Wednesday, July 27, 2005





"I KNEW they could do this!!!"



I swore that this was NOT going to become a "Cat-a-Blog" about my pwecious 'ittle kitties... But for those of you who are also "owned" by one or more cats & might appreciate this image, I humbly submit this pic. Harpo and Milo are getting along famously (better than I could have ever hoped), but Milo has also developed the habit of taking at least one massive, steamy crap in my living room each day. I can't pinpoint a particular time of day-- he's done it in the night, between my morning departure and noon, between noon and 5, and again in the evening. Never more than once a day, and not every day, but just when you think he's stopped, the phantom crapper strikes again. Ironically, the cat in this pic is a dead ringer for Milo. Any suggestions on how to curb the kitty ca-ca problem? Any wisdom would be appreciated. Cause if this cat poo problem doesn't stop, he may have to find another place to park his happy ass.


Monday, July 25, 2005

Synchronicity

This past weekend I had one of those strange cosmic karma kind of moments .

As the only daughter of an only child, all of my maternal family heirlooms are trickling down to me in dusty rivulets. The "good stuff" will only uncork after the eventual passing of my grandmother (who's 93 and feisty as hell), and I'm in no hurry . But in the meantime I keep receiving familial flotsam and jetsum in trunk-filling packages whenever I visit my mom-- basically every Sunday.

As I mentioned in one of my first posts, my mom recently retired after a 40+ year teaching career. And this "new-found" freedom (yeah, I know.. she's ALWAYS had her summers off) has catapulted her into a frenzy of cleaning and purging of possessions. Likewise, she's nudged Grandma (a Class A-1 packrat) to do the same. The result is the steady stream of effluvia that I have to find room for in my own nest. Much of it has found a new home in one of several different antique shops around town (I don't sell the personal / sentimental items), but the growing box of photographs and keepsakes is accumulating at an alarming rate.

On Friday night I stayed in, watching TV and attempting to polish the silver plated tableware that I hoped might appeal to one of the shop owners. Eventually I came to a large cardboard box marked "kitchen misc" containing a dozen silver serving dishes and utensils, apparently received on the occasion of my mother's parents 25th wedding anniversary, as well as a packet of greeting cards, also addressed to them. I sifted through the cards, noting that most bore little more than a signature at the bottom-- the givers choosing to let the printed sentiment do the talking. The last one was addressed to my grandmother alone, and it was signed "Love, Daddy." The words confused me at first, as I knew that her father had died when she was only six years old. And then I remembered my mother telling me that she had always called her parents "Mom & Daddy"-- that they had addressed each other as such in her presence-- only rarely calling each other "Catherine" and "Paul." The unbridled sentiment the verse expressed brought tears to my eyes, as it told of the daily joy, pride and wonder he felt over the gift of Grandma in his life. He had been nearing 40 when they married, and after 25 years he was still humbled to have found a woman who could make his dreams come true. Grandpa had been 12 years older than grandma, and in many ways he had filled the gap of father AND husband for her... They loved each other devotedly. So it was all the more bittersweet to realize, after reading the cards wishing them "Many years more of happiness!" and "a long life together!" that they had been parted a few months later by my grandfather's death.

Yesterday, as I worked in Mom's basement, dutifully sorting through several more boxes, I stumbled across a packet of family pictures. I recognized my dad's handwriting on the back of the first picture, a sweet shot of his mother and her beloved mutt, Butchie (more on him later). Further down the stack, I found a side view picture of my parents as they walked down the aisle after saying their wedding vows. In his precise Catholic-school penmanship, Dad had written, "The happiest day of my life: December 31, 1966." He had kept these pictures in a box along with other odds and ends, and after his death my mother had simply packed it inside of a larger box and left it unopened. The image itself was unremarkable, and most people would have been tempted to toss such a badly angled candid shot. But he knew the importance of the moment that had been captured, and it spoke to him just as strongly as any posed, formal shot might have done. This symbolized the day he had started his life over, apart from his distant mother and recovered alcoholic father. He was entering a new and hopefully happier part of his life with a woman who loved him. His hand was resting gently at Mom's back, and his angular frame was turned protectively toward her. He was officially the man in Mom's life, a role left empty by the death of her father 5 years before. You can't see either of their faces in the picture, yet I was grateful because I'd like to think they only had eyes for each other and were blind to the congregation.

