My 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).
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"
Meandering 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.
Sunday, September 07, 2014
Thursday, September 04, 2014
the Recent Unpleasantness
I have not been speaking much here, and it's been in large part due to what I have been referring to as the Recent Unpleasantness.
In early July, the Sober Husband was summarily fired on short notice from his beloved, high-paying job. One week he was jetsetting around the world in business class, holding meetings, mentoring people, setting policies, etc.. and the next, he was at home looking as though he'd been struck with a poleax. On the day he came home, jobless, I greeted him and said, "There's something I wanted to tell you."
"That you told me so?" said the Sober Husband, bracing himself.
"No, that I love you." We made him a special dinner and tried to focus on the positive.
That didn't last long. Soon we were squabbling over his plans to go, despite the Recent Unpleasantness, on a vacation with his mother in Martha's Vineyard. My argument: he should stay home to look for a job. His argument: he should go to Martha's Vineyard, and we could recoup the expenses by canceling my planned vacation to Burning Man. "Oh, HELL NO" was the response from the beleaguered Drunken Housewife.
We had neither of us, the Sober Husband nor I, ever been without income or the prospect of income before. True, I had been a starving student, but in those days I had odd jobs and the prospect of a golden future. My being a stay-at-home mother had appeared to be a rational choice economically, albeit not always emotionally. We'd never faced the abyss of joblessness and economic uncertainty.
A terrible period ensued of great stress and unhappiness. Your humble correspondent spent a considerable amount of time curled up in bed, during daytime hours, softly weeping into the fur of a number of cats of various degrees of feralness.
To make things worse, the Sober Husband had a painful surgery requiring a lengthy-ish convalescence. I warned the children that it wasn't going to be pretty. "Your father has one of the world's great immune systems; he never gets sick. Plus, he's really graceful, so he doesn't hurt himself. As a result, he freaks out whenever there's the slightest thing wrong with him. He has no idea how to handle it. Be ready." This warning barely sufficed. The normally James Bond-like Sober Husband became a tormented and high maintenance convalescent.
A few days into the convalescence I had to leave to drive up to acquire Lola from her summer camp. "I'm leaving you in charge," I said to Iris firmly. She reported over the phone some difficulty in getting her father to take his medications. He said to me indignantly, "She made me stick out my tongue to show that I swallowed it!" "Nice work, Iris," I said proudly.
On top of this, our most majestic pet, Frowst, developed ulcers in his mouth. Prescribed real morphine for his pain, he spends approximately 23 hours a day lying directly upon your Drunken Housewife. When he is well, this magnificent longhaired cat spends his time surveying the neighborhood from atop a neighbor's roof or our fence. When he's hurting, he requires being held like a baby.
But happily this season of suffering and uncertainty is drawing to a close. Next week the Sober Husband begins a new job, an exciting and prestigious one. Income will begin to flow again... and among the multitude of benefits which will start up I was happy to discover pet insurance! Frowst can get the oral surgery he needs (I have booked him in to see a feline dental specialist). We are happy that our summer of stress and worry is drawing to a close, and we feel for our friends who are unemployed who don't have a happy ending in sight.
In early July, the Sober Husband was summarily fired on short notice from his beloved, high-paying job. One week he was jetsetting around the world in business class, holding meetings, mentoring people, setting policies, etc.. and the next, he was at home looking as though he'd been struck with a poleax. On the day he came home, jobless, I greeted him and said, "There's something I wanted to tell you."
"That you told me so?" said the Sober Husband, bracing himself.
"No, that I love you." We made him a special dinner and tried to focus on the positive.
That didn't last long. Soon we were squabbling over his plans to go, despite the Recent Unpleasantness, on a vacation with his mother in Martha's Vineyard. My argument: he should stay home to look for a job. His argument: he should go to Martha's Vineyard, and we could recoup the expenses by canceling my planned vacation to Burning Man. "Oh, HELL NO" was the response from the beleaguered Drunken Housewife.
We had neither of us, the Sober Husband nor I, ever been without income or the prospect of income before. True, I had been a starving student, but in those days I had odd jobs and the prospect of a golden future. My being a stay-at-home mother had appeared to be a rational choice economically, albeit not always emotionally. We'd never faced the abyss of joblessness and economic uncertainty.
A terrible period ensued of great stress and unhappiness. Your humble correspondent spent a considerable amount of time curled up in bed, during daytime hours, softly weeping into the fur of a number of cats of various degrees of feralness.
To make things worse, the Sober Husband had a painful surgery requiring a lengthy-ish convalescence. I warned the children that it wasn't going to be pretty. "Your father has one of the world's great immune systems; he never gets sick. Plus, he's really graceful, so he doesn't hurt himself. As a result, he freaks out whenever there's the slightest thing wrong with him. He has no idea how to handle it. Be ready." This warning barely sufficed. The normally James Bond-like Sober Husband became a tormented and high maintenance convalescent.
A few days into the convalescence I had to leave to drive up to acquire Lola from her summer camp. "I'm leaving you in charge," I said to Iris firmly. She reported over the phone some difficulty in getting her father to take his medications. He said to me indignantly, "She made me stick out my tongue to show that I swallowed it!" "Nice work, Iris," I said proudly.
On top of this, our most majestic pet, Frowst, developed ulcers in his mouth. Prescribed real morphine for his pain, he spends approximately 23 hours a day lying directly upon your Drunken Housewife. When he is well, this magnificent longhaired cat spends his time surveying the neighborhood from atop a neighbor's roof or our fence. When he's hurting, he requires being held like a baby.
But happily this season of suffering and uncertainty is drawing to a close. Next week the Sober Husband begins a new job, an exciting and prestigious one. Income will begin to flow again... and among the multitude of benefits which will start up I was happy to discover pet insurance! Frowst can get the oral surgery he needs (I have booked him in to see a feline dental specialist). We are happy that our summer of stress and worry is drawing to a close, and we feel for our friends who are unemployed who don't have a happy ending in sight.
Monday, July 07, 2014
fasting in the mountains
This year's family vacation at Camp
Mather began oddly. I have been sick for eight months, with one
trivial illness following upon another's footsteps. Obviously there
is some underlying cause, something causing my immune system to have
become as weak and wizened as Mr. Burns', but it could not be
determined. Extensive bloodwork ruled out thyroid, liver, kidney, or
other obvious enemies. A breath test ruled out an ulcer. The best
ideas my medical provider could come up with were that I had a
vitamin D deficiency (no doubt caused by my staying inside when I was
sick) and crystals in my inner ears (it turns out that if you cause
me to sit, roll, sit, like down, roll over like a trained dog, my
eyes would shake uncontrollably, thus proving that something was
definitely up with my inner ear).
