Monday, December 21, 2009

This too shall pass

Things I heard today in the office:

"Man, these north face jackets are so sweet, but everyone has the ones in the sweet colors."
"Dude, that’s a little too gay for me. My gaydar just went up."
"Being a bum would be the easiest job. You just do nothing."

I didn’t say anything because I didn’t know where to start. And so I am writing about it on my blog. Lame. But next time there is “bum” talk, I will pipe up. And same for gay talk. I thought once everyone gets past seventh grade this shit goes away. Guess not.

The best thing I overheard today that made everything better was my grandma asking my mom if she had ever seen The Nanny and saying what a hoot that Fran Drescher is.

Sunday, December 20, 2009

No thanks

It’s Christmas time here at Dunley and Didley, PC, LLO. Just look at our festive holiday environment, and I’m sure you’ll be convinced that this is the place for you. (And we do this for every holiday, thanks to the folks at Office Environment Consultants, Inc.!) This afternoon is the firm holiday party, which means at 4:45, our runners will distribute cookies to all of the employees at their work stations and then everyone will call into a conference call and listen to a holiday greeting from the firm president.

We place great value on work-life balance here at Dunley and Didley, PC, LLO. For instance, one of our newest associates took last Monday afternoon off for an appendectomy. Another associate started sleeping at home rather than at the office after she had her baby.

We maintain a high profile in the community and support various unimportant non-political causes. Our firm has box seats to almost every athletic or cultural event going on in town. Of course, we don’t use them, but we always fill the seats with attractive people. Won’t you join our team?

Friday, December 18, 2009

Drawerings

A friend of mine is asking everyone she loves to create a self-portrait of themselves and submit it to her and then she will turn it into an album or something wonderful. She showed me her depiction of herself. Although she greatly overestimated her girth, the skill with which she wields a pencil is amazing. She is always dazzling me with secret talents. She kicks ass at law school even though she hates it more than me. She is generally brilliant and never forgets a thing. She is a talented ceramicist, painter, and writer. She can arrange slices of cheese and crudités on a platter in the most pleasing and precise arrangements I’ve ever seen. Her chocolate chip cookies are the best I’ve ever eaten and so too for her cinnamon rolls. She is hilarious and she is one of the kindest and most gracious souls on the planet AND she is for sure one of the prettiest girls around.

I am intimidated about my self-portrait project. I’ve never been gifted in the visual-arts department. I wonder why that is? Why some people totally suck at it and others rock it. I think it is something about brain-wiring and I don’t think me or my teachers could have done anything different with Child Melba to help her out in this department.

I’m thinking about my friend tonight and I have to post something on my blog every day because of a promise I made so I am writing about her because that’s what I am thinking about. I can’t write about anything besides what I am thinking about, right? I hope my friend is okay tonight. Her pet rat died a few nights ago and besides that she’s been dealing with a whole heap of shit. More shit than anyone should ever have to deal with. Is there a way that we can make it so only sucky people have sucky shit to deal with and the wonderful people of the world like my friend can be left alone? That's what I want for Christmas.

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Fan Mail

And when I said that I was going to have a blog post every day starting December 16th, I meant December 17th. I really did. I meant that I would start this endeavor on the first day of my break, which is today, the 17th. I apologize for any confusion and beg your forgiveness.

How to start this habit of daily blogging? Not sure. First I’ll have to start a habit of daily writing. What will I write about? Prepare for things to get a lot more mundane around here. But first, I thought I’d answer some fan mail. This one is from a lady named Tancy who lives in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

Dear Melba,

I’m a huge fan. How do you manage to post a blog entry every other month or so, while being a mediocre law student, working between 5 and 15 hours a week , going to yoga classes here and there, running and swimming when the mood strikes, and ignoring your family? Keep up your amazing work!

