Showing posts with label life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label life. Show all posts

9.14.2012

Five Things This Week

Nothing but a lazy, ungrateful cuss.

1. Kitty Cats Dead and Alive. This week marked the one year anniversary of Rolly's adoption, and I'm a little disappointed to see that she doesn't really care. Not a "Thanks, pal," not a "Here, let me wash the dishes for you." Nada. I even showed her the story of Double Trouble and she expressed no appreciation for being rescued from the glass box she shared with a shrew back at PAWS. Speaking of Double Trouble, you should really sign the petition. I don't care if you don't like PETA. University's who conduct useless experiments on helpless animals in order to keep the government funding bucks constantly flowing deserve to be called out, no matter who does the calling.

2. What Gives? My back. Well, my back gives out. It first became a problem when I was 19 years old and working at a summer camp. Kids jumped on me. I picked up the little ones. I pushed them on a tire swing. And then my back decided it hated children and wouldn't let me move for several days. When I was 26 I threw it out by sneezing. I also had major problems after bowling on my 29th birthday, and it almost kept me from voting in 2010. And this week it's been crazy stiff, and giving me occasional sharp shooting pains if I move my legs a certain way. So, Back, what gives?

3. Teachers. Guess what, just because as a child you went to school doesn't mean you know how to be a teacher or what it is like to be a teacher. So be quiet and let them speak up for themselves.

4. They May Take My Life, But They'll Never Take My Freedom!  I start full-time work next week, for the first time since early in the year of 2009. Thankfully I'll still get to work from home and so I shouldn't complain or anything, but how do all of you people who work 9-5 finish all your errands? I was hoping to have an easy week this week before I take the plunge, but all these things have come up. Haircut, Free Wednesdays at the AIC, dentist appointment, haggling with doctor's offices, getting my student ID (oh man, the next time you see me, ask me to see it. It's a riot!), going to the post office to mail a package. How do any of you people get anything done, ever?

5. Rather Large Things I Might Like to Eat. Let's Return to Cookie Mountain, shall we? And remember that TV on the Radio used to be good. Like on the first ep and album. They've been crap since then mostly, but I've recently revisited this album and discovered that it's not as bad as I remembered. Bill gave me a dirty look when he came home and I was listening to it. But we can't all have such discerning taste as he. I mean, this song is pretty straight up.




9.07.2012

Five Things This Week


I used to  be a spelling bee champ. A Quiz Out master.
What happened to me?
1. Remembering how to be a student. I was always a model student, from kindergarten through undergraduate; you could maybe say I was a professional student, but instead of being paid with money my hard work was rewarded by warm and fuzzy feelings of being smarter than you. But it's been almost a decade since I received my BA, and now in my second week of my graduate program I'm realizing that I've forgotten all of my mad school skillz. My first time through college, I was so paranoid about missing deadlines that I would pull all-nighters three nights before a paper was due, even though I had the outline done, all my resources fetched, and plenty of free time every upcoming afternoon.

Now I've, gasp, found myself doing things at the last minute, not because of procrastination but because I don't remember what the phrase time management means.  I feel mentally challenged by just trying to keep track of reading assignments. (I'll let you know how I feel about the actual reading when I finally get around to doing it.) Additionally my handwriting has degenerated into that of a howler monkey, and the function of a two-pocket folder now baffles me. Why are there two pockets? What goes on the left side, and what goes on the right side?  

2. Being Thankful. Three months ago, my husband was literally dying, but now he's living (Thanks, modern medicine!) and has found a job (Thanks, Marcia!) as an assistant teacher. He's grumbling, though, because it has been a long time since he's had to deal with the daily grind. For the past several years we've gotten by on part-time freelance work (Thanks, simple living!), and now he makes about the same amount of money working 40+ hours a week in a school as he did working part-time from home. (Thanks, non-union, corporatized charter schools!) Additionally, I've been offered a full-time job from the company for whom I've freelanced for three years (Thanks, my obsessive, awe-inspiring attention to detail!), and they are allowing me to work from home to accommodate my school schedule. (Thanks, telecommunication innovation!)

3. The Justice System. We all know that Drew Peterson is a Class A creep-o and murderer, but I'm a little worried that the state of Illinois finds it perfectly acceptable to convict someone based on gossip.

4. Feeling Good About Myself. I liked Plus Model Magazine's Facebook page, and every day they inundate my feed with images of gorgeous women of all shapes and sizes, and it has done wonders for my self-esteem. Also noteworthy pages to like: Healthy is the New Skinny, Operation Beautiful and My Body Gallery. Women can be sexy no matter what their size, no matter what their imperfections (or even because of them). I think most men and women would agree with this statement, but misrepresentative media has made us all forget.

