Nevertheless, I figured I'd better write something. We're leaving my place early tomorrow for parts north, and I'll likely be offline until Monday. I finally got my stuff from Amazon, so I was able to exchange gifts last night with my mom and boompah. We had a nice evening and tried a new restaurant (Dragonfly, where we had spring rolls and taro chips and I had a house salad and vegetable noodles). I got all kinds of cool stuff, too! Good new books that I can't wait to dig into, a great new Scurvy sweater that I had coveted, a new piece of Fiestaware, an awesome carry-on bag, and from sweetie, WonderWoman underoos, a Vendetta shirt (www.makingfiends.com) and a Making Fiends piece of signed artwork! I think most of my gifts went over well.
Christmas shopping -- glad I'm not in the middle of it. I went to Target tonight to pick up a couple things, and found a relatively short line. Only one woman was in front of me, and she was already being rung up. Great! Especially because the store itself was really busy. Except . . . she had taken one bottle of some juice drink from a 4-pack and drunk it while she was walking around, and now she wanted to pay for it individually. Since the 4-pack was $2.59, she figured the individual drink should be between fifty and sixty cents, but the clerk and her supervisor are suggesting .75 with the CRV included. Well, she's not willing to let it go, and she's using her (incredibly inaccurate) math skills out loud repeatedly to convince them that she should basically be deeply discounted for stealing their product and consuming it before getting to the cash register. When I FINALLY got to the front, I said, deadpan naturally, "Hey, I ate half a bag of Pepperidge Farm cookies back there, and since I only ate four and there are eight in the bag, I figure you should only charge me $1.50." Poor thing, the cashier looked absolutely stricken, like she was trying to keep a cheerful and understanding face on while she was dying inside. I quickly explained that I was joking, and she said "Oh, that was a good one, because the woman in front of you did something JUST LIKE THAT." Um, yeah. Way to have your humor hat on. I wished her a happy holiday with not too much stress. Yikes.
Okay, my ass has got to be ready at 4:30 tomorrow, so I'm going to give my cat a little extra loving, then I'm going to wash and dry my hair so I don't have to do it in the morning. Take care all, have a wonderful Christmas or Yule or Solstice or Hannukah or Kwanzaa or stay-at-home-and-eat-Chinese-food or regular old Saturday. Take care,
CM
Wednesday, December 22, 2004
Monday, December 20, 2004
Christmas as an adult
Yeah, so Christmas as a child is all red and green and construction paper garlands and cookies and good foods and mountains of presents and music and decorating the tree and hot cocoa . . .
Merry Christmas! Says the plumber. Your garbage disposal's totally shot. I could replace it right now for $400. I've got one in the truck . . .
Merry Christmas! Says the auto body shop guy. Your car needs just about $3,000 worth of repairs and we'll need to keep it for a week . . .
On the bright side, and there is one . . . I got paid early, have a little money, and can afford what I paid (NOT the whole amount in either case -- a deductible on the car and just over $100 for the plumber to fix a leaky pipe. And even more bright side, the car will be good as new when I get it back and my insurance company is covering a rental. Also, I think I (and maybe Dad and Piggs) can probably handle a garbage disposal installation. So it's not all that bad, it's just that now I see how mom felt all those years when like the week before Christmas the washing machine would start walking through the house, or the refrigerator would die, or the garbage disposal, or the dishwasher . . . sometimes these would happen at the same time, too.
Even more slightly unrelated bright sides . . . I had a tiny little cocktail party last night for a couple close friends, and had a really nice time. I enjoy putting out a good party spread. I made way too much food, but it was fun to do. We had chocolate fondue with angel food cake, asian pears, bananas, an orange, and red grapes. There was a cheese tray with gorgonzola, brie, sharp cheddar and chevre. I had two baguettes, some chips, and crackers for the dips, which included muhammara, tapenade, chipotle-orange creme, new-fashioned onion dip, my mom's salmon dip, and smoky lentil spread. We also had crudites, cookies, peanut brittle, wine, sparkling fruit juice drinks, and hot cider. It was cool. I got some great presents, including an original artwork made with me in mind! We leave for Oregon on Thursday (crazy early), and until then get to just kick back and enjoy our vacation! I'm going to ballet tomorrow (to work off at least SOME of that cheese) and we're meeting my mom and boom-pah for dinner and present exchange tomorrow, but other than that, we've got no plans, appointments, or obligations. Ah, this is the life.
Oh, and I do still love the lights and colors and decorations and music and food . . . I've got the spirit, it's just that there's a whole new side to it all as a grown-up.
Not much else is new. Take care,
CM
Merry Christmas! Says the plumber. Your garbage disposal's totally shot. I could replace it right now for $400. I've got one in the truck . . .
Merry Christmas! Says the auto body shop guy. Your car needs just about $3,000 worth of repairs and we'll need to keep it for a week . . .
On the bright side, and there is one . . . I got paid early, have a little money, and can afford what I paid (NOT the whole amount in either case -- a deductible on the car and just over $100 for the plumber to fix a leaky pipe. And even more bright side, the car will be good as new when I get it back and my insurance company is covering a rental. Also, I think I (and maybe Dad and Piggs) can probably handle a garbage disposal installation. So it's not all that bad, it's just that now I see how mom felt all those years when like the week before Christmas the washing machine would start walking through the house, or the refrigerator would die, or the garbage disposal, or the dishwasher . . . sometimes these would happen at the same time, too.
Even more slightly unrelated bright sides . . . I had a tiny little cocktail party last night for a couple close friends, and had a really nice time. I enjoy putting out a good party spread. I made way too much food, but it was fun to do. We had chocolate fondue with angel food cake, asian pears, bananas, an orange, and red grapes. There was a cheese tray with gorgonzola, brie, sharp cheddar and chevre. I had two baguettes, some chips, and crackers for the dips, which included muhammara, tapenade, chipotle-orange creme, new-fashioned onion dip, my mom's salmon dip, and smoky lentil spread. We also had crudites, cookies, peanut brittle, wine, sparkling fruit juice drinks, and hot cider. It was cool. I got some great presents, including an original artwork made with me in mind! We leave for Oregon on Thursday (crazy early), and until then get to just kick back and enjoy our vacation! I'm going to ballet tomorrow (to work off at least SOME of that cheese) and we're meeting my mom and boom-pah for dinner and present exchange tomorrow, but other than that, we've got no plans, appointments, or obligations. Ah, this is the life.
Oh, and I do still love the lights and colors and decorations and music and food . . . I've got the spirit, it's just that there's a whole new side to it all as a grown-up.
Not much else is new. Take care,
CM
Wednesday, December 15, 2004
Whoo hoo!
Okay, so today I'm checking the job postings online for my district, and there's one at a school that I've been given an insider tip on -- that there's going to be an English teacher job that's for high-level college bound students. Sounds perfect, right?
I call, because it doesn't say whether it's that particular opening or not, and tehe secretary puts me on hold to ask. She asks me to repeat my name a couple times, which makes me nervous, because my dad works at that site, and can be a bit of a rabble-rouser. Anyway, after she gets back on the phone, she says no, that's not the one, but the principal would like to talk to me. I talk with him for a minute, and he says my name has already come up for the position (from the same insider), that it will be posted in the early spring, and that they'll be in contact about it because they are not passive about getting good teachers. He also asks whether I've had training for the program, which I haven't, but I did say I was willing to take the training this summer, and that I had other applicable experience, like teaching at City College, and having my M.A. Anyway, it sounds really good! I know I sitll have to apply and interview and whatnot, but if the principal already has my name on what sounds like a short list, that can only be good news, right?
