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Love portioned in scientifically equal quantities at the atomic level

I am still sick. Why am I still sick? Because the Baby Jesus hates me. That’s why.

I had fooled myself into thinking that maybe I could look on the bright side and maybe I was losing weight, quarts at a time, but then my sister mentioned that she’s been sick since August and hasn’t lost an ounce. So much for that. I’m still not really hungry for anything, but I was able to get somewhat excited about some butternut squash ravioli last night. Which then set off some kind of horrible carb craving chain of events–two hours later I was convinced that if I didn’t have a hot fudge sundae, I was going to die.

I didn’t die.

Because I went out and got a hot fudge sundae.

I didn’t want to risk it. Luckily, I’m off the unbalanced carb horse at the moment, mostly because there are no carbs in water.

Speaking of hot fudge sundaes, I have been thinking about joining a gym. Well, truthfully, I have been thinking about it for four years. It always comes down to the fact that I can have all the self-esteem in the world but as soon as I put on work out clothes and walk into a room full of hard bodies, I am mentally transported to 10th grade gym class. Say what you will about high school golden years, but 10th grade? Wasn’t one of them. So I counter that with the fact that I will avoid feeling all ishy if I just use the money to buy a treadmill instead. After all, for a year of avoiding the gym, I could avoid a large piece of machinery in my house instead.

I’m all about convenience.


I forgot to mention a rather big fat deal on this here page, which is the fact that Mopie and Anne have asked me to join them as a contributor on Big Fat Deal. It’s a great honor to be in such fabulous company. Of course, it’s no secret about how much I adore Mopie and I love Anne equally as much.

I’ve only tongue kissed one of them, though.

Unspoken

My Mafia Grandmother and I haven’t talked since our shouting match in the ER when she refused to have tests done after her stroke. A few weeks ago, my sister came over to my desk and applied heavy amounts of guilt about how she’s an old woman and how you just don’t know how long she’s got and how I’m supposed to be the better person about things because we all know how she is, that one. She kept at it until she made me cry, sitting at my desk and surrounded by my coworkers and then I had to ask her to leave.

It seems like I was being immature about the entire thing, feeling that if you don’t care about my feelings, why should I care about yours? But I wasn’t really trying to punish anyone. I just didn’t want to deal with it. Or couldn’t. Honestly, the entire thing really just made me way too emotional and you cannot show emotion in my family. The second you do, you’ve lost. Not just now, but forever. You will always be weak. Forever and ever the end. I personally needed distance from the situation, regardless of how crappy my sister thought I should feel about it.

So imagine my surprise when my grandmother called me the other day. I had fully expected to be the one who would make the first move. I imagine her psyche as a mountain, completely immobile and killing dozens of idiotic Americans attempting to reach the summit every year.

She apologized for not seeing me during Thanksgiving (as my crazy Aunt Brumhilda decided that she would make Thanksgiving dinner and only invite Mafia Grandma, thus excluding my mother and her family). We didn’t address anything that happened in the ER, and in fact, studiously avoided it, but in our family it’s all subtext and you have to learn to listen for it. For instance, when she said “I wanted to make sure that we got to see you for Christmas” she was really saying “I am stubborn and make mistakes sometimes.” When I said “I want to see you too” I was really saying “We’re all stubborn. It’s in our DNA.” And when she said “I thought I’d make a crock pot of pea soup, because my one side is better, but it’s still not good and I can’t trust it to lift a turkey or a ham” she was really saying “You were right. I should have gotten the tests” and when I said “Do you want me to bring anything?” I was really saying “Please. Let me be strong this time.” And when she said “Oh, I don’t know. We always have so much food” she was saying “I have a hard time. It’s hard to say that I need help” and when I said “Ok, maybe I’ll bring some turkey for sandwiches” I was saying “Would you let me lift your goddamned turkey for you already?” and when she said “That would well with my pea soup. That sounds delicious” she was really saying “Thank you for understanding”

There are always rules to every game. These are ours.

The Norwalk Group

My great grandmother used to feel that if the weather would just go from lovely mild fall weather to a good hard freeze, cold season would cease to exist. Much to the dismay of the makers of NyQuil. While I’m not sure that the woman who wouldn’t let me sit on the bare ground for fear that the cold would get up through my lady bits and give me pneumonia should really be lauded as a sage on that which ills, it’s an interesting concept. We’ve gone from bitterly cold with negative wind chills back up to a drizzly mid 40’s. I can imagine that traveling from Antarctica to Seattle in a week’s time would be quite the shock to the system, so maybe she had a point.

Esteban has been sick since Thursday night; a horrible kind of sick that entails gut cramps and nausea and constant worries over whether the next fart will manifest itself in physical form. He’s borderline dehydrated and cold to the point of shivering every hour or so. At night, he takes advantage of my inner blast furnace and snuggles against me for heat. Meanwhile, for the first time since my last bout with a fever, I can tolerate it because the man is a six foot three ice pack. It was almost an exact replica of last year’s food poisoning, except not quite as violent and not nearly as fast a recovery. Five days later, he still has it. Unfortunately, he’s now dealing with it in San Jose, having to withstand a very dehydrating plane flight and making his fellow seatmates move every time he needed a visit to the head.

We were joking that it had to have been food poisoning and couldn’t possibly have been contagious, because if it were, I would have definitely had it, as I had a lot of close contact (heh) with him during the onset. However, the similarity to the symptoms that closed a couple of local schools was a little unnerving. And then on Sunday, I heard the first gut rumble and started to feel very hot.

