I'll start with an extremely small one: my bank account. December is a horrible month for our finances and it's been compounded this year by an instance of credit card fraud. We're not alone in this, but we were lucky to find out about it the day before all the Target customers discovered they were victims of the retailer's data breach. I imagine we squeaked in just before the bank was flooded with calls, so I'm hoping the investigation will go forth without a hitch. And I'm thanking God for the small favor that there even is an investigation, because it means we probably won't be held accountable for the charges. Unfortunately, the reason I'm so confident of this is that it's happened before. On the bright side, the situation makes for a good excuse to post a scene from one of my favorite holiday movies. Here's Bing Crosby in White Christmas, reminding us not to sweat the small stuff. I'm going to take his advice.
Saturday, December 21, 2013
Small Things
I'll start with an extremely small one: my bank account. December is a horrible month for our finances and it's been compounded this year by an instance of credit card fraud. We're not alone in this, but we were lucky to find out about it the day before all the Target customers discovered they were victims of the retailer's data breach. I imagine we squeaked in just before the bank was flooded with calls, so I'm hoping the investigation will go forth without a hitch. And I'm thanking God for the small favor that there even is an investigation, because it means we probably won't be held accountable for the charges. Unfortunately, the reason I'm so confident of this is that it's happened before. On the bright side, the situation makes for a good excuse to post a scene from one of my favorite holiday movies. Here's Bing Crosby in White Christmas, reminding us not to sweat the small stuff. I'm going to take his advice.
Thursday, December 19, 2013
Killing Christmas
I am a huge Killers fan. I mean, how can
you not approve of this?
So I was super excited when I realized the band releases one Christmas single every season. They have about six songs out, available for your listening pleasure on Youtube.
I’m proud to say I’m into edgy Christmas music. I own a CD (do they still have those?) called The Edge of Christmas, which is all the proof I need that I’m an edgy chick. Plus, I’m totally open to someday doing either the Laura Ingalls Wilder or The Fred Claus version of celebrating. The former would entail lots of oranges, a smattering of sugar cubes, which we would savor all day long, and handmade gifts. The kids would offer to milk the cow for us for ten days, giving us a well-deserved break. The Fred Claus holiday would put either a baseball bat or a hula hoop under the tree—one for each kid, dependent on gender. (Red alert! That sort of makes it sexist. Is it better to fall prey to mass consumerism or sexism? I must ponder.)
I’m proud to say I’m into edgy Christmas music. I own a CD (do they still have those?) called The Edge of Christmas, which is all the proof I need that I’m an edgy chick. Plus, I’m totally open to someday doing either the Laura Ingalls Wilder or The Fred Claus version of celebrating. The former would entail lots of oranges, a smattering of sugar cubes, which we would savor all day long, and handmade gifts. The kids would offer to milk the cow for us for ten days, giving us a well-deserved break. The Fred Claus holiday would put either a baseball bat or a hula hoop under the tree—one for each kid, dependent on gender. (Red alert! That sort of makes it sexist. Is it better to fall prey to mass consumerism or sexism? I must ponder.)
Anyhoo, my Edge of Christmas CD is a
collection of non-traditional songs, including Christmas Wrapping by The
Waitresses, some song by Freddie Mercury, the quartet of God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen
(featuring Sarah McLachlan and the Bare Naked Ladies) and the duet between Bing
Crosby and David Bowie—arguably the best holiday song ever recorded. It’s great—yet
it’s still met with resistance when we add it to the mix at family celebrations.
Any deviation from Christmas in Killarney or the Sinatra family rendition of
The Twelve Days of Christmas (which—frustratingly—mixes up all the words) makes
my family queasy. They dig Nat King Cole, Bing, Sinatra and Vanessa Williams, but
draw the line at BNL’s Elf’s Lament or The Hannukah Song. It’s okay. To each
his own.