Fondly,

Tancy in Tulsa



Dear TIT,

Thanks so much for your letter. It ain’t easy, let me tell you. I couldn’t do what I do without my amazing self-discipline. I start every morning by opening my eyes, removing my headgear, and setting one intention for the day. My daily intention could be anything. Sometimes it’s ambitious, like last Tuesday when I set out to count how many times I heard the word “yonder” during the day. Other times it’s totally whimsical like last Wednesday when I set out to inflect the second syllable of every word regardless of where the inflection normally occurs. After intention setting, I do seven sit-ups. Then I head to the bathroom. [This portion removed by site moderator.] By the time I’m done there, it’s dinner time and I choose between a Hot Pocket or a Lean Cuisine, depending on my mood. If I’m not too full, I eat ¾ of an ice cream sandwich and throw the stub in a shopping bag that I keep in the freezer. (When the kids come over, I pull out the bag and let them have an all-you-can-eat-stub fest.) After dinner, I select a piece of classical literature from my collection of leather bound classical literature. I recline on my chaise lounge and wait for a boy to pop by to whom I will say, “Oh, I was just reclining on my chaise catching up on my Thucydides.”

This is what works for me and keeps me going. It’s different for everyone. Find what works for you, stick to it, and then you’ll find that all your hopes and dreams are within reach.

Kindly,

Melba

Monday, December 14, 2009

Things you might not know about me because they are not generally known because they are not true:

• I am a fitness fanatic.
• I live for college football.
• I take personal hygiene very seriously.
• I love cats and all small furry animals.
• I am trilingual.
• I am in Paris doing research for my fourth novel.
• I am allergic to nuts.
• I unicycle everywhere I go year-round.

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

She called me a what?

A writer! But I haven't posted in over 2 months...because I haven't written ANYTHING in that time.

What have I been up to in that time? Not studying. Hanging out with a boy. Riding bikes with friends. A good bit of yoga. Cooking and eating. Lots of cooking and lots of eating. And then pooping.

I recently deactivated my facebook account. I deactivated on "Black Friday" because I was seeing too many shopping and sales related status updates. Facebook made me realize that most people are much less interesting than they appear from a distance and that an alarming number of people with whom I interact on a daily basis do not distinguish between "your" and "you're" or "there" and "their."

I've tried to deactivate before but then I reactivate 5 minutes later just to see if anyone posted a photo of me or wrote a lame comment about someone else's lame status update. This time though, I announced that I was going off and that announcement has kept me true to my word (for the most part). And so I will make an announcement here to set a little goal for myself. During my upcoming winter break (December 16th to January 8th), I will post something everyday.

Here is something from earlier today.

Do I have to reproduce? Will I get bored if I don’t? Is there someone who would be with me and not reproduce with me? What will I do when my dinner mates start talking about soccer games and picking colleges? I will do the same thing I do now when they start talking about football. I will avert my eyes and wait it out. My eyes will be averted for forever.

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Dear Cat,

The thing that I said I was going to write about has already been written about too much.

Here:

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/20/opinion/20dowd.html?_r=1&scp=4&sq=dowd&st=cse

And here:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/marcus-buckingham/whats-happening-to-womens_b_289511.html

The reason I thought this might be something worth writing about is that I keep having the same conversation with all of the smart, self-aware women I know. The topic: why is it so much work to be happy?

It’s whiney, anyway. And I think the explanation is simple. In this day in age, only stupid people are happy. There are fewer stupid women than stupid men, so there are fewer happy women than happy men.

Sunday, July 19, 2009

To the women before me

Thank you
for clearing the branches off the trail,
for wiping down the table before I sat down to eat,
for flushing the floater down the toilet even though it wasn’t yours,
for speaking up when something wasn’t right,
for thinking of others without sacrificing any part of yourself,
for showing them all that you could do so that the same would be expected of me.

Screw you
for playing into stereotypes because then they were projected onto me,
for acting less intelligent than you are,
for just going along with things,
for settling,
for always buying what they are selling,
for making thinness your greatest achievement.

For the women after me

I remember the first time I heard her say she hates her body. It was in a dream. She said she hated her webbed feet. Even though she doesn’t have webbed feed, I woke up with a feeling of dread because of the inevitability of my six-year old niece one day coming to disdain a part or parts or the entirety of her body and then carrying that disdain around for the rest of her life. Can it be prevented? Currently, she spends hours looking in the mirror, loves her naked body, and flashes and shakes her little butt because doing so makes her happy. How can we prolong this celebration? We (you, me, my sisters and mother) must be models of self-love. We must celebrate ourselves every day and feel nothing but gratitude for our functioning, funny-looking, abundant, flat, hairy, smelly, beautiful bodies.