They looked at me as though I were insane and excused themselves.
On my own I ran across a recent study
showing that a person's immune system could be rebooted by fasting.
Evidently when the body is in ketosis (burning off pre-existing bits
to keep running), the white blood cells are amongst the first to go.
Then the body is signaled to make new, fresher ones. The articles I
read differed between saying 2 days was sufficient, with others
saying it must be a fast of 3 days. It was also argued that 4-7 days
of starvation (450-750 calories) would have the same effect.
No time ever seems ripe for a 3 day
fast, but I decided on the spur of the moment to try. I am terrified
of going back to Burning Man with such a weak immune system, and I'm
sick of being sick. Also, I gained back quite a lot of all the
weight I'd heroically lost with huge exercise, and I am dying to
become a gym rat again. All that I need is a halfway decent immune
system once again.
On Day 1 I fasted. I did allow myself
a cup of coffee with lowfat milk, a smidgeon of low fat milk, but
nothing else. My rationale was that I didn't want to go through
caffeine deprivation at the same time I was undergoing food
deprivation. I got through the day just fine. The afternoon and
early evening were spent at Iris uber Alles' graduation from the 8th
grade, which featured each and every one of the 57 graduates giving
two speeches: one on the subject of their choice and a shorter one
about a classmate. Lola and I did well sitting through the 118
speeches (some were also given by school dignitaries), but when we
emerged and saw the catered foods spread about, I weakened. I told
the Sober Husband to stay as long as our admired graduate wished, but
Lola and I were going home. “Lola has been so patient,” I said,
but the reality was that I could not be by those tables of artfully
displayed food. I knew from experience that those lavash rolls were
not as flavorful as they looked, but what about the spring rolls?
Best to flee.
Day one of fasting: complete, with the only
rule-breaking a few tablespoons of low fat milk and a single breath
mint (to encourage someone who shall remain nameless to take one, who
really needed one).
Day two was rougher. It was the day
for Lola and I to pack and depart for Camp Mather. Iris had an
elegant graduation party to attend in Santa Cruz, at one of her
classmates' second homes right on the beach, and I had promised her
she did not have to miss this event.
The horrible reality dawned that each and every one of our family
bikes was in a poor state. My brakes were sketchy. Iris's bike had
a horrendous flat and needed a new tire, the previously applied patch
having failed. Lola's bike was in the best shape but was clearly too
small for her. Loving the bike dearly, Lola insisted it would be
fine. The Sober Husband's was the next best off but not particularly fabulous.
“Why do we never look at the bikes
until the last minute?” I complained. Next year I need to calendar a Mending of the Bicycles Festival the week before. The Sober Husband was skeptical that
any of these bikes would be roadworthy, and, as he kept mentioning, he had a coffee date with his friend J.
My fasting had taken a new turn. Onay
1, I was peaceful and ambitious, dreaming of good health. Day 2, I
was just as committed but crabby as all get out. “Call J. and tell
him to come to the house, instead of meeting you for coffee,” I sternly commanded. “You guys can send Iris's bike up with me except for
that wheel, and you can have today and tomorrow to get a new tire.
Fix one of these bikes (with a sweeping gesture at mine and the Sober
Husband's), and I will ride which ever one you can get ready.”
This was delivered in a highly testy manner.
At some point I was speaking to the
family members about what needed to be done, and the Sober Husband
and Lola slowly backed away, down the hall and out the front door. I
flew into a temper and chased them. “I do not care how crabby I
am, you just cannot leave in the middle of a conversation without
saying goodbye! Do you realize how awful that is! How rude that
is!” The parrot screamed, “Goodbye! Goodbye!”
Eventually my darling Mini Cooper was
packed, with two bicycles on the top and plenty of stuff on the
inside. Lolz and I took off. I had asked Lola to find us a book on
CD to listen to on our ride, amongst our many, and she had chosen one
which turned out to be on tapes. “Lola, I SAID CD. My car can't
play tapes.” Lola quailed. “It's okay, Lolz, it's okay,” I
assured her. “We'll try some short stories.”
I had a book of Tom Perrotta short
stories on CD in the car, and we tried one. It turned out to have a
discussion of threesomes and some other sexual inappropriateness
which caused me to hit the fast forward button. I felt irked. The
stories I'd listened to earlier from this collection had largely been okay for Lola; they
just had to be followed by a sexed up one. We did listen to one about
an elderly woman whose whiny plastic surgeon son refuses to bring his
kid, the woman's only grandchild, to visit around the holidays. It
wasn't racy, but it failed to grip. We gave up on Tom Perrotta. (In Perrotta's
defense, a couple of those stories had been greatly appreciated when
I was in different company, driving back from camping with my friend
Michele).
Lolz and I made excellent time arriving
at Camp Mather. Due to my fasting, we forewent our usual decadent
Mexican lunch in Oakdale (the Mexican food of Oakdale is
magnificent). We did stop for diet Red Bulls, as I found myself
flagging and needed a pep-up. The study had said that “fluids of
no nutritional value” were acceptable during fasting, and I thought
a diet Red Bull should surely count as a “fluid of no nutritional
value.”
In the afternoon Lola furtively ate
Cheezits in the car. This was horrifically difficult for me. I
craved those Cheezits so much.
Once at Camp Mather, we located our
cabin. It was somewhat inauspiciously located, in a clump with
other cabins, not near any of the roads. It would be tricky to get
my Mini close enough to unload. I figured out the closest I could
get it, and we gamely unloaded the car. Getting the bikes off the
rack was harder. I had a milk crate to stand on, but even so it was
agonizing to get them off. A kindly woman sensed my growing
psychosis and brushed off my rejections of her help, insisting. We got
Lola's bike off. Then the friendly woman's husband arrived and helped get my own bike
off. Lolz and I were grateful, although I was well aware of the bad
impression I was making: short-tempered and incompetent at removing
my own bikes from my own car.
Trying to reverse the Mimi back out of the trees to park it for the week, with Lola stationed to watch for dangers, I ran into a
rock. “Lola, you were supposed to be looking!” I snapped. The
neighbors came out, as if to ensure I did not murder poor Lola. I
steered the car as best as I could and got it safely parked with no
further misadventures.
Lola and I set up our cabin and hung a
hammock. It was time for dinner. I sent Lola ahead to the dining hall as I was still
fasting, but then began to feel guilty. Poor Lola, going alone to
eat. I came along behind, getting myself some plain green tea (no
milk, no sugar, nothing). I found Lola in the end sitting with a
couple we know from her school, whom Lola had informed of my fast.