Man, this could be just the break I need.
In other news, teachers are weird. We had this meeting after school yesterday to train us on how to use a program that kids can use to take short quizzes on books they've read, and two teachers talked the whole time, worse than the kids. One of them kept repeatedly making the Mac make its "Whoops" noise, which is a loud electronic thunk, and she commented that it would make a pretty good drumbeat. The she wanted her name added to the list of kids so she could take quizzes, too, and begged "Leave it on there permanently! I can't wait to use it!" Crazy.
I call, because it doesn't say whether it's that particular opening or not, and tehe secretary puts me on hold to ask. She asks me to repeat my name a couple times, which makes me nervous, because my dad works at that site, and can be a bit of a rabble-rouser. Anyway, after she gets back on the phone, she says no, that's not the one, but the principal would like to talk to me. I talk with him for a minute, and he says my name has already come up for the position (from the same insider), that it will be posted in the early spring, and that they'll be in contact about it because they are not passive about getting good teachers. He also asks whether I've had training for the program, which I haven't, but I did say I was willing to take the training this summer, and that I had other applicable experience, like teaching at City College, and having my M.A. Anyway, it sounds really good! I know I sitll have to apply and interview and whatnot, but if the principal already has my name on what sounds like a short list, that can only be good news, right?
Man, this could be just the break I need.
In other news, teachers are weird. We had this meeting after school yesterday to train us on how to use a program that kids can use to take short quizzes on books they've read, and two teachers talked the whole time, worse than the kids. One of them kept repeatedly making the Mac make its "Whoops" noise, which is a loud electronic thunk, and she commented that it would make a pretty good drumbeat. The she wanted her name added to the list of kids so she could take quizzes, too, and begged "Leave it on there permanently! I can't wait to use it!" Crazy.
Sunday, December 12, 2004
Dirty Santa
Oh lord. Why am I me? My friend calls and invites me to a party. He says "Oh, don't forget to bring a present for the Dirty Santa exchange." A few days later, by e-mail, I think to ask "how dirty are we talking?" He responds, as dirty as you want. Which to me means we are exchanging sex stuff. Yeah? It has to stay under ten bucks, so I'm thinking a bottle of warm-up lube or some of those dice which instruct you what to do and where. I make a special trip to the G Spot . . . . Wait, here is a good time for a side story.
So I'm walking down J street thinking "Have I passed it? I didn't think it was this far down. Oh god, I CAN'T FIND THE G SPOT!"
Okay, back to the main story. I get in there and look around, and as it turns out, my under-ten-dollar options are plentiful. There is "Lotto for Lovers," the aforementioned dice, a number of lotions and lubes, some novelty candies (Dick Tacs, Tit Tacs and gummy penises), as well as feather-y things, or even small plasticy whip-like items. But on the shelf in the center is the Toot-Z-Pole, a "personal massager" in an aerodynamic shape in a package that looks like the candy the name suggests. It's $6. I get it, as well as the lotto things (which are $3). I feel confident that I have a good Dirty Santa gift.
We arrive at the party a little late, due to having attended my staff Christmas party earlier the same evening. When we get there, the gift exchange has already begun. The rules are that you can choose a new gift from the pile when it's your turn or "steal" someone else's gift. A gift may only be stolen twice, and if your gift is stolen you have the option of opening a new gift or stealing another. Anyway, as I sit down, the gift currently being opened is . . . martini glasses with 8-ball stems. My host decides he needs to catch us up on what's available to steal. There's also . . . a bottle of wine and barware. And a nutcracker. Not even a dirty "nut"cracker or anything, just a nutcracker. I start laughing my ass off, realizing that my gift really does not fit with the rest. I tell my host, practically hysterically, that I really thought he meant "dirty" Santa like "porno" Santa. He reassured me that I'd done the right thing, and that this was one of the tamest years they'd had. Yeah. Okay. I don't feel like a perv. Anyway, it worked out fine -- my gift was selected right after my admission, and then rapidly stolen, and though I had thought of it as a novelty item, I am actually fairly well satisfied that the gift will be put to good use. And after everything was opened, it turned out there was another personal massager, it just wasn't as cylindrical as mine -- it was a fingertip massager. Sheesh. We ended up with the wine and barware, by the way.
It's bedtime now, but I promise I'll tell the highlight of the staff party, too, the wine smuggling adventure . . .
So I'm walking down J street thinking "Have I passed it? I didn't think it was this far down. Oh god, I CAN'T FIND THE G SPOT!"
Okay, back to the main story. I get in there and look around, and as it turns out, my under-ten-dollar options are plentiful. There is "Lotto for Lovers," the aforementioned dice, a number of lotions and lubes, some novelty candies (Dick Tacs, Tit Tacs and gummy penises), as well as feather-y things, or even small plasticy whip-like items. But on the shelf in the center is the Toot-Z-Pole, a "personal massager" in an aerodynamic shape in a package that looks like the candy the name suggests. It's $6. I get it, as well as the lotto things (which are $3). I feel confident that I have a good Dirty Santa gift.
We arrive at the party a little late, due to having attended my staff Christmas party earlier the same evening. When we get there, the gift exchange has already begun. The rules are that you can choose a new gift from the pile when it's your turn or "steal" someone else's gift. A gift may only be stolen twice, and if your gift is stolen you have the option of opening a new gift or stealing another. Anyway, as I sit down, the gift currently being opened is . . . martini glasses with 8-ball stems. My host decides he needs to catch us up on what's available to steal. There's also . . . a bottle of wine and barware. And a nutcracker. Not even a dirty "nut"cracker or anything, just a nutcracker. I start laughing my ass off, realizing that my gift really does not fit with the rest. I tell my host, practically hysterically, that I really thought he meant "dirty" Santa like "porno" Santa. He reassured me that I'd done the right thing, and that this was one of the tamest years they'd had. Yeah. Okay. I don't feel like a perv. Anyway, it worked out fine -- my gift was selected right after my admission, and then rapidly stolen, and though I had thought of it as a novelty item, I am actually fairly well satisfied that the gift will be put to good use. And after everything was opened, it turned out there was another personal massager, it just wasn't as cylindrical as mine -- it was a fingertip massager. Sheesh. We ended up with the wine and barware, by the way.
It's bedtime now, but I promise I'll tell the highlight of the staff party, too, the wine smuggling adventure . . .
Friday, December 10, 2004
Interview tips and galoshes
Yay! My galoshes arrived! They're pink with apples all over them. I'm almost proud of myself for finding something so uniquely me -- like when you get someone a present and you just KNOW they're going to love it, only it's for me. I couldn't contain my enthusiasm when I got home, so I put them on immediately (they're still on) and started singing Galoshes to the tune of Volare.
Okay, so I got conned into sitting on an interview panel yesterday (had I known I'd be at school over three hours later than usual, I'd have said no), and I have some tips for interviewees.
Gleaned from Interview 1 -- First, if you are a woman, no, it is not necessary to wear makeup or a skirt. At least for this interviewer. I don't care. But if you're sweaty and greasy and disshevelled as all get-out, maybe you could blot and run a comb through your hair. This goes for men, too, but this particular interviewee was female.
Also, be confident. Just because you're interviewing for two positions at this site, don't ask "Does that seem weird?" You seem nervous and needy. Just assume or pretend that it isn't weird.