I don't know why these images came to me less than 48 hours apart, after never seeing either before. It left me wondering about how and why certain people come into our lives, both romantic and platonic relationships. Why we drift in and then out, grow close then apart. Why some relationships are a nightmare and others are beyond our wildest dreams. How the same person can be the love of our life and "my favorite damn disease." Some relationships seem pre-destined-- SOMEone knew to put my grand / parents together, while others defy explanation. When I try to figure out how in all that's unholy I ended up becoming friends with my neighbor, John, it baffles me completely. We've each lived in at least a 1/2 dozen different states and over two dozen homes respectively, yet we managed to run smack into each other. Had either of us made even one different life-decision we most likely wouldn't have even met, our lives having been so different. Yet here we are, our lives completely interwoven, without a clue why...

Friday, July 22, 2005

T.G.I.F. already!

These aren't original to me, but they always give me a chuckle or two ~
(NOTE: Even if I didn't think up all of these pithy comments, I've heard versions of WAY TOO MANY of them issue from my own mouth & the mouths of my friends)

DIFFICULT
WORDS TO SAY WHEN YOU ARE DRUNK

Specificity
Indubitably
Innovative
Preliminary
Proliferation
Cinnamon
Statistics
Impervious

IMPOSSIBLE WORDS TO SAY WHEN YOU ARE DRUNK

Thanks, but I don't want sex.
No, I don't want another drink.
No pizza for me thank you.
Sorry, but you're not good looking enough for me.
Oral Sex? NO THANK YOU.
Good evening officer.
I'm not interested in fighting you.
No one wants to hear me sing.
Me? I cannot dance.
I think I should go home early.

HANGOVER RATING SYSTEM
> One Star Hangover (*)
No pain. No real feeling of illness. You're able to function relatively well. However, you are still parched. You can drink 5 sodas and still feel this way. For some reason, you are craving a steak & fries.

> Two Star Hangover (**)
No pain, but something is definitely amiss. You may look okay, but you have the mental capacity of a staple gun. The coffee you are chugging is only increasing your rumbling gut, which is still tossing around the fruity pancake from the 3:00 AM Waffle House excursion. There is some definite havoc being reeked upon your bowels.

> Three Star Hangover (***)
Slight headache. Stomach feels crappy. You are definitely not productive. Anytime a girl walks by you gag because her perfume reminds you of the flavored schnapps shots your alcoholic friends dared you to drink. Life would be better right now if you were home in your bed watching Lucy re-runs. You've had 4 cups of coffee, a gallon of water, 3 iced teas and a diet coke and haven't peed yet!!!

> Four Star Hangover (****)
Life sucks. Your head is throbbing. You can't speak too quickly or else you might puke. Your boss has already lambasted you for being late and has given you a lecture for reeking of booze. You wore nice clothes, but that can't hide the fact that you only shaved one side of your face. (For the ladies, it looks like you put your make-up on while riding the bumper cars.) Your eyes look like one big red vein, and even your hair hurts. Your sphincter is in perpetual spasm, and the first of about five craps you take during the day brings water to the eyes of everyone who enters the bathroom.

> Five Star Hangover (*****)
You have a second heartbeat in your head, which is actually annoying the employee who sits in the next cube. Vodka vapor is seeping out of every pore and making you dizzy. You still have toothpaste crust in the corners of your mouth from brushing your teeth in an attempt to get the remnants of the poop fairy out. Your body has lost the ability to generate saliva so your tongue is suffocating you. You don't have the foggiest idea who the hell the stranger was passed out in your bed this morning. Any attempt to defecate results in a fire hose like discharge of alcohol-scented fluid with a rare 'floater' thrown in. The sole purpose of this 'floater' seems to be to splash the toilet water all over your ass. Death sounds pretty good about right now.

and finally...

21 Clues a Woman Should Call it a Night

1. I have absolutely no idea where my purse is.

2. I believe that dancing with my arms overhead
and wiggling my butt while yelling WOO-HOO is truly
the sexiest dance move around (or is it woo-woo?)

3. I've suddenly decided I want to kick someone's ass
and honestly believe I could do it too.

4. In my last trip to "pee" I realize I now look more like
Tammy Faye Baker than the goddess I was just 4 hours ago.

5. I drop my 3:00 a.m. burrito on the floor, (which I'm eating
even though I'm not the least bit hungry), pick it up and carry on eating it.

6. I start crying and telling everyone I see that
I love them so-o-o-o-o much.

7. There are less than 3 hours before I'm due to start work.

8. I've found a spiritual side to the geek sitting next to me.

9. The man I'm flirting with used to be my 5th grade teacher.

10. The urge to take off articles of clothing, stand on a table
and sing or dance becomes strangely overwhelming.

11. My eyes just don't seem to want to stay open on their own
so I keep them half closed and think it looks exotically sexy.