So I checked out the Killers Christmas
offerings from years past, confident that I’d be adding them to my holiday
playlist. I typed: Killers Christmas into a Youtube search and got a song
called…..Don’t Shoot Me, Santa. Um, okay. The video features a creepy Santa (as
if the concept of Santa isn’t creepy enough on its own) having a sock puppet
show and eventually tying Brandon Flowers up with garland. (Hmm, maybe that part
wouldn’t be so bad if it weren’t blatantly unrealistic. As if garland could
seriously restrain anyone.) It’s pretty frightening. If I put that in my player, I’d
scar my children for life. And maybe my husband too.
The next song that popped up was Joseph,
Better You Than Me, which is another one that probably won’t make the Kreft or
Morrison Christmas cut. I had high hopes for Happy Birthday Guadalupe—and to
give it credit, it was more upbeat than the lament about Joseph’s trials as an
alleged cuckold. Yeah, I can dig Happy Birthday Guadalupe. If forced.
Next was Boots. The video starts off promising,
with Jimmy Stewart’s prayer sequence from It’s
a Wonderful Life. So! Yay. It soon disintegrates into shots of a homeless
man pining over a photo of a beaming blond family. Now, I understand that in a
video you have to tell a story in a very short amount of time—and it’s not
going to be anywhere near the caliber of a well-plotted movie like IAWL—but I’m
going to go out on limb and say that homeless people rarely carry 5 x7 glossies
of their beaming families. If they even have beaming families. Which they do
not.
Last but not least on the playlist was The
Cowboy’s Christmas Ball, which sounded like a mash-up between a Johnnie Cash song
and The Walt Disney World resort promotional video.
I briefly contemplated adding one of these
to the CD shuffle at our Christmas celebration. In all fairness, it would
probably go unnoticed—like almost everything we do goes unnoticed when we’re
surrounded by beloved family members—but my husband and I are gluttons for
punishment. We relished hearing Don’t Shoot Me Santa pop up between Vanessa
Williams’ Do You Hear What I Hear and some Johnny Mathis horror—just to see
what would happen. Then we decided that even we could never be that cruel.
Although A Great Big Sled (above) is always a possibility. That one’s not too bad
and there’s the added bonus of being able to tell my mom that there exists a
music group called The Killers. (I can already hear her say: Who’d listen to a band
named after felons?)
The Killers get an A for trying to rebel
against this asinine fight to the death that Christmas has become, but a big,
fat E for subtlety. I should thank them, however, for pointing out that holiday
traditions are so ingrained that even an edgy person like me can’t easily
dispense of them. If that was their intent, then they killed it. I now
know that it would take more than an epiphany to get me to listen to The Cowboy’s
Christmas Ball over Mele Kalikimaka. Although I might give it another go at Epiphany,
which I hear is a religious event disguised as an excuse to leave the
decorations up a week past the hullabaloo.
Happy Holidays to all!
Kill Christmas this year for me! (If you’re Christian.)
Monday, December 9, 2013
Maybe Next Time We'll Think Before We Tweet
Americans expressing hate for The Sound of
Music Live on NBC awoke today to find that their pretty little souped up four
wheel drives had been keyed. There were hundreds of calls to police stations
all over the nation, as complainants lamented the ugly slashes across both the
driver- and passenger-sides of their automobiles.

Owners of cars with leather seats reported
that their upholstery had been shredded beyond recognition into the semblance
of a name. The damage was so bad it was unclear which name exactly, but some victims were
able to make out the letter “C” amid the carnage.
There were also reports of headlight
damage and holes in tires across America. A Louisville slugger was found
abandoned in a vacant lot in Salem, Massachusetts. It was taken into evidence
and is being dusted for prints, but authorities aren’t optimistic about finding
a suspect.
“We got an anonymous tip that the
perpetrator took to the mountains in hopes of immigrating to another country,”
Pipefitter said. “I think we’re gonna have to put this one to bed in the cold
case file.”
But going to bed might be hard for the
hundreds of victims whose cars have been vandalized.
“I went to bed, because the sun had,” said
a tearful and exhausted Gretyl VonderKemp of Hoboken, New Jersey. “And look what happened. I never
expected to wake up to this.”