And third, you should probably find out what the job is, because standard interview questions assume you know (e.g. "What makes you uniquely qualified for this job?" "What will you be doing in a typical day?"). If for some stupid reason, you didn't at least look at the job description before you applied for it, don't begin answering every single question with "Well, again, I really don't know what the job entails . . ." Dude, make some shit up. I'd have had way more respect for a decent bullshitter than I did for someone so lost and forlorn-seeming. If you gave good answers that seemed confident and like you knew what you were talking about, even if you were WRONG as to what you imagined the job entailed, I'd have ranked you higher.
Oh, and finally, don't mention that you worked with a population just like ours and didn't like it at all.
Gleaned from interview 2 --
Let us close the door, sit down, and ask the first question before you begin your verbal barrage about why you'd be the best candidate.
Second, you may indeed have 50 pages worth of recommendation letters, photocopies of your war medals, praise from various groups . . . but it was kind of weird to give us a several-pound stapled document. Especially since several of the pages were stapled upside-down.
Third, if you're going to be working with kids, we all know we secretly call them things like "knuckleheads" and "hoodlums" in the staff lunchroom, but maybe don't call them that in the interview. Repeatedly.
Fourth, it was a little odd when we asked if you had anything else to add and you opened your wallet to show us pictures of your kids.
Fifth, we weren't all that put out that you were late, it happens. But when I realized you were late because you'd scheduled your interview for 3 pm when your school day gets out at 2:45, and you still have to negotiate the staff parking lot, one of the busiest, most traffic-jammed streets in the city, and the several-mile drive here, I lost a little sympathy. Here is what you do -- when the person calls to schedule your appointment and you know you have a snowball's chance in hell of making it on time, you say "Actually, I don't get out of school until almost three. Is there a later appointment available?" Or if you can't and it's that important to you, get a half-day sub, go have a nice lunch somewhere, and be on time.
And more generally, no dead-fish handshakes (shudder). You got the job, Interviewee 3, but only after overcoming that horrible first impression. I still get queasy thinking about it.
Interviewee 4, you were well-qualified, you would fit in well with our staff and population, and in fact we know you from subbing here regularly. You rule. You got the job, too. But dude, throw away the 1980s polyester Cosby sweater. No, seriously. I don't want to see that thing again.
Okay, all for now! Five more days of work until vacation time!!!!!!!!!!
Okay, so I got conned into sitting on an interview panel yesterday (had I known I'd be at school over three hours later than usual, I'd have said no), and I have some tips for interviewees.
Gleaned from Interview 1 -- First, if you are a woman, no, it is not necessary to wear makeup or a skirt. At least for this interviewer. I don't care. But if you're sweaty and greasy and disshevelled as all get-out, maybe you could blot and run a comb through your hair. This goes for men, too, but this particular interviewee was female.
Also, be confident. Just because you're interviewing for two positions at this site, don't ask "Does that seem weird?" You seem nervous and needy. Just assume or pretend that it isn't weird.
And third, you should probably find out what the job is, because standard interview questions assume you know (e.g. "What makes you uniquely qualified for this job?" "What will you be doing in a typical day?"). If for some stupid reason, you didn't at least look at the job description before you applied for it, don't begin answering every single question with "Well, again, I really don't know what the job entails . . ." Dude, make some shit up. I'd have had way more respect for a decent bullshitter than I did for someone so lost and forlorn-seeming. If you gave good answers that seemed confident and like you knew what you were talking about, even if you were WRONG as to what you imagined the job entailed, I'd have ranked you higher.
Oh, and finally, don't mention that you worked with a population just like ours and didn't like it at all.
Gleaned from interview 2 --
Let us close the door, sit down, and ask the first question before you begin your verbal barrage about why you'd be the best candidate.
Second, you may indeed have 50 pages worth of recommendation letters, photocopies of your war medals, praise from various groups . . . but it was kind of weird to give us a several-pound stapled document. Especially since several of the pages were stapled upside-down.
Third, if you're going to be working with kids, we all know we secretly call them things like "knuckleheads" and "hoodlums" in the staff lunchroom, but maybe don't call them that in the interview. Repeatedly.
Fourth, it was a little odd when we asked if you had anything else to add and you opened your wallet to show us pictures of your kids.
Fifth, we weren't all that put out that you were late, it happens. But when I realized you were late because you'd scheduled your interview for 3 pm when your school day gets out at 2:45, and you still have to negotiate the staff parking lot, one of the busiest, most traffic-jammed streets in the city, and the several-mile drive here, I lost a little sympathy. Here is what you do -- when the person calls to schedule your appointment and you know you have a snowball's chance in hell of making it on time, you say "Actually, I don't get out of school until almost three. Is there a later appointment available?" Or if you can't and it's that important to you, get a half-day sub, go have a nice lunch somewhere, and be on time.
And more generally, no dead-fish handshakes (shudder). You got the job, Interviewee 3, but only after overcoming that horrible first impression. I still get queasy thinking about it.
Interviewee 4, you were well-qualified, you would fit in well with our staff and population, and in fact we know you from subbing here regularly. You rule. You got the job, too. But dude, throw away the 1980s polyester Cosby sweater. No, seriously. I don't want to see that thing again.
Okay, all for now! Five more days of work until vacation time!!!!!!!!!!
Sunday, December 05, 2004
No Rest for the Wicked
Would have been a better title for the last post, but not this one. This one's about my awesome new glasses!
Dude, my regular ones are kind of a glittery copper that's iridescent enough that when I tilt my head they can appear blue or green. They're a really good shape for my face, too. And best of all, on both sides of the frame on the outside, there are five tiny rhinestones. Hee hee! The sunglasses are cool, too. I talked my grandma out of several pairs of her old glasses, and settled on a bronze-colored very extreme cat-eye with a dark brown lens. Now I need a head of platinum blonde hair, red lipstick, a scarf to keep my hair back, some driving gloves, and a convertible.
Dude, my regular ones are kind of a glittery copper that's iridescent enough that when I tilt my head they can appear blue or green. They're a really good shape for my face, too. And best of all, on both sides of the frame on the outside, there are five tiny rhinestones. Hee hee! The sunglasses are cool, too. I talked my grandma out of several pairs of her old glasses, and settled on a bronze-colored very extreme cat-eye with a dark brown lens. Now I need a head of platinum blonde hair, red lipstick, a scarf to keep my hair back, some driving gloves, and a convertible.
Busy weekend
So, on Friday after school I ran over to Mom's house, and Mom and Boompah and I went on the Christmas home tour. It's always fun to see other people's homes, especially the beautiful original bungalows of East Sacramento. We saw another super-girly house (by another, I'm referring to a home tour I blogged about a few months back). At first, I was like "Okay, this is an acceptable use of pink and lavender" but by the time we got to the bedrooms, I realized that EVERYTHING was pink and lavender and covered in flowers and chintz. You know, even if I were a woman living alone, my house wouldn't get taken over by the spirit of girlishness. Geez. We also saw the same house that last time made me so sad -- the one with the frame pictures still in the frames. They had changed a few things (by they, I mean the new designers) and there appeared to be a few more personal touches, but it still felt lonely and deserted. The strangest one by far, though, was a beautiful old house with a number of incredible features some people would die for -- a spacious entryway, original hardwood floors with an oak-leaf stencil, big rooms . . . but the "artist" who lived there apparently has a yen for mid-century modern furniture in citrus colors. Seriously, the dining room had a chrome and glass table with ACRYLIC chairs and an acrylic fireplace screen and was painted tangerine! The gorgeous and huge living room had two things in it, a large crimson sectional sofa and an abstract tall sculpture in vibrant colors. However, even the size of the sofa was no match for the size of the room, and it looked forlorn and out of place. It was quite odd. The other interesting place was decorated with a bunch of what appeared to be original art deco pieces. I had to admit some jealousy when I saw the incredible peacock-fan shaped fireplace screen with what looked like an Erte girl at the top. Incredible. I also liked the orange-vanilla candles burning in one of the homes (they smelled like Dreamsicles.