My instinct at such times is to just stop eating anything solid and start pounding water, so I haven’t really had the gut cramps that were plaguing Esteban. The headache has been sort of annoying and just scrolling through documents is making my head feel spinny. Watching a Beyonce video this morning almost made me throw up (although that might not be the norovirus and some editorializing). I’m not sure that it really is norovirus, but at this point, if another person walks by my desk with a bag of microwave popcorn, I’m going to projectile vomit on them. Thank God for the vial of Aveda Blue Oil that I carry around in my purse. Between that and helping me survive in moldy hotel rooms (Hilton Chicago, I’m looking at you), it’s worth its weight in gold. Actually, gold might be cheaper by the ounce. But other than that, I’ve pretty much escaped unscathed. The only seriously objectionable thing is this nasty taste in my mouth that prevails after even the most vigorous brushing. I’ve even gone through two ampoules of Go Smile pear-flavored touch ups, just trying to quell the taste of ass from my mouth. How can I taste ass when I’ve only had water, chicken broth and one bagel in the last three days? It boggles the mind.

Esteban checked in before his conference and said that he was feeling hungry for the first time since Thursday night, which is a good sign. I’m forcing the issue by eating a bagel this morning. I figured that the first instance of seriously unbalanced carbs in months will shock the virus right out of my system. Or cause me to pass out and then I’ll get to go home sick and sit on the chaise and watch Buffy DVDs. A win-win-win situation.

I have to say, however, that all the water combined with the paleness and flushed cheeks has given me this great Liv Tyler complexion. Fever chills might be the next big thing in beauty.


Edited to add: the above was posted right before I walked into the bathroom and had a very unfortunate experience. I then decided that it was probably a good time to cash in another sick day.

What Not To Wear

I would like to believe that I have gotten a hold of my body image issues somewhere along these 30 years (how sad is it that my stepfather actually scolded me for being fat when I was five) and also have thrown a lot of money at my collective wardrobe to soothe any lingering doubt. And then there are episodes that make me think that I still have miles to go before I sleep.

For some reason, our friends’ annual Christmas party always fills me with dread. At some point, I ended up being the fashionista in our little group, so there was a heady reputation to live up to, and on the other hand, Esteban reminds me that the majority of our social circle doesn’t know or doesn’t follow the rules for cocktail fashion and usually several of them come in whatever they put on when they got up in the morning. Or they put on a nice pair of trousers but then pair them with white athletic shoes because they could not buy a clue if they tried. Except that I know this is Wisconsin and white athletic shoes are considered the Levi jean of footwear. Except that no, it isn’t. Guys can get away with pairing a velvet blazer with a pair of jeans ONLY if they wear appropriate shoes. That is a statement. Gym shoes with black trousers? That’s the lead singer in a generic 80’s video, not a fashion statement.

And don’t even get me started on the black pants, white socks and black shoes thing. I can actually hear the rationalization in my head “Well, I’m not going to take off my shoes, so nobody should notice.” Except, hello, your pants are way too short. Men, please buy longer pants. You look like idiots–with or without appropriate socks.

This is not to say that this is a casual affair. I’m taking the cue from the host by dressing beyond a typical Saturday at the pub. And while in San Francisco visiting the Igigi boutique, I bought this completely adorable cocktail dress. In fact, it wasn’t even on the sales floor and Ozlem dug through the warehouse in order to find one for me. I had been absolutely in love with the dress since it appeared on Igigi’s site and was really looking for any excuse to buy it. The Christmas party seemed like a good excuse.

However, on Saturday morning, the reality dawned that this dress was so perfect, so completely beautiful that I would be excessively overdressed in that crowd. There is such a thing as raising the bar and making a statement, but at some point, you’re being just as much of an asshole as someone who shows up in paint-spattered ragged jeans. And I think that cute cocktail dress would push me into that category, considering that I might be sitting next to someone in track pants.

What is more, Esteban is hyper-sensitive about my goodies being oggled by his single guy friends, of which there are many. And just as many pieces of my wardrobe that highlight my better assets. Between the decently modest but inappropriate dressy outfits and the hootchie of hootchness outfits, I was pretty limited. Finally, I decided upon a wrap top that could be alternately modest or a tease, depending on how I tied it. While doing my hair, I didn’t like how the top was clinging. By then, I had reached the point of hating everything in the world and had decided that I had the body of a corpulent toad. At that point, I may or may not have then thrown myself across my bed, atop a pile of previous rejects, declared to an empty room that I wouldn’t be going and then sulked for a good fifteen minutes. Then I got back up, finished my make up and dealt with the rest of my hair, which was being a stubborn ass and wouldn’t go into a quirky chignon. I’m going to have to figure out better ways to finesse this length, because it’s not as forgiving with the updo as the previous length.

While I was cursing my hair, Esteban came in and told me to put on one of the previous outfits, one with lots of peek a boob action and apologized for acting like a caveman sometimes. I wasn’t going to take his advice, but then watching the shirt ride up again, I gave up on the updo and also put on a longer but more boobsome top. Sometimes, you just have to know when to give in.

At the party, Joel had set up a slide show of the pictures from previous years and I watched myself fluctuate by 70 pounds over the last 9 years. According to this pictorial record, my slimmest look was 2003, although there are no pictures of me standing in 2002, I seem to remember that was my actual lowest weight. I’m afraid to see the pictures from this year, although hopefully the girls will capture the eye and no one will look at the size of my ass.