“So you're fasting!” they greeted me. “We're taking care of
Lola.” I sipped my plain hot green tea while they ate garlic bread
and pasta and salads and desserts.
I apologized to Lola for my crabbiness,
and she was kind enough to be encouraging to me. We wound the
evening down quietly reading.
Day III: I woke up in a state of
altered consciousness. I felt vaguely saintly and above it all.
Crabbiness from Day II was far below and behind me. I floated about
in an aethereal state.
At breakfast I had no interest in
eating. Lola had a full meal, while I sipped green tea. The couple
we know stopped by. “Still dieting?” they asked. “Fasting,”
I corrected, “and I'm in an altered state. It is like those people
who fast for religious reasons. It's wonderful.”
They looked at me as though I were insane and excused themselves.
Despite my being on my 3d day without
food, Lola and I did some manual labor around camp. Our picnic table
was at a 45 degree angle and positioned right between three cabins.
Lola discouraged trying it, but I was hellbent on carrying it around
and up the hill to the side of our cabin, where it would be a bit
more private and a bit more level. It was not easy, but we did it.
“Amazon Lola!” I praised her. We set up our bug-repelling dining
tent over the picnic table and arranged all our chairs. “We've got
it all nice now, Lola,” I said happily, still in my lofty state of
an elevated consciousness.
However around noon I snapped. I felt
so delightfully above it all... but I was keenly aware of the box of
Cheezits. I also felt weak. “Lola, bring me the Cheezits,” I
said. “It's 11:58, can you wait two more minutes?” urged Lola. If not for those Cheezits, I could have made it another
day. I actually skipped a wine and cheese social at Camp Mather (and
believe me, I am all about wine and cheese socials) due to my fast.
End result: 2 ½ days of fasting,
followed by 24 hours of very light eating, then returning thereafter
to regular eating whatever the hell presented itself which appeared
edible.
It may be a placebo effect in part, but
I feel so much better. The first day or two after my fasting, I felt
good but weak, and now my energy is gradually returning. Since then I've worked out a few times at the gym, decluttered my garage, and generally shown a much higher energy level. I also resisted a cold the Sober Husband had and a virus one of the children had. Fasting: it's magic.
Saturday, July 05, 2014
competitive art
The Sober Husband recently pushed me into starting a Twitter account. Iris uber Alles watched him and then elbowed him out of the way when he was choosing an avatar. Insulting his choices, she said wearily, "Let me." She turned the computer to display the results to me. "Oooh!" I said happily. "I love it!"
Thanks to Iris, I am a goat, and the top of my Twitter is a lovely picture of Coconut, our feral cat with whom the children and I are obsessed. (Once when the Sober Husband was away on business, one of the children asked him, "Do you miss Coconut?" When he said, "To be honest, I haven't thought about him", the children were appalled. "We worship him," they hissed).
Lola did not take this lying down. She devoted several hours to creating a piece of art "for your Twitter."
Thanks to Iris, I am a goat, and the top of my Twitter is a lovely picture of Coconut, our feral cat with whom the children and I are obsessed. (Once when the Sober Husband was away on business, one of the children asked him, "Do you miss Coconut?" When he said, "To be honest, I haven't thought about him", the children were appalled. "We worship him," they hissed).
Lola did not take this lying down. She devoted several hours to creating a piece of art "for your Twitter."
I find it hypnotic and more than slightly unsettling. I have yet to unleash it upon Twitter, though.
Sunday, June 29, 2014
you can follow me on twitter
I am now tweeting as @drunkenhw now! I promise to send out a tweet when I post anything here, but I will also be tweeting randomly and possibly drunkenly as well.
Friday, June 13, 2014
at play with the eight year-olds
I am very fond of a particular game, a form of Pictionary I play on my iPhone called "Drawsomething." Fourteen year-old Iris uber Alles got tired of this game and stopped playing it over a year ago. "Momdude, people don't play that any more."
"Sure they do. I play it. All these people I play with, play it."
She sighed and rolled her eyes. "No one plays it."
My opponents consist of eleven year-old Lola (who took a very lengthy break from the game but who returned to the game, thankfully), the Sober Husband once in a great while (he'll make a move in our ancient match whenever he feels like ingratiating himself with me), and a variety of strangers that the game pairs me up with. I have crossed paths with some truly amazing artists, but judging by the quality of their artwork, most of my fellow players are small children.
"Look at this," I said to the children recently, showing them a rather arcane scribble. "What do you think this is?"
The children made some insulting remarks, but as I pointed out, the player was "probably only eight years old." How much detail and command of perspective could we expect? Gazing at the mysterious doodle, I said, "You know how I started playing Warcraft again, after taking years off? Well, I was playing my new character, and I didn't know how to play that character very well yet, and someone was insulting me. So I wanted to make them feel bad, and I typed in, 'I'm only eight.'"
The children roared with laughter. "You said you were 'only eight!'" We all laughed until we started to cry, except for the Sober Husband, who clearly found all of this below his notice.
At the time we were staying in a cabin, rented through a resort management company but owned by an elderly couple with an unquenchable passion for nicknacks. Ornaments covered every surface. Iris accidentally knocked a decorative fish off a wall, and we could not figure out where it had come from. It was fortunately undamaged, but still we couldn't cover up the mishap because we couldn't put it back in place. The walls were still covered with plaques, pictures, and bric-a-brac, and there didn't seem to be a surplus nail or hook. "We should leave it out with a note," I said. All at the same time, Iris, Lola and I had the same thought: we would use the eight year-old excuse.
"Iris has to write, 'I am very sorry. I am only 8."
In the end, I think it was Lola, who can produce a childlike writing, who wrote, "My sister knocked a fish off the wall. She is sorry. She is only 8." At least we resisted the impulse to describe Iris in this note as having special needs.
"Sure they do. I play it. All these people I play with, play it."
She sighed and rolled her eyes. "No one plays it."
My opponents consist of eleven year-old Lola (who took a very lengthy break from the game but who returned to the game, thankfully), the Sober Husband once in a great while (he'll make a move in our ancient match whenever he feels like ingratiating himself with me), and a variety of strangers that the game pairs me up with. I have crossed paths with some truly amazing artists, but judging by the quality of their artwork, most of my fellow players are small children.
"Look at this," I said to the children recently, showing them a rather arcane scribble. "What do you think this is?"