12. I've suddenly taken up smoking and become really good at it.

13. I yell at the bartender, who (I think) cheated me by giving me just lemonade,
but that's just because I can no longer taste the gin.

14. I think I'm in bed, but my pillow feels strangely like the kitchen floor.

15. I start every conversation with a booming,
"DON'T take this the WRONG WAY but..."

16. I fail to notice that the toilet lid's down when I sit on it.

17. My hugs begin to resemble wrestling take-down moves.

18. I'm tired so I just sit on the floor (wherever I happen to be standing) and take a quick nap.

19. I begin leaving the buttons open on my button fly pants
to cut down on the time I'm in the bathroom away from my drink.

20. I take my shoes off because I believe it's their fault that I'm having problems walking straight.

21. I start believing that EVERYONE in the room wants to see my boobs.

Have a great weekend!


Thursday, July 21, 2005

Brain "Lesions"

I am convinced that the "Lesion" (a.k.a. my neighborhood American Legion post) tampers with the contents of their beer. Either they lace the can lips with acid, or the cans have a semi-permeable layer that allow ghetto funk to seep in... Damn near every time I go there, I end up getting smashed and having some degree of hangover. No matter how much or little I drink!

I went there a few weeks back, drank two beers, and nearly fell out the door as I headed home. Last night, on a much less temperate outing than I typically allow myself (especially on a work night), I visited The Lesion and now have the oddest gaps in mental continuity. Did I really help up-dump a 40-gallon garbage can (filled with dirt and debris from a recent parking lot cleanup) on the way home? Did I really stop to weed my window boxes by moonlight? Did I really step on one of my poor cat's paws as I listed through the kitchen on my way to bed? And why were these longhorns (see left) wandering through my neighborhood?

All I know is that the Lesion is like my personal Bermuda Triangle. I enter innocently enough, trying to get from one place to another (i.e. the intersection of Frustration Road & Ticked Off Lane) only to be expelled into the streets a few hours later, dazed and staggering, wondering why there's no one in the wheelhouse of the shipwreck that is me.

Maybe it's the temperature of the beer. Maybe it's the inordinate speed of consumption. Could be the strains of Barry White from the juke box. Maybe it's a fermentation situation, a la the Salem Witch debacle. The Bud goes funky, and poor Ya-ya finds herself driving the porcelain bus the next morning. Who knows?

But if anyone knows why that hole in the wall joint lays me low every time I walk through the door, I would be pleased to hear your theory. Until then I'll be forced to return to the Lesion again and again until I determine the cause of my crippling intoxications.

Friday, July 08, 2005

The Pre-e-e-e-e-ecious

For those of you who wondered WTF ever happened to Jimmy Hoffa, the truth can now be told... All this time he's been wedged in under the keys of my PC keyboard.

Along with a stray pastrami sandwich, three pounds of dust ("someone's either coming or going under there!"), assorted crumbs (too many damn work-through-lunch-at-the-desk moments, I guess), and one odd bit of tin-foil gum wrapper type material that I've decided to dub "The Precious."

Earlier this morning I let my OCD take over while I used the canned spray air, Oxy Clean spray and Q-Tips on my keyboard. This mania of cleansing was inspired after spotting The Precious bobbling around just between Shift and Cap Lock. I started out simply tilting the keyboard and blowing-- no luck. So I grabbed the Air and started hosing down the crevices. T.P. just laughed and skittered over towards the space bar. I thought I would be wily and distract it by getting out the Oxy spray and swabs. No dice. It's peering up at me this very moment, taunting me just out of reach.

For now, I'm just going to encourage peaceful coexistence. And when it least expects me, I WILL STRIKE.

Thursday, July 07, 2005

Sun Dogs

It might be hard to see-- focus on the puffy, Volkswagen-shaped cloud in the center of the shot-- and look just above. The colors didn't come through at all from this shot I took with a cheap disposable camera. But I wanted to try to capture the illusive creature a fellow traveler was calling a "sun dog." It's supposedly even rarer to see than a traditional rainbow, as they appear on sunny days rather than during storms. I spotted this one several weeks ago on a day-trip around Ohio. I've been lucky to see a number of beautiful rainbows in my life, but the unexpected treat of spotting a rainbow on an already sunny day caught me off gaurd.