Well, it works for opera singers.

Giving an inch

Last week, it was time for my 7 week haircut and color touchup. I’m a very natural brunette right now, only a shade or two darker than my actual color, and about two shades lighter than my winter standard, which is, according to pictures from Weetapie last year, a shade too dark. And yet, I’ll probably go there again come February, because I found out that Esteban has serious crushes on both Sela Ward and Nigella Lawson. I can’t compete with Sela Wards eyebrows because they are absolutely fantastic, but dark hair? No problem.

When my stylist asked how much I wanted cut off, I replied “A lot” because I was getting sick of my hair slipping into my jackets and getting trapped. Plus, my hair is fine, which means at a certain length, there’s just too much weight to have any volume whatsoever. Which sucks, because really, I’m just counting down the days until big hair comes back. I have got back combing down to a science. My stylist looked at me and made a pinchy shape with her fingers, saying “this much?” and I replied “At least.” Because I was being passive aggressive about it all. I don’t really like to make decisions about my hair. I’d rather accidentally fall into some perfect style and shape. This has not been a winning strategy for me so far but I hold out hope.

She cut off six inches. Six inches! Half a ruler. An octave on a piano. The average size of a male unit. Six freaking inches. I didn’t think I had that much to give, honestly. I would have thought, six inches, man, I’d be sporting a pixie cut, no question. Except apparently, I had many more inches to give than that. My hair was longer than I thought, maybe Marsha Brady long. And while it is now shorter than it has been in at least two years, maybe more, it’s Rachel Green Season 1 length, a good length. One of those lengths they recommend in women’s magazines for flattering any face shape. It takes so much less time to blow dry and style and I have to remind myself not to dump so much product into my hand because I’m wasting half a palmful of Sap Moss shampoo every morning. I walk around and shake my head because it feels so light and swingy. I spritz and suddenly my locks can defy gravity once again, making little burls and tousles of artful mess that is the style of the moment. Six inches are all the inches in the world.

Except that they’re not. I went from having long hair to having medium-length hair and not a soul has noticed. I look at myself and think, wow, jeez, short! I had to point out my haircut to my sister. Esteban, the man who looks at me every single day, looked at me when I returned from the salon and said “Hey….What time do you have to go to your hair appointment tonight?”

Clearly, I should have gone for a seventh inch.

Bio pic

I still don’t have MS Office loaded on my PC. It’s one of the casualties to the great reload of Aught Six, along with a bunch of fonts and probably something else really important like my Sims based on several Wagnerian opera characters. Siegfried and Torvald always liked the butt sex, you know. Or so I would imagine.

I have mentioned this before, but living in a northern clime during these dark months is pretty devastating to one’s optimism. Seasonal Affective Disorder sounds like such a hippy dippy thing, but I think it’s real and also I think I am Affected. And you’d think that I would just sleep more, since it’s dark all the time, but really, now that there’s a Starbucks near my workplace, I end up hitting it at the tail end of my lunch hour (which is always late because I usually don’t get to leave my desk until after 2 pm) so I’ve got a venti cup of some kind of caffeine carbonating my neurons for about eight hours. Which means, hi, midnight? Wide goddamn awake.

This upcoming trip to NYC is helping a great deal, oddly enough, even though it’s more travel stress, because oh my god, the hotel rooms in New York are crazy! To stay in a hotel of the class I’m accustomed during my solo travels, it’s something like a gazillion dollars a night. And half of me wants to just pony up a couple of grand and hide in the Waldorf Towers all weekend and the other half of me wants to be frugal and sleep under a park bench so that I can go crazy on Fifth Avenue. I’ll figure something out. And a great deal of this mood buffer is due to the fact that the lit journal editor wrote a very sweet e-mail telling me that he was excited that I was actually coming and that he’s putting my bio on the event’s advertising. Which sort of makes me laugh because bios are just silly and really, does anyone read them? I always feel like an asshole writing them, because a) writing about yourself in third person automatically is sort of assy and b) I never know what to say in them so usually end up saying something silly to deflate the entire process and then when I reread it later, I think I come off as though I’m making light of the thing and that instead of being assy, I sound very much like I have a case of full blown ass. The bio for the last reading, I said something about liking toast with peanut butter and bananas (which is actually very accurate and says more about me than the fact that I have a cat). In this one, I said that I had a cat and then I made fun of the word “blogosphere”.

What a fucking ass.

The 2005 Holiday Weetamix Liner Notes (a year late)

The last time I did Holidailies, I wrote out the liner notes to the Holiday Weetamix CD and I think it’s probably one of my favorite entries from that year. However, the mistake I made was posting them before the recipients actually received their Weetamixes, thus eliminating the surprise. Last year, I didn’t write out the liner notes to my Holiday Weetamix CD because I didn’t get them out until a few days before Christmas. Because I suck. And because of that, I present you with the liner notes from the 2005 Holiday Weetamix CD!

Death Cab for Cutie – The New Year
I always throw a few non-seasonal songs on the mix, and while technically this one is seasonal in a way, it’s definitely not a Holiday song perse. I think the entire difference between the 2005 Holiday mix and its predecessor is really underlined by this song. The 2004 mix is full of optimism and the 2005 mix feels terribly sorry for itself. The New Year? I don’t feel any different. I don’t understand, honestly, because I had a great 2005, and I have happy memories of December in itself. But apparently the week I compiled the song list did not exemplify the entirety of my year. Apparently I was awash with ennui that week and took it out on the list. Or maybe I was just cautiously optimistic rather than unabashedly so as in 2004. You decide.

