tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-253240392024-03-07T00:48:59.638-08:00shh, don't wake the DRUNKEN HOUSEWIFEMeandering anecdotes and an occasional incisive comment, courtesy of an overeducated, feminist former-professional, who is continually outsmarted by her overly-gifted children and genius spouse and who seeks refuge in books, cocktails, and the occasional Xanax.the Drunken Housewifehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14606104534453493304noreply@blogger.comBlogger1245125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25324039.post-17356335513703406712017-12-15T15:57:00.000-08:002018-01-29T12:27:00.948-08:00the microbes and meMy life as a stay-at-home mother has pretty much come to an end. My beloved Iris uber Alles left home early at 16 (she insists this had nothing to do with her mother) and is currently living in Berlin, of all places, studying abroad. Tiny Amazing Lola is no longer tiny and while still amazing, is not very interactive, spending most of her free time in her room with the door firmly shut, texting other teens. I am not much needed in the home, apart from feeding and cleaning up after the pets.<br />
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However, this past fall I discovered a new passion: microbiology. Microbiology was my dreaded last prerequisite, dreaded because it was legendarily demanding, but it turned out to be spellbinding. "I love the pathogens," I confided artlessly to anyone who'd listen. I felt angst when I had to put my plates of <i>Staphylococcus epidermidis</i> that I had lovingly cultured into the autoclave bin. </div>
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I saw microbiology wherever I went. "The dog is wagging her tail exactly in the manner of a bacteria with a flagella," I observed. Gathering steam, I added, "Did you know that a protozoan with a flagella moves its flagella in an <i>entirely different way</i>?" </div>
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But it was so riveting only for me.</div>
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On our family text chat, one of the children posted that she'd spiked a fever. "Did you know fevers can be caused by the death of Gram negative bacteria??" I typed back. "They release an endotoxin when they die that causes a fever. Type 'More' to subscribe to Basic Microbiology Facts.'" She did not, in the event, type "More." Driving in the car one day with a teenaged child, I asked if she'd read a piece I'd forwarded about viroids of the sea: viruses living in seawater who prey upon other aquatic viruses. She rolled her eyes and patiently explained. "You know how you're not interested in everything I'm interested in? Well, I can't come along with you on this microbiology thing."</div>
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Like all good things, microbiology came to an end, leaving us with a hard-earned A on my transcript and some fresh stains on the Sober Husband's lab coat, which I borrowed for the class. Still the memories linger. A friend mentioned that she'd been up in the night vomiting with presumed food poisoning, but her husband had eaten the same things and was fine. I suggested that she'd picked up a norovirus, also known as "the Winter Vomiting Virus." "Type 'More' to subscribe to Basic Microbiology Facts," I added. </div>
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the Drunken Housewifehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14606104534453493304noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25324039.post-14017455215663140592016-06-02T10:56:00.002-07:002016-06-02T10:59:50.711-07:00your long-overdue updateThis poor old blog has fallen into deep neglect, and the reason is chiefly that my darlings Iris uber Alles and Lola have turned into highly private teenagers. It's difficult to write a dark, witty mommy blog when your dark, witty children don't want to be discussed in public. I've opted to let the blog suffer, rather than dealing a mortal blow to the tricky parent-child relationship.<br />
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But! The blog has come up recently a few times, and evidently it's not forgotten by others. I'm in physical therapy for a pesky knee injury, and during a session, my physical therapist asked me, "Do you blog?" Somehow she had found this blog and recognized its voice as that of her foulmouthed, chubby client. And one of my friends sent me a note the other day on Facebook, laughing because one of her friends, who doesn't even know me, had posted on Facebook about my blog. And one of Lola's friends asked several times, but then gave up, if I were still writing.<br />
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If I could create a new spin for this blog, I could move it into a new era. I was thinking of making it about my reading, but the world is so overpopulated with book blogs. I could make it more about myself, but I was never the most dynamic character around here.<br />
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In any event, for the loyal followers, herewith an update.<br />
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The increasingly dynamic Iris uber Alles has decided to leave high school two years early and is moving to the East Coast to attend college. Her parents are coping with this and extremely proud. She will be pursuing a degree in environmental studies, an excellent choice.<br />
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The ever-complicated Lola developed an obsession with the delightful game, Undertale, which has been described as "raising difficult, Kantian questions about our obligations and personal morality.. .But on an artistic level, Undertale places itself next to works like As I Lay Dying and Die Ehe der Maria Braun in terms of its ability to make us contemplate the dilemma-ridden moral choices that we have to make as human beings." http://www.popmatters.com/feature/undertale-and-immanuel-kant-ethics-in-video-games/<br />
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The Sober Husband is ever industrious, enjoying his current job at the height of Silicon Valley, where he endures such hardships as the one he shared last night at dinner: "The chocolate knob is broken on the FroYo machine by my desk." We jeered. I pointed out that he could walk to one in a different area, but he noted that he could muddle through by using the "mix" knob for a combination of vanilla and chocolate and then attempting to eat only the chocolate part. Cry for him, please. Also, he's developed some kind of hero worship of Henry Kissinger, and sharp words were exchanged over a recent article in Foreign Affairs which he felt offered a moral framework wherein Henry K. was just a delightful, wonderful fellow who always did the best possible thing but which I found evidence for my assertion that no, Henry Kissinger remains a war criminal who dodged prosecution.<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjBQbKAWzqQ8Z9m9wzssupRvCruttr-CuTzu704g_SsJt0v47n3XbJLr_wvmgLiWt7qj480GglC1F3UtcXEGKnkMMw5ap3C-r5HpQleJd1OAF5Wj2JzpcAec9Nl_kdxEJe7ayrV/s1600/IMG_0120.JPG" imageanchor="1"><img border="0" height="248" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjBQbKAWzqQ8Z9m9wzssupRvCruttr-CuTzu704g_SsJt0v47n3XbJLr_wvmgLiWt7qj480GglC1F3UtcXEGKnkMMw5ap3C-r5HpQleJd1OAF5Wj2JzpcAec9Nl_kdxEJe7ayrV/s320/IMG_0120.JPG" width="320" /></a>And as for me, contemplating an empty nest, I'm taking baby steps towards a new career working hands on with animals. I'm taking a night class in biology at a nearby college, and I'm still doing a wildlife rehab volunteer gig. More strangely, I've become a doting dog owner. My darling Kreecher, an aging Chinese Crested, foiled an attempted break-in at our home and is a constant comfort to her owner. My former obsession with working out has been foiled by a horrible knee injury I incurred at the gym (ironically my gym habits led to me becoming out of shape!). I limp now and have spent a fortune on physical therapy. But we managed to get me to Amsterdam, where I limped around the 500 year celebration of Hieronymous Bosch. So don't cry for me. Save your tears for the Silicon Valley engineers who must endure the loss of their chocolate soft serve.the Drunken Housewifehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14606104534453493304noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25324039.post-61931062185780787322015-12-11T06:00:00.001-08:002015-12-11T06:00:18.853-08:00what price should we chargeSophomore Iris was hard at work on her homework when she made a rather random observation to her father that in some places in the world, people charge suitors a goat for the hand of their daughter. "Would you want a goat for me?"<br />