“You should’ve seen my boyfriend Ralph’s
expression when he saw his Hummer,” Gretyl’s sixteen-going-on-seventeen-year-old
sister seconded. “There’s no way to describe the sense of violation. We were
totally unprepared to face this.”
Police said the MO is reminiscent of some vehicular
crimes that had swept the nation in 2007, coinciding with the release of the
album Some Hearts.
Carrie Underwood, who happened to be nearby
fording streams and following rainbows, reiterated her comments of earlier this
week. “Mean people need Jesus.” Underwood also cited the Biblical passage, 1
Peter 2:1-25.
Wednesday, November 20, 2013
Knitting with the Enemy
Let me make one thing
clear. I don’t knit. I wish I did, but I don’t. This blog isn’t about knitting,
anyway. It’s about a gap way bigger than my thigh gap, which—if you’re
wondering—is the term assigned to describe the space between a woman’s thighs.
In my case, it’s nonexistent. I don’t have time to talk about non-existent
things (Generation Xers don’t, as a rule), so instead I'm going to conquer something that exists with a vengeance. The generation gap.
I called the blog Knitting with
the Enemy because it occurred to me that I spend a lot of time conversing with
older people, primarily women. And we’re different. Back in the day, I thought
it was because they were old and I was young. Being no longer young, I’ve
realized that age had nothing at all to do with the antagonism expressed between
women of different generations.
Case in point: My mother, who is nearing 80
years of age had an altercation with a woman in her nineties at the senior
center, where my mother is apparently considered to be “one of those flighty
young whippersnappers” who’ve ruined the world. Who of us haven’t been victims
of this mindset?
Take the movie Sleeping With the Enemy (See? I got around to explaining the blog title. If at first you don't succeed, yadda yadda) The film stars
Julia Roberts and some mean-looking guy and is about a woman who seems to have everything—a beautiful
home, money, lovely clothes, handsome husband—until we find out that the
husband is a bastard dictator who also beats her. (Like I said, mean.) Sure, we’re horrified when
Julia’s screen husband demands that she line up the towels just so and alphabetize
the canned goods. We gasp up phlegm when he slaps her around because the toilet
paper roll is a millimeter off-center or the lamb is under-cooked, the chutney
ruined.
As I recall, women of my generation were
clutching their theater seats to keep from running up to pummel the male lead while
screaming “You’re lucky to be getting a hot meal, you ingrate!” But there was another
group of women whose eyes were darting about in the darkness. Although ashamed
to admit it, they’d allied themselves straightaway with OCD man and remained
pretty firmly on his side, perhaps until he planted that first blow. While no one likes
to see Julia’s pretty face get messed up, thoughts like: I love a well-kept
house, or she should have dinner on
the table for her husband were floating around that theater, believe you me (Is that a thing? What does that even mean? Believe you me.) I
could feel the vibes ricocheting off the screen.
If Martha
Stewart saw that movie, she was probably wondering the whole time why the film
was even called “Sleeping with the Enemy.” He’s only looking out for her best
interest, thought Martha, as the empire she built by pointing out the inadequacies
of others flitted through her mind’s eye. What’s wrong with that?
Yeah, it took a stint in jail to mellow
her out. Let’s not let it get to that point, folks. Three words. Get off Pinterest.
If you’ll agree to do that, I’ll refrain from making
fun of the thirty-somethings walking around, shopping with their I-phones held
in front of them like old guys once held the TV Guide crossword puzzle in days
of yore. I’ll be super-supportive of the parents who are picking out their
dinner wine as their toddlers teeter on the verge of death, doing the
hokey-pokey in the seat of the grocery cart. (“Oh, look! Skylar can turn herself around!
How cute is that? I’ll send you a picture”) In fact, I’ll carry around a pile
of concussion awareness sheets, like the ones they hand out at the pediatrician, and slip one of them to parents, quiet as a Mickey. No judgment intended,
just safety. I’ll join Lean in and try to read about a support network of
working women without allowing my envy to short out the Internet. (Hey, I didn’t
have that when I was working, you young whippersnappers. Ingrates!)
