And remembered…

It snowed…

11/16/2008

November snow

In November.  In Kentucky.

I know it’s not much of a snow, but still it snowed.  I talk to my husband about retiring to Alaska because I know there will be lots of snow.  I don’t think he believes me…

golden

This picture does not do justice to what I witnessed last week.  The sunlight shining on these yellow leaves filled that whole office with such a lovely glow…

Emma

I miss Emma so much so many times during the day.  I have pictures of her on my computer and I load them and use the mouse like I’m petting her.  It’s pathetic, I know.

Emma was a good dog to me.  She even deserves credit for saving my life a few times. Seriously.

I want to see her, smell her, and touch her.  I miss her warmth and softness.  She was so sweet.  She’d even hug me back in that whippet way of hers.

It’s so unsettling how something can be gone and with you at the same time.

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…suitable for 4 year olds and some adults.

This salesman runs out of gas in a thunderstorm.  He tries and tries to use his cell phone, but it’s not picking up any signal because of the storm or the remote area he seems to be in.

He sees lights on in a huge ugly and over done mansion across the road.  Using his rain coat to keep dry, he crosses the street and walks up the long dark drive lined with unkempt and very large shrubbery to the front door.

He knocks at the door using the huge lion head knocker.  The knocks were as loud as thunder.  No one comes and he knocks again.

The door slowly and with loud creaking begins to open and a tiny little butler with a very large nose looks out and asks in that way that butlers tend to have, "May I help you?"

"I hope so.  I’ve run out of gas across the road here," he points to his car suddenly visible via a huge and very close strike of lightning.  "May I come in and use your phone to call triple A?"

The butler looks past the salesman and to the car with his upturned chin and says, "I see.  Well, of course.  You must come in and use our telephone."

"Thanks so much," the salesman says.  "You’re a pal."

The butler pushes the door open wide and says to the guy, "Follow me."

The salesman is lead into a large foyer.  The walls are dark with heavy woodwork.  The center table has a bouquet of thorny roses, but the flowers have folded over and begun to dry out from a lack of watering.  Dried petals upon the table scatter about from the "SWOOSH!" of the front door closing with a loud THWACK!

The salesman is lead into a library filled with old dusty books and a rolling ladder to reach its upper shelves.  The room is heavy with the scent of mold and mustiness.

"Wait here," the butler says to the salesman.  "And I will bring you a telephone."

With quick and tiny steps the butler leaves him alone in the room and closes the door to the library on his way out.

The salesman takes a seat in what looked to be a big comfy chair, but instead he slips out from its shiny leather seat and on to the floor.  He tries other chairs and the sofa in the room, but they are all made of the same overstuffed shiny leather and he just can’t get a seat in this overwhelmingly dark stinky library.  He is stuck with just having to look over the selection of books on the shelves lining the walls from floor to high ceiling in the danky dark library.

He pulls a book from a shelf and takes it over to to a side table.  He switches on a lamp, but nothing happens.  Click, click.  He tries it again.  Nothing.  None of the other lamps work either.  Only the lone ceiling pendant lights the dismal room.

So the salesman waits.

….and waits.

…and waits.

Suddenly the door to the room flies open and in walks a very tall and quite slender butler, but with a very tiny nose.  A teeny nose.  A barely pimple of a nose at all, notices the salesman.

"You are needing a phone?" he asks the salesman.

The sales man nods his head yes to the spindly butler.

"I’ll go and find you one then, " says the second butler and he quickly turns on his heels and is out of the library with door snapping shut behind him.

And the salesman is left to wait.  Again.

So he waits.

…and waits.

…and waits.

The library door opens quietly and the man watches as a quite round butler enters the room pushing in front of him a very large box.  This box is really big.  Nearly bigger than the very round butler struggling to get the box through the library door.  

The box is quite shabby with bits of tape just barely holding it together.  Large stamps of "FRAGILE" and "DO NOT DROP" are over lapping each other all upon the box.  

The salesman makes a move to help this very obese butler bring in the box, but he is quickly given a wiggle of "no" from the butler’s chubby right index finger.