Harry Nilsson – Remember (Christmas)
I had to do something to cleanse the palate from the dissonance of the feedback that ended “The New Year”, so went with quiet piano and Harry Nilsson commiserating that the holidays, they’re tough, man. They’re tough on all of us. Memories hurt. And this song makes me think of Meg Ryan’s smile. That’s probably an association caused by the fact that it’s on the You’ve Got Mail soundtrack and is the song playing during a montage when she’s realizing that she has to close the store and then sees herself as a child, spinning with her mother and good god are you crying right now, because I totally am. She had to close her mother’s store! She has been happy to have been part of your life! God! I am such a chick. But this song is dripping with nostalgia and also, Harry Nilsson knows just where to stick you. Watch out for him.

Joni Mitchell – River
Oh my god, I clearly needed Xanax or something last December. Because River? RIVER? Good lord, that’s a sad song. I seem to remember that this was another song where I indulged my mood, but then again, who doesn’t sometimes wish they had a river that they could skate away on?

Leon Redbone/Zooey Deschanel – Baby It’s Cold Outside
I was originally going to use an Alan Cumming/Liza Minelli version of this song, but then Mopie convinced me that the Redbone/Deschanel version is the best version of this song. And honestly, she’s right. This is a great version and also, really weird, because what strange powers that be decided to stick Zooey Deschanel into a recording booth with Leon Fricking Redbone? And then, a calamity. At some point during the mass CD burning sessions, this song got eliminated from the playlist. I didn’t notice it was missing until I was almost done, so I have no idea how many CDs actually ended up with this song on it.

Squirrel Nut Zippers – Hot Christmas
I still love SNZ. I only like listening to them during the winter months for some reason, and also, I don’t really like all of their holiday music. I’ve officially run out of decent SNZ songs to include on the Holiday Mixes, so 2006 is the first holiday mix in a long time to go without something from the Zippers.

Rufus Wainwright – Hallelujah
From the title, you’d think it was a religious song, and honestly, I guess it is, but it also isn’t. I was addicted to this song for a very long time a few years ago. I had to keep playing and replaying it while I was writing. I get like that sometimes. I’ve worn through my addiction, but I still love this song. And I have a serious love affair going with Rufus Wainwright’s voice.

Fiona Apple – Across the Universe
I don’t really like Fiona Apple. Oh, sure, I’ll sing “Criminal” at karaoke and slither around the stage as though I’m an anorexic nymph wearing a wife beater, but I still am not terribly fond of her. But her cover of this song is my second favorite. There’s something dreamy and lovely and innocent about her voice here. And that’s the kind of mindset someone should have during the end of the year. Peace and love and harmony with the universe and all that hippy crap. (By the way, the best cover of “Across the Universe” is by Rufus Wainwright, but since I like his “Hallelujah” so very much and I didn’t want to duplicate two artists on one mix, I opted for the Apple version here.)

Sarah McLachlan – Song for a Winter’s Night
I don’t know. It sounded like dark afternoons and fireplaces and also, oh my god, more ennui! Although I will justify this in that Sarah McLachlan, even though she’s totally a clich’, has got a very beautiful voice. And it makes me sort of hate her for it.

Buffy the Vampire Slayer soundtrack – Magic Snow Music
I try to always put at least one song without words on each mix, and this one was about snow. Except that really, I had a typo in my mp3 and apparently the piece was titled “Magic SHOW music”. Meh, in my world, it’s Magic Snow.

The Carpenters – Sleigh Ride
Think back to a happy memory during your childhood. Think of your mom or your grandmother handing you a present or nuzzling your nose. The sound of her voice? Face it. In your memories, it sounds almost exactly like Karen Carpenter. I think a few years ago, I declared that all holiday compilations needed to have at least one Carpenters song, but looking at the song list for the 2006 edition, I’ve broken that edict.

Janet Orenstein – There’s Always Tomorrow
I know that a lot of people think that the stop action Rudolph specials are creepy, but I love them. I love the Bumbles that bounce. I love Yukon Cornelius. I really love the island of misfit toys and the Charlie in the Box. And I love Clarice before she ever got tainted by Anthony Hopkins and Jame Gumb. I love her silly little red polka dot bow. And I love that she tries to cheer up Rudolph and that she trash talks Fireball who, quite honestly, was the reindeer equivalent of Scott Farcas. Fucking Fireball.

Billy Mack – Christmas is All Around
Just like last year, I had to use a song from the “Love, Actually” soundtrack. And I love Bill Nighy, whose character “Billy Mack” sings this song in the movie while bare assed naked, his naughty bits hidden by a carefully placed guitar. His delivery of the lyrics in this song still make me laugh. You can actually hear him sneer at one point. That’s some great acting, people. Great acting. I know that it’s a clich’ and supposedly overrated, but I stupidly love this movie, even though Laura Linney’s character gets massively screwed by the plot and there’s mofo Joni Mitchell again, growling out her weltschmerz and making Emma Thompson cry. But still, a great movie, full of completely edible men like Alan Richman and Colin Firth and Liam Neeson and the guy who plays Tim on the UK series “The Office” and also Colin Firth some more. (There’s also Hugh Grant, who is not quite so edible. In fact, this movie completely cured me of any appetite for Hugh Grant, because he is just terribly unsexy in this film. However, his character does have the good taste to hit on the hottest chick in the movie and who makes Kiera Knightly look in comparison like the underfed child that she is.) It should go without saying that I recommend this movie for your yearly dose of schmaltz. And also, they perpetuate the rumor that Wisconsin is full of friendly and lickable women (portrayed in the movie as heavy metal groupies). But maybe pretend Laura Linney’s character isn’t in it, because she’s just going to depress you.