It all boils down to jealousy really, and
we should rebel against that type of thing so we can all knit peacefully
together someday. Except I don’t knit.
And if it’s important to teens that there
be a little gap of space between their legs, I’ll try to understand. Maybe that’ll
keep them from being obsessed about other things that might be going on down
there (but I doubt it). What am I saying? Down with thigh gaps! There are better gaps to think about, more important gaps. Gaps in teeth, resume gaps, pick a gap!
Flabby thighs aside, we Gen-Xers have got
you all sooo beat in terms of cool demographic monikers. And that includes you,
Baby Boomers (Although Baby Boomers sounds way better than Spawn of Men and
Women Who Responded to their Fear and Uncertainty in the Face of Death By
Having Extraordinary Amounts of Sex……Or does it?)
Monday, October 14, 2013
Thank you, Phantom Gardener!
Looks kind of fake, doesn't it? |
It all started in the spring. I decided to
cut back on my flower budget, resolving to make do with a few hanging pots that
were Mother’s Day gifts and some perennials that I moved from elsewhere in the
yard. Freebies all. There was the necessary evil of replacing three spirea
bushes that had died, but we left the bed on the other side devoid of bushes. I
told myself it was because things were looking too symmetrical. Now I know that
I was too lazy and cheap to buy and plant three more matching spireas. Some
lovely wildflowers are just the thing, I thought, anticipating a slightly
lopsided look. It’ll be like that hairstyle that’s shorter in the back than in
the front. Angular chic.
Unfortunately, I’ve never had luck with
wildflowers. Deep down, I knew they’d never grow well enough to offset the
three bushes on the other side. The tame wildness of an English garden has
always been out of my grasp—and would be again, I feared. In any case, we spent
less than a hundred dollars on the yard, and that included veggies for the
vegetable patch.
Okay,
so the transplanted perennials finally took and spread this season, filling out
the kidney-shaped bed that had looked pretty dire in past years. I owed a debt
to early and extended bloom times, thanks to unseasonably warm weather followed
by a stint of cooler summer nights. I think we had TWO springs instead of one. This
benefited the front garden, which I barely had to weed, and time for writing emerged
as sure as spiderwort.
I should’ve mentioned that these floral
cutbacks had to do almost as much with time issues as financial. I resigned
myself to letting the yard go to pot in the name of finally finishing my damn
book.
But I didn’t have to cope with a yucky
yard, because the Phantom stepped in. A perennial that I’m sure I accidentally
pulled, thinking it was a dead bloom leftover from last summer, popped up in
another spot and grew to huge proportions. (My friend’s theory is that a
squirrel dug the bulb up and relocated it, but I know it was the Phantom.) Smack
dab in the middle of the wildflowers that never were and flanked by armies of
blue bells, it gave the air of wildflowers. As if I’d planned it that way.
At the same time, a crop of petunias in
all colors began to bloom along the back of the bed, apparently seeded from
last year’s hanging pots. Since there were no longer any bushes to cover them
up, the freebie petunias could be seen from the road. There were so many
varieties that I was able to transplant a patch of white to the front. There
they complemented my pre-planned pansies.
In the back of the house, similar wonders
were afoot. Since au naturel was the theme, I planted only one thing around the
patio. The rest of the beds were occupied by herbs and odds and ends. (Smelled
wonderful.) The plant I went with was a climbing yellow something or other from
my mother-in-law. She gets me the same plant every year and I think I’m the
only one in the family who hasn’t found the proper spot for it. Wherever it
ends up, it look green and lush but refuses to climb, its blooms sparse. I’ve
tried to plant it near a trellis, in a wishing well and along a line of netting
meant to lure it up the porch railing. No go. Meanwhile, my mother-in-law’s not
only climbs like a toddler on speed, it becomes top heavy with blooms. Its
vivaciousness taunted me whenever I went over there.