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The Sober Husband started opining about dowries and how we should get a dowry for Iris, and ever pedantic, I couldn't let that stand. "A dowry is when you don't value women, and you have to pay people to take your daughters. Iris is talking about bride price. Bride price is when you value women, and people have to pay to marry them." <br />
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Iris challenged me if I would require a goat to marry her off.<br />
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"What kind of goat? I like goats." Pause. "I think I would want two goats for Iris."<br />
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"Mommy!" <br />
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"I want a goat."<br />
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The Sober Husband pointed out that we could require a goat in exchange for Lola's hand as well. A goat-rich future loomed ahead of us.the Drunken Housewifehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14606104534453493304noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25324039.post-90633392684118124642015-12-03T21:42:00.001-08:002015-12-04T05:58:40.152-08:00the sparkling social life of the semi-hermiticThe Sober Husband and I have become homebodies. After all, when you have a comfortable home with pleasant company, it doesn't always make sense to venture out into the larger world. But lately I have resolved to gear my social life back up, get out more, etc.. And, weirdly enough, this weekend we have been invited to a number of parties, so it would seem a good time to act on this resolve. Two are in Oakland on the same day, so it would work to stop by both of them, and coincidentally I had a hair appointment already set for the day, so it will even be a good hair day.<br />
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But the resolve is crumbling already. One of the parties is a holiday gathering for volunteers of a certain large organization, and there are a few requirements. The guests are supposed to bring a gift to donate to charity, their own cup to drink out of, high end homemade cookies for a potluck, and little trinkets to give to the other guests. I RSVPed yes and was all set to go, and then I read this list of requirements, and my reaction was that they have gone too far. What exactly are they giving me? If I have to bake (and the call was to show off your cooking chops with really fabulous, fancy, amazing cookies), and I have to bring a gift for charity, and I have to bring little bits of sparkly crap for the other guests AND my own cup, what is the point? I could stay at home with my cup and drink my own alcohol without having to cross the Bay Bridge. Not to mention that there's a theme you're supposed to dress for. True, it's optional, but encouraged, and that makes yet another requirement. <br />
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It reminded me of a similar party I didn't attend, where I was supposed to bring food, pay $25 to cover the hostess's expenses, and to prepare a ten minute speech about my passion for my work. There is just so much you can ask from me under the guise of inviting me to a party. Even leaving aside the speech (and I think it's best to leave it far, far aside), you are not going to see me both bringing food and paying. That brings together the worst features of a potluck and an unhosted event thrown by a reluctant host. </div>
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The other prospective party this weekend refreshingly did not set any requirements for the guests. But today the host of the second party posted a note about the food, after realizing that the entrees are all shellfish. If you are a meateater but don't eat shellfish, you're encouraged to speak up so another entree can be ordered for you but if you're a vegetarian, there will be a few vegetable side dishes you'll be asked to share with the meateaters so don't ask. I realize I am insanely touchy about my vegetarianness, but I am also allergic to bivalves (not shrimp or lobster, though). This presents me with a dilemma. Should I feel free to speak up and ask for an entree, since I have a legitimate medical reason not to eat what was ordered, or should I remain silent as an undesirable vegetarian who doesn't merit an entree? In the end I am not going to trust any of that food, since the restaurant notes that pretty much everything is cross-contaminated with shellfish and because the restaurant seems to have no concept of vegetarianism. And also in the end, the host is someone I like a lot, and I don't want to be a bother, so there is no way I would ask for anything special. It's just so much easier to stay home, where I don't have to worry about clam contamination or feeling like a freak because I'm a vegetarian. </div>
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On the other hand, there's one more party. There is no dress code. There are no requirements that we bring cups, gifts, fancy baked goods, or anything. Since there's no dinner served, there are no issues with food. And, unbelievably enough, it's within walking distance of our home, and held by someone we love. I see no way out of it. Even Thoreau held occasional dinner parties when he was living at Walden, and even a crabby curmudgeon like the Drunken Housewife occasionally inflicts her company upon kind party-givers. </div>
the Drunken Housewifehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14606104534453493304noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25324039.post-57217985425969822392015-09-27T21:57:00.000-07:002015-09-27T21:57:16.268-07:00a practical mindsetSo I have been a vegetarian since I was a senior in college, waaaay back in the eighties, and the children have always been vegetarians. Back when they were infants, I negotiated with the Sober Husband that we would raise them as vegetarians until they were old enough to decide for themselves, and they decided for themselves that they are passionate about vegetarianism. They have never intentionally eaten meat and can be quite judgmental. I am not the alpha vegetarian in my home; my slips with seafood are quite sternly viewed (I have never eaten birds or mammals willingly, but I have had my moments of cheating with a lobster or crab). <br />
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The Sober Husband never wanted to be a vegetarian and was quite cranky over my vegetarianism. I remember a vicious fight where he complained how much my being a vegetarian impacted him and how it was a blight on his life. I thought that was rich coming from a man who lived off tortilla chips and ramen when I met him, but my viewpoint was ignored. But as the years went by and the children's viewpoints hardened, he became more compliant. He now often says he is a vegetarian. <br />
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However, today he was busted. I got an email receipt telling me he'd bought a turkey croissant at a cafe. When he got home, I tipped him off that he'd been busted. He played dumb at first but then copped to it. "It was the only savory thing they had."<br />
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I gave him a hard time. "You ate a dead bird. Would you eat the fat bird?", I said, referring to his Amazon parrot.<br />
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"If it died," he said practically.<br />
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<br />the Drunken Housewifehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14606104534453493304noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25324039.post-64775962530657510212015-09-25T21:07:00.003-07:002015-12-04T06:02:37.845-08:00dancing the limboSo I had a mammogram recently, the first one I'd had in a long time. I had intended to have one a couple of years ago, but I ran into problems trying to get one. First we had insurance that viewed it as optional, and I couldn't afford to get one. Then we got new, fancier insurance, but I ran into a procedural wall. When I asked my then physician to order me one, she stared at me blankly and said, "You can do that on the website." When I went home and tried to order one via my healthcare provider's website, I failed. I am a reasonably intelligent person who has been using the internet since the internet was a baby, but I could not find any way to request a mammogram on that website. When I asked the person at the desk at my next appointment, they were likewise dismissive and flat out refused to help me. Yes, a grownup, a grownup with a graduate degree at that, should not be so easily thwarted, but I had a lot of other things going on at the time and this procedural barrier stopped me from getting a mammogram. <br />