What does it take

A beautiful woman’s body is attacked by breast cancer. She and the doctors get the cancer out of her body and she regains her strength. I tell her she looks great, and she says she feels great. But then she says she needs to lose ten more pounds. I want to shake her: But you are alive! Is it not enough that after attack and then radiation your body is now dancing to the music and laying in the grass? If surviving cancer is not enough to quiet the incessant voice in a woman’s head that tells her that there is too much of her, is there any hope for me to quiet the voice in my head?

Monday, April 13, 2009

Taxman

Some people go through life keenly aware of how fucking trivial it all is.
Others give a shit about graduations and goodbyes.

I spent an hour or so today reading letters that my mother wrote to my father in the year or so leading up to their marriage. My mother has always lived life.

I was surprised by many things in those letters.
My mother was a romantic. Unfortunately, I didn’t have the pleasure of reading the letters that he wrote to her.

My mother and I are more similar than I thought.

Life is not that hard. I need more love in my life. Those letters made me feel like all of the things I care about and all of the things that I am angry about don’t matter. Just find someone to love.

In eighth grade my mother said she wanted to be a dental hygienist and that is what she still does today.

I saw pictures of my dad with another girl feeding him hardboiled eggs at some college frat event. My mother went on dates with many boys.

I feel like I could be plucked from the earth and it would make no difference.

Life is a journey, I know, but when will the sucky part be over.

My mother said she would die if she lost my father’s respect. She said it made her unhappy that he didn’t go to communion, but she didn’t want him to go for her. What were they up to?

My mother was a terrible student.

My dad’s friends called him Beans.

My mother and father were confused sometimes. They had conversations that made her feel “icky.” This is such a relief to me.

My mother looked forward to being a good lover and she said she was thinking about their new home and thinking about what to cook for dinner and then she marveled, “I don’t even get angry thinking about it.”

She said “I trust you, but not with directions.”

Fucking tragic that his heart stopped beating twenty-seven years later.

And in the background for me is this nagging feeling that what I should really be doing is studying the Internal Revenue Code for my tax class.

Saturday, March 7, 2009

First I found your house.

And then I found you on the Internet.
Now I scan the obituaries for your name.

I come in peace.

One day I asked myself what if I go down this street instead of that one.
I don’t know, only one way to find out.
And so I took Orchard instead of Dudley and nearly stopped in my tracks when I saw it.
This house is the only thing that could keep me in this city.
Waking up in this house would make life worth waking up to.
Coming home to this house would give me a reason to have left home in the first place.

I smell my lentils cooking in the kitchen.
I hear me typing in the front bedroom.
I see my sisters coming over to play pinochle in the front room.
I see the attic full of fabric scraps and skeins of leftover yarn.
I see me sleeping with the windows open in the back bedroom.
I see me crying in the bathroom.
I see me stretching on the front porch.
I see my laundry hanging in the backyard.
I see me letting the weeds grow on the side of the house.

There is only one place for all of this, for all of me. And you are living there. With your wife and your dog. You are young. You look fertile, like you might try and fill the house up with kids.

And so I must wait.

Sunday, March 1, 2009

A composite of some of the writer's facebook friends

I used to say that my mom was my best friend and then I met my husband. Now I say that he is my best friend because that is what people say. Actually, women say it more than men. But they always sound happy when they say it and so I say it. I am married to my best friend. But secretly, we like REALLY different things. If we weren’t married and people didn’t say you should be married to your best friend, there’s no way we would be best friends. I like shopping and celebrity news and lotion. He likes dogs and trucks and sports. One thing that we can agree on is that steak is delicious. He said that he knew that I was a “cool chick” when I ordered a steak on our first date and ate more than half of it. So whenever we fight, which we don’t really do that, we try to remember to go eat steak.

We also really like reality TV. We’ve liked it since the beginning, but now there are so many shows to choose from. We have different favorite shows (me: the bachelor :: him: west coast choppers), but they are all so good that we will each watch the other’s favorite show. That’s what marriage is all about, watching each other’s favorite shows.

We also really like working out. He loves “being ripped” and I just don’t want to ever get fat. He promises that he would love me even if I get fat, but he says such mean things about his sister Janine who probably needs to start working with a trainer that I know that if I got fat maybe he wouldn’t say those things but he would probably think them.