Nine years ago this week, I found myself driving back solo from Texas, tail between by legs and hungry for a friendly face. I had moved to Houston 6 short months earlier, looking for a new start. All I had found was heat, a job market so competitive that I couldn't even get an interview for a part time job because I lacked a bachelor's degree, and raw cracked hands from washing my laundry in the bathtub to save money. After running out of gas on an 8-lane road (as I left my 8-hour per week-to-start retail job) and making a dusty 2-mile hike (wearing black in July-- DUH), I made up my mind to pack up my toys and go home. Home to West Virginia where I could live inexpensively with my mom, finish my half completed degree, and try to re-root myself.

In 48 hours I quit my job, packed my worldly goods into my un-airconditioned Cavalier and headed east. On day two, as I traveled somewhere in Kentucky, a particularly fierce thunderstorm moved through and settled ominously along the horizon ahead. I knew that I was most of the way home, and yet with every mile I was feeling worse about my decision to "give up" and go back to WV. "Great," I thought, "Now I've got a freakin' hurricane dead ahead of me."

But instead of drowning me, the rain was considerate enough to contain itself to the westbound traffic only. My lane was barely wet, while the wipers of the on-coming cars were flailing wildly. By chance I looked out my passenger-side window to see if I had become a latter day Moses, or if the fields on the right were dry as well. It was then that I saw my first triple rainbow. Three distinct bands of ROYGBIV hung in the sky, and I wished frantically that I hadn't packed my 35-mm at the bottom of my belongings when I made my escape. I consoled myself by pulling over into the sorrel that lined the road and spent a glorious 5 minutes basking.

Wednesday, July 06, 2005

The Glance Askance


...or, why I adopted another cat.

That's me on the right.

The dating pool around here is regrettably shallow,
and I don't see improvement in sight.

Besides, this guy had halitosis issues. Big time.

Any suggestions?

Windmills in My Mind

A List.
Further proof of why I should be self-employed (I spend my day pondering minutiae instead of being useful). Work with me-- these are ramblings, not logic-driven observations.
  • (as a child) I never thought I would live past the age of 28. I was convinced that I was destined to die young, and so I made a lot of stupid-ass decisions based on that conclusion. Why 28? Why me? Dunno... I guess my dramatic little soul couldn't perceive something sadder than to be smited "so young"...
  • (as an adult) I never thought the day would come that I could say, "I haven't had sex for an entire year." FYI: Dates with B.O.B don't count; they only tidy cobwebs short-term..
  • If someone ever asked me, 'Have you considered suicide?" I'd have to say yes. Yes, I considered it, thought about what an absolute waste it would be, and went back to thinking about the problem that first made me think about suicide. Thought about it? Yes. Considered it to be an acceptable / viable option. Nope.
  • One of my favorite anonymous memories? Riding on the Metro in DC with about 3,000 touring Girl Scouts. As a friend and I entered the Metro station, we were swarmed by countless like-dressed girls, ranging in age from 5-15, being herded toward their trains. We had just visited the Holocaust Museum, and I was in a broody state of mind as a result. So the thought of being immersed by a sea of shiny-happy folks was NOT on my agenda. Shortly after the train left the station, a group of Scouts started singing, "The Alligator Song"- a longtime campfire standard. Before I knew what I was doing, I was standing with the Scouts, bellowing along at the top of my lungs: THE ALLIGATOR IS MY FRIEND... HE CA-A-AN BE YOUR FRIEND TO-O-O-O-O-O-O-O... I'D RA-A-ATHER HAVE HIM AS MY FRIEND... THAN WEAR HIM AS MY SHO-O-O-O-O-O-OE!.... A-A-A-A-A-A-A-ALLIGATOR..... A-A-A-A-A-A-A-ALLIGATOR!!!

Tuesday, July 05, 2005

Harpo & Milo

DISCLAIMER: Don't worry folks... this is NOT about to become a feline-focused Blog that natters on endlessly about nothing but how "pwecious and ca-yuuuute" my two cats are...

Well, possums... we all survived the weekend. Both cats are still alive, and I have a feeling (fingers crossed) that this will be a successful blending of furry children.

Of the two, Harpo seems to be transitioning in a smoother manner. Just as when I introduced him to his late housemate (Sophia), he was all friendship and playfulness after the initial shock of introduction. Milo, however, spent most of the first 72 hours cowering under my bed and slinking stealthily up and down my stairs between the food supply in the kitchen and his 2nd floor bolt-hole. And other than a few "face-offs" with H (where M felt compelled to hiss a bit and act tough), the only rough spot came last night around 10:30PM when Milo walked into the living room, made sure I could see him clearly, and proceeded to urinate copiously on the carpeting. Luckily I realized what he was preparing to do, so I leapt up and shooed him toward the litter pan in the kitchen & staved off the worst of the destruction.