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So what with one thing and another and my not thinking I was at high risk, I didn't get one. And then a few years went by, and I saw a different doctor, who finally didn't seem to think it was my job to go out in the world and make someone give me a mammogram but who sent an order through the ether to a breast clinic to give me one. I went, had the procedure done, and went home with an air of having taken care of business.<br />
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Next I got a call at 5:05 p.m. on a Friday from the hospital who had done the mammogram, asking me in urgent tones to return their call. I did promptly, but they didn't call me back but instead closed up shop for the weekend at 6:00 p.m. "Who does that?" I fumed. "Who calls someone after five on a Friday and ruins their weekend?" Anyone I told I was worried told me I was being ridiculous and stupid both, as no way on earth would anyone call someone about a bad mammogram and leave a cryptic message after five on a Friday. What an idiot the DH is, hahaha so very stupid.</div>
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With no support whatsoever I got through the weekend rather gracelessly. On Monday the hospital called me again and let me know that there was a problem with my mammogram and I needed to come back as soon as possible. The very next day I returned for a diagnostic mammogram, and the tech showed me that there is an 11 millimeter growth in my left breast. "It could be a lymph node," she said optimistically. "Have you been sick?"</div>
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"I did have a really awful respiratory infection, " I said. </div>
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"That's it, then!" she said perkily.</div>
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But then I stopped and thought. It felt like just yesterday, but... "It was really in July," I said. "I was sick in July." The radiation tech didn't have a good way to spin this, and her cheer wound down.</div>
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After the diagnostic mammogram results were sent to some mystical doctor off-site, I was sent for an ultrasound. These images were also sent off-site to the Oz-like being, who said that I needed to go for a fine tissue biopsy.</div>
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Here is where I ran into trouble. The first vacancy was for two weeks away. The person at the clinic doing the schedule visibly freaked out and asked me to wait, and she scurried off. I could hear her in the next room urgently asking for something to be done to get me in sooner. This did not add to my confidence level. But nothing evidently could be done.</div>
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At this point I became stressed... and the stress continues and continues. If I act like I have cancer, I am being a drama queen. If I act like I don't have cancer, I'm in denial. It's a no win situation. And no one is helping. Absolutely everyone I talk to about this seems to think I am an idiot for not getting the biopsy done sooner. Never mind that the only way I could get it done sooner would be if I could change my growth and move it up near the surface, where it could be reached without ultrasound (the actual growth is waaaaay back by my ribcage and will supposedly take approximately one and a half hours, with me under sedation, for a physician to reach with ultrasound to let them know what the hell they are doing). A friend tipped me off that I have access to a fancy sounding "health care concierge" thanks to the Sober Husband's glamorous new job, and I was relieved and excited... but the health care concierge got back to me in a couple of days to tell me that there was no possibility of a fine needle biopsy anywhere near San Francisco on less than two weeks notice. </div>
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"If it were me," someone said to me approximately nine times today, "I would get the biopsy done sooner." Well, if it were you, bitch, you'd soon realize that like King Canute you cannot order the tides to go out and you cannot order a radiologist to do your bidding. Perhaps if I hacked off large amounts of my torso myself I could get this done sooner, but if I want it done by someone skilled, I am going to be waiting two weeks. <br />
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Meanwhile there is not a lot of support at home. "Be nice to me; I may have cancer," I said to a rather crabby family member. This family member tossed their hair and said snappily, "<i>You told me not to worry." </i><br />
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<b style="font-style: italic;">Postscript:</b> After an agonizing biopsy, it turns out that I have a benign tumor. Yay! Benign!</div>
the Drunken Housewifehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14606104534453493304noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25324039.post-76978752198672445652015-08-13T08:18:00.002-07:002015-08-13T08:18:57.175-07:00shingles vaccine from hell!!I am strongly pro-vaccine. It's delightful that children aren't stuck in iron lungs nowadays. I remember having the mumps and am glad my kids didn't have to suffer that way. My grandmother died of cervical cancer, and I'm happy my daughters can get a vaccine that will dramatically decrease their chances of getting that cancer. Etc.., etc.. But now I have met the shingles vaccine, and it has kicked my ass.<br />
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The other day I had a physical, with a new-to-me doctor. The main takeaway was that your DH is officially an old. I turned fifty, and I have arthritis in my knees. It is time for me to get a colonoscopy. And I was subjected to a shingles vaccine. <br />
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I was happy to get the shingles vaccine, as one of my colleagues at my volunteer job had a debilitating case of the shingles and was ill for a month. She went through hell, and that was fresh in my mind. <br />
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But the morning after the shingles vaccine, I woke up with my arm swollen, discolored, and itchy. It was very dramatic looking, a huge, dark red circle protruding from my arm. I went ahead and left for my volunteer shift, working in a wildlife rehab clinic. About an hour into my shift I began to feel lightheaded and faint. I took a break and went to the break room, where I hydrated myself and ate a bunch of peanut brittle on the excuse that raising my blood sugar might help. Once my blood was surely fizzing with sugar, I went back to work. I felt like I was going to faint. My colleagues said I was flushed. I went and sat outside in the shade, and before I knew it, an hour had passed by. I went back inside. Although everyone urged me to go home, I didn't want to make Iris uber Alles leave early, as it was her last weekday volunteer shift before school started. Eventually we left, and I drove cautiously. <br />
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At home I took to my bed. My arm worsened. I began feeling violent stabbing pains, and flu symptoms were starting. Dr. Google was inconclusive. It seemed like I was having a worse reaction than normal, but since my breathing was okay, it seemed safe. But I was miserable. If I stood up, I felt dizzy and faint, so I avoided that. I emailed my doctor. I whined.<br />
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The next day I woke up with a pounding headache, but the pain had subsided in my arm. It was still swollen, sore, and discolored, but it mainly only hurt if it were touched. My doctor wrote back saying that the dizziness was enough of a concern that I should have gone to the E.R. <br />
