Stuck to the top, the sides, underneath...I think she uses it for making lines of color on her nails or something. Meanwhile, my nails are non-existent from picking at it for a good 45 minutes.<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">A portion of the collection. I know there's more lurking in the dark corners of the girl's room.<br />
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So, yeah, the desk was a huge mess, and is now clean. Let's see how long <em>that </em>lasts. I blame YouTube. There are way too many videos of new and exciting ways to do one's nails. Come <em>on</em>! Does anyone really need their nails to look like watermelon slices or candy corn? When I was thirteen, going for bright pink polish was living on the edge. Now the nail polish displays rival the Benjamin Moore paint chip display at the local hardware store. Curses, you Age of Information! <br />
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Looking at the nightmare which is a teenage girl's room (yeah, I know--teenage boys aren't any better...and why do the boys' rooms always smell like Fritos?) this morning made me start thinking of how happy I am that we did not go crazy when buying furniture for our sweet little girl who, when it was time for her "big girl bed" was the perfect image of innocence. Who knew that a face like this:<br />
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Could, in only a couple of years, do something like <strong>this </strong>to her bed:<br />
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I like to refer to those as her Sing Sing years, where at the tender age of seven she decided it was fun to carve her name into any surface that was soft enough, kind of like a lifer in prison. That bed didn't stand a chance. Fortunately, we didn't have the desire (nor the deep pockets) to shop for her furniture at Ethan Allen. And now I can simply sigh when I see her name carved into the foot of her bed, or the desk covered in nail polish, rather than go on an all-out bender like my mother did when she saw that my young 3ish-year-old self colored on my Mary-Had-a-Little-Lamb-lamp with markers. Now <strong>that</strong> is a memory from my youth that I'll <em>never </em>forget. Holy crackamoli, you'd think I had just shaved the cat (I did cut her whiskers once) or set fire to my room (that I did not do). <strong>Not</strong> that my creative offspring did not get a good long-winded lecture. She has yet to carve her name anywhere since. The nail polish is another story. I'm working on that one. <br />
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And, yes, I know the majority of you out there reading this are saying, "Fool, why are you cleaning the girl's room in the <em>first</em> place? Get her to do it herself!" That happens, too. But sometimes even a desk needs a full overhaul. And now she totally owes me. I just need to think of <em>what.</em><br />
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Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00071814380520488326noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1683263320577336961.post-35257819235611646712012-10-23T11:10:00.000-04:002012-10-23T15:26:57.040-04:00Happiness Is a New, Warm Puppy.<br />
I feel like I have not written for a year. But I have a good excuse. My time has been all-encompassed by this:<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Willa. A very sweet pup.</td></tr>
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As well as this (actually this is very subdued compared to their regular wrestling goings-on):<br />
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Meet the newest addition to our crazed house, Willa. She fits right in. The best thing is, she's waaaaay mellow. She loves to sleep in the lap of the human who is closest when she gets hit by the sleep bug, has <strong>no </strong>toileting issues (unlike some <strong>other</strong> dogs we know...I'm not mentioning names, but sounds like Drip It), and can totally hold her own. This all balances out very nicely with Lady Neuroses, also known as Pippet, i.e., the afore-unmentioned toileting-issued (among many, many other issues) dog.<br />
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When we adopted Willa (big shout out of thanks to Kelley Prichard and her organization, Adopt A Stray <a href="http://www.adoptastrayrescue.org/">http://www.adoptastrayrescue.org/</a> for sending this sweet girl our way!!) I knew what to expect: the energy needed to make our little one feel at home, and the time and attention we would have to spend getting her used to her new surroundings. But even as prepared as I was, much of everything else in our daily routine dropped out the bottom, shall I say, while the doting, learning and training ensued. Holy crap, my floors are filled with puppy detritus brought in from the yard, which has not been mowed in <strong>weeks</strong>. {Alex--<strong>MOW THE LAWN</strong>!!!!