Simple Plan – My Christmas List
Even in what must have been a sour mood, I still recognized the need to balance the mix out with something moaning about all the hurt in the world. The boys in Simple Plan don’t wish they had a river that they could skate away on. They don’t want you to remember everything that was lost along with your childhood innocence like Harry Nilsson. They want a bike. And a first class trip to Hawaii. And a lot of other things too.

Rooney – Merry Christmas Everybody
This reminds me of something you might have heard in the early 80’s on maybe a tribute CD to fix world hunger or something. It’s just a poppy little song from Rooney. I think Rooney is ok with that.

The Decemberists – Grace Cathedral Hill
Oh this song. I love this song. Definitely a non-holiday song, but so beautiful and poignant that I couldn’t help but include it, and also, it’s the Decemberists. In December. So hah, it works. This is another song that I was addicted to, and in fact, it’s the sixth most frequently played song on my iPod right this minute. There are moments in life when you believe in the possibility of magic. And once I was driving along California Street in San Francisco and this song queued up on the iPod and Mopie mentioned that we were actually on Grace Cathedral Hill right then, passing the Cathedral. Which is of course nothing special, and yet, it was all the proof in the world I needed at that moment. Awhile back, I was reading a review of the new Decemberists album and they said that it’s the music that English graduate students put on to seduce other English grad students. That’s probably true, because I can tell you that any song which uses the word “moribund” makes me a little hot.

Coldplay – Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas
It’s songs like this that make you realize that Chris Martin really doesn’t have that spectacular of a voice. He doesn’t. He uses it in a way that is perfect while doing his Coldplay songs, but as a voice? It’s nothing special. I love this song, though, and since I used the best version ever in the previous year’s mix (Chrissy Hynde, for the record), Chris Martin just happened to be in the right place at the right time.

Death Cab for Cutie – Christmas ( Baby Please Come Home)
I was on a serious Death Cab kick last December and I like the symmetry of opening and closing the mix with the same group, but this was actually the first song that I knew would be going on the Holiday Mix and thus, it set the tone. I love Ben Gibbard’s voice and wish that he’d get on the stick and do another Postal Service album already. And oh the ennui! I was so freaking emo last year, it’s like I was reliving my senior year in high school. This year’s mix is better. There’s a song sung by a snowman and stuff. Only a little emo, I promise.

The liner notes on Holiday Mix 2006 will be posted a week after they’ve been sent out, along with the songs that didn’t make it onto the mix. And if you post your favorite Holiday Song in the comments section and leave a working e-mail address, I’ll send you a link where you can download these songs as mp3s to have for your very own, along with the artwork that went with the 2005 Holiday mix CD.

A distorted weekend

I have been working on my holiday cards for the last week, punctuated mostly with the fact that my PC has been limping along for the last few months. It wouldn’t show thumbnails in Windows and wouldn’t play .avi files. It wouldn’t open several programs, like my general CD burner or Sony Movie Maker or WinAmp. It crashed if I tried to open the Sims2. However, with my gazillions of song files and ginormous photo archive, this lack of a CD burner was the biggest problem. You see, how did one back all of this stuff up if one cannot operate the DVD burner? One employs the uses of one’s local computer geek. Enter Esteban.

I hate reloading my PC and put it off as long as possible, because every time, every damn time, there is something that gets lost. Last time, it was my mail archives. The time before that it was all of my saved games. The time before that’ I don’t know, something painful that I’ve repressed. And one horrible time in the 90’s, it was every piece of writing I had saved on the hard drive. I only had paper copies of some of the missing documents so the rest are lost to the ether. Ah well, it was while I was an undergrad, so it’s not like it was all that great anyway, but if I ever end up as famous as Dorothy Parker, I’m sure someone will be upset about it, other than myself. Not likely, but still.

So I mentally prepared myself for being without the pc for two days while he backed everything up and reloaded everything and then Esteban borrowed some technical thing from one of his technical buddies (Hi Shill) and then realized that it wouldn’t work because my computer was that well and truly fucked. So I exhaled. He then told me that the easiest way to do the back up would be to buy another hard drive identical to mine and back everything up that way, so for a week, I asked him “Did you buy the hard drive yet?” and he’d say “No” and then the next day, I’d say “Did you buy the hard drive yet?” “No.” “Did you buy the hard drive yet?” “No, I will tomorrow.” And then the next day, “Did you buy the hard drive yet? Because I need to burn my holiday CDs and get them sent out.” And then the response was just silence, so I knew that the only way it would happen was if I ordered the damn thing myself. And then he balked and tried to act like he wasn’t a big hairy procrastinator and mentioned my tendency to need to marinate on decisions, but see, that’s different, Internet, because I need time to weight the options but in this situation, we already had a course of action which means that we should just go ahead and act already. Right? Can I get an amen?

Thus, on Saturday, while I was entertaining Abby in the living room with Karaoke Revolution, Esteban sat in my office and did the transplant. He was still transplanting when I went to bed, although I did check on his progress and open iTunes between revolutions with something and then was subjected to him racing into the room, flipping on the light and hissing “Did you open up iTunes? Because you might have just lost all of your purchased music.” Whatever, most of the music’s only got two more reloads left anyway.