The salesman is beginning to wonder just how many butlers he’s going to see before one brings him a telephone…

Finally the butler has positioned the box in the very center of the room.  He turns to the salesman and asks, "you’re needing to call a car service?"

"Well, really triple A," the  salesman replies.  "Unless you have access to gasoline?"

"Oh, no,"  the butter-ball of a butler says.  His mouth seems to stay in the round tight "no" a bit too long.  "We don’t keep such things on hand.  Much, much too dangerous," he sighs.

The salesman just stares at him.  

The much more than portly butler stares back.

"Is someone bringing me a telephone," the salesman asks.

"Of course," says the butler seemingly a bit annoyed with the salesman as he waddles his way back to the library door.  "A phone is on it’s way I assure you, "  he tells the salesman as he turns in the doorway and looks over to the box he’d just brought in.

"In the mean while," he asks a bit timidly to the salesman, "do you think you could unpack this box?"

The salesman is becoming quiet exasperated with all these butlers and their apparent lack of butleling assistance.  He is just about to say no and leave the mansion and it’s unhelpful staff, but the fat little butler gives him such a beseechingly sad plea of a look that the salesman says,

"I suppose so."

The salesman watches as the bulky butler quietly closes the door behind him.  Once again he is left alone to wait for a phone in the very large and useless library.  He sighs.  He stares at the over sized box in the middle of the room.

"I guess I’ll have to work for the use of a telephone around here," he mumbles to himself as he walks towards the sizable package.  The box is as wide as a refrigerator and just as tall, too.

The salesman circles the box once and draws his ring of keys from his raincoat pocket.  His cell phone slips out and drops to the floor.  He picks it up and looks to the screen to see still not a single bar of signal available.

A strike of lightning shines through the tall windows and a crack of thunder follows immediately.

The sales man opens the small swiss army knife attached to his key ring and begins slicing through the tattered tape of the humongous box.  The worn out box sides fall to the floor and inside the box is — another box.

The salesman quickly cuts the tapes holding this much tidier box sealed and its sides fall to the floor revealing — another box, but this one is held together with twine.

The twine is quickly cut and the box sides fall away to show — another box!

Through tape, twine, brown paper and more tape, twine, and brown paper the salesman cuts his way through open one box inside another.  The  boxes continue on and on, each one smaller and smaller than the one before before until the salesman comes to a box about the size of a toaster.

The sales man carries the small box to a side table.  It is so light in weight he is thinking that it must be empty as he uses his little knife to cut through the taped top.
 
Inside is a — ANOTHER BOX.

He opens it and continues opening more and more smaller boxes and then he reaches what must surely be the last box as it is no bigger than a thimble and how could a box be any smaller than a thimble?

He opens the thimble sized box and out JUMPS this very ORANGE and enormous MONSTER!  A monster bigger than the very first box the man had opened!

The salesman jumps back, nearly falling over the back of a sofa to get away from the very ORANGE and stupendous sized MONSTER and the MONSTER begins to chase the salesman all about the now seemingly very small library.

The salesman is climbing over furniture and ducking under tables, but there just seems to be no possible way to outrun the very ORANGE and immense MONSTER!  He tries and tries, but the very ORANGE and big MONSTER keeps blocking his every attempt to reach the library door!

Quickly the man scrambles up one of the rolling ladders, but the monster just climbs up right behind him.

The salesman has reached the top of the ladder and there is no place for him to go unless he were to turn around to jump off and over the very ORANGE and colossal MONSTER, but the floor of the library now seems very far and away.

He does turn around to see that the very ORANGE and great MONSTER is just a few rungs behind him.  Already he can smell the tang of the very ORANGE and monstrous MONSTER’s breath.

The MONSTER is nearly upon him.  The salesman does his best to squeeze himself as far back into the ladder and bookshelves as he can.  His poor head is pressing against the ceiling and beginning to ache from the pressure of being squeezed where there is no room to squeeze.