Right now we are saving up our money to update our kitchen. We went to a factory direct appliance store today to look at stainless steel appliances to go with our granite countertops. Our house will look just like a new condo! I can’t wait! After the kitchen is done, we are going to save up for a new motorcycle for my husband. And then maybe we will have a baby or build a deck. I am so happy and blessed and nothing is wrong. At all.

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Pearls

My grandfather gave them to my mother on her wedding day.

Many women show up at the office with them around their necks shortly after getting married. Maybe it is a common thing for a bride to get pearls for her wedding. I don’t know much about what is common and not and am always having to ask my older sister.

My mother gave me pearls when I was fifteen shortly after my father died. It sort of made sense at the time. Like it was my consolation prize. You will not be getting these from him when you get married, nor will he be walking you down the aisle or teaching you to drive, all of which is unfortunate and so we will forgo the wait and give them to you now. How’s that? That better? Uh, okay, thanks.

They stayed in my mom’s top dresser drawer while I went away to college and then when I moved to Seattle. Now I am back in the same state as my pearls and I take them out of my mom’s dresser sometimes when I go to work in the same building where my father used to work, which, oddly enough, overlooks his grave.

I am twenty-six now and am realizing how things have been complicated for me as a result of my father’s death. I have come to think that it is quite appropriate that I got my string of pearls when I did.

I have not consulted with my mother on why I got my pearls when I did. I think maybe she had some money after the funeral and didn’t know what to do with it and maybe it was cheaper if you buy 3 strands at once (one for me and one for each of my two sisters). Maybe it was simply that she knew that my oldest sister would be getting married soon and that my other sister and I would be bridesmaids and so we should all have pearls to wear. Maybe I would have gotten them at that time anyway. My mother is much more into thrift than symbolism.

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Different Strokes

Amazing. Last night I was on my way to a party with my housemate who is very much a dude. I was driving and halfway there he asks me if I think they will have food. I say probably just snacks. He calls the host of the party to ask if there will be food. I try to stop him. (Oh my god! What will the host think!) I try to urge him to call someone else who we think will be there. Preferring to go straight to the source, he calls and asks the host, “Hey, man, do you have food there?” “No, man, just munchies.” “Okay see you soon.” “Yeah.” Click. We stop at jimmy johns. My housemate orders a sandwich, holds the mayo and tomato and replaces with sprouts and mustard. We show up at the party way way way further out in the burbs than I have ever been before. There is a long folding table with every sort of booze imaginable, tons of wine, and a keg of Sam Adams and then various snacks throughout the kitchen such as egg rolls, taquitos, crackers, various cheeses, cream cheese with jelly on top, chips, guacamole, salsa and other dips.

What is most remarkable about all of this is that my housemate had no shame in calling the host to ask if there will be food for him, and the host had no shame in saying the food that we have here will not suffice as dinner for you. There is no apology or self-consciousness on either part. The host doesn’t try to satisfy my housemate and suggest that perhaps he could eat enough tacquitos to make a meal. He just says we don’t have food (even though there was so much food). In the car, my housemate had unabashedly slurped down the sandwich and said, “That hit the spot.” Then at the party he chows down on the munchies and there are no thoughts of “I really shouldn’t.” Just, “Hey man, awesome tacquitos.”

I am awestruck by the whole thing. Largely because of my complicated relationship with food. And because of my fear of offending anyone or making anyone feel bad, which is usually my guiding principle in social situations. It was fascinating to watch my housemate operate without the shadow of either food issues or people-pleasing tendencies. It was frustrating too. Why am I strapped down by all this self-consciousness and he is just waltzing through life happy as a clam? The difference between us is self-awareness, and I know that, most often, it is a virtue. It is better to go through life aware of yourself and questioning the world around you and your place in it rather than obliviously bumbling about. But sometimes it is a drag to be under constant self-evaluation.

The party was fine. I kept finding myself in pleasant enough conversations and marveling at my social skills that had gone unused for weeks. But there was so much taupe there. There was one point where I wanted to stand up on a chair and say, “If you are wearing something from Banana Republic, take it off and put it in this pile.” Then everyone would be naked and we would have a big pile of various shades of taupe clothing made in China.