So far, I haven’t noticed anything missing, although it will be weeks and months before everything is back the way I want it. And then the machine will need to be reloaded again, but at least I can do the Holiday Weetamixes before 2007.


As mentioned above, Abby stayed with us over the weekend. We were supposed to have her for 10 days, which is why we didn’t go anywhere over Thanksgiving weekend as we had originally planned during the summer, but then my sister decided to buy a house in a town 30 miles north of here, which meant that taking Abby to school became quite the ordeal and it made sense that she stayed with our stepsister instead, save for last weekend when she came to hang out with us. She’s always a fun addition to Casa Bix and aside from the propensity to strew her belongings hither and fro, she’s completely low maintenance. When I got home from Chicago, we went out to get dinner and then Uncle Esteban admitted that he hadn’t found her air mattress from the last time she stayed and if it was the one that Mopie had returned, then he had no idea where it was.

The majority of the weekend was spent playing Karaoke Revolution. You’d think the 8-year-old would go for the Michelle Branch and Avril Lavigne, right? Well, you’d be mistaken. Instead, she rocked “Call Me” and “Do You Really Want to Hurt Me”. And honestly, you haven’t lived until you hear a sweet little soprano plead with you to play that funky music, white boy, play that funky music right.

Her only request for the weekend was that we get pedis and manicures again, like we did the last time she stayed with us. My own manicure was hoopty and my pedi was in dire need, so no problems there. Unfortunately, the owner of the nail salon wasn’t available and someone else did Abby’s nails, which meant that instead of hand drawing snowflakes onto Abby’s toenails, they used stickers. This fact was belabored for hours afterward. Ms Abby has heady expectations for her personal grooming, apparently. Also, we went to Target because she didn’t have adequate warm clothes along with her, and ended up with a faux fur hoodie that was oh my god the best thing ever. Everyone had to feel her hoodie (which sounds dirty but she’s eight, so shut up) and act appropriately awed on how soft it was. Even that, she opined, would have been awesome if it had fur on the inside and the outside. Yes, Ms. Abigail, and as I tell Uncle Esteban regularly, it’s good to want things.

We went to Joel’s baby’s christening and then afterward, I took Abby to see the Santa Clause movie. Which, by the way, was sort of awful. I don’t like Tim Allen, hate the grunting thing a LOT, but I’ve always liked the other Santa Clause movies. Perhaps the added presence of Martin Short tipped my scales of Annoying Personality Tolerance and no amount of holiday cheer could set them right again. But I did laugh at the Canada jokes and eat a nutritious lunch of movie popcorn, so it wasn’t a completely lost afternoon. After my stepsister picked Abby up, Ward and June called and invited me over for dinner, so I went because I don’t see them nearly enough and I had also purchased some cranberry stilton for her at TJ’s that I needed to give her anyway. She made a delicious dinner and then they wanted to watch Ice Age 2. So basically I spent my Sunday watching movies that I had zero interest in just to make other people happy. And God bless us everyone.

These little town blues are melting away

For some reason, I never really feel right unless I have a trip on the horizon. I think it’s a sickness. Or perhaps, a delightful personality quirk. Let’s go with that.

About a month ago, I was invited to read a short story at a lit journal issue launch party in DC. The invitation came the day after I returned from San Francisco, and Esteban was still freaking out about the shootings in the Castro, so despite the fact that flights were cheap and I could have stayed for free on my friend Mary Kaye’s couch, I didn’t. Also, we had Esteban’s family Thanksgiving at the same time as the reading, so that would have been a sticky issue in itself. And blah, how yucky? I mean, I hardly ever submit anything and then I do and then I get invited to be a reader? How many times does that happen in your life? Not a lot when you only send out one submission a year.

I am fully aware of how broken that is.

Then something interesting happened. I got another notice from the editor. There’s going to be another event, this one a week after New Year. In New York City.

Oh the possibilities there! I haven’t been to NYC since my freshman year in college, when I spent my first ever writing earnings on a trip to NYC to take Jane Pratt up on the offer to visit the offices of Sassy and glom onto a reluctant Mike Flaherty, who openly hates fat chicks. Or hated them in 1990, anyway. Maybe his proclivities have changed. Maybe he pines wistfully for the cute young Bix in his past? Who knows.

I wasn’t going to do this. I really wasn’t. And Esteban really wasn’t crazy about my going to New York, since according to him I was practically grazed by flying bullets on Halloween. He actually blames me for it, despite the fact that as soon as we started feeling uncertain about the situation in the Castro, we took off and were well on our way back to the apartment when the first shot was fired. If Joel hadn’t seen it happen, Esteban wouldn’t even realize that it happened. I pointed this out to him and he pointed out that his not knowing about it doesn’t make it safer. I think he blames me for traumatizing Joel. Dude, if Joel hadn’t decided to stop for SUSHI rather than meet us at the agreed upon time and location, he wouldn’t have witnessed to Oakland style street theatre either. But that, as Esteban likes to remind me, is not the point. It COULD have happened anywhere. I COULD have been shot. In the head. Dead. And I do not take. My safety. Seriously. This is exactly how he says it, as though I myself placed the piece in the gangsta’s hand and then encouraged him to pop a cap in the crowd’s collective ass. I’m not trying to be flip about this, and I appreciate his concern for my well-being but man, I could drop out of the sky in a broken airplane too. I could get hit by a bus in Green Bay or the wiring in my brain could frizzle out while I’m sitting in my annoying but perfectly safe cubicle. I’m certainly not going to sit back and cower just because the world is a scary place.