The salesman watches in terror as the very ORANGE and alarmingly huge and close MONSTER raises one of his huge beefy hands for the salesman.

The hand reaches closer and closer with its large and pudgy index finger coming closer and closer to the salesman’s chest.  The salesman wants to close his eyes in fear, but he just can’t stop staring into the very ORANGE and tremendous MONSTER’s deep and hollow holes of black eyes.

The very ORANGE and jumbo MONSTER pokes at the salesman’s chest with his very long and prodigious index finger.  He looks into the salesman’s face of terror and opens his mouth to squeal,

"TAG!  You’re it!" 

P.S.   The key to this ending is to have been moving closer and closer to the child so that you could POKE THEM IN THE CHEST WHEN YOU SQUEAL AS LOUD AS YOU CAN, "TAG!  YOU’RE IT!

P.P.S.  While I did write this little story I did not create the basis for it.  It was told to me by an old school chum in a life and time far far and long long ago…

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Thursday we come home to discover our water had been shut off.  Ouch.

I went to our checking account online and found the reason right away.  Our bank draft didn’t go through.  I immediately went to the water company’s online site to pay our bill and then shot them a note of apology and to please turn our water on as we needed to take showers and stuff.

Friday morning we used a slew of baby wipes to clean our bodies before going to work.  We were able to have our morning coffee and such because we shamelessly have water delivered to us from Highbridge.  I know paying for bottled water is considered highway robbery to some (like my father) but this water is so much better than what comes outta the taps in Lexington — even after I Brita it.

I drink a lot of water.  I’m not a soda or iced tea drinker.  I like my coffee and tea and do use the Brita water for these, but I am primarily a water drinker.  And I prefer the taste of Highbridge over those two.  So I pay for my delicious water in the same vein of reason as those who buy soda, charbucks, beer, or whatever.

We’ve been making our son’s car payment for the last three or four months and this has been killing us (but not so much that I should give up the Highbridge).  It’s nearly five hundred a month that we don’t have.  I don’t know where we’ve been finding it until stuff like coming home to no water happens.  We have been doing without a lot these past few months along with "robbing Peter to pay Paul," but hey — he’s our son.  And we want to help him out.  And it’s only for a little while.

That’s what we keep telling ourselves.  No matter that we’ve had to semi re-fi the house, switch to generic foods, and other horrendous life altering money saving ways in order to accommodate these temporary situations.  We’re gonna do it because he is our son.  Charity begins in the home, pholks.  It really does.

My dad doesn’t feel this way.  He’ll tell you, "you don’t owe your kids anything."  And by that he means beyond food, clothing, and shelter.  And even then it really only counts as long as the kid is unable to provide for these on its own.  The kid doesn’t have to be 18 for some of these to be dropped if the kid is old enough to, you know, GET A JOB.  Especially if that kid is your only daughter.

Now if that kid is your middle-aged son and he is now using a third car (from your collection of six) because he drove the other two into the ground — well that is not even the same thing as helping your kid out.  I don’t know what it is, but I’m sure my dad (and late mother) somehow rationalized this behavior in their little selfish parenting minds.

My parents were not nurturing at all.  If there were such a thing a pro-de-nurturing my parents had it hands down over anyone else.  And even their basic provisions came with life scarring conditions, but that’s a blog post no one would have time to read (or would I have time to write).

But even so, I will go on to the let you know that not all parents want their kids to have it better in life than they did.  OH, HELL, NO!  There are parents who are more like "how dare you," when it comes to being happy or doing well.

I am not one of those (my) parents.

So we’ll continue to struggle at helping our son out another month or two.  Our darling son really needs our help financially, mentally, and emotionally right now.  And we can do that.  Yes, we can.  And it makes us feel damn proud to do it, too!

And on another note…

A person could do this to infinity… 

A person could do this to infinity

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Because Ali did…

01/14/2008

Because I’m such an Ali whore: 

Have to do this little legal thing first : 

Original source: The list is based on an exercise developed by Will Barratt, Meagan Cahill, Angie Carlen, Minnette Huck, Drew Lurker, Stacy Ploskonka at Illinois State University. The exercise developers ask that if you participate in this blog game, you acknowledge their copyright.