} Chewed bits of unrecognizable stuff can be found under every piece of furniture in the living room. And there are no less than twenty toys of various sizes and materials splayed about the floors from one end of the house to the other. I'm waiting for Jay to roll an ankle on one of them so we can hear a blue streak echo throughout. And <strong>now, </strong>Pippet is reverting. She has decided that paws up on tables and counter tops are totally OK, and anything she finds up on said surfaces is fair game. She took a tub of port wine cheese off the counter and consumed about half of it before I got to her (and if you are wondering who eats that garbage, well, now you know: me and Pippet). This morning I intercepted her schnoz from engulfing an apple core just as it (the schnoz, not the apple core) was readying for the attack. She has suddenly taken great interest in slurping out of my coffee cup, only after taking a nice, long draw from the toilet. I'm hoping everyone is remembering to flush while in their puppy-induced haze. Bad behavior aside, she gets along with her new housemate, so I should be glad of that and just work through the two-year-old-acting-out.<br />
<br />
As much as we miss our old girl Scout (who is, of course, still here in our hearts), it is wonderful to see youth and energy in the house again. Pippet finally has a sister to play with and who actually may have more energy than her at times. They are both passed out right now, exhausted from chewing on each other for a good hour. I am so going to take this time to enjoy the peace and quiet. It's just like when my kids were babies. Talk about full circle!!<br />
<br />
And so I am going to leave this post short and sweet. So much has happened in the last couple of weeks. There are Shirtless Running Guy stories, my adventures with DIY at-home mole removal (steady your stomachs for <strong>that</strong> one), discoveries made during furniture moving, and a never-ending tick season. All stories to be told another time. Stay tuned...I'm back at it!!Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00071814380520488326noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1683263320577336961.post-61519193443998348812012-10-04T16:49:00.000-04:002012-10-04T16:49:10.463-04:00Shirtless Running Guy...Done Up.Today as I was having my routine Thursday morning cranky-fest over coffee with my friend, Sue, none other than SRG ran by. But now that time of year is upon us that I can no longer call him Shirtless Running Guy. And so I give you...<strong>SHIRT<em>ED</em> RUNNING GUY</strong>:<br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjUAG5sChHONuHYYv-dkN6nfdX9w2DcCSdWm5UWAOmierpKONAsuSsMCOPw2HJ_MLN8uIWYDeXPB8s3kudON0S4J6yEcPjdNvfm86hVMGq8qDTF0Sg7k3jcEokjtYIHsqnDbr-UdUxJKwrt/s1600/photo+(25).JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjUAG5sChHONuHYYv-dkN6nfdX9w2DcCSdWm5UWAOmierpKONAsuSsMCOPw2HJ_MLN8uIWYDeXPB8s3kudON0S4J6yEcPjdNvfm86hVMGq8qDTF0Sg7k3jcEokjtYIHsqnDbr-UdUxJKwrt/s320/photo+(25).JPG" width="240" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">That <em>je ne sais quoi </em>is lost once the shirt appears, no?<em> </em></td></tr>
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Sadly, the hedges prevent us from getting the full effect. But though he wears a tank top in today's picture, the shorts remain <em>lit-tuhl. Very lit-tuhl.</em> I like the baseball cap, too. I haven't seen him without it in a long time. Could Shirt<em>ed</em> Running Guy be having an issue with his hair follicles atrophying? We may never know. Unless he ditches the hat.Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00071814380520488326noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1683263320577336961.post-83537395246906639302012-09-25T15:08:00.001-04:002012-09-25T15:12:31.976-04:00Adopt-a-Stray Update!If you got through the bitching and moaning of the beginning of my post from yesterday, you probably read about our new adoptee, Jenna-the-cutest-pup-ever, coming to us very soon from a wonderful animal rescue, Adopt A Stray, down in Arkansas. Kelley, the founder, has started up a new website. Though it is still under construction, it is still very navigable, and the adoptees are able to be seen, which is oh so important! Here's the address if you are so inclined to take a peek: <a href="http://www.adoptastrayrescue.org/">www.adoptastrayrescue.org/</a><br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjGFNmBVAVALHktxAGa9mxEchDYJN41AYfI0kx8cCCuvkVONXPZ5imfliKAUv2T5zkE5IUo2A-PKh8U2ImN6HyfA9H2_Noixmo6FY7Y184R1weF91ARCzCE_OE4YDLrCXHdXrFWMwCvGjcQ/s1600/s4362a4987761m13293836.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjGFNmBVAVALHktxAGa9mxEchDYJN41AYfI0kx8cCCuvkVONXPZ5imfliKAUv2T5zkE5IUo2A-PKh8U2ImN6HyfA9H2_Noixmo6FY7Y184R1weF91ARCzCE_OE4YDLrCXHdXrFWMwCvGjcQ/s320/s4362a4987761m13293836.jpg" width="261" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">One of the babies available for adoption. Come <strong><em>on</em></strong>! How cute can you get?</td></tr>