That night my band had a show out in Citrus Heigts. We were a little skeptical about the place, since it looked like about half the people at the bar were long-term alcoholics who were perfectly happy to listen to "Love Me Two Times" on the jukebox all night long, and that perhaps the big guy with the noose and hangman's knot tattooed on the back of his head and around his neck might not appeciate the subtleties of our lyrics in the Mullet Song or White Trash Whore. I thought that the people getting Bugles from the vending machine next to the stage might not appreciate our prog rock song about Valkyries. But I'm always down to play, and so I got into my high-energy mode and made friends with the other bands and got hyped and ready to play. I stood up front while the other two bands played, and I was surprised that I liked them both a great deal, especially the second one (I won't name names, because band people love to Google themselves, so let's call them the Blue Collars), who had an old-school sound kind of like X. I stood up front and bounced/danced to all the music. After the Blue Collars got done, I told them how much I liked the music, and the lead singer said how much I'd helped him out. I was confused fro just a second when he continued "I like to have a pretty girl up front to watch, it helps me focus." Oh. So I joked back that he would have to return the favor and stand up front when we played. We had a good show -- I jacked up a couple times, but the people ate it up, and I was pleasantly suprised to find that the audience was mostly made up of other band members, their friends and our fans. It went really well, and because the other girl band, Silk Rage (fake name again), had cancelled, they kept shouting for us to go on and on. We really didn't have much prepared in the way of encores (must change that in the future), but we did a couple things, and they just loved us. The Blue Collar guy stood upfront the whole time, except when he disappeared and came back with a beer for me. Uh-oh. I had been making eye contact with everyone, but after that I made a conscious effort to not make eye contact with him on lines like "then we can make love . . ." Anyway, after the show he came over and gushed to us about how wonderful we were, what great singing voices, our style. We started packing the car and he stood around watching. A couple other people bought shirts. We got paid and went inside to split the door money -- he asked again and again whether we had his e-mail, whether he had ours (I reassured him that we'd signed his mailing list), he'd love to play with us again, did we have his e-mail? Finally we're all packed up and ready to go and he wants, to, I know! Buy a shirt! Yeah, anything to get like two more minutes of Mockula. Poor thing. But altogether it was a good experience and a good show.
Saturday -- weird day. I went and picked up my new glasses (so cute!), then tried to get gas, but my debit card was declined! Even though I had plenty of money in my account! I figured it was just Arco. Then I went to the Co-op which was crowded as usual. I didn't want to stay long (the car was still packed with all our band equipment) so I only picked up a few things. I also tried to use the ATM there to deposit some checks, but they were out of deposit slips. Okay . . . Finally, I decided to just use the ATM on the way home, but it's on Stockton Blvd, which is currently torn up six ways from Sunday due to various projects, so the snare drum is going crazy at every bump. I get to the bank and there's a crazy guy trying to figure out how you get money out, and he thinks that perhaps his California ID will work. He is polite enough to let the two people behind him go when he can't figure it out, but there's no money in the machine. Oh well, I just deposit my checks and get the hell out of there.
At home, we made pita bread, which was delicious. Saturday is typically sushi night, so we went there. Mine was delicious, but the water was funky. I was hesitant to complain, but it was like sucking up a swimming pool, so I mentioned it to Brian, the owner, 'cause we've kind of made friends with him. Piggs' was not so good. Well, what he ordered was good, but they were trying something new, the "Tune 'em Up" roll, which was shrimp tempura inside the roll with spicy tuna on top, then torched like creme brulee to, I guess, sear the tuna. Anyway, Piggs is anti-shrimp, and he said the roll tasted of acetylene, so he got kind of ill. We came home and fought with the christmas tree, which is as we speak leaning at about a 75 degree angle. I can't get it to sit in the stand properly, and the screws on two sides are easier to tighten down than the screws on the other sides, so it's like a tree pendulum that can swing back and forth on the screw fulcrum. It was a pain in the ass, and moderately like the scene in A Christmas Story when dad is battling the furnace, and all you could hear was "frickin' frackin' marquar farkle!" Piggs' legs were sticking out from under the tree, I could see the pruners disappearing into the underbrush, then a stream of cursing, as (I assume) he did things like squash his own head with the pruner handles. We had pleasant Christmas music on and hot beverages. It was funny.
Okay, that's it for now. Bye everybody!
That night my band had a show out in Citrus Heigts. We were a little skeptical about the place, since it looked like about half the people at the bar were long-term alcoholics who were perfectly happy to listen to "Love Me Two Times" on the jukebox all night long, and that perhaps the big guy with the noose and hangman's knot tattooed on the back of his head and around his neck might not appeciate the subtleties of our lyrics in the Mullet Song or White Trash Whore. I thought that the people getting Bugles from the vending machine next to the stage might not appreciate our prog rock song about Valkyries. But I'm always down to play, and so I got into my high-energy mode and made friends with the other bands and got hyped and ready to play. I stood up front while the other two bands played, and I was surprised that I liked them both a great deal, especially the second one (I won't name names, because band people love to Google themselves, so let's call them the Blue Collars), who had an old-school sound kind of like X. I stood up front and bounced/danced to all the music. After the Blue Collars got done, I told them how much I liked the music, and the lead singer said how much I'd helped him out. I was confused fro just a second when he continued "I like to have a pretty girl up front to watch, it helps me focus." Oh. So I joked back that he would have to return the favor and stand up front when we played. We had a good show -- I jacked up a couple times, but the people ate it up, and I was pleasantly suprised to find that the audience was mostly made up of other band members, their friends and our fans. It went really well, and because the other girl band, Silk Rage (fake name again), had cancelled, they kept shouting for us to go on and on. We really didn't have much prepared in the way of encores (must change that in the future), but we did a couple things, and they just loved us. The Blue Collar guy stood upfront the whole time, except when he disappeared and came back with a beer for me. Uh-oh. I had been making eye contact with everyone, but after that I made a conscious effort to not make eye contact with him on lines like "then we can make love . . ." Anyway, after the show he came over and gushed to us about how wonderful we were, what great singing voices, our style. We started packing the car and he stood around watching. A couple other people bought shirts. We got paid and went inside to split the door money -- he asked again and again whether we had his e-mail, whether he had ours (I reassured him that we'd signed his mailing list), he'd love to play with us again, did we have his e-mail? Finally we're all packed up and ready to go and he wants, to, I know! Buy a shirt! Yeah, anything to get like two more minutes of Mockula. Poor thing. But altogether it was a good experience and a good show.
Saturday -- weird day. I went and picked up my new glasses (so cute!), then tried to get gas, but my debit card was declined! Even though I had plenty of money in my account! I figured it was just Arco. Then I went to the Co-op which was crowded as usual. I didn't want to stay long (the car was still packed with all our band equipment) so I only picked up a few things. I also tried to use the ATM there to deposit some checks, but they were out of deposit slips. Okay . . . Finally, I decided to just use the ATM on the way home, but it's on Stockton Blvd, which is currently torn up six ways from Sunday due to various projects, so the snare drum is going crazy at every bump. I get to the bank and there's a crazy guy trying to figure out how you get money out, and he thinks that perhaps his California ID will work. He is polite enough to let the two people behind him go when he can't figure it out, but there's no money in the machine. Oh well, I just deposit my checks and get the hell out of there.