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My love for vaccines has been tested. I love all but this one. The sad part is that this vaccine is only good for five years, so it isn't going to be that long before the time to get it again rolls around. the Drunken Housewifehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14606104534453493304noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25324039.post-69296679346039195612015-08-05T21:43:00.001-07:002015-08-06T09:03:04.330-07:00hangin' on the telephoneRecently I was stuck in hellish traffic. The Drunken Housewife of the past had determined that it would be delightful to go to an outdoor play in the East Bay on a Friday evening, requiring that the present day Drunken Housewife drive with the children, a heavy picnic basket, and lots of blankets through Friday night rush hour traffic across San Francisco and over the Bay Bridge and through Berkeley and through the chokepoint of the Caldecott Tunnel. Taking mass transit was not feasible, as it would have meant walking down the hill to the MUNI subway, taking the subway to a transfer point to BART, taking a long BART ride, and then waiting for a shuttle bus. All of that would have been fine if not for the heavy picnic basket and all the blankets and the fact that you can never get a seat on BART during rush hour.<br />
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The driving was stressful. After some shameful swearing at some nearby cars and an unforgivable snapping at poor Iris, I determined to relax and unwind. I asked the children to tell me stories to amuse and distract me. Iris made up a long one about a heroic little bat with opposable thumbs. Lola's story was more abstract and abandoned. We turned to discussing Lola's big new transition: the time has come for Lola to carry a cellphone. "You can call me," I said. "I think we should take up prank phone calls. I'm going to call you a lot." It then occurred to me that I had never placed a prank phone call to the dignified Iris. And Iris never calls me, unless it's to ask to be picked up somewhere. "Hey! Why don't you ever call me? Just to talk. To tell me that I'm your hero."<br />
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"Momdude, that is really weird," Iris observed critically.<br />
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"No one has ever called me to tell me that I am their hero," I mused. "Pretty much people only call me if I missed an appointment or if I am supposed to pay them. That's why I hate the telephone; it's never pleasant. Hey! I am going to call you, Lola, when you have a phone. And I'll sing." At this point, I sang: "Did I ever tell you you're my heeeeero, you're the wind beneath my wings." <br />
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After this we all dissolved into laughter for some time.the Drunken Housewifehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14606104534453493304noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25324039.post-68276531299444887132015-07-16T11:18:00.002-07:002015-07-16T11:18:28.580-07:00caring for our friends, with the Sober HusbandI hand the Sober Husband a magazine open to an article I recommend he read. "Hey! That magazine. That's X's magazine." It turns out this magazine I brought home was, unbeknownst to me, launched by a former colleague of the Sober Husband. <br />
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"Isn't X the one who had cancer? How is he doing?"<br />
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"Cancer? He didn't have cancer."<br />
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"Who had cancer then? I thought it was him. Doesn't he have kids and he had a cancer blog?"<br />
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The Sober Husband demurred strongly, suggesting I was confused over one of his childhood friends. I persevered.<br />
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"One of those guys from Doggyo had cancer. Which one was it? One of your friends. I remember reading his cancer blog." <br />
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"One of my friends has cancer? Now I want to know who it is. I feel bad."<br />
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"Why do you feel bad when you didn't even remember?"<br />
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"Because someone I like has cancer."<br />
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"But you didn't even remember!"<br />
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Eventually we recalled that another colleague from the same former employer, with a very similar name, was the one who had cancer.<br />
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"He had a bone marrow transplant and everything," recalled the Sober Husband, forced to relive the whole ordeal and feel bad once more. "But he recovered."<br />
<br />the Drunken Housewifehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14606104534453493304noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25324039.post-25873351399326048812015-04-15T10:04:00.003-07:002015-04-15T10:04:43.587-07:00I dreamed a dreamI had a terrifying dream about a stalker who broke into our home while we were sleeping. In the dream, I'd wake to find a hammer left near me, to let me know that the stalker had been there and could have killed me. In my dream, I was freaking out but the Sober Husband was calm. "How do you know he wants to hurt us?" my dream-husband asked.<br />
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In real life I told the dream to Lola (who was at the time wanting to hear my dreams, as she'd been writing an article about dreams and could never remember any of her own). Lola opined that the Sober Husband would in real life react the same way he did in the dream. So I told him about my dream.<br />
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"I think that person was being nice, leaving us hammers," he said. "Like a gift. Hammers are useful."<br />
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"How many hammers can you use? And it was scary," I said defensively.<br />
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"I could use a lot of hammers. Some might be special, too."<br />
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"You don't think it's creepy? Hammers are weapons!"<br />
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"I like hammers."the Drunken Housewifehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14606104534453493304noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25324039.post-2046468091206999422015-03-16T12:59:00.002-07:002015-03-16T12:59:38.500-07:00effectivenessLast night freshman Iris uber Alles vented about an assignment in her world history class. One part of the assignment was to "write about a small group of people who have changed things." Although the assignment didn't specify that this needed to fall into the World War II era, Iris's class is studying WWII at the moment. Immediately I had an idea: the women of the Rosenstrasse protests. <br />
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Years ago I learned about these women. Although most Jews in Germany were rounded up and sent to camps, Jews who were married to Aryans were exempt. They were subject to a myriad of horrible restrictions (couldn't work, couldn't have a pet, must have their homes inspected, had to wear the yellow star, etc..), but they weren't sent off to Auschwitz or Treblinka. However, at one point, high level Nazis decided that they were going to give Hitler a special birthday present: making Berlin truly Juden-frei. The Jewish spouses were rounded up. To that point Germans had tended to look the other way, if not to celebrate and join in on Jew-killing, but these German wives were different. They made signs saying things like "Give Us Back Our Husbands" and protested publicly on Rosenstrasse, where most of the Jewish spouses were being kept (some were sent to Auschwitz). Shockingly the Nazis folded and freed these particular Jews, even releasing the ones who were in Auschwitz. I thought these women were a good example of how a few people could make a difference. Iris listened and made a few notes.<br />
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The Sober Husband was not ready to let me glean the glory of giving the winning suggestion. "I know a few people who made a difference, " he said. "What about the Nazis? Himmler?"<br />
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I gave him the evil eye. He continued in that vein. "Hitler was just one guy, and he made a difference"<br />
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"I am sure," I observed loftily, "that the assignment wants positive examples."<br />
<br />
"How can you be so sure?" The Sober Husband smirked and continued to catalogue the powerful achievements of the Nazis.<br />
<br />