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I dare you not to smile while looking at these faces!Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00071814380520488326noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1683263320577336961.post-64504371837055799372012-09-24T17:31:00.000-04:002012-09-24T17:33:44.703-04:00Digging Around for the Upside to the End of SummerWatch out. I've been feeling all morose and crabby for the past couple of days, due mainly to the realization that the summer was filled with lots of great events and adventures (that's the name of a singles' matchmaking place, isn't it?), all of which were fantastic, but are now merely memories (I have to say the Gotye concert, which was the most recent thing, was <strong><em>stellar</em></strong>). That, and the first day of autumn/last day of summer was this past weekend. I know. I sound all jaded and whatnot. But seriously, as I described to a couple of friends today, I feel like a kid the day after Christmas. It's just that anticlimactic situation that's inevitable when great things happen, and then the Happy Balloon deflates. I'm pretty sure I'm not the only one this happens to. And of course, this too shall pass. Another summer is only a short nine months away. I wish I was as ecstatic about the upcoming ski season as the rest of my family. It will be fun, but I do sandy beaches and warm oceans better than snowy mountains, butt-freezing chairlifts, and snotcicles.<br />
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So, it's time to look forward to some new things. Now that autumn is here, cooler temps are on the horizon. It was 39°F when I woke up this morning (that's enough to make even the happiest of people crabby). And these cooler temps can mean only one thing: Shirtless Running Guy is going to start putting on some duds. I got a text from a friend last week letting me know that he was wearing a...a...a...<strong>tank top</strong>! <em>AN ACTUAL SHIRT</em>! I saw him as well, though at first I thought he was a woman because: a) he was far away; and b) the shirt made him look a bit androgynous. It was kind of loose and flowy, not super-tight-wife-beater-like. Soon, on the really cold mornings, the running tights and gloves will appear. Maybe I can get out of my doldrums by aiming to capture some new shots of his seasonal running apparel. It will be the opposite of a strip tease. The clothes go on rather than come off.<br />
<br />
And the biggest, best thing to look forward to is the new puppy-girl we are in the process of adopting. I just got news today that she will be transported up here from Arkansas in just under two weeks. She is the sweetest thing, and we can't wait to meet her in person! Here are a couple of pictures of her (you <em>know</em> there will be a bajillion more pics on this blog the minute she gets into my car in two weeks!):<br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj2bOK2DGu7wi_0aZrERJKAUygfhQ7UsZv42ljATN9-6hAAhLisaWZ1JuBKgTidbtcCN2C03I57bJSJIf4CPXknK1LRGWxazh-4JYMI0Hzb9U42Yj-FX8j30goOrXXS5bvULty6cTiHR21O/s1600/Willa.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="200" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj2bOK2DGu7wi_0aZrERJKAUygfhQ7UsZv42ljATN9-6hAAhLisaWZ1JuBKgTidbtcCN2C03I57bJSJIf4CPXknK1LRGWxazh-4JYMI0Hzb9U42Yj-FX8j30goOrXXS5bvULty6cTiHR21O/s200/Willa.jpg" width="200" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">C'mon...how can you <em>not</em> make a smunchie-munchie noise when looking at her?</td></tr>
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;"><em>Smoonchie-moonchie</em></td></tr>
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Right now her rescue name is Jenna, but I'm pretty sure it will become Willa once she's at her new home with us. I can't say enough about the woman who rescued her. Her name is Kelley Prichard and she is the founder of Adopt-a-Stray Rescue down in Arkansas. She has a heart of gold, and has done so much for so many animals whose lives would have otherwise been miserable if not non-existent. If you are ever wanting to give a loving home to a rescue dog but need some direction on where to begin, here's a link to her Facebook page: <a href="https://www.facebook.com/#!/adoptastray.rescue">https://www.facebook.com/#!/adoptastray.rescue</a> She is how we found Pippet, too!<br />
<br />
So just writing these few paragraphs of not outrageously exciting stuff has made things all warm and rosy again. Amazing how that works. Had a bad day? Crabby and pissy like I was? Write down a couple of things that make you happy. It <strong><em>so</em></strong> works! Bloggotherapy.Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00071814380520488326noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1683263320577336961.post-57690998952236610712012-09-19T17:24:00.000-04:002012-09-19T17:24:45.880-04:00An Homage to IndieMusic equals inspiration, no? It can come in any form, dependent on the listener. From Mozart to Lead Belly, The Sex Pistols to southern gospel, The Chieftains to The Dead (cringe: Even I had a spell of Deadhead-ism back in the 80's. Jay still gets stuck there sometimes.). Whatever the source, it's what gets you going.<br />