At home, we made pita bread, which was delicious. Saturday is typically sushi night, so we went there. Mine was delicious, but the water was funky. I was hesitant to complain, but it was like sucking up a swimming pool, so I mentioned it to Brian, the owner, 'cause we've kind of made friends with him. Piggs' was not so good. Well, what he ordered was good, but they were trying something new, the "Tune 'em Up" roll, which was shrimp tempura inside the roll with spicy tuna on top, then torched like creme brulee to, I guess, sear the tuna. Anyway, Piggs is anti-shrimp, and he said the roll tasted of acetylene, so he got kind of ill. We came home and fought with the christmas tree, which is as we speak leaning at about a 75 degree angle. I can't get it to sit in the stand properly, and the screws on two sides are easier to tighten down than the screws on the other sides, so it's like a tree pendulum that can swing back and forth on the screw fulcrum. It was a pain in the ass, and moderately like the scene in A Christmas Story when dad is battling the furnace, and all you could hear was "frickin' frackin' marquar farkle!" Piggs' legs were sticking out from under the tree, I could see the pruners disappearing into the underbrush, then a stream of cursing, as (I assume) he did things like squash his own head with the pruner handles. We had pleasant Christmas music on and hot beverages. It was funny.
Okay, that's it for now. Bye everybody!
Thursday, December 02, 2004
Ranty-head
Okay, this entry is going to sound like a real live blog. Or possibly like a hipster posting to an "online community" (i.e., I've been reading too much Craigslist).
First, on bathroom etiquette. In the office at work, there is one ladies room. It has an outer "waiting" area, and an inner W.C.-eqipped room. Rant number one is "How the hell did I walk in on you?!" Seriously, if you had left something in the waiting area, I'd have suspected you were in there. If the light in the inner room was on, I'd have heard the fan. If the DOOR WAS LOCKED I wouldn't have been able to open it. But none of those things gave me any clue that you were sitting with your pants down on the pot. Why? Why would you subject me to this?
Rant number 2 is that earlier today I did all of the above -- had the light on (and therefore the fan running), a briefcase on the counter outside, and the door locked. In fact, on top of that, had you listened, you might have heard the telltale signs of urine hitting the bowl and of me pulling toilet paper off the roll. But you tried the handle, tried it again, again, knocked . . . did I really need to say "Just a minute, someone's in here" for you to get the hint? I mean, really?
Now this next one is actually Craigslist-related, but I don't want to post it there because I really don't want to go from observer to participant in that teeming morass, but I read an anti-anti-smoking "Best of" post on there earlier and it was, in tone and in idea, like many others I've read, and it irritated the crap out of me. Basically, the short story is that a guy was standing in line for a movie and smoking. A woman came up and asked him to stop, but he didn't want to. She was a bitch about it and he was an asshole back. End of story. But he somehow extrapolated from this encounter that all non-smokers are whiny SUV-drivers who don't bathe. Or something like that. To go into slightly more depth . . .
SMOKER DUDE "Let me begin by saying that this woman was what I refer to as a "yippie." You see, Santa Cruz is full of people who were "there" in the sixties, and thought that being a free-spirited hippy was the proverbial bee's knees. Then the 80's happened, and they sold out all of their values, and bought into the establishment. Not that there's anything wrong with that. What's wrong, is that now that we're in the new millenium, they have decided that they miss all of the free spirit of the 60's, and that they want it back, but are also unwilling to relinquish their cellphones, SUV's, beach-front condos and Starbuck's mocha-soy-latte-frappuchino-whateverthefucks in the spirit of all that is "groovy." So instead, they buy expensive leather jackets, become buddhists, extol the virtues of a vegetarian diet, and last, but not least, they PREACH BULLSHIT TO UNSUSPECTING PASSERSBY AND WHEN CONFRONTED WITH INDIFFERENCE RESORT TO BEING PISSY AND QUOTING THE MUNICIPAL CODE!!"
MOCKULA: Are there people like that? Sure. But the writer knows nothing about this woman other that what she looks like, is wearing at the time, and what she said (and he admits elsewhere in the rant to having been drunk at the time, so consider the possible impairment of his perceptions). Do we know this woman is a "Yippie?" Not at all. And did she "preach bullshit" to him? Doesn't sound like it. It sounds like she asked him to put his cigarette out. Finally, there are ample nonsmokers in the world who don't necessarily drive SUVs and who boycott Starbucks on principle. Me included. Plus, I don't have a cellphone or a beachfront condo. I'm also not a Buddhist and I don't own a leather jacket. I am, as a matter of fact, a vegetarian. Wow, one out of eight stereotypes ain't bad!
SMOKERDUDE: "I agree--smoking is disgusting. It smells like shit, it makes you cough up shit that looks like leftovers from the set of "ghostbusters" and it makes people die. However, if I am offending you with my second-hand smoke, it isbest to politely say, "Excuse me, but I really don't like cigarettes, so would you mind either putting it out or moving a little further away from me while you finish it?" In this case, I would surely respond, "why yes, I am terribly sorry for offending you,and I would be more than happy to accomodate your polite request." And I would. Gladly."
MOCKULA: Gee, sounds like fun. I might just take it up. Is he right in suggesting the polite way to ask a smoker to put out his butt? Yes. And I don't know SMOKERDUDE personally, so I can't say for certain that he wouldn't respond as he indicates he would, but my first inclinations is to laugh my ass off. I have never seen this happen in my whole life. The usual response I've witnessed (I tend not to bother asking people to put out their cigs) is "fuck off, bitch."
Note: The movie they were in line for was Fahrenheit 911.
SMOKERDUDE: "So, I guess the moral of this story, is that if you're going to go see a scathing liberal movie that's full of trumped up ideas that support the writer's own beliefs, you can sure as hell expect the audience to act the same way. I did like the movie, but I definitely took it with a grain of salt. All I could think, was that here we are in line, about to see a movie about exercizing your personal rights and freedoms, and not letting the government dictate how you should live your life, and this stupid yippie bitch is quoting the fucking municipal code instead of just asking me nicely to put out my cigarette.
I hope her cellphone gives her cancer."
MOCKULA: Wow, hostile much? Also, I'm not sure I got the exact same message from the movie, but whatever, I agree with him that the government shouldn't dictate how you live your life. However, my sympathy for your lifestyle choices stop at exactly where they start to infringe on mine. Heck, you can shoot yourself up with heroin using dirty needles, good luck to you, but you can't stick ME with them. And unlike the lady in line with you, I probably would not have asked you to put your cigarette out. I would have either waited until you put it out, or let the line get a little longer so I didn't have to stand right by you. Also, I'll never tell you how you're going to give yourself cancer. Unless you're illiterate, deaf and blind, there's a good chance you know smoking is bad for you. Heck, even Hellen Keller would understand someone grabbing a cig out of her mouth and writing "No! Bad!" into her palm. So I'll never feed you that bullshit. In fact, I'm generally not even one of those people who makes "stinky face" and waves my hand around. I do, however, hold my breath when I'm walking by a smoker, because I'm a lifelong asthmatic who has had pneumonia more often than most people have had a cold. I don't need your habit compromising my health. And I've read other smokers' rants indicating that those people who cough around smokers are faking it to send a message. I don't know most of those other people, but if I cough, you may be satisfied that it's for real.