"You're so negative! I had an uplifting and thoughtful example. You're picking something awful!" Then I changed gears. "What about Charles Manson, huh? He had a small group of followers, and they had a giant impact."<br />
<br />
He started to answer, but I plowed on. "What about the Son of Sam? He was just one guy, and he had the whole city of New York in fear!" <br />
<br />
Our squabbling continued until I loftily accused him of jealousy over my excellent suggestion. "I have told so many Jews about the Rosenstrasse protests, too. No one knows about it, and it's fascinating. You just want to be the most loved parent and not let Iris pick my idea!"<br />
<br />
Defeatedly the Sober Husband instructed Iris, "Love Mommy the most. Do Mommy's idea."<br />
<br />
Iris uber Alles had dropped out of this conversation early on and declined to make a ruling. "Anyone want to watch 'House of Cards'?" she asked diplomatically.<br />
<br />the Drunken Housewifehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14606104534453493304noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25324039.post-45179914942407199982015-01-23T11:44:00.002-08:002015-01-23T11:46:38.314-08:00things I hate that everyone loves<b>Paris.</b> It smells bad, and everything costs too much. The most overrated city in the world.<br />
<br />
<b>This one Indian restaurant in my neighborhood everyone adores. </b>It's the only Indian restaurant I've ever run across which has next to no vegetarian options. And weirdly it serves virtually everything in wraps. Now I have been to southern India and know what a dosa is, so I know that a "wrap" is a version of an authentic Indian dish, and if it were a dosa, I'd be fine. But meat in a wrap? And that's Indian food? Get off my lawn! Which brings us to..<br />
<br />
<b>Wraps. </b>To begin with, the word is so unappetizing. "Wraps." It looks and sounds like the antithesis of good food. And it seems to stress that what is inside the food doesn't matter. All that matters is that it's wrapped up, because you are too much of a slob to get your lunch in your facehole without it being hermetically sealed. Also, I like to be able to see what I am eating.<br />
<br />
<b>Amazon.</b> It killed off so many independent bookstores. It tried to go after beloved publisher Hachette by not selling Hachette's most prominent authors. It didn't give a fuck that it was preventing authors from making sales by barring those authors from its site, when they were just innocent third parties. And it treats its employees like slaves. Warehouse employees faint during the summer. They are kept under fear of firing. Their bathroom breaks are severely limited. I could go on and on. In summary: it's an evil, evil company. <br />
<br />
The Sober Husband has been recruited by Amazon many, many times, including for really interesting and fun jobs (most notably working on their delivery-by-drones program). We've had some conflict over this. "I'd rather you work for online porn. Or spam," I have said.<br />
<br />
<b>The mountains.</b> I don't want to go skiing; that's much too cold. I'd rather be by the sea or off in a nice, toasty warm desert. It puts a strain on my poor car to heave us up some giant peak, only to have to turn around and come back down to a more sensible level. <br />
<br />
<b>Tomatoes</b>. Why are they in everything? Why is it assumed that vegetarians live off tomatoes? I tried some online eating program where they give you recipes and shopping lists so you can eat healthy but fabulous diet foods, and every single last meal was crammed with tomatoes. Tomato salad, tomato flatbreads, stuffed tomatoes, chopped tomatoes, grilled tomatoes, pureed tomatoes. One of my favorite cookbooks, a seasonal menus book by my beloved Melissa Clark, is unusable all summer because every single fucking thing revolves around tomatoes. Last year at Burning Man someone decided that, as a kindness, they'd make dinner for those of us working on building our theme camp, and the vegetarian option was spaghetti in tomato sauce with chopped up tomatoes all over it. And then the only topic of conversation amongst everyone during the whole meal was how weird it is that the Drunken Housewife doesn't eat tomatoes, did you ever hear of anyone who didn't like tomatoes, why doesn't she like tomatoes?, surely she would like the tomatoes if she only ate them, everyone loves tomatoes, tomatoes are the best thing in the world, it must suck to be her, god, what a picky eater. And then the next day everyone wondered what the hell was up when I snapped and said, "I don't want to hear ANOTHER WORD about how I don't like tomatoes. Seriously." In summary, tomatoes are loathsome, oozing their nasty little seeds everywhere.the Drunken Housewifehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14606104534453493304noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25324039.post-62357910489841895912015-01-21T16:48:00.003-08:002015-01-21T16:48:49.397-08:00more than anything in the worldI love camping in the desert, and the children frankly think that is one of the more inexplicable and idiotic things about their mother. Today in the car Lola asked me again to explain why I like being in the desert. I struggled to describe the desolate majesty, the weird beauty, and among other things, I said that because there aren't trees, you can see farther. <br />
<br />
That right there to Lola was the matter in a nutshell. "As you know, I love trees." She grew pensive. "I love trees more than anything in the world, except a bunch of things."the Drunken Housewifehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14606104534453493304noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25324039.post-1731380270844827112015-01-20T17:21:00.005-08:002015-01-20T18:07:35.783-08:00street closures and the jaded residentsFor a couple of weeks there have been some ominous signs posted, stating that parking will be forbidden on much of our block for a five day period. The five specified dates of forbidden parking passed by without incident. <br />
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<br /></div>
<div>
Then today suddenly, three or four days after the permits for blocking off parking had expired, I drove home to find to my displeasure that our street was closed. "Dammit, Lola," I said, "what is going on?" I parked a block away, complaining about having to shlep my groceries and Lola's backback. "It's a good thing I was lazy at the grocery store and didn't feel like doing much shopping," I observed to Lola.</div>
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<br /></div>
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"What if we'd had a mattress delivered?" said Lola. "Two years ago we had a mattress delivered. What if we had waited until today?"</div>
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<br /></div>
<div>
We shlepped our things home, discussing this outrage all the while. No parking signs do not mean a street is going to be closed off, just that you can't park there, and it seemed wrong to us that our street was barred to us. As we were approaching our house, my next door neighbor's sleek Porsche roared through. "Hey! Brad drove through the cones," I said. My neighbor emerged from his car. </div>
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"How'd you get through," I said admiringly. "I couldn't fit my Mini through those cones."</div>
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"I just drove over them," said my normally mild-mannered neighbor. "I've just had it with these street closures. It's always something. I say fuck it!" There was a pause. Lola and I had never heard this neighbor swear before. <br />
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"I'm too well-behaved," I mourned. Brad's defiance seemed admirable next to my mealy-mouthed obedience to authority.</div>
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<br /></div>
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"What the hell are they doing, anyway?" Brad continued. "Is that the water department?"</div>
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We all regarded the giant excavation in the center of our street, just a few feet from my house. </div>
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"Didn't they just replace all of that a few years ago?" We three agreed that only a couple of years ago, the city had torn up our entire street and replaced all the water pipes.</div>
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<br /></div>