The only way Milo could be more physically opposite of Harpo would be if he were white with a black spot (H has one stray white spot on his belly). M is a lo-o-o-o-ong lanky tabby, with pointed ears, paws the size of soup plates, and beautifully symmetric markings on his front legs. His build shrieks testosterone, and his butchness is only relieved by a sweet pair of green eyes. H is of a rounder build-- not fat, just less angular all-over. Milo is also much more physical-- Harpo does the usual amount of window ledge prowling & lap visiting. But Milo has one hell of a vertical leap. This morning I founding him perched on top of the very china cabinet that he was cowering under on Friday when I brought him home.

For now it still feels like I have a mute stranger for a houseguest. You don't know his tastes, and yet you're obliged to see to his needs and comfort without being able to ask him a damn word. I'm hoping the day will come, as has happened with Harpo, when I barely remember the time B.C- before cat.

Friday, July 01, 2005

A Cautionary tale

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A Tale of Two Kitties

This morning my kitchen was Ground Zero for introducing my current cat, Harpo, with a new donor-kitty, Milo. I've been wanting a second cat (to keep Harpo company when I travel), but I've been so busy actually TRAVELING that I never got around to getting the job done. So when my boss mentioned that he was looking for a new home for his cat (a beautiful 2-year-old tabby) I leaped at the chance. He assured me that the only reason they were needing to relocate him was because their 8-month-old puppy had taken to terrorizing Milo (i.e. carrying him by the neck and flinging him "playfully" in the air, as well as other undesirable behaviors). Since the puppy is property of their son (who will NOT give the pup up), they decided that the meek could not inherit the earth in their home, and that wussy-boy had to go... Milo also has the additional selling point of already being neutered & declawed, just like Harpo. So I figured my vision of nirvana would be completed by having two affectionate men in my home who neither expect sex nor could claw me to take revenge for not getting any...

I had sequestered Harpo outside of the kitchen so that I could get Milo safely indoors and settled before I made the big introduction. Milo at first refused to come out of the cat carrier, immune to all of wheedling, coaxing and cajoling. I finally resorted to slowly up-dumping the box, only to have the cat magically wedge himself up... inside ... the box... It took several gentle shakes to finally force his flattened furry form onto the linoleum, and from there he gave me a look that spoke volumes. "WHO are you? WHY do I smell another cat? WHERE is that friggin' puppy that tortures me? WHAT kind of mad woman are you???" and finally, "HOW THE HELL DID I GET HERE???" Milo made a beeline for the corner under my china closet, scrunched his butt against the wall, and hunkered down for battle.

Meanwhile, the kitchen door that I thought I had latched came gliding open, thanks to a swift head-butt from Harpo, who likewise wanted his own questions answered. "WHO closed this door? HOW come I can't get to my food and water bowls? WHY can't I get to my favorite window hammock to watch birds and sleep???" After making his disgruntled mr-r-r-r-UP sound, Harpo did his little "doop-dee-doop-dee-doop whazzup?" walk into the room, oblivious that the hounds of war had been unleashed. I took the chance to sneak out of the kitchen to use the bathroom, and hurried back to see if they discovered each other yet. In typical male oblivion, Harpo was still so busy sniffing the carrier & new litter box that he hadn't started to search for the source of the new smells. So I took matters in hand and grabbed Harpo's beloved jingley - sparkley - thing - on - a - stick, and slowly lured him over towards Milo's hiding place.
Game on.

I've never seen a silent cat confrontation before. Usually they are heralded by guttural growls, throaty gurgles and hissing, followed by either a heated battle or a decision to part company. But the boys both stood their ground and eye-balled each other for a good 5 minutes. Other than Harpo's tail doubling in size, there was no evidence that a power-play was in motion. When I saw that the tail was returning to normal, I backed away and headed for the door to get back to work. Milo then made a frantic leap up onto the dividing wall that parallels the entryway & was looking at me with saucer-sized eyes. I approached him, again trying to use the wheedling tone, which only caused him to back up and begin to slide down between the wall and the china cabinet. My last view was of Milo sinking back toward the floor, as clawless paws clung to the ledge in desperation. That was 3 hours ago, and I'll be heading home for lunch shortly to asses the damage. As mellow as Harpo is, they'll probably be best buds already, sharing the feeder and snoozing in the cat hammock.