The children made some insulting remarks, but as I pointed out, the player was "probably only eight years old." How much detail and command of perspective could we expect? Gazing at the mysterious doodle, I said, "You know how I started playing Warcraft again, after taking years off? Well, I was playing my new character, and I didn't know how to play that character very well yet, and someone was insulting me. So I wanted to make them feel bad, and I typed in, 'I'm only eight.'"
The children roared with laughter. "You said you were 'only eight!'" We all laughed until we started to cry, except for the Sober Husband, who clearly found all of this below his notice.
At the time we were staying in a cabin, rented through a resort management company but owned by an elderly couple with an unquenchable passion for nicknacks. Ornaments covered every surface. Iris accidentally knocked a decorative fish off a wall, and we could not figure out where it had come from. It was fortunately undamaged, but still we couldn't cover up the mishap because we couldn't put it back in place. The walls were still covered with plaques, pictures, and bric-a-brac, and there didn't seem to be a surplus nail or hook. "We should leave it out with a note," I said. All at the same time, Iris, Lola and I had the same thought: we would use the eight year-old excuse.
"Iris has to write, 'I am very sorry. I am only 8."
In the end, I think it was Lola, who can produce a childlike writing, who wrote, "My sister knocked a fish off the wall. She is sorry. She is only 8." At least we resisted the impulse to describe Iris in this note as having special needs.
Friday, June 06, 2014
dog for a day
The night before last I had terrible insomnia, epic, unforgivable insomnia. I took two Xanax (prescribed to me for exactly such occasions), but still I remained awake until after five A.M. At 7:00 the Sober Husband shook me awake, after less than two hours sleep, so I could drive the children to school.
Zombielike I drove the children to their respective schools and returned home, to discover a request that I chauffeur a sick bird up to a wildlife rehab center in Marin. I took a one hour nap, drank some coffee, showered, and asked if the bird still needed driving, hoping the problem had been solved so I could take another, longer nap. But no, the bird still was in a pinch, so I got into the car and drove across the city to pick up the bird.
Only a block from the bird I saw a small dog walking aimlessly in the road. I pulled over and looked around. There was no one in sight. The dog had no collar. I parked the car (with the sick bird in a box in the back) and spoke to the dog. The dog cowered, as though expecting to be hit, but walked over to me. I spoke to the dog, who began to wag her tail and look enthusiastic about our budding friendship. I waited a few minutes and then ushered the dog into the back of my Mini Cooper.
Further down the street I saw a cocker spaniel roaming idly, unrestrained and without an escort. My heart sank. I slowed down, but the dog vanished. I would have normally parked and investigated, but I figured that since I had not only a stray dog but a sick bird who needed veterinary attention, I had enough on my plate.
The directions my GPS gave me were confusing, and I missed my turn and ended up on a weird, scary street where I saw not one but two small dogs without collars roaming idly. "My God, how many dogs are there out here?" I thought. One of these dogs was waddling very, very slowly down the middle of the street, and I had to slow down to nearly stopping to avoid running this dog down. "Please, I don't need any more dogs, " I thought. The dog I had taken already was climbing all over my car and poking its snout at the poor sick bird's box.
A man was seated on the curb, contemplatively throwing crumbs at the two collarless little dogs. I decided to think those were his dogs or, if not, that he was in charge of them. I drove off. It occurred to me that if I ever wanted a dog, I now knew where to go for an admirable selection. An hour or so later, I reached the wildlife clinic. I cracked all the windows for the sake of the dog, who amiably licked my face.
"What do you have for us today?" asked the volunteer at the front desk, recognizing me. "Sick bird," I said. "But I found a stray dog too, when I was picking up this bird!"
I offered the dog the chance to get out of the car, perchance to pee, but she resolutely curled up on the front seat, refusing to get out. I wondered if she was afraid I'd ditch her. I got back in the car. The dog expressed a lot of happiness, and I began contemplating keeping her. I started imagining all the fun we'd have, my dog and me. Meanwhile she sometimes disrupted my driving by climbing up on me and licking my face, and she scratched the previous pristine upholstery of my front passenger seat, but still, I was enamored.
While I was driving I spoke on the phone to the Sober Husband on my handsfree cellphone. "Better take the dog to the shelter," he said. "I don't have time," I lamented. Our Lola was reading at the culmination of her mystery writing class, and I needed to be there. I decided to drive home, leave the dog in our minuscule backyard, and then drive to the school. The Sober Husband advised that the dog would tear up our plants, but it was better than leaving the dog in the car unattended.
I had a little trouble getting the leashless dog into the house, as clearly she wanted to explore the block. Once we were in the home, we saw our tabby Henry, who took great offense and puffed up like a Halloween cat, hissing. The dog whimpered, cowered, and lost control of her bladder. I petted them both in turns, murmuring, "There, there." The dog ate some cat food with great enthusiasm and seemed happy to go in the yard. Henry, still angry, hissed at me even when the dog had been put out. I cleaned up the pee.
At the reading, I explained to Lola that I was going to have to cut out early to go take a dog I'd found to the shelter. She is used to hearing odd things from her mother and merely nodded. Iris, who had been brought to the reading by her father, decided to go with me. After Lola read two pieces aloud, Iris and I tiptoed out and raced home. There the dog was thrilled to see us. "I love her," proclaimed Iris.
We drove the dog to the city shelter, barely avoiding accidents on the way when the dog decided to show her love for me more boisterously (my absence having caused her loving heart to grow even fonder).
Once in the door one of the staff, who knows me well as a crazy cat lady, exclaimed, "Is that yours?" "No, I just found her," I said. The staff were all instantly enamored of the dog. One half-seriously suggested to another that they should not enter the dog into the system but instead just take her home. The dog was thrilled to get so much attention. Everyone thanked me for taking the trouble to bring her in, rather than leaving her alone.
Back at home I cleaned up some vomit my dog-for-a-day had left me in my backseat. Throwing this away I discovered a moribund mouse in the garage, probably attacked by a cat although with no visible wounds. I made a little box for the mouse and determined to take it to the now-closed Wildcare (which cares for rodents as well as other animals) in the morning if it survived the night. I put the mouse's box in a quiet spot in the dining room, away from the parrots and cats. The Sober Husband then chose to stand next to the mouse's box and shout across the house to the children. I looked at him irritably. "I put the mouse there specifically because it is quiet, and you are standing there next to it shouting!"
"Your work is never done, is it?" he said. "It's like Mr. Incredible, when he says he has to keep saving the world, why doesn't it stay saved?"