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"How can they just close our street?" I complained. "I feel like they should send us a letter, give us some notice. I could have had a piano delivered today. I have had a piano delivered before. Or I could have had a cocktail party today."</div>
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"Listen to you!" said Brad.</div>
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"I have had cocktail parties before," I said defensively.</div>
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"You sound like you're from Atherton! Cocktail party! " He paused. "Come to think of it, if we were in Atherton, I bet they <i>would</i> have told us they were closing the street."</div>
the Drunken Housewifehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14606104534453493304noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25324039.post-8573458241867856042015-01-16T10:17:00.000-08:002015-01-16T10:17:26.498-08:00things said in our homeMe, to Lola: "If after you move out and you come by to visit and you find my corpse partially eaten by cats, don't be mad at them. Tell them you're sorry and get them some nice canned food." <br />
<br />
Lola nodded in agreement. "It's not like you're using your body, after you're dead."<br />
<br />
<br />the Drunken Housewifehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14606104534453493304noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25324039.post-20902285237637477192014-12-28T16:42:00.002-08:002014-12-28T16:50:32.461-08:00cheery thoughtsI'm depressed, and I hate nearly everyone and everything.<br />
<br />
Happy holidays! the Drunken Housewifehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14606104534453493304noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25324039.post-50611563241680147382014-12-05T17:37:00.004-08:002014-12-06T10:39:54.313-08:00enduring, enduringEver since the horrible week in which my mother and one of the Sober Husband's brothers both unexpectedly passed away on the very same day, I've been in a deep, dark depression. My forms of self-medication have involved sitting on the couch sipping prosecco (a <i>day</i> drink, thankyouverymuch) and eating home-made Chex mix, something I associate with my mother. The last time I was in the hospital, my mother sent me a batch of homemade Chex Mix; we made it a lot when I was growing up, and we developed our own recipe.<br />
<br />
The other people in the house have been left to forage for themselves, as I haven't felt up to cooking. Frozen foods and Chex mix are the order of the day. I did rally for Thanksgiving, when we had an epic feast with eleven different dishes. Then I plunged back into my depression when our hot water heater broke the day after Thanksgiving, leaving us with a few days of no showers and no dishwasher and a nice $1,300 bill. It felt like something terrible was happening to us every day. My dentist told me to have expensive oral surgery, a recommendation I am ignoring, the day after the water heater trauma.<br />
<br />
A few people suggested to me that we replace the hot water heater ourselves, but tellingly none of them live in San Francisco. Our house is on a very steep hill, so our hot water heater has to be lifted up over five feet to its inconvenient location and also it has to be made earthquake-safe. Also we don't own any vehicle that could possibly contain a hot water heater. I felt ashamed, but in the end, we had to admit we wouldn't have done such a good job. The professional owned a truck and had the right equipment to braze the gas lines and to drill into the exposed bedrock under our storage space. <br />
<br />
In the background the Ferguson and New York grand juries failed miserably to see what was obvious to anyone else, which is that walking in a street or selling loose cigarettes are not capital offenses. Some people very dear to me had horrible things happen to them as well, things I won't write about as they are not my traumas to tell.<br />
<br />
We're walking on tiptoes here, afraid of what each day holds.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />the Drunken Housewifehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14606104534453493304noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25324039.post-34035543797216516122014-11-14T15:59:00.000-08:002014-11-14T16:00:55.997-08:00how I didn't even manage to go to my dead mother's funeralI was not looking forward to going to my mother's funeral. Obviously, emotions would be raw, and my family is not close at the best of times. Additionally my parents retired to a remote area of Texas which is far away and not easy to reach. There is an airport two hours from their house, but there are no direct flights there from any of the three major airports in my area. So getting there always involves plenty of time and money. But I felt that clearly I needed to be there, to pay my respects and to see how my father was coping. Neither of the children wanted to go; both are very diligent students and feared missing several days of school. The Sober Husband is still fresh in his shiny new job but was game to accompany me.<br />
<br />
The night before the funeral the Sober Husband checked the weather forecast. "The high is going to be below freezing," he informed me cheerily. Expletives escaped my dainty lips. Although I'm from Maine originally, I have lived in California for over twenty years. I don't have any winter clothes. Usually Texas is in the seventies, but a freakish storm was advancing. "It's going to be colder than Alaska," I noted after doing some searches online.<br />
<br />
The day came to leave. I got better flights from San Jose than I could find from San Francisco, so I planned to pick up the Sober Husband at his Silicon Valley office on the way to the airport. (Almost every flight combination had a travel time of over 11 hours, but I managed to find one clocking in at only 5 hours by flying out of San Jose). I kissed the children goodbye in the morning and ran about like a decapitated chicken during the day running last minute errands. Then I set out to meet the Sober Husband.<br />
<br />
As I drove down to Mountain View in heavy traffic, the Sober Husband called to tell me our flight had been delayed an hour. I kept driving. He called again to say it had been delayed two hours, meaning we would miss our connecting flight. We agreed that we'd go to the airport and try to figure something out with the customer service people, and I kept driving. He called a third time to say that our second flight, the one to where my parents live, had been cancelled entirely. "Let me think, "I said, and I hung up. I called him back and asked him to call some other airlines and see what they could do. <br />
<br />
When I reached the Sober Husband's office complex, I felt like trying out the fancy new valet parking which had recently been instated. I pulled up by the valet parking booth. The valet was talking to a man with a clipboard, and they both rather ostentatiously turned their backs on me, as if to say, "Not for the likes of you." "Fuck it, " I thought. "I'll roll old school and park myself." Was the problem my gender? My lack of techie geek cred -- is it that obvious? Surely it wasn't my car, as a youngish, undented Mini Cooper should be welcome anywhere. I found a parking space for my beloved Baby and hiked back to the lobby, where I found the uncustomarily dour Sober Husband scouring Expedia. <br />
We both worked our cellphones and took turns with his laptop. But the answer was clear: there was no way we could get to El Paso the next day before the funeral. The best case scenario would be arriving several hours afterward, and that didn't feel worth it for me, as we needed to return the very next day for a variety of reasons. We called my father and told him we couldn't come. <br />
<br />
Due to this large and unseasonably early winter storm, over one hundred flights from Denver, where we were due to change flights, were canceled. Ours was one of them. I was so glad we hadn't gotten on our first, severely delayed flight, as I could only imagine what it would be like at Denver, with all the people from all those over a hundred flights stuck there. <br />
<br />
We texted our neighbors, who were hosting Iris and Lola for a few nights, and the friend who was having Lola over after school to say that it was all a false alarm and we'd be returning home. <br />
<br />