Finally, it's not in this guy's rant, but I've read it a number of times anyway --- the people who complain about not being able to smoke in bars. Actually, let me quote a real one, because I ran across another. Here's Marlborogal:
MARLBOROGAL: "I'd like to address some of your imbecilic arguments. Because they're really dumb. Also because I'm bored at work.
(Enter anti-smoker #1, an overweight soccer mom with bleached-to-shit mall hair. She settles her blowed-up ass onto a barstool next to mine and her cell phone comes to life with an obnoxiously loud, midi-sounding version of 'God Bless America'. She answers it and tells little Aidan that, no, he can't stay over at Jeffery's tonight because Jeffery's dad only makes five figures and Jeffery's mom drives a used Camry. Which is devilish. Now go home and keep your daddy company while he chugs an imported lager or five and dreams of a life less dismal than the one he wound up with. She hangs up and goes back to pretending to watch the basketball game flashing on the tv screen above the bar to impress the buff black guy sitting next to her, because she gets no validation from her husband anymore and needs to seek it elsewhere by flirting and getting a response from strange men, and all black guys love basketball so it'll totally work, and I light up a cigarette, horror of horrors, and she turns to me with a sugary smile and asks me to put it out. Why?)
"Oooh, well, second hand smoke kills, didn't you know?! I don't want to be breathing that shit in while consuming copious amounts of the health-promoting wonder-drug Jose Cuervo and eating chicken wings fried in synthetic whale blubber with a side of processed ranch dressing! I'm trying to keep young and virile, here!"
Fuck. You."
Wow, I gotta do some research and find out if smoking increases hostility. Again, we see the stereotypes about this nonsmoker at the bar that really, the writer knows absolutely nothing about. Nice guesses, and frankly, I think the great majority of it is total fiction. I think there might be a grain of truth in there that a woman at a bar once asked the writer to put out her cigarette. Plus, I can eat and drink anything I like, as long as I'm doing it to myself. That's the real difference, isn't it? I could eat fettucini alfredo (heart-attack-on-a-plate) two inches from you and it still wouldn't affect your health. Second, let's say that instead of the soccer mom, it's me, Count Mockula. Well, I generally eat well and exercise, so if I go to a bar, who are you to say that my health is for shit and I'm being a hypocrite if I eat something deep fried once a month? You know nothing about me, yet you're imposing your bad-health habit on me. Once a month cheese fries vs. pack-a-day habit? Way to get on your high horse, Marlboro cowgirl.
MARLBOROGAL: "Listen, you needle-dicked motherfuckers who pollute the living hell out of our air by driving in your ugly, lumbering SUVs in the middle of a FUCKING OIL CRISIS!"
MOCKULA: Whoa, the SUV thing again! It's downright weird. Is there some survey out there that I don't know about it showing that nonsmokers overwhelmingly drive polluting vehicles? You know, when I bought a car, two of the qualities on my shopping list were good gas mileage and low emissions. But I must be the exception. (And on the topic of polluting, I hardly dare to bring it up, but do you know how many TONS of cigarette butts get cleaned up off our beaches every year? Somehow this undermines these smokers' perception that they are environmental superheroes. Do all smokers throw their butts on the ground? No, but go anywhere near the smoking areas outside offices, etc. and look around. I think a LOT of them must.)
MARLBOROGAL: "You hypocritical shit sticks who work knowingly - and without the tiniest of moral qualms about it - for companies who dump toxic waste into our water, who pump out thick clouds of inky smoke into our skies twenty-four hours a damn day. I don't give a fuck if my second hand smoke kills you. In fact? I hope it does, because apparently, the process of natural selection is running out of energy trying to keep up with all you morons and could use a little nudge. Yuppie idiot.?"
MOCKULA: Huh. I'm a teacher. I don't think we pollute that much.
MARLBOROGAL: "'They're my lungs, and I have a right to want to keep them healthy!'
No, seriously. Fuck you."
MOCKULA: Now see there? That's intellectual debate, ladies and gentlemen. That stunning and inarguable comeback just shut down the opponent! Whoo-hoo, way to use your logic. Oh wait, no you didn't. Seriously, do you mean that other people really don't have the right to stay healthy should they so choose? So would you vote for de-criminalization of poisoning, stabbing, murder, malpractice, vehicular manslaughter? If people don't have a right to not have other people hurt them, what do they have?
MARLBOROGAL: "Or how about this guy?
"Ewww, I don't want to go home with your satan smoke clinging to my clothes and hair!"
Pussy ass tea-bagging homo. Fuck you too.
I read recently that there's an amazing new product that'll clear that shit right up for you. It's called 'Shampoo,' you cunty little crybaby. Also? Some Tide will take care of that singed Garth Brooks Tour, '96 T-shirt you're so worried about. I know that shit's irreplaceable.
I mean, I hate to make you have to do a load of laundry just because I want to be self-indulgent and light up in a BAR, because I know you usually don't have to wash your clothes. People who don't smoke don't produce any sort of offensive bodily odors or ever spill anything on themselves or come out of a restaurant smelling like 30 different kinds of meat. Also? Their shit doesn't stink. So, I apologize, sincerely, for adding another chore to your pure, clean, minty fresh life...but, seriously? It's not that difficult. You don't even need a river and a washboard anymore."
MOCKULA: Now, the writing here is actually kind of amusing. It's the logic that's lacking. First of all, not wanting to stink don't make you homosexual, although there is probably more stink-tolerance on the part of heterosexual men in general. Second, yes, shampoo is stupendous. But I don't usually use it at two a.m. and have to stay up extra-late to blow dry my hair so that I don't go to bed with wet hair. Usually, I can fall into bed after a night out NOT stinking so badly that I can't stand the funk. Second, I do wash my clothes, duh. But do I usually wash my jacket after a night out? Or my purse? No, but those items reek so badly that I can't go out in public with them again until I have them dry-cleaned (which is pretty expensive). Also, I often wear dry-clean-only clothes when I want to look nice for a night out. So then that's more expense (because do I often get away with several wearings of those items otherwise? Yeah -- I have a white-collar job and don't sweat much.) And finally, even those clothes I throw in the wash regularly, like a t-shirt and jeans, get so befouled by your stink that I often can't stand to have them in the bedroom at all, and must wash them immediately so that they don't make the entire house smell bad enough to make me ill.
MARLBOROGAL: You've all met this soulless, braindead numbfuck:
"I don't care if you kill yourself, just leave me out of it!"
Oh, for real? Cool. And I don't care if you have a problem with smoke. Just stay the fuck out of my precious few pro-smokin' bars."
MOCKULA: Okay, now she makes a little bit of sense. See, since I don't like dealing with the illness, stench, 2 a.m. shower and blowdry, extra dry-cleaning and loads of laundry, potential asthma attacks, not to mention burning eyes and disgusting morning-after pleghm, I generally DO stay out of the bars that allow smoking. But thank god for the ones that don't. And curse the nights when my band plays one of the ones that does. Because then I can't avoid those thoughtless assholes who seem to be able to justify sickening and stinking up others on the grounds that it's their right to harm themselves. I won't wish any ill on you, partly because I'm just not nearly that hostile, but partly because (insert sanctimonious tone) I really don't need to, do I?
First, on bathroom etiquette. In the office at work, there is one ladies room. It has an outer "waiting" area, and an inner W.C.-eqipped room. Rant number one is "How the hell did I walk in on you?!" Seriously, if you had left something in the waiting area, I'd have suspected you were in there. If the light in the inner room was on, I'd have heard the fan. If the DOOR WAS LOCKED I wouldn't have been able to open it. But none of those things gave me any clue that you were sitting with your pants down on the pot. Why? Why would you subject me to this?