Premise: bold each of the statements that applies.

Father went to college  - before he married and while we were children

Father finished college - while we were children

Mother went to college – while we were children

Mother finished college

Have any relative who is an attorney, physician, or professor - grandfather taught college

Were the same or higher class than your high school teachers  -I dunno

Had more than 50 books in your childhood home - had more than 50 books in my room…spent most of my money on books!

Had more than 500 books in your childhood home

Were read children’s books by a parent

Had lessons of any kind before you turned 18 - yes, but I paid for them

Had more than two kinds of lessons before you turned 18

The people in the media who dress and talk like me are portrayed positively

Had a credit card with your name on it before you turned 18

Your parents (or a trust) paid for the majority of your college costs

Your parents (or a trust) paid for all of your college costs

Went to a private high school

Went to summer camp  - yes, 4-h camp for 1 week, two summers, but I paid for it

Had a private tutor before you turned 18

Family vacations involved staying at hotels - family vacations meant  camping or visiting relatives!

Your clothing was all bought new before you turned 18 -  bought or made new, began buying my own clothes at 14

Your parents bought you a car that was not a hand-me-down from them

There was original art in your house when you were a child

Had a phone in your room before you turned 18

You and your family lived in a single family house

Your parent(s) owned their own house or apartment before you left home

You had your own room as a child

Participated in an SAT/ACT prep course

Had your own TV in your room in High School

Owned a mutual fund or IRA in High School or College

Flew anywhere on a commercial airline before you turned 16 - yes, but the rich uncle paid!

Went on a cruise with your family

Went on more than one cruise with your family

Your parents took you to museums and art galleries as you grew up - ha!

You were unaware of how much heating bills were for your family - nope, but the dental bills were shoved down our throats!

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A workmate was going to PetSmart on her lunch break and since they always have animals there to pet and such I opted to go with her. I also needed a bag of feline pine for Sophie.

Afterwards we went over to Marshall’s — another store I’ve never been to because we all know what a shopping whore I am … not.

And I see something I’ve not seen in a few years, but I don’t go look at it because I remember it costing $40 or $50 the first time I fell in love with it and well, you know. That’s a lot of money to me.

My friend makes her purchase and then decides she needs to go back and get two more of the same, but different sizes. And we’re walking straight down the isle to my old love again.

I stood in front of the shelf and stared at it. There were three of them, but one was taller than the others. I picked it up expecting it to be a hollow ceramic imitation and it…was…not. It was solid and heavy. HEAVY.

I stood there caressing it longingly and looked at the others on the shelf. Slowly I upended it to take a look at the dreaded price tag and it was $7.99.

$7.99!

Now I don’t know what’s it made of. It could be soapstone, but it most likely something to mimic soapstone. It didn’t matter. It still had all the rich beauty I remembered so I bought it.

elephant.jpg

I thought about sleeping with it last night…

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is not filled with turmoil or gonads and strife.  So I feel pretty much blessed.  I went through enough in my early years I guess.

They can’t be fixed.

Hopefully I will be approved for the foster to adopt program.

I have a deep need to save a child or two from the pain I had to endure.

It doesn’t have to be like that.  It shouldn’t be like that.

It won’t be like that in my home.

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Princess Ah-Ah hosts the Carnival of the Mundane this week and has asked me for a submission. This is the third request to me from a host/ess and while I love being invited I must say that I’ve developed a bit of a complex about the matter. Perhaps I should title my blog….

THE TOKEN BLOG: Those Bland Life Thingits Nobody Cares About But Me…

Ah-ah chooses the topic of “The Ones That Got Away (or alternately, The Ones That Ran For Their Lives…)” as our assignment and Geez…this just sucks because this is the absolute truth…

I was deeply in love with a young TIMOTHY GORDON HESS when I was 13 years old and in the seventh grade. He was lean, tall, wore glasses, was also 13, and had a paper route that took him by my house 6 days a week.