Back at home I felt discombobulated. I was supposed to be having a painful, cathartic, awkward family moment, not feeding the pets and driving Lola to school as usual. On the bright side, with this extra time the Sober Husband was able to arrange to go to his brother's wake in Chicago. So at least one of us will get some sort of a catharsis or meaningful moment.the Drunken Housewifehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14606104534453493304noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25324039.post-13870258611000709152014-11-10T10:31:00.001-08:002014-11-10T10:31:12.532-08:00a husk, experiencing the strange stressesIn the few days after my mother's death, I've taken up a regime of day-drinking ("Champagne, which is <i>a breakfast drink", </i>I informed the Sober Husband) and day-eating on the couch. This was interrupted yesterday by a phone call informing the Sober Husband that one of his brothers had died. Bizarrely it turns out that the brother in question had passed away around the same time as my mother, but had not been discovered for a few days as he was living alone after his divorce. <br />
<br />the Drunken Housewifehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14606104534453493304noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25324039.post-60618260960511536682014-11-06T12:27:00.001-08:002014-11-06T12:27:13.167-08:00the stressIn July the Sober Husband was suddenly fired from a wonderful job he loved and was very good at. Overnight we had no income. Later in July he had surgery he is still recovering from, and he is not one of the world's better patients. Since then we had two huge disputes about cash: first, over the tiny travel trailer I bought before he lost his job and secondly over my dear cat Frowst's dental surgery, which cost $3,700. There has also been some other marital stress which I would rather not discuss. I also had a falling out with a friend which was very traumatic.<br />
<br />And now, we received word yesterday that my mother had unexpectedly died in the night. <br />
<br />
Also, I'm turning 50 in two weeks, which I'm dreading.<br />
<br />This is really a four month stretch from hell. the Drunken Housewifehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14606104534453493304noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25324039.post-72609844117521714302014-10-26T15:24:00.002-07:002014-10-26T15:24:42.079-07:00the Sober Husband describes the catsThe Sober Husband met a friend and the friend's new girlfriend for coffee. The girlfriend has cats and asked about our cats. As the Sober Husband described it, "I told her we had two types of cats."<br />
<br />
"What?" interjected Iris, Lola and I all at once. "What are the two types?" Republicans and Democrats? Extroverts and introverts? Scientologists and agnostics?<br />
<br />
"Let him tell the story," said one child reprovingly, after our derisive laughter had gone on long enough.<br />
<br />
"So I said we had four adult cats," the Sober Husband continued gamely.<br />
<br />
"WRONG! We have five cats," I pounced.<br />
<br />
"Shit!"<br />
<br />
"Count them on your fingers by name," I said.<br />
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"Frowsty, Henry, Emo, and Nert," he said. <br />
<br />
"You left out Zorro."<br />
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The Sober Husband appeared disgusted at this point that we had somehow acquired five cats without his realizing it. After some time, he was able to resume his narrative. "So I said we have kittens, and every year there is some kitten we can't resist, so we are constantly accumulating cats."the Drunken Housewifehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14606104534453493304noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25324039.post-3435311275482795752014-10-26T13:44:00.001-07:002014-10-26T15:32:40.191-07:00the further adventures of tiny, amazing LolaRecently we ran across some art Lola did when she was younger. She turned her name into an acrostic: <br />
<br />
Legally a minor<br />
Optimistic<br />
Loyal<br />
Artistic<br />
<br />
Iris and I were slayed by the first L and fell about laughing. "Really, Lola? That's what you thought was the most important thing about yourself?" Luckily Lola had a sense of humor about her younger self as well and didn't take offense.<br />
<br />
On Friday Lola had no school, and I took my tiny, amazing, legal-minor to a corn maze. I felt ashamed of never having had this American experience. It must be a midwestern and western thing, as we had lots of corn in New England growing up, but no corn mazes. My Puritan ancestors would have been horrified at the idea of wasting good corn on fools traipsing about idly.<br />
<br />
At the corn maze, Lola and I got lost quickly. We attempted to use our powers of memory and reasoning. These powers were evidently too weak. Lola asked with trepidation, "What if we don't find our way out?" <br />
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I reassured Lola. "If worst comes to worst, we can make our way between the corn and get out. We will do our best to gently bend the corn and not trample any. And we have water." We soldiered on.<br />
<br />
At some point we came upon one of the two viewing platforms, where you could climb out a flight of stairs and look across the maze. We decided to skip it, because we thought it would be cheating, and we regretted that as we wandered on in the maze. Later we talked sorrowfully about that platform as we trudged on. "I thought we were going to see it again," I said. "I can't believe we didn't circle back to it." <br />
<br />
Still later we came upon a viewing platform, and we were excited. We climbed up and learned that using the viewing platforms was not cheating. The corn maze paths were so narrow that all you saw from up in the air was a solid field of corn. We did figure out, however, that we were on the very same viewing platform we'd scorned earlier and had been wandering around in the beginning of the maze for a whole hour. Online we had read that the typical person spent about forty-five minutes in the corn maze, but we were not typical, and we were atypical in a bad way. We decided it was time to adopt a basic strategy and turn the same direction at every single intersection.<br />
<br />
After a while, we found ourselves back at the very beginning of the maze. This was disheartening. We were out of the maze, but we knew we'd only experienced the first third of it. The lady who sells tickets to the maze also felt sorry for us. "Did you try always turning left?"<br />
<br />
"We started always turning right."<br />
<br />
The woman shook her head sorrowfully. "You could try again."<br />
<br />
Lolz and I looked at each other. <br />
<br />
"If you're going back in, you might want to do it before these kids start," advised the woman. A huge group of tiny preschoolers was advancing upon the maze.<br />
<br />
I grabbed Lola's hand and we ran in. We methodically turned left at every crossing, which felt efficient but when we reached the first viewing platform (our third visit) we found the preschoolers. They had beaten us there. Disheartened we trudged on. "We are people of the corn," we said. We tried to sing a song the Sober Husband is fond of about a chicken in the corn, but we didn't know enough of the lyrics. "Chicken... corn... la la la la," we chanted. <br />
<br />
Eventually we came to another viewing platform, and we clambered up. "It's the same one," said Lola pessimistically. "No, Lola, look! We're closer to the trees. But where's the other one?"<br />
<br />
"They took it down!" said Lola wildly. "They took it down while we were in here!"<br />
<br />
We scanned the field. Then a man came into view, climbing up on the other platform. "Oh, there it is," said Lola deflatedly.<br />
<br />
We climbed down and finished the maze. We could see from how pristine the paths were that most people didn't reach this part of the maze. When we left, the ticket lady congratulated us. The woman selling pumpkins said, "You wouldn't catch me going in there. How long did it take?" <br />
<br />
"An hour and forty-five minutes," we said shamefacedly.<br />
<br />
"They'd have to get me out the next day," said the pumpkin lady consolingly.the Drunken Housewifehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14606104534453493304noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25324039.post-11539594425572712072014-10-13T19:55:00.000-07:002014-10-14T22:25:39.149-07:00tiny, amazing Lola and the make-up mysteryWhen Iris uber Alles graduated from middle school, her little sister Lola and I had some trouble finding our assigned seats. As we wandered throughout the auditorium, reading the labels on the folding chairs and failing to find our name, we ran into one of Iris's teachers, one she greatly admires ("C. is so badass!"). I took this opportunity to share with this teacher how highly Iris spoke of her. In reply, the teacher, C., fixed me with a very stern eye and said intently, "Iris shouldn't be allowed to wear makeup! She's too hot!" There was an awkward pause. <br />