Rant number 2 is that earlier today I did all of the above -- had the light on (and therefore the fan running), a briefcase on the counter outside, and the door locked. In fact, on top of that, had you listened, you might have heard the telltale signs of urine hitting the bowl and of me pulling toilet paper off the roll. But you tried the handle, tried it again, again, knocked . . . did I really need to say "Just a minute, someone's in here" for you to get the hint? I mean, really?
Now this next one is actually Craigslist-related, but I don't want to post it there because I really don't want to go from observer to participant in that teeming morass, but I read an anti-anti-smoking "Best of" post on there earlier and it was, in tone and in idea, like many others I've read, and it irritated the crap out of me. Basically, the short story is that a guy was standing in line for a movie and smoking. A woman came up and asked him to stop, but he didn't want to. She was a bitch about it and he was an asshole back. End of story. But he somehow extrapolated from this encounter that all non-smokers are whiny SUV-drivers who don't bathe. Or something like that. To go into slightly more depth . . .
SMOKER DUDE "Let me begin by saying that this woman was what I refer to as a "yippie." You see, Santa Cruz is full of people who were "there" in the sixties, and thought that being a free-spirited hippy was the proverbial bee's knees. Then the 80's happened, and they sold out all of their values, and bought into the establishment. Not that there's anything wrong with that. What's wrong, is that now that we're in the new millenium, they have decided that they miss all of the free spirit of the 60's, and that they want it back, but are also unwilling to relinquish their cellphones, SUV's, beach-front condos and Starbuck's mocha-soy-latte-frappuchino-whateverthefucks in the spirit of all that is "groovy." So instead, they buy expensive leather jackets, become buddhists, extol the virtues of a vegetarian diet, and last, but not least, they PREACH BULLSHIT TO UNSUSPECTING PASSERSBY AND WHEN CONFRONTED WITH INDIFFERENCE RESORT TO BEING PISSY AND QUOTING THE MUNICIPAL CODE!!"
MOCKULA: Are there people like that? Sure. But the writer knows nothing about this woman other that what she looks like, is wearing at the time, and what she said (and he admits elsewhere in the rant to having been drunk at the time, so consider the possible impairment of his perceptions). Do we know this woman is a "Yippie?" Not at all. And did she "preach bullshit" to him? Doesn't sound like it. It sounds like she asked him to put his cigarette out. Finally, there are ample nonsmokers in the world who don't necessarily drive SUVs and who boycott Starbucks on principle. Me included. Plus, I don't have a cellphone or a beachfront condo. I'm also not a Buddhist and I don't own a leather jacket. I am, as a matter of fact, a vegetarian. Wow, one out of eight stereotypes ain't bad!
SMOKERDUDE: "I agree--smoking is disgusting. It smells like shit, it makes you cough up shit that looks like leftovers from the set of "ghostbusters" and it makes people die. However, if I am offending you with my second-hand smoke, it isbest to politely say, "Excuse me, but I really don't like cigarettes, so would you mind either putting it out or moving a little further away from me while you finish it?" In this case, I would surely respond, "why yes, I am terribly sorry for offending you,and I would be more than happy to accomodate your polite request." And I would. Gladly."
MOCKULA: Gee, sounds like fun. I might just take it up. Is he right in suggesting the polite way to ask a smoker to put out his butt? Yes. And I don't know SMOKERDUDE personally, so I can't say for certain that he wouldn't respond as he indicates he would, but my first inclinations is to laugh my ass off. I have never seen this happen in my whole life. The usual response I've witnessed (I tend not to bother asking people to put out their cigs) is "fuck off, bitch."
Note: The movie they were in line for was Fahrenheit 911.
SMOKERDUDE: "So, I guess the moral of this story, is that if you're going to go see a scathing liberal movie that's full of trumped up ideas that support the writer's own beliefs, you can sure as hell expect the audience to act the same way. I did like the movie, but I definitely took it with a grain of salt. All I could think, was that here we are in line, about to see a movie about exercizing your personal rights and freedoms, and not letting the government dictate how you should live your life, and this stupid yippie bitch is quoting the fucking municipal code instead of just asking me nicely to put out my cigarette.
I hope her cellphone gives her cancer."
MOCKULA: Wow, hostile much? Also, I'm not sure I got the exact same message from the movie, but whatever, I agree with him that the government shouldn't dictate how you live your life. However, my sympathy for your lifestyle choices stop at exactly where they start to infringe on mine. Heck, you can shoot yourself up with heroin using dirty needles, good luck to you, but you can't stick ME with them. And unlike the lady in line with you, I probably would not have asked you to put your cigarette out. I would have either waited until you put it out, or let the line get a little longer so I didn't have to stand right by you. Also, I'll never tell you how you're going to give yourself cancer. Unless you're illiterate, deaf and blind, there's a good chance you know smoking is bad for you. Heck, even Hellen Keller would understand someone grabbing a cig out of her mouth and writing "No! Bad!" into her palm. So I'll never feed you that bullshit. In fact, I'm generally not even one of those people who makes "stinky face" and waves my hand around. I do, however, hold my breath when I'm walking by a smoker, because I'm a lifelong asthmatic who has had pneumonia more often than most people have had a cold. I don't need your habit compromising my health. And I've read other smokers' rants indicating that those people who cough around smokers are faking it to send a message. I don't know most of those other people, but if I cough, you may be satisfied that it's for real.
Finally, it's not in this guy's rant, but I've read it a number of times anyway --- the people who complain about not being able to smoke in bars. Actually, let me quote a real one, because I ran across another. Here's Marlborogal:
MARLBOROGAL: "I'd like to address some of your imbecilic arguments. Because they're really dumb. Also because I'm bored at work.
(Enter anti-smoker #1, an overweight soccer mom with bleached-to-shit mall hair. She settles her blowed-up ass onto a barstool next to mine and her cell phone comes to life with an obnoxiously loud, midi-sounding version of 'God Bless America'. She answers it and tells little Aidan that, no, he can't stay over at Jeffery's tonight because Jeffery's dad only makes five figures and Jeffery's mom drives a used Camry. Which is devilish. Now go home and keep your daddy company while he chugs an imported lager or five and dreams of a life less dismal than the one he wound up with. She hangs up and goes back to pretending to watch the basketball game flashing on the tv screen above the bar to impress the buff black guy sitting next to her, because she gets no validation from her husband anymore and needs to seek it elsewhere by flirting and getting a response from strange men, and all black guys love basketball so it'll totally work, and I light up a cigarette, horror of horrors, and she turns to me with a sugary smile and asks me to put it out. Why?)
"Oooh, well, second hand smoke kills, didn't you know?! I don't want to be breathing that shit in while consuming copious amounts of the health-promoting wonder-drug Jose Cuervo and eating chicken wings fried in synthetic whale blubber with a side of processed ranch dressing! I'm trying to keep young and virile, here!"
Fuck. You."
Wow, I gotta do some research and find out if smoking increases hostility. Again, we see the stereotypes about this nonsmoker at the bar that really, the writer knows absolutely nothing about. Nice guesses, and frankly, I think the great majority of it is total fiction. I think there might be a grain of truth in there that a woman at a bar once asked the writer to put out her cigarette. Plus, I can eat and drink anything I like, as long as I'm doing it to myself. That's the real difference, isn't it? I could eat fettucini alfredo (heart-attack-on-a-plate) two inches from you and it still wouldn't affect your health. Second, let's say that instead of the soccer mom, it's me, Count Mockula. Well, I generally eat well and exercise, so if I go to a bar, who are you to say that my health is for shit and I'm being a hypocrite if I eat something deep fried once a month? You know nothing about me, yet you're imposing your bad-health habit on me. Once a month cheese fries vs. pack-a-day habit? Way to get on your high horse, Marlboro cowgirl.