Back at home I cleaned up some vomit my dog-for-a-day had left me in my backseat. Throwing this away I discovered a moribund mouse in the garage, probably attacked by a cat although with no visible wounds. I made a little box for the mouse and determined to take it to the now-closed Wildcare (which cares for rodents as well as other animals) in the morning if it survived the night. I put the mouse's box in a quiet spot in the dining room, away from the parrots and cats. The Sober Husband then chose to stand next to the mouse's box and shout across the house to the children. I looked at him irritably. "I put the mouse there specifically because it is quiet, and you are standing there next to it shouting!"
"Your work is never done, is it?" he said. "It's like Mr. Incredible, when he says he has to keep saving the world, why doesn't it stay saved?"
The next day I felt depressed. "I miss my dog," I kept saying. "I had a dog for a day." Perhaps I should drive back across town and find another one.
Monday, June 02, 2014
#yesallwomen
A lot of women have been sharing their stories of misogyny and gendered oppression in the wake of the Elliot Rodger murders. Here's my top one:
Because when I was raped, my first husband forbade me to talk about it or use the word "rape" because it was too upsetting to him. #yesallwomen
Because when I was raped, my first husband forbade me to talk about it or use the word "rape" because it was too upsetting to him. #yesallwomen
Friday, May 30, 2014
the bitch is back: an update
I've been considering shutting down this blog. The primary reason is that it has been a chronicle of my raising two very eccentric children, and they have grown old enough not to want to be chronicled. I avoid writing about the ever-amusing and interesting Iris uber Alles because, at age 14, she has become a highly private person. However! In discussions with Lola, she has explicitly given me permission to continue writing about her "so long as it's not embarrassing." So we're a bit hamstrung here, but not entirely.
While I was on hiatus, a mother of one of Lola's friends invited me to get together, and it turned out that she was inspired to ask me for coffee because someone told her to read this blog, saying "Everyone reads The Drunken Housewife!" As she read it, she recognized the details and realized that she knew the author. Indeed, her child had spent the night at the Drunken Housewife's home (and emerged none the worse for wear). Over coffee this woman said to me charmingly, "I knew I liked you before, but now I really like you!" How embarrassing it was for me to then stammer, "I think I'm not writing it any more."
A few other people contacted me outside of the blog to ask me to keep writing. So, I concluded, the blog may have seen its best days. The bigger numbers, the being mentioned in the Wall St. Journal or other periodicals, may be past us. But! There are still people who want to read whatever embarrassing tripe I manage to occasionally spew out, and it's not as if I'm doing something so much better with my time.
What have I been up to, besides not blogging? I have a new volunteer gig, working a shift a week at a wildlife rehab clinic. That's invigorating as it's hard work in a good cause and gets me out of the house regularly. I've been quilting again. I'm attempting to buy a vintage trailer so I can stop sleeping in a tent at Burning Man and instead live in a tiny little bastion of retro cuteness. I have an almost-tamed white kitten with blue eyes who needs a home very badly (a home with other cats, please, as she loves all other cats). I've read some very good books and wasted a lot of time hate-reading PUA forums online. I took a spur-of-the-moment road trip down to L.A. to help out my beloved commenter Hughman and his elderly beagle, Polly. And again that brings me back to the fact that this blog has brought me real friends. It's funny how I've inadvertently made enemies with this blog but in my everyday life, I'm more affected by the real friends who've met me through it. It has enriched my life, although not financially (I did have a few ads here once upon a time but have not done anything to follow up on those). So! I'll keep it up, but with significantly fewer anecdotes of the children, sigh.
While I was on hiatus, a mother of one of Lola's friends invited me to get together, and it turned out that she was inspired to ask me for coffee because someone told her to read this blog, saying "Everyone reads The Drunken Housewife!" As she read it, she recognized the details and realized that she knew the author. Indeed, her child had spent the night at the Drunken Housewife's home (and emerged none the worse for wear). Over coffee this woman said to me charmingly, "I knew I liked you before, but now I really like you!" How embarrassing it was for me to then stammer, "I think I'm not writing it any more."
A few other people contacted me outside of the blog to ask me to keep writing. So, I concluded, the blog may have seen its best days. The bigger numbers, the being mentioned in the Wall St. Journal or other periodicals, may be past us. But! There are still people who want to read whatever embarrassing tripe I manage to occasionally spew out, and it's not as if I'm doing something so much better with my time.
What have I been up to, besides not blogging? I have a new volunteer gig, working a shift a week at a wildlife rehab clinic. That's invigorating as it's hard work in a good cause and gets me out of the house regularly. I've been quilting again. I'm attempting to buy a vintage trailer so I can stop sleeping in a tent at Burning Man and instead live in a tiny little bastion of retro cuteness. I have an almost-tamed white kitten with blue eyes who needs a home very badly (a home with other cats, please, as she loves all other cats). I've read some very good books and wasted a lot of time hate-reading PUA forums online. I took a spur-of-the-moment road trip down to L.A. to help out my beloved commenter Hughman and his elderly beagle, Polly. And again that brings me back to the fact that this blog has brought me real friends. It's funny how I've inadvertently made enemies with this blog but in my everyday life, I'm more affected by the real friends who've met me through it. It has enriched my life, although not financially (I did have a few ads here once upon a time but have not done anything to follow up on those). So! I'll keep it up, but with significantly fewer anecdotes of the children, sigh.
Tuesday, April 01, 2014
I've been considering hanging it up
For a while I've been thinking that this blog has passed its sell-by date. First, I'm more repressed. Iris and Lola are old enough not to want to be written about, and therefore I no longer can report on their wacky ways freely. I maneuver about this by often telling a story but not specifying which child it is about, but frankly I'm passing up on the best material out of not wanting to alienate them. As one of them put it, "When I was little, I thought it was great that you were a blogger..." Significant pause.
Secondly, you readers are more repressed (or not reading, sigh). There used to be a lively give-and-take in the comments, with regular personalities become celebrities of this blog. Now I rarely see a comment. The stats show that people are still reading -- they just don't seem to have anything to say. It makes me feel like this is a ghost town of a blog.
But then every now and then something happens that makes me feel appreciated and like this is worthwhile. I have been occasionally recognized in public ("Hey! Are you the Drunken Housewife?"), and yesterday a mom of one of Lola's friends invited me out for coffee. Over our caffeinated drinks, she confided that a friend of hers had called her to discuss something she'd read on my blog. My mom acquaintance didn't know about the blog, and her friend said, "Everyone knows the Drunken Housewife!" My acquaintance looked up the blog and then realized, "I think I know this person!" As I sipped my low-fat latte, she said, "I liked you before, but now I like you more. I had no idea."