You wouldn’t believe how many compliments I’ve gotten on the yard this year.
Here it is almost wintertime and I’m still
benefitting from my Phantom Gardener. Around the hydrangea shoot I transplanted
(from a bigger bush in front) a patch of moss roses from years ago sprouted,
adding some well-needed color to the patio. They’d re-seeded in a symmetrical
formation at the base of the budding bush, which also took immediately to its
new location.
One day I noticed some moss rose vines
shooting up from a container I’d left out for a few days. While I never planted
them, I took the pot into my house and set it by my kitchen sink. With a little TLC, I
know I’ll be able to keep it alive through the winter months and enjoy a little
touch of Spring when I need it most. All thanks to my Phantom Gardener.
Wednesday, September 18, 2013
The Parent Club
I interrupt this session of writing to get
some anger off my chest. See, it’s been festering since August 12, which is the
day I went to Cedar Point with my family. We joined a few other families there.
It was actually a Girl Scouting activity. The troop covered the day-trip with
the proceeds from their cookie money. We walked around, stood in line, rode
rides and eventually drifted away from the others in our group. That was okay;
the Scouts plugged this as an individual family event. It was a good time….until my three
kids, my husband and I decided to go—not on the Dragster or the Raptor or the
Gatekeeper—but….to THE PARKING LOT…Dunh-Dunh-Dunh…togetourjackets. (I’m trying
to make this more dramatic as a build-up to the cause of my anger.)
Thursday, September 12, 2013
National Cry-in-Public Day
Hey, I’m in a blogging
mood today. So back to blogging I go. This’ll be a dark one, unfortunately, despite the dwarf video. I’m
such a dreary ghoul these days. I might swear a little. Here’s why: Yesterday was 9/11 and I had to
take my mom for simple out-patient surgery, during which I realized just how
vulnerable I am. Seeing her vulnerable does that to me. I know, it’s selfish of
me to be so self-absorbed. I should be thinking of her, or the nation, or the
people suffering through yesterday. I mean, it’s not like I was innocently
working away at my hard-won job when a plane smashed through my office walls. I’m
lucky. I’ve never had to jump from a gazillion-floor building to avoid being
crushed to death by debris, choosing one bad death over another. I didn’t have to imagine that happening to a loved one, or hear about it on TV, or think about it in
the depths of the night. I didn’t lose anyone that day. Nor have I received the
dreaded call from my kids’ schools. We’ve had Lock Down Drills, but not the
real deal, even though our neighborhood could be a twin to Sandy Hook. No wonder it
clawed away at my insides to see that community go through what it went through. Likewise it makes me sick to hear my husband relate his coworker’s rants. Sandy Hook
was just something the government came up with so Obama could take away their right
to bear arms. (Yes, there are crazies all around. Great, now I sound paranoid.)
Still, I need my mom so much, and there
were times I feared something might’ve gone wrong during this simple no-brainer
surgery that takes three minutes tops. So what if thirty other people were
having the exact same thing done? It took two hours when you factor in all the
prep and stuff, and the whole time I thought about people who send their kids
off to school unaware that this will be the day the teen with untended
mental illness comes in to wreak his twisted sense of judgment. In a world
where chaos reigns, how can I be sure my mom won’t be the one in a million? The
one time this surgery goes bad?
In the waiting room, I read a book about
Columbine while the coverage of 9/11 memorials played in the background on mute (for me. For others, there might've been sound). Flags
flapped, people alternately bowed their heads and saluted. Victims cried. The
book was Wally Lamb’s The Hour I First
Believed. Take it in small doses, people, but take it—just not during a
loved-one’s surgery or on September 11th. I think I might’ve been torturing
myself for not having lost anyone to
these horrible things.