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Picture your vision going all wavy-like (kind of like if you were at a Dead show) and turn the clocks back a little for a bit of author-imposed digression. I know--<em>yawn</em>. Humor me for a sec. Way back when, during my college years, I had high aspirations of making it big as a visual artist. I did not know how it was supposed to pan out, whether I would fall into that romantic, starving bohemian stereotype, or the commercial drone working in the graphics world. I just knew that making stuff was one of the <strong>very</strong> few things I was really good at and it was what ultimately made me the happiest. <br />
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Well, I learned things don't always work the way our tiny, 20-ish, idealistic minds would prefer. I had various jobs for various printing houses, but did not get to use my artistic talents very much. Then marriage happened and shortly thereafter our family was started. Not that I don't appreciate Jay and the kids, but <strong>wow</strong>. Sort of a buzz kill for my inner artist.<br />
<br />
OK, enough with the depressing and boring reflection. Sometimes you've got to set ground work, ya know? Anyway, currently things are on an upswing with my painting and overall artistic output. Hey--I even started this blog, which finally puts my degree in English to work for the first time since I graduated over twenty years ago. Point is, I'm doing and making stuff again. It may not be to every one's taste, but it feels damned good to put all of the scrambled mess that's in my bizarre mind out there in a creative way.<br />
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Back to the music thing. This newly found and prolific expression coincided with my re-appreciation for music. There are so many great new sounds to constantly be discovered! Music has always been a trigger for expression with me, as I know is the case with so many people. I feel huge amounts of crazy energy/joy when I see the array of amazing indie artists out there right now. It's that cutting edge and freedom from the expected that makes so much of the indie music scene full of pure awesomeness. At the helm of this reawakening of mine is a key artist whom I began listening to, just as I began to unearth all of my art supplies. That would be Wally de Backer, a.k.a. Gotye. Ah yes, we all know his "Somebody That I Used to Know," I can see the eyes rolling and hear the groans as I type that song title, due to the massive air time it has received in the last year (I personally still love it and will still belt it out if I'm out of earshot from other people and not near any glass that I can shatter with my voice). But there is so much <strong><em>more</em></strong> on the rest of his <em>Making Mirrors</em> album as well as his previous work, i.e. <em>Like Drawing Blood </em>and<em> Boardface</em>. Like this piece entitled "Save Me," from <em>Making Mirrors </em>which just happens to have incredible animation to go along with it, as so much of his work does.<br />
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And through listening to his work, I have been introduced to the music of Wally's fellow musician currently on tour with him, Tim Shiel, a.k.a. Faux Pas. More amazing music--the kind that you can totally get lost in. Nice. I'm totally loving this song from his latest album, <em>Remixes</em>: <a href="http://soundcloud.com/iamfauxpas/caitlin-park-baby-teeth-remix">Tim Shiel & Caitlin Park - Baby Teeth Remix</a> . Excellent work, and if you're inspired to do so, take a gander at his website: <a href="http://www.iamfauxpas.com/">www.iamfauxpas.com</a> . Great stuff, all of it. AND accolades to Caitlin Park for having such a kick-ass voice. <em>Zounds</em>. Here's her website: <a href="http://caitlinpark.net/">http://caitlinpark.net/</a> . I think I'm needing to listen to more of her work.<br />
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So what's the point of this diatribe that is seemingly endless? Simply this: I need to thank these guys. It is because of their music that I'm back on course with my art. Pretty neat. And now for the...erm...odd bit. I'm directing this precisely to Wally, Tim, et al. I was lucky to see the show you played here in Boston back in March, and I am even luckier to have tickets to your upcoming show here this Saturday the 22nd (!). I do not need to shake your hands personally to show my appreciation (though c'mon, that would be great for just about <em><strong>anybody</strong></em>). <strong>BUT</strong>, if at some time during the show, you happen to look out at the crowd, center section in the vicinity of the 11th row, I'll be there, heartily singing along (though terribly off key, much to the dismay of those near me) and grateful that there are such great artists such as you to inspire and delight so many people. A big thank you for helping me get my art chops back!<br />