Wow, did it just get very inspirational in here all of the sudden? Sorry about that.

So I decided fuck it. I’m doing this. I declared the vacation days required and logged into my airline’s site to put a flight on hold because even though I am solid in my decisions, I don’t trust fate and figure that something will come up if I act rashly. Which is another dose of broken, but whatever.

I informed Esteban of my decision and he said “Awesome. Have fun. Just be safe, ok?” Which means that I’ll just have to make sure to call him on a regular basis to reassure him that I haven’t been stabbed to death in a gutter. Although really, I was 18-years-old and hanging around a pre-Guiliani Times Square. From what I’ve heard, NYC today is pretty tame and there’s a Gap where the beaver shows used to be. It should be fine.

I mentioned the lit reading to Jake yesterday and then this morning, he is once again the best travel companion ever.

Once upon a time, I was standing on Fifth Avenue and decided that I wanted the kind of life that existed in New York City. And while I may not have hit the mark geographically and I may complain a lot, seriously, I have the greatest life. I never dreamed it would be seventeen years until I went back but I think this return will have been worth the wait.

I am seriously stoked.


So yeah, if you’re going to be in NYC on the evening of January 5th, I’m going to be there too, reading one of my short stories in a bar in the Village. And then apparently breaking into the chorus of Seasons of Love, because how Jonathon Larson is that anyway? E-mail me for details.

All work and no play

I was very nervous for this trip, not just the fact that I would be facing my big important clients for the first time in person but also because I really didn’t want to drive the dratted company van again. To assure this, I made my travel accommodations myself. When they dropped off the keys, I signed the papers and noticed the word “Cadillac”. As in a 2007 SRX. With Bose speakers and an XM radio that I never did figure out how to use. And an input for my iPod. This pretty much guarantees that I will be my own personal assistant from this point forward.

The ride down was uneventful, other than the fact that the radio was singing the praises of Big Giant Snowstorm Approaching! It made me roll my eyes, because we Midwesterners always get so sensational about the first big blizzard and man, they are almost always a dud. But then there were reports of Dallas getting shut down and then Kansas and hmmm, maybe not? I didn’t really care, as long as it waited until I was checked into my lovely hotel on Michigan Avenue, car tucked into the covered valet lot. From that point forward, it could snow us all in. I could live very well on the complimentary snack hours in the executive lounge and I had the internet and room service for everything else. There was a Caribou Coffee just up the street and Starbucks in the hotel lobby. If anything, I could pretend to be Eloise and charge everything and make snowmen in my suite out of rolled white sheets.

There was an eerie sense of d’j’ vu when I walked into the hotel. The exact Christmas decorations were out, they were playing the exact same musak. The exact same pointless gingerbread house guarded the elevator bank, and the exact same giant tree sat in the main entrance way. One of the things I love about this hotel in particular is that main entrance way. It’s so grand and inviting, while still managing to hold one at arm’s length. I think that’s the allure of hotels, the sense of belonging while not really belonging. Perhaps it’s just material status, rented by the evening. Regardless, I enjoy the type of status where you walk outside and you’re standing under warm yellow glowing heaters that manage to fight the cold winds coming off the Lake three blocks away. A man in a Nutcracker furred hat asks if he can get you a cab, and you only have to nod and then he’ll step out into the wind, hail one for you, then stand there until you’re in the cab and on your way. It’s so fucking elitist and snobby and I don’t even care because it’s awesome.

I checked into my corner hotel room, dumped all of my stuff and grabbed a cab to take me up to the prime shopping. It was rush hour at that point, so instead of going all the way up to 900 N. Michigan, I got out at Nordstrom. I figured that I’d be walking around a lot, so I had changed into sneakers, but immediately, I regretted it. Not that my Old Navy sweater would really earn me any points among the serial shoppers decked out in furs and D&G. Plus, I was carrying a shopping bag from the Lego store. Perhaps I could have been more obvious only if I’d worn a sandwich board that actually said “Tourist”. Ah well. There were many waiters running around with trays of canap’s and glasses of wine, each pointedly ignoring me. It pissed me off until I realized that I was slumping around with an apologetic look on my face for having the audacity to run in these circles wearing New Balance work out shoes and a seven dollar sweater. I straightened up, put on my most disinterested expression and walked into the salon shoes department. A waiter appeared at my left, offering a complimentary vodka martini. Sometimes I forget it’s all in how you carry yourself.

Sometimes I also forget that a vodka martini on an empty stomach has the effect of making one very silly in very short order. I escaped Nordstrom with my credit card unscathed, but just barely. The cashmere wraps were looking very comfy, but I already have two, including one that I never wear because it just seems too foo foo. Also, I’ve been in a thrifty mood recently, so I was able to talk myself out of buying that arctic fox fur wrap. And also, there’s the guilt. Although I have zero guilt about buying leather gloves or having leather seats in my car and really, is a cow less important because it’s not fuzzy wuzzy? I should probably figure out where I stand on that issue.

I decided to attempt some Christmas shopping, so walked up to H&M, but then, as seems always the case when I’m in H&M, I immediately got overheated and bored with the whole store and hated how everything is size 2 and some of it is fug. I continued to walk up the street to where the Hootchie Mama store is, but then got distracted by the Payless Shoes where Jake and I had scored our Halloween costume shoes. I bought three pairs of shoes on a whim. I have no idea where I’m going to wear them, but who doesn’t need another pair of ballerina flats? Me, that’s who, because I already own twelve pair. Oh bother.