<br />
Eventually Lola and I moved on and found our seats. "That was weird," I said. "<i>I know," </i>said Lola. "Was that some kind of criticism of my parenting?" I mulled.<br />
<br />
Much later (after each and every student had given not one but two speeches, some other people had given speeches, and the students had had lots of pictures taken and consumed lots of h'ors d'oeuvres), I started to tell Iris about this chance encounter. Lola decided that she, not me, should tell it. <br />
<br />
"So! C. was fascinated by tiny, amazing Lola," began Lola. "Mommy was telling C. about how Iris thought she was a badass, so C. sadly had to tear her attention away from tiny, amazing Lola." <br />
<br />
At this point Lola was interrupted by her audience, who wished to know what exactly was so amazing about Lola. Lola eventually got back into the groove of her story: "So then C. said to Mommy, 'Iris shouldn't be allowed to wear makeup!' Then she turned her attention back to tiny, amazing Lola. And Mommy was all surprised by what C. said. And Mommy asked tiny, amazing Lola, 'What did she mean by that?'" the Drunken Housewifehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14606104534453493304noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25324039.post-60131421865570763402014-10-08T21:04:00.004-07:002014-11-16T03:23:42.701-08:00and yet life meanders onLife has not been the most fabulous lately, and I realize there is no one to blame but myself. I am healthy once again, after resetting my own immune system successfully, and my husband is employed once again. I'm back to my gym rat days, obnoxiously enough, and was taunting Iris uber Alles today. "Poke me here" (forcing the poor thing to prod me in the upper six-pack zone). "See! You could bounce a coin off there. " Then I poked her similarly. "Look! It's like a marshmallow!" Later, I noted, "Feel free to prod me in the abs whenever you want. Perhaps you are afraid you might harm your finger." Iris rolled her eyes.<br />
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I tend to be a glass-half-empty (probably drained by a rich sociopath when my back was turned) kind of gal on the whole. Funnily enough, given how dark my outlook has been of late, that I'm bizarrely able to take with equanimity the one thing which drives most women my age insane: hot flashes. I've been 'pausing hard lately, and for the most part, I'm fine with it. I lived in the tropics for a couple of years and liked it; for a while I led a fruitless campaign to get our family to move to a warmer climate. So I'm viewing this all as my having moved to my own private tropics.<br />
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But yet, it is a dark time. Warm, but dark. My psychiatrist retired, the slacker, and I feel abandoned. The Sober Husband and I are in marriage counseling, and it's been what Jane Austen might refer to as "a right old clusterfuck." For example, yesterday our counselor suggested that since I am irked by the Sober Husband's ubiquitous complaining, I should try doing everything just the way he likes so that he will never need to complain. I used about fifty swear words in my explanation of why that is never going to fucking happen. <br />
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I'm of a mind to call it a day and not return to pay for more of these gems of counseling, feeling I could get more from a vintage copy of "The Total Woman" (which I read in sneaky bursts while babysitting as a tween), but the Sober Husband is in strong disagreement. <br />
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After Robin Williams died, people thought for awhile about depression. I saw so many Facebook statuses urging, "If you ever feel like that, call me!!!" I rolled my eyes at each and every one of these. The sad truth is that at this point, honestly I am not going to call anyone on a bad day. Everyone is fucking sick of hearing about how I am depressed. There is nothing more dreary than hearing about someone's depression, and anyone whose phone number I have has undoubtedly long ago had their share of hearing about mine. Additionally, the last thing I want to hear is unsolicited advice from someone who has never attempted suicide and who is not a psychiatrist. "Just look on the bright side" and "Why don't you just shake out of it?" and the like are not helpful in the least. And, finally, if you really feel that bad, you don't feel up to talking on the phone. You feel more like curling up in bed in silence.<br />
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In times like this, honestly it is literature that keeps me going. If I were to die, there are so many books I wouldn't have read. Lately, there have been some amazing books, gorgeous jewels of books that made me gasp and feel that it was worth it, dragging through life, if you at least get to now and then put up your feet, take off your shirt if you're 'pausing hard, and get drunk in words.<br />
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<i>Recent books you should read, particularly if you have my flavor of depression:</i><br />
<i><br /></i><b>California</b> by Edan Lepucki: A dark dystopic tale about life after our society collapses due to economic and environmental disasters. Beautifully written, it raises so many questions about political activism, what life is like living off the grid, how to build a society, the use of a liberal arts education. Absolutely brilliant. When I finished it, I started it over from the beginning, just not wanting it to be done.<br />
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<b>Station 11</b> by Emily St. John Mandel: Another novel set in the near-future after society's collapse, this time due to a pandemic. Mandel's book is so beautifully written, such luscious language and such an intricately linked plot, that I kept exclaiming out loud as I read it. "This book is like a necklace," I informed the uninterested Lola. "It's just so gorgeous, and it all ties together." <br />
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<b>The Bend of The World</b> by Jacob Bacharach: Bacharach's protagonist is a rather aimless man with a meaningless job and a shallow relationship whose gay, drunken best friend is obsessed with arcane theories and conspiracies. Extraordinarily witty and chock-full of silliness, but yet extremely moving and beautifully written, with an breathtakingly spare use of language at times. I literally laughed out loud at one point and teared up at another, and there is not another book I can think of which has drawn both of these reactions from my black, shriveled soul.<br />
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<b>Your Face In Mine</b> by Jess Row: A man sees someone he thinks he knows on the street, but this can't be his old friend. This oddly familiar person is the wrong race. A weirdly gripping intellectual exploration of the implications of racial reassignment surgery, pairing beautiful writing with original ideas. I was so engaged by this book that I paid no attention to my surroundings and ended up with a rather wretched sunburn on my left thigh. It seems appropriate that part of my skin changed color while I was reading this book, a little unintended homage to the power of Row's writing.<br />
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<br />the Drunken Housewifehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14606104534453493304noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25324039.post-36209064674914822532014-09-07T00:33:00.001-07:002014-09-07T00:33:02.605-07:00becoming too specialMy most majestic pet, the long-haired beauty, Frowst, requires daily doses of a morphine derivative due to hideous ulcers in his mouth. The long-term plan is to extract more teeth (he's already had one oral surgery), but the medium-term plan is to keep him doped up on painkillers and hope he doesn't lose more weight. (He gets special, appetite-tempting meals served to him, as well as a special medication aimed at increasing his appetite).<br />
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The Sober Husband is unsure about this. "You are already his person; now you're becoming his pusher! It's not going to be pretty"the Drunken Housewifehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14606104534453493304noreply@blogger.com2