MARLBOROGAL: "Listen, you needle-dicked motherfuckers who pollute the living hell out of our air by driving in your ugly, lumbering SUVs in the middle of a FUCKING OIL CRISIS!"
MOCKULA: Whoa, the SUV thing again! It's downright weird. Is there some survey out there that I don't know about it showing that nonsmokers overwhelmingly drive polluting vehicles? You know, when I bought a car, two of the qualities on my shopping list were good gas mileage and low emissions. But I must be the exception. (And on the topic of polluting, I hardly dare to bring it up, but do you know how many TONS of cigarette butts get cleaned up off our beaches every year? Somehow this undermines these smokers' perception that they are environmental superheroes. Do all smokers throw their butts on the ground? No, but go anywhere near the smoking areas outside offices, etc. and look around. I think a LOT of them must.)
MARLBOROGAL: "You hypocritical shit sticks who work knowingly - and without the tiniest of moral qualms about it - for companies who dump toxic waste into our water, who pump out thick clouds of inky smoke into our skies twenty-four hours a damn day. I don't give a fuck if my second hand smoke kills you. In fact? I hope it does, because apparently, the process of natural selection is running out of energy trying to keep up with all you morons and could use a little nudge. Yuppie idiot.?"
MOCKULA: Huh. I'm a teacher. I don't think we pollute that much.
MARLBOROGAL: "'They're my lungs, and I have a right to want to keep them healthy!'
No, seriously. Fuck you."
MOCKULA: Now see there? That's intellectual debate, ladies and gentlemen. That stunning and inarguable comeback just shut down the opponent! Whoo-hoo, way to use your logic. Oh wait, no you didn't. Seriously, do you mean that other people really don't have the right to stay healthy should they so choose? So would you vote for de-criminalization of poisoning, stabbing, murder, malpractice, vehicular manslaughter? If people don't have a right to not have other people hurt them, what do they have?
MARLBOROGAL: "Or how about this guy?
"Ewww, I don't want to go home with your satan smoke clinging to my clothes and hair!"
Pussy ass tea-bagging homo. Fuck you too.
I read recently that there's an amazing new product that'll clear that shit right up for you. It's called 'Shampoo,' you cunty little crybaby. Also? Some Tide will take care of that singed Garth Brooks Tour, '96 T-shirt you're so worried about. I know that shit's irreplaceable.
I mean, I hate to make you have to do a load of laundry just because I want to be self-indulgent and light up in a BAR, because I know you usually don't have to wash your clothes. People who don't smoke don't produce any sort of offensive bodily odors or ever spill anything on themselves or come out of a restaurant smelling like 30 different kinds of meat. Also? Their shit doesn't stink. So, I apologize, sincerely, for adding another chore to your pure, clean, minty fresh life...but, seriously? It's not that difficult. You don't even need a river and a washboard anymore."
MOCKULA: Now, the writing here is actually kind of amusing. It's the logic that's lacking. First of all, not wanting to stink don't make you homosexual, although there is probably more stink-tolerance on the part of heterosexual men in general. Second, yes, shampoo is stupendous. But I don't usually use it at two a.m. and have to stay up extra-late to blow dry my hair so that I don't go to bed with wet hair. Usually, I can fall into bed after a night out NOT stinking so badly that I can't stand the funk. Second, I do wash my clothes, duh. But do I usually wash my jacket after a night out? Or my purse? No, but those items reek so badly that I can't go out in public with them again until I have them dry-cleaned (which is pretty expensive). Also, I often wear dry-clean-only clothes when I want to look nice for a night out. So then that's more expense (because do I often get away with several wearings of those items otherwise? Yeah -- I have a white-collar job and don't sweat much.) And finally, even those clothes I throw in the wash regularly, like a t-shirt and jeans, get so befouled by your stink that I often can't stand to have them in the bedroom at all, and must wash them immediately so that they don't make the entire house smell bad enough to make me ill.
MARLBOROGAL: You've all met this soulless, braindead numbfuck:
"I don't care if you kill yourself, just leave me out of it!"
Oh, for real? Cool. And I don't care if you have a problem with smoke. Just stay the fuck out of my precious few pro-smokin' bars."
MOCKULA: Okay, now she makes a little bit of sense. See, since I don't like dealing with the illness, stench, 2 a.m. shower and blowdry, extra dry-cleaning and loads of laundry, potential asthma attacks, not to mention burning eyes and disgusting morning-after pleghm, I generally DO stay out of the bars that allow smoking. But thank god for the ones that don't. And curse the nights when my band plays one of the ones that does. Because then I can't avoid those thoughtless assholes who seem to be able to justify sickening and stinking up others on the grounds that it's their right to harm themselves. I won't wish any ill on you, partly because I'm just not nearly that hostile, but partly because (insert sanctimonious tone) I really don't need to, do I?
Wednesday, December 01, 2004
Bollywood, no, wait, not . . .
So we were in this Indian restaurant the other night (actually, I think it bills itself as Nepalese) and had a delicious dinner. While we were eating, the friendly server was talking for a while to a couple at the next table -- the young woman trying not to look like she was entirely clad in Old Navy fleece, and the young man trying desperately to look like he grew up on the Panhandle in 1969 (dreadlocked white boy). The Nepalese gentleman is discussing his love for films -- how when he was in Kathmandu, he rented American movies all the time, sometimes renting the same ones twice without realizing it. He's a comedy guy, he asserts, although one of his favorites is Rambo. Old Navy starts giving him a list of movies to check out, and he really wants to remember, so he gets a paper to write down her suggestions, which include the Slums of Beverly Hills (I'm sure he'll get a big kick out of the vibrator scene) and American Pie (yes, all middle-aged Nepalese men enjoy pie-screwing flicks). Piggs and I kept giving each other those "Are you hearing this?" looks. It was a little surreal.
Although it is basically Indian food (naan, samosas, curries, tandoori . . .) there are a few unusual touches: twice they've given me just a little taste of this cold, spicy potato salad. It's delicious, quite hot, and the guy said it's a traditional Nepalese dish, in which case I'm all for Nepalese food. Bring it on!
I got my Christmas shopping basically done. Whew! I haven't even set foot in a mall. I did it all online. I also couldn't help myself -- I bought a Nanowrimo shirt. Hell, I'm a winner, I deserve it! http://www.nanowrimo.org -- go to the donation station and store. It's the one with a pencil cannon that says "For those about to write we salute you."
Okay, gotta work. --CM
Although it is basically Indian food (naan, samosas, curries, tandoori . . .) there are a few unusual touches: twice they've given me just a little taste of this cold, spicy potato salad. It's delicious, quite hot, and the guy said it's a traditional Nepalese dish, in which case I'm all for Nepalese food. Bring it on!
I got my Christmas shopping basically done. Whew! I haven't even set foot in a mall. I did it all online. I also couldn't help myself -- I bought a Nanowrimo shirt. Hell, I'm a winner, I deserve it! http://www.nanowrimo.org -- go to the donation station and store. It's the one with a pencil cannon that says "For those about to write we salute you."
Okay, gotta work. --CM
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