5. Returning to Form. Have you heard the new Dirty Projectors album?






7.19.2012

Happy Belated Birthday to Me

We didn't think it was a good idea for Bill to
actually wear a hat in his condition.
I am lucky to have a husband who is a good gift giver. Since my birthday is in June, and Christmas is in December  (in case you didn’t know), that means he pretty much spends the entire year hunting down thoughtful gifts for me. This year he was already done shopping for me when he was hospitalized about two weeks before my birthday. Still there on my big day, we had a little party with my sisters and nephews in his room. Becky made vegan Hostess cupcakes, and I got to watch “Sharkboy and Lava Girl" with Adrian, and Bill just lay in his bed and laughed at all of little Julian’s hijinks.

But I waited until he came home to open my gifts from him. This way I was able to have two birthday parties this year, which I needed. Since Bill was on the mend, I had a lot to celebrate.

So here are some pictures of the birthday fun that we had at home with the kitties. It was modest fun, but gave me an excuse to dance to Queen’s Greatest Hits and take pictures of Rufus and Rolly.

As usual, Bill gave me marvelous gifts: a cookbook, a few new denizens for our menagerie.
He also bought me two adorable necklaces, and constructed a necklace hanger, which not only does a fabulous job keeping all of my necklaces tangle-free, but also displays them beautifully on our wall.

Oges by Bill Ripley. This is the image on the T-shirt Bill
gave me for my birthday.
My favorite gift was a T-shirt he had printed that features his oges. I've been asking for him to get me a T-shirt with his artwork on it for a while now, and he finally did. For years I've been trying to get him to submit designs to Threadless, but he won't. Oh well. It makes me feel special to have a one-of-a-kind Bill Ripley shirt.

7.17.2012

In His Right Mind

Recovering, lefty style


My husband is a freak. He is amazingly strong despite never having lifted a dumbbell in his life. He once carried a couch on his back up three flights of stairs. He regularly performs impressive feats of agility, despite having the stamina and flexibility of your average great-grandpa. He does handstands and successfully chases busses several blocks down the street.

So last month, when the principal of the school he was student teaching at called to say that he had fallen on the playground and perhaps had suffered a concussion, my first thought was that he had been trying to show off to his second graders by walking on his hands or doing a backflip off the monkey bars.  Upon arriving at the school I was surprised to find out that he had fallen and hit his head on the blacktop during a simple game of tag, and I was further surprised at the hospital when they told me that he didn’t have a concussion but a hemorrhage, and that he had to be taken into emergency surgery.

Neurosurgery is serious business, but someone forgot to tell this to Bill. He was in ICU for nearly a week, and for the first few days he was sedated and breathing through a ventilator. This didn’t stop him from trying to escape. Yes, he was in a drug-induced coma, but he still tried to get out of bed, pull out his IVs, and push away the nurses. They tied his wrists to the bed and put mittens over his hands to prevent him from causing himself or anyone else harm.

While he was in ICU I stayed overnight in the hospital, finding it impossible to sleep because he was constantly on the move, nearly falling off the bed, sitting up, tugging and kicking, hitting his head against the bedrails. I had to keep constant vigilance. Whenever I left the room it seemed like something happened. At one point I went home to take a nap, and upon returning I discovered that the moment I left he tried to bust out like the Hulk and six people had to hold him down.

On his third night in ICU, just before going to the waiting room to visit with my family, I noticed his mittens were off, and I told the nurse that this made me nervous. But the nurse shrugged it off and said, “We’ll put them on overnight.” Well, sure enough, a friend who was visiting in my husband’s room came out a few moments later to tell me that Bill had pulled out his breathing tube, or self-excavated, as the nurses so eloquently term it.

News of Bill’s self-excavation terrified me. The sedatives he was on suppressed his lung function, and so I thought that the nurses would try to put it back in again, a process I am sure would have been difficult given Bill’s defiant state. But they said that since he was breathing on his own and his oxygen levels were good, they wouldn’t try to reinsert it. I was relieved, not only because he could be off that horrible machine, but also because he wouldn’t try to punch anyone.

A few days later, still mostly unconscious and unable to eat, a nurse tried to put a little feeding tube down his nose and Bill slapped his hand away and said, “Fuck, you, dude.” I tried not to laugh, but these words made me very happy. Next to his constant requests for soda and falafel, this was the first sign that he was coming back to himself.

After two weeks in the hospital, Bill is home and recovering, and finds it very strange to hear all of these accounts of things he said and did that he has no recollection of. He is very proud to learn that even while sedated he shirked authority, and also that he surprised everyone by his stature-to-muscle ratio. When a particular nurse found out that Bill was mostly vegan, he said that he would consider changing his diet, if begin a vegan gave you such beastly strength.