This kind of moment keeps me blogging in the half-assed way that you must have become accustomed to. Is half an ass better than none?
Secondly, you readers are more repressed (or not reading, sigh). There used to be a lively give-and-take in the comments, with regular personalities become celebrities of this blog. Now I rarely see a comment. The stats show that people are still reading -- they just don't seem to have anything to say. It makes me feel like this is a ghost town of a blog.
But then every now and then something happens that makes me feel appreciated and like this is worthwhile. I have been occasionally recognized in public ("Hey! Are you the Drunken Housewife?"), and yesterday a mom of one of Lola's friends invited me out for coffee. Over our caffeinated drinks, she confided that a friend of hers had called her to discuss something she'd read on my blog. My mom acquaintance didn't know about the blog, and her friend said, "Everyone knows the Drunken Housewife!" My acquaintance looked up the blog and then realized, "I think I know this person!" As I sipped my low-fat latte, she said, "I liked you before, but now I like you more. I had no idea."
This kind of moment keeps me blogging in the half-assed way that you must have become accustomed to. Is half an ass better than none?
Wednesday, March 19, 2014
what is wrong with me? (other than my personality, sigh)
So! I have been sick for over six months now, not with one thing, but with a series of things each following the other in lockstep. Flus, colds, fevers, sinus infections, coughs, aches and pains... The last few weeks have been marred by severe nausea, causing me to not work and to skip some social engagements I actually wanted to attend.
This week I developed a disturbing new symptom. When I roll over at night in my sleep, I become so dizzy that the dizziness wakes me up and is painful. During the worst episode of this, the room was spinning around me, exactly as if I'd gotten completely trashed and had what we called in college "the bedspins." I had no alcohol in my system at all, though. These episodes are completely miserable, and since my sleep is fragile due to severe insomnia, they are not easily overcome.
Meanwhile, my test results came back. If you were to look at my blood alone, you would have to say, "Huh. There is nothing wrong with this person." No problems with the liver, thyroid, white blood cell levels, glycemic levels, cholesterol, etc.. My blood pressure is fine. Evidently I have no ulcer, either. Every hypothesis so far has been ruled out.
This week I developed a disturbing new symptom. When I roll over at night in my sleep, I become so dizzy that the dizziness wakes me up and is painful. During the worst episode of this, the room was spinning around me, exactly as if I'd gotten completely trashed and had what we called in college "the bedspins." I had no alcohol in my system at all, though. These episodes are completely miserable, and since my sleep is fragile due to severe insomnia, they are not easily overcome.
Meanwhile, my test results came back. If you were to look at my blood alone, you would have to say, "Huh. There is nothing wrong with this person." No problems with the liver, thyroid, white blood cell levels, glycemic levels, cholesterol, etc.. My blood pressure is fine. Evidently I have no ulcer, either. Every hypothesis so far has been ruled out.
Friday, March 14, 2014
an idiot dreaming of the purple rain
Late at night recently Prince's people announced he was playing this weekend in the Bay Area. Last weekend he did a couple of last minute shows in L.A., and presumably he felt like doing the same up in NoCal this weekend. The tickets sold out within minutes, of course.
I figured that he was likely to add another show. I looked at the calendar for the venue. It was suspiciously empty for the next day. Late last night I kept refreshing the calendar, and then the object of my desire appeared: another Prince show the next night. I felt ever so clever. But the link to buy tickets didn't work. I refreshed that many times. Examining the site more closely, I found a link which said that the tickets for that show would go on sale at "12:00 pm Thurs 3/13." Clearly that couldn't be noon on Thursday, because the show's existence wasn't announced until around 10:30 p.m. It must mean midnight on Thursday, I reasoned. Everyone else went to bed. I myself was exhausted but determined, having missed the amazingly wonderful shows Prince put on last year in San Francisco which everyone but me attended and bragged about on Facebook for weeks (I hate them all). The Sober Husband unhelpfully joked, "Don't you know some poor person in Oakland who can go stand in line for you?"
"There is no line! It's all online!" I snapped. I took my laptop downstairs. Around midnight I started trying to buy tickets. Every few minutes I'd refresh the screen, but the tickets never went on sale. Eventually I fell asleep. In the morning I tried again, but it still wasn't working. After I drove the children to school, I looked at the website again, and far from the tickets going on sale, the show had been taken off the listings.
"I lost a night's sleep for nothing," I told the Sober Husband over the phone. "I am so stupid."
I figured that he was likely to add another show. I looked at the calendar for the venue. It was suspiciously empty for the next day. Late last night I kept refreshing the calendar, and then the object of my desire appeared: another Prince show the next night. I felt ever so clever. But the link to buy tickets didn't work. I refreshed that many times. Examining the site more closely, I found a link which said that the tickets for that show would go on sale at "12:00 pm Thurs 3/13." Clearly that couldn't be noon on Thursday, because the show's existence wasn't announced until around 10:30 p.m. It must mean midnight on Thursday, I reasoned. Everyone else went to bed. I myself was exhausted but determined, having missed the amazingly wonderful shows Prince put on last year in San Francisco which everyone but me attended and bragged about on Facebook for weeks (I hate them all). The Sober Husband unhelpfully joked, "Don't you know some poor person in Oakland who can go stand in line for you?"
"There is no line! It's all online!" I snapped. I took my laptop downstairs. Around midnight I started trying to buy tickets. Every few minutes I'd refresh the screen, but the tickets never went on sale. Eventually I fell asleep. In the morning I tried again, but it still wasn't working. After I drove the children to school, I looked at the website again, and far from the tickets going on sale, the show had been taken off the listings.
"I lost a night's sleep for nothing," I told the Sober Husband over the phone. "I am so stupid."
Thursday, March 13, 2014
oddly the same
Recently we were at a friend's home at the same time he was working on his application for disability benefits. "I hate writing," he complained. Additionally, he has limited use of his hands (the primary reason for needing disability), which made typing hard. "Does anyone like writing?"
I couldn't resist. I pulled up a chair and studied what he'd written. "You need to really emphasize the pathetic parts," I said. "You're leaving out so much. And you've got to lead with the worst parts." I sat down and rewrote the short essay, emphasizing the truly horrific facts in my friend's case.
On the way home, I noted to the Sober Husband, "It was just like applying to Lowell!"