There is something about Chicago that makes it magical, I think. Something about Chicago in December, at least. It sparkles with snow and resounds with clippety clops of Hansome cabs. At several points, I thought of my notion that I never notice smells unless I travel, or perhaps I am so accustomed to the thirty or forty common smells within my daily life that I just don’t notice them. But December Chicago smells like a man. It smells like the nap of his neck, just under the five o’clock shadow and above the collar of his cashmere sweater. Or maybe it smells different to different people because maybe it smells a bit like being in love.

I continued walking up State, but I was so hungry that I was getting cranky and it had started to rain, the precursor to the predicted Blizzard Of Massive Proportions that had caused O’Hare to cancel a bunch of flights in preparation. I caught a cab, went back to the hotel and ordered room service. Beef, because Chicago is a beefy town and one must do as the locals do. I probably should have just gone anywhere else, because my supper was subpar. I peered out my hotel room curtains and from the 22nd floor, I could see far out across the flat landscape, but the puddles on the rooftops were busy with giant raindrops. On the Hancock Building a few blocks away, they had replaced the normal white spotlights on the top with red and green. Clouds had swallowed the antennae. It was starting already.

I watched The Office, did some work and then went to bed, my dreams punctuated by the passing of the El. Sometime in the middle of the night, there was a crashing boom of thunder and the entire building shuddered. Then again. When I woke up, I flipped on the television to hear the local news personalities excitedly telling the viewers to call in sick and stay off the roads, because some kind of white hell had been unleashed outside. I flipped open the curtains and not only was it snowing sideways, but the entire Hancock building had completely disappeared.

Of course, the one time I didn’t have a camera along, I get a great car and a great view and a whopper of a meteorological event. Figures.

When I walked out of the main entrance onto Michigan Avenue, Grant Park was some kind of gingerbread fantasy of statues wearing marshmallow coats and trees sculpted out of royal icing. I half expected a stop-action animation lumberjack to wander up and declare that bumbles bounce. I think I actually said “You’ve got to be fucking kidding me” but it was probably lost in the gale force winds that shot straight up the Saint Lawrence and right up my skirt. Yeah. Guess who only brought a skirt and heels for her presentation?

I’d like to think I rocked the Working Girl look with my white socks and sneakers over my silk stockings but realistically, every speck of the fashion faux pas showed on my face. The second I stepped into the client’s building, I hit their bathroom, changed into my heels, and pulled my hair out of its ponytail, the static quelled by the onslaught of snowflakes.

The training went pretty well, although really, they don’t pay me enough and also, I think the client was only half kidding when they asked if I wanted a job with them. And I also found out that one of my clients I used to work with all the time just came in second on The Apprentice. If I paid any attention to that show at all, I would have recognized her name immediately, but since I don’t, they all laughed at me for not knowing that she was famous now. Or as famous as we corporate people ever get, I suppose. Or rather, good famous, instead of infamous.

My section of their day was officially done at noon, but I stuck around to help someone out with their boring work stuff, then caught a cab back to the hotel. I had checked out, figuring that the storm would peter out by noon, and according to my Polish cabbie, the roads weren’t that bad in the city. I did have the go ahead to stay overnight from both my boss, the Veep and Esteban, but I figured that I’d give it a try and if I had to pull over and get a hotel somewhere up the shore, then I would. Besides, I had a new input plug for my iPod to keep me company and I really wanted to get out of town before rush hour started.

I headed north, slowly but surely. I wasn’t having a problem with the roads, but apparently the ribbon of freezing rain that came before the snow had made the roads a greasy hazardous mess. I was passing cars in ditches, up dividers and down culverts. I saw a double-trailer semi jackknifed fifty feet off the shoulder. I watched a squadron of eight snowplows barrel down three lanes of empty highway. Meanwhile, I blew past everything at a cautious 60 mph, but really, I wasn’t having any problems whatsoever and probably could have gone faster. The real problem was the rest of the cars on the road. Between semis going 40 and idiotic little Hondas going 75 mph and then slamming on their brakes and losing control like hyperactive little roller skates, it was slow going.

Four hours later and I finally made it to Milwaukee (that leg usually takes 90 minutes in light traffic). I stopped at school to pick up the mail in my mailbox and then made a stop at the new Trader Joe’s for wine and supplies. I was struck by how spoiled I am by my travels. When I’m in San Francisco, Trader Joe’s is just another grocery store. The Milwaukee store was filled with’for lack of a better word’tourists. They were gawking at everything, blocking aisles, standing and arguing about whether they needed the cracked black pepper crackers or if they had them already. After four hours of cursing idiotic drivers, I was faced with a store full of them. One couple was so obnoxious that I almost didn’t censor myself when the thought “Man, are you this annoying all the time?” came to the surface. Because seriously, are you?

I finally got home at 7:30. Seven hours after I left Chicago. I did stop at school for about ten minutes and in Trader Joe’s for maybe a half hour, but even so, a trip that normally takes three and a half hours on a normal day took almost twice that. Unbelievable. Apparently I drove through the entirety of the snow belt, because back at home, we had maybe an inch of snow and Esteban reports that when he picked up Abby in her northern suburb, they had only a trace of accumulation along the sides of the road. Chicago, yet again, gets all the fun. Figures.

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