We had a few classes together, but I actually sat across from him in Science class. Yeah, I didn’t make a really good grade in Science class that year…or in any other class Timothy was in. And Timothy? He was a straight A student. I shoulda just copied off him…dammit!

Being 13, Timothy and I spent a lot of time just playing. We played at my house, his house, all over the little rural area we lived in, and at school. Timothy eventually gave me a section of his paper route and then we got to play around after school before we started our routes. We’d get into trouble in some of our classes, my house, and his, but we had the best fun together!

People were always commenting to us about how they’d “seen” us riding our bikes down a road or on the way to the stone quarry; walking the rail road tracks or playing in the creek by the park; or hanging out just about anywhere. Some time later I was told that people always thought we were “going together,” but no…we were just really good friends (despite my huge crush on the boy) so many were startled when he “took” another friend as his date on the 7th grade class trip. It turned out okay for me as a bunch of us ended up as a group, so we still did a few rides together as a pair—I had little less fear about some rides than she did.

Timothy and I were fast friends all through the 7th, 8th, and 9th grades. Towards the end of the 9th grade I was shocked when he asked me to be his date for the student council dinner—the equivalent of a prom in our very rural area. I mean we had to dress up and everything!

We had a busy summer between 9th and 10th grades. My family was preparing to move away, and still Timothy didn’t know what a huge crush I’d had on him for years. We exchanged many letters during our 10th grade year apart and when I told him I was coming for a long weekend to visit an old girl friend that summer he demanded a day of my time.

I rode on my friend’s bike to meet him near my old house. There were no hugs for greetings, instead he yelled, “Let’s go!” I pedaled my bike fast behind his to the stone quarry. Once there we climbed to the top and Timothy asked me to keep following him—he had something special to show me.

Eventually he grabbed up my hand while he was asking me if it was okay. Yeah, like I was gonna pull it way. TIMOTHY…GORDON…HESS was holding MY hand. We’d hiked a bit further and suddenly Timothy admits to me that he thinks of me as his girl friend and has for some time.

It was one of those “OMG” moments, you know…

And then he asks if he can kiss me!

And I was so shocked that he even asked. And I’m thinking a thousand things at once. Like how long I’ve been in love with Timothy Gordon Hess and he didn’t know. And how I’ve never kissed a boy at all. AND A MILLION OTHER THINGS.

“No, ” I finally say. “Not today.”

He asked me again and again. And even said please. He wanted to know why. And I just gave him the lame, “not today” answer again and again.

We spent the rest of the day at a special place in the creek he discovered without me. It really was pretty.

I remember telling my old girl friend all about it, too.

Finally even Timothy and his family moved away from the area. We still wrote some letters and exchanged a few phone calls, but we eventually just stopped keeping in contact. It happens, you know.

Years later I read where he had died in a car accident at Penn State.

I still think of him sometimes…and miss him.

….and wish I had said, “yes.”

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Or God Bless us everyone…

I’ve been sitting here trying to remember my Son’s first christmas. It was so long ago. He was eleven months old to the day. We made him a small tree and had cut his crib mobile animals from their umbrella and hung them on the little tree. I can’t recall if it had lights, but I know there is a picture in a book somewhere.

1984

We only had a few small things for him, but I didn’t worry as he still had grandparents to visit (he was an only grandchild until he was seven years old) and they were sure to overwhelm the poor kid with stuff, Stuff, and more STUFF. I remember he got duplicate peg bench and hammer sets and I think they were his absolute favorites.

I wish I could tell you this was a lovely memory, but it’s not. I was incredibly ill at the time, but no one knew. Just me. I was so alone. Everything was alien and wrong for me. I just wanted to roll up into an empty box and die.

By then end of the day my Son and I were exhausted. I don’t know how Hubby felt. I can barely remember him from that day.

In a short while my Darling Husband and I will be on our way to deliver Meals on Wheels. He’s already spoken to his family via telephone. I’ll call my dad later. And my son? I’ll call him as soon as we get back from our deliveries.

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