San Francisco has one -- and only one-- academic magnet high school. (There is also a magnet school for the arts). Dreaming of a high-quality and free education, we had Iris uber Alles apply. The process was not quite what we'd expected. First, the application required a couple of essays -- and they were all explicitly aimed at establishing just how much Iris had suffered in life. The application specified that essays should address issues the applicant had experienced such as homelessness, poverty, immigration, parents being jailed, etc.. Then later in the process, Iris was required to write an essay at her present school, while being proctored --- and once again the topic was what challenges she'd faced in life, aimed at drawing out stories of great socioeconomic suffering.
I think it's appropriate that kids who have had a rough start in life be given an advantage in getting into the special public school. Bright kids who've faced so much adversity in life but managed to cope nonetheless deserve the very finest in life. But yet it's sad that San Francisco has only the one magnet school for academic high-fliers and that the process is so one-note. There seems to be something amiss if applying for an academic magnet school is eerily like applying for SSI.
I couldn't resist. I pulled up a chair and studied what he'd written. "You need to really emphasize the pathetic parts," I said. "You're leaving out so much. And you've got to lead with the worst parts." I sat down and rewrote the short essay, emphasizing the truly horrific facts in my friend's case.
On the way home, I noted to the Sober Husband, "It was just like applying to Lowell!"
San Francisco has one -- and only one-- academic magnet high school. (There is also a magnet school for the arts). Dreaming of a high-quality and free education, we had Iris uber Alles apply. The process was not quite what we'd expected. First, the application required a couple of essays -- and they were all explicitly aimed at establishing just how much Iris had suffered in life. The application specified that essays should address issues the applicant had experienced such as homelessness, poverty, immigration, parents being jailed, etc.. Then later in the process, Iris was required to write an essay at her present school, while being proctored --- and once again the topic was what challenges she'd faced in life, aimed at drawing out stories of great socioeconomic suffering.
I think it's appropriate that kids who have had a rough start in life be given an advantage in getting into the special public school. Bright kids who've faced so much adversity in life but managed to cope nonetheless deserve the very finest in life. But yet it's sad that San Francisco has only the one magnet school for academic high-fliers and that the process is so one-note. There seems to be something amiss if applying for an academic magnet school is eerily like applying for SSI.
Wednesday, March 12, 2014
feline failures to perform
The last couple of nights my insomnia has been particularly intense. Last night, as I lay awake in the wee ours of the night, I felt irritated that no cats were keeping me company. Usually you can rely upon having one about, but lately, no. "There are five cats in this house," I thought, "and where are they?" None were pulling their weight, I felt.
At some point I padded quietly to the bathroom. As I passed Iris's room, I heard the sound of multiple cats purring. Evidently all five cats had chosen to spurn me for Iris.
It was hard not to take this personally. "$#*@& ingrates," I thought.
Eventually I fell asleep, only to be awakened by the insistent attentions of Coconut, our largest and neediest cat. Coconut pushed against me until I petted him, and he walked on me, crying. It was hard to feel excited about this, though. Coconut was clearly thinking of breakfast. Affection was a means to an end. I accepted it, though, reaching down to stroke his silky fur.
At some point I padded quietly to the bathroom. As I passed Iris's room, I heard the sound of multiple cats purring. Evidently all five cats had chosen to spurn me for Iris.
It was hard not to take this personally. "$#*@& ingrates," I thought.
Eventually I fell asleep, only to be awakened by the insistent attentions of Coconut, our largest and neediest cat. Coconut pushed against me until I petted him, and he walked on me, crying. It was hard to feel excited about this, though. Coconut was clearly thinking of breakfast. Affection was a means to an end. I accepted it, though, reaching down to stroke his silky fur.
Saturday, March 08, 2014
medical hypotheses
I saw a new medical practitioner, who thinks that there is probably a combination of things going on with me, likely some but not all of the following: (a) ulcer, (b) vitamin D deficiency, (c) diabetes, (d) anemia, and/or (e) thyroid problem. Her top bets are an ulcer/vitamin D deficiency combo. I'm skeptical about the vitamin D theory (I go into the light; I drink vitamin D enhanced milk in my coffee) but willing to swallow some supplements.
On Monday I'm having a large amount of blood drawn for labwork, but we did the ulcer test already (but the results won't be back from the lab for weeks). I was fascinated to see that ulcer tests are done by breath nowadays. Long, long ago in the eighties I was tested for an ulcer, and I had to drink a lot of barium and have a series of x-rays taken while I was cavorting about topless and embarrassed. Nowadays there's still a drink involved, but it's relatively tasty. "It tastes like Crystal-Lite. Lemony," said the tech, and she was right. Not at all like the thick, nasty barium solution which solidified in my gut and caused me to feel as though I'd swallowed a cannonball.
The entire ulcer test was charming, as opposed to its eighties forebear. First I had to wait until a full hour had elapsed after the last thing had gone into my mouth (I'd had a glass of water upon arrival at the office, injudiciously as it turned out). Then I took a deep breath, held it, popped the cap off a little mylar bag, and then thoroughly exhaled through a spout, filled the bag, and capped it. Then the tech carefully watched me drink the faux Crystal-lite down through a special straw (I am not sure why the straw was important, but it was included in the lab kit, and the tech made a big point out of searching for it and having me use it). Then after exactly fifteen minutes, I took another deep breath, held it for over four seconds, and then filled up another mylar bag. So much nicer than the old barium days, which no one would have described as charming.
What would really be charming would be a functioning immune system. While I was at the doctors, I also got a tetanus shot, which the tech tried to talk me out of on the grounds that it is risky to get vaccinated when one has a depressed immune system. I took it anyhow, because I'm going through training offered only once a year for wildlife rehabilitation work, and I have to get a tetanus shot by the end of the month or I'll be dropped from the training and will have to wait a full year for another chance. There's no reason to think waiting another couple of weeks is going to mean a drastic improvement in my health, so I ignored the well-meant advice and got the shot.
Today, the day after the shot, I dragged myself to my training despite feeling ill, and the class was full of sick people who'd evidently done the same: a room of coughing, sneezing, feverish looking animal lovers forcing themselves out of bed. I looked about and thought, "Good luck getting healthy" about myself.
On Monday I'm having a large amount of blood drawn for labwork, but we did the ulcer test already (but the results won't be back from the lab for weeks). I was fascinated to see that ulcer tests are done by breath nowadays. Long, long ago in the eighties I was tested for an ulcer, and I had to drink a lot of barium and have a series of x-rays taken while I was cavorting about topless and embarrassed. Nowadays there's still a drink involved, but it's relatively tasty. "It tastes like Crystal-Lite. Lemony," said the tech, and she was right. Not at all like the thick, nasty barium solution which solidified in my gut and caused me to feel as though I'd swallowed a cannonball.