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Alright. I don't know if these guys will ever see this, and if they do, hopefully they don't think I'm all weird- stalker-crazy. But one thing I know is it's always good to put some thanks out into the universe. It definitely never can hurt. Rock on, Garth.Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00071814380520488326noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1683263320577336961.post-85050511414477239812012-09-11T12:59:00.002-04:002012-09-11T14:46:14.561-04:00Greener Pastures Always AwaitSadly, we said goodbye to our old-woman-dog, Scout, this morning. She went peacefully, on a blanket on the floor of her vet's office, with me lying right beside her, our noses touching. My thanks to the amazing staff at Main Street Veterinary Hospital, who helped guide both Scout and me through the entire procedure, down to the doctor and technician who shared a couple of sniffles with me once everything was complete. It takes a very special kind of person to do what they do on a daily basis. <br />
And so, as they say, on to greener pastures for our old girl. Carry on, Scooter.<br />
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Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00071814380520488326noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1683263320577336961.post-32746896760817945902012-09-06T18:30:00.000-04:002012-09-06T19:59:40.465-04:00On Brain Aneurysms, Grizzly Bears, Dust, and Gilbert Gottfried: the Composition That is My End-of-Summer Brain.We've all heard it enough since Labor Day: summer is over for the year 2012 (my god, I'm opening with a ray of sunshine, huh?), at least here in the Northern Hemisphere. And though we officially have a few more weeks according to the calendar, the magic is <strong>totally </strong>gone. Belly-up. Gone-zo. So, with the kids back to school, it's back to talking to my dogs or myself during the day. And thinking about lots of weird things. Here are a few of them that have been knocking around in all that empty space in my brain for the past week:<br />
<br />
<ul>
<li>Maggots are freaking scary. Way worse than snakes, spiders, grizzly bears (even when they have that big snarly turned-up nose thing going on) and what have you. Why? Well, besides being all gross and squirmy and able to move across surfaces at an alarming speed (!), I now have first-hand knowledge that they are pretty damned resistant to <strong>straight bleach</strong>. It doesn't even seem to <em>begin </em>to phase them for a good 20 minutes. Blech. I'm not happy about the fact that I was able to discover that tidbit, nor am I happy that I'm the person who gets to deal with the outdoor trash cans. Hint, hint, Jay.</li>
</ul>
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Not nearly as scary as those nasty little buggers.</td></tr>
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<ul>
<li>Blue jays are the Gilbert Gottfrieds of the avian world. Loud. And annoying. And yet there still remains a certain appeal that makes you say, "I guess they're not <em>that </em>bad." (That may be a "just me" thing.) I can't believe I just admitted that.</li>
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<ul>
<li>If I were to suffer from some life threatening event, say, ohhh, a brain aneurysm, while Jay and the kids were watching <em>Doctor Who</em>, I'd be toast. Never mind that I wouldn't be discovered until somebody came looking for whatever the next meal may be and instead found me lying in a heap of rigor mortis somewhere.</li>
<li>As much as I try to make it work, dust just doesn't cut it as an addition to our house's decor. Thicker and denser is not a plus. </li>
<li>There has yet to be a product put on the market that truly makes dusting our house's decor not pure torture for me. Swiffer ads LIE.</li>
<li>And finally, has Shirtless Running Guy been told by an informant that there's a crazy blogging lady who can't stop writing about him? I wonder. He made major eye contact with me a couple of weeks back. Almost accusing. I think I've got a giant case of covert picture-taking guilt. </li>
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And so it's back to the grind of school and work and eventually extremely short days resulting in Seasonal Affective Disorder in just about everything that moves. Time to embrace one's pasty, white, winterized self. Know it. Love it. Ignore it. A brand-sparkly-new summer will be here before you can say tan-in-a-can.<br />
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