Of course, everything went fine with my
mother. (Once again, I lucked out big-time. I should play the freaking lottery every day! I never play it.) That
evening my kids told me what they did in school to preserve the memory of
the tragedy that occurred twelve years ago, which was watch this: Patriot Day video. My husband and I told them (again) exactly
where we were and what we did that day. I’m sure all the teachers did the same. He’d
taken the day off work to be present for the delivery of our swing-set. I was
running up to get some diapers for my one-year-old daughter, and I listened
with wide-eyed disbelief (or—I’m ashamed to say—more like narrow-eyed
skepticism) to what I thought was the War
of the Worlds prank all over again. In fact, I kind of blamed OrsonWelles for what I was hearing. Goddamnit, I remember thinking, if
freaking Welles hadn’t tried to be some macho radio pioneer, this wouldn’t be
happening now. What can I say, the
frightened mind is rarely rational.
After our recollections, my kids reminded me they hadn’t yet been born on September 11, 2001, and the one who had been born (my diaperless daughter)
didn’t remember it. (How could she? She was only one.) Columbine popped into my head.
NONE of them were around for that.
This hobbled me emotionally because I looked
at my three kids and a voice in my mind said: there will be something else. Something that will
rock their world and change it. From that day forward they will always remember
where they were when it happened. They’ll remember every little detail. As that
knowledge trickled down into my gut, I had the chilling realization that
whatever it was lurking in their future, waiting to strike—it would be bad. No generation is exempt. Thus far, the pattern of
chaos has been totally predictable in this regard. It will happen.
I never cry in public. Frightens the
children and turns off the people working the deli counter. Inappropriate. Besides, what the fuck
do I have to cry about? Did my husband perish at the Twin Towers? Did my
seven-year-old miss his birthday because of some family’s lost and damaged son?
Not crying in public is a tendency I share with Wally Lamb’s main characters.
It’s a weakness in wolves' clothing, disguised as strength. They think it’s
because they’re men. I beg to differ. Because, last I checked (and I check
daily), I’m a woman, yet as reluctant as the next guy to turn on the waterworks.
I’m like a cowboy (not the ones in
Brokeback Mountain).
I want to change. I want my crying jags
to see the sunlight, no longer exiled to the laundry room. I propose we
institute National Cry-in-Public Day. (I’m writing my congressperson now. Wait!
Who’s my congressperson again?)
See, at church on Sundays? I’ve been noticing
these people. They cry silently through prayers or during the petitions or even
during announcements. Either church is their
laundry room or they’re far braver than I. Let’s say for argument, though,
that they’ve lost someone recently and they have an excuse for their grief. I’m
still envious of them, and a little fascinated. By putting their grief on
display so publicly, they defy us to address it. I wish I had the bravery to go
up and stand next to them. To say: I see your sadness. To sit with them for a minute, bonded by mutual fear. Except I’m the ice-blooded pussy who
hides in her laundry room to cry. (Can a woman be a pussy? No? Ironic.)
National Cry-in-Public Day would put an
end to all this agonizing. (More irony.) We'd be obligated to cry, reason or no. Crying would be revealed for what it is: a sign of
strength, not weakness. An acknowledgement that in the face of bad things, we
are not going to retreat to our laundry rooms. We are going to flaunt our
sadness and with it, the wisdom gained from a lifetime of intermittent
tragedies. This might not be the end of the violence, but we won’t pretend to
be strong anymore. We are vulnerable and we know it. See, you’ve got nothing over us
anymore, chaos! Fuck you, and the monsters you breed. You might be too random (finger
quotes here) to realize it, but crying cleanses, dude. So just keep hiding
behind your trench coats, your demented fb pages, your little booby traps, your
bombs and guns. Meanwhile, we’re gonna cry ourselves as naked as the day we were born.
SIDE NOTE:
Okay, here I was gonna place a video of "It's Alright to Cry" from the psyche-forming Free to Be You and Me. But that message didn't really sink in with me, whereas this one did. Besides, it's funny.
SIDE NOTE:
Okay, here I was gonna place a video of "It's Alright to Cry" from the psyche-forming Free to Be You and Me. But that message didn't really sink in with me, whereas this one did. Besides, it's funny.
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