The entire ulcer test was charming, as opposed to its eighties forebear. First I had to wait until a full hour had elapsed after the last thing had gone into my mouth (I'd had a glass of water upon arrival at the office, injudiciously as it turned out). Then I took a deep breath, held it, popped the cap off a little mylar bag, and then thoroughly exhaled through a spout, filled the bag, and capped it. Then the tech carefully watched me drink the faux Crystal-lite down through a special straw (I am not sure why the straw was important, but it was included in the lab kit, and the tech made a big point out of searching for it and having me use it). Then after exactly fifteen minutes, I took another deep breath, held it for over four seconds, and then filled up another mylar bag. So much nicer than the old barium days, which no one would have described as charming.
What would really be charming would be a functioning immune system. While I was at the doctors, I also got a tetanus shot, which the tech tried to talk me out of on the grounds that it is risky to get vaccinated when one has a depressed immune system. I took it anyhow, because I'm going through training offered only once a year for wildlife rehabilitation work, and I have to get a tetanus shot by the end of the month or I'll be dropped from the training and will have to wait a full year for another chance. There's no reason to think waiting another couple of weeks is going to mean a drastic improvement in my health, so I ignored the well-meant advice and got the shot.
Today, the day after the shot, I dragged myself to my training despite feeling ill, and the class was full of sick people who'd evidently done the same: a room of coughing, sneezing, feverish looking animal lovers forcing themselves out of bed. I looked about and thought, "Good luck getting healthy" about myself.
Thursday, March 06, 2014
six months sick
For over six months now, I've been sick. Not with one ailment, one precise disease, but with a multitude of little ones, each one following on the previous one's heels. Over that six months, I've felt almost healthy one or two days each month -- each time thinking, "Hey! I feel almost all better! Maybe I'll go to the gym tomorrow", only to wake up feeling sick the next day with something new.
Colds, flus, viruses, low grade fevers, aches and pains-- each illness seeming too unimportant for a doctor's visit, none seeming to require a prescription be written. For the past three weeks, it's been consistent nausea, headaches, and weakness.
And... I'm gaining back weight, my once amazing gym-toned muscles are turning to flab, and I'm bored and boring.
Holed up at home, my existence is somewhat Proustian at the moment, but I don't have his admirable cork soundproofing. Marcel vanquished the street noises of Paris, but I'm hearing San Francisco tear up the sidewalks in my neighborhood.
Meanwhile my doctor quit and moved away (this is my second good doctor to do this, following on the heels of my long-term, beloved dentist). I'm trying a new medical professional out tomorrow, but it feels ridiculous to go to the doctor with such a nebulous sort of problems.
Colds, flus, viruses, low grade fevers, aches and pains-- each illness seeming too unimportant for a doctor's visit, none seeming to require a prescription be written. For the past three weeks, it's been consistent nausea, headaches, and weakness.
And... I'm gaining back weight, my once amazing gym-toned muscles are turning to flab, and I'm bored and boring.
Holed up at home, my existence is somewhat Proustian at the moment, but I don't have his admirable cork soundproofing. Marcel vanquished the street noises of Paris, but I'm hearing San Francisco tear up the sidewalks in my neighborhood.
Meanwhile my doctor quit and moved away (this is my second good doctor to do this, following on the heels of my long-term, beloved dentist). I'm trying a new medical professional out tomorrow, but it feels ridiculous to go to the doctor with such a nebulous sort of problems.
Saturday, March 01, 2014
humiliating wishes
Recently the Sober Husband asked me what I want (which he could give me, of course; if I could have anything, it might be an improved immune system, outlawing veal, ending testing on rats, a Chinese crested dog, or a houseboy). Pondering this led to a conversation with Iris uber Alles.
"There are two things I want, but I'm too embarrassed to tell you. It's really pretty humiliating. You're going to make fun of me."
"Now you have to tell me!"
"You're going to say I'm too materialistic. Well, the first one is a vintage trailer."
Contemptuously Iris spat out, "Everyone knows that!" It's true that over the past few years, I've spent a lot of time looking at what I call "trailer porn", and I went so far as to leave a note on a beautiful little vintage Scamp begging the owners to call me if they ever want to sell it.
I carried on, but lost my courage. "I can't say the other one. I can't."
"There's been so much build-up, you have to say it!"
Finally, after some pressing, I admitted to wanting a browlift. "My eyes are the main good thing about me." I'd like to get rid of the bags under my eyes and tighten up my sagging brows.
Iris reacted with surprise. "Honestly, I don't think you need one. You're not aging badly like [name deleted] or other people your age."
"But look." I demonstrated how fabulous I'd look by pulling back my brow.
"I'd get the trailer."
However, in the end what the Sober Husband probably has in mind is more along the lines of buying me a bag of jelly beans or taking me out to dinner. While I'm dreaming, I should probably imagine myself post brow-lift, looking bright-eyed and merry in my darling vintage trailer.
Sunday, February 09, 2014
love, Sober Husband style
"I'm going to Texas," the Sober Husband, who travels a lot for work nowadays, informed me. "On February 14th."
I looked at him. "Do you know what day that is?" I asked sternly.
He gave me his best Bambi-caught-in-the-headlights look, with long, fluttering eyelashes over beseeching eyes. I stared stonily.
Eventually a child broke the silence. "It's Valentine's Day, duh!" said the child contemptuously to her father.
"And I guess we're not doing anything for it," I said.
I looked at him. "Do you know what day that is?" I asked sternly.
He gave me his best Bambi-caught-in-the-headlights look, with long, fluttering eyelashes over beseeching eyes. I stared stonily.
Eventually a child broke the silence. "It's Valentine's Day, duh!" said the child contemptuously to her father.
"And I guess we're not doing anything for it," I said.
Thursday, January 23, 2014
IMing with the Sober Husband
IM convo with husband:me: Are you there?
Sober Husband: Yup. Composing my reply to your reply.
me: about what?
Sober Husband: Nearing the airport now, home in maybe an hour.
...about the meaning of all that jargon in the Wikipedia entry on the Pauli principle.
me: i don't even remember this
Sober Husband: You wrote me 19 minutes ago. I'm replying.
me: ?? Did I get hacked?
Sober Husband: Oh, you're my wife.
Wednesday, January 08, 2014
Lolz has an idea
"If we get another kitten that's mutated, like Lobster [a foster kitten with deformed front feet]? We should name it 'Vodka Mutini." - eleven year-old Lolz
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