But what this nurse didn’t realize was that, although veganism is the diet of superheroes, what Bill eats has nothing to do with his power. His brawn comes not from nurture but from nature. His freakpowers are not something any mortal man can hope to attain, even through the strictest of discipline. And Bill realizes he is lucky to have this gift, and often flexes his biceps and marvels as if an icy blue lightning rod implanted what he sees there. He does not take his gift for granted, and he only uses it for good, like to open salsa jars or carry home a box of kitty litter from Dominick’s. 

But I know he wants to do more with his powers. To most Bill meets he seems such a sweet, shy, mild-mannered boy, but I get to see him mirror-boxing before bed and see that gleam in his eye—the primal joy of knowing that no other ape in the jungle can mess with him, and the hope that someday a villain will corner us in an alley and whip out his tommy gun, asking, just asking, for Bill to reveal his true strength. This scenario used to scare me, because I know if we were ever in such a situation my husband would do something stupid. A left hook isn’t much against a firearm, even if it is a freakish beastly left hook. But now I don’t know.

Everyone has commented on how unlucky the situation is. He was just playing tag, and he fell, and now all this. Most people would have landed on their arm and suffered nothing more than a broken bone, but not him. Not Bill, the born loser. Only I see things a little differently. I read a statistic that upwards of 80 percent of people who receive a head injury like his die. But Bill didn’t. He defied that most infamous, inescapable foe. So maybe he is lucky, after all. Or perhaps he is, indeed, superpowered.  At any rate, I’ll feel a little safer walking with him through the city streets at night, and also thankful to still have such a sturdy arm for support. 

7.07.2011

The 4th of July in Ukrainian Village is insane

I grew up in Indiana, where buying and igniting fireworks is more legal than paying your income taxes. Back in the 80s, we'd go to the parking lot of this junkyard on the corner of Route 6 and Lake Park Avenue where some mysterious men set up tents of explosives for sale. My parents spent who knows what sum on sparklers and smoke bombs and fountains and spinners. On the big night everyone in the neighborhood would sit on on their curbs (or hide in the backseat of their station wagons if they were too scared) while their dad's set off the fireworks.

When I was a little older, I think my parents realized they were throwing their money down the toilet through this patriotic process, and we started going to the city fireworks in Hobart and Portage. When I first moved to Chicago I would trek back to Indiana for the festivities. Something about sharing the night under the fireworks with countless other simple folk was magical. Especially in Hobart, where that old-town feel at the downtown parade and the lakefront park ambiance at the fireworks make you feel like you're living in some sort of Pleasantville reenactment.

The past several years, however, Bill and I have attended the Oak Park fireworks. They didn't have quite the charm as Indiana fireworks. Something seemed, I don't know, sterile about the entire experience. Last year we sat on a soggy tennis court next to a family that obviously hated each other and everyone in attendance. But still, it was fun. It reminded me of going to the city fireworks as a lass and being part of a community, and I thought I would miss it when we moved into the city.

Alas, read the title of this post! On Independence Day eve, we were keenly aware that many fireworks were being detonated in the vicinity. I'm talking being detonated by average folk who live in the neighborhood, not by professionals ordained by the city. I was shocked. I didn't think people did this in Illinois. I've lived in several Chicago neighborhoods previously, including Roger's Park, Wrigleyville, and Andersonville, and the skies were silent around the 4th of July.

So on the 4th of July night Bill and I took our camera and sparklers and wondered about the streets of our new neighborhood. It was crazy! I've never heard such random crackling and ubiquitous booms before, not even in my Indiana youthdom. Every time we passed an alley, someone was there lighting a fuse. The sky exploded. The earth rattled. It was a real hoot, and way better than sitting on metal bleachers listening to "Born in the USA." It made Ukrainian Village seem a little more like home.

10.27.2009

The Accidental Vegan

So, I am a vegan. Did you know that?

Here’s a list from Peta2 that I like, showcasing “accidentally vegan” food. I don’t necessarily like the list because it has revealed to me treasures previously unknown. I was already eating some Laffy Taffy while I read it. I really like it because it is something I can submit into evidence in my defense. Here is my case: The World vs. Normal Vegan, in which defendant must prove that she is not a two-headed freak that only eats grass and twigs; in which defendant must prove that she is neither militant nor angry. (I mean, how can defendant be angry while eating motherfuckin’ Jujyfruits?)

Of course, vegans know that this is actually a stupid list, because the list could really go on for miles and miles, as there are probably more “accidentally vegan” food items than there are non-vegan food items. So I want to topsy-turvy this hot stuff and start calling things that aren’t vegan “accidentally not vegan.” For instance, did you know that Imagine Tomato Soup contains milk? Like, seriously, wt. I tried some of it a while back and it tasted like vomit. Someone accidentally put some butter in that shit. Come on now, why you gotta do that? That was surely an accident. And also a jar of Planters Dry-roasted peanuts has freakin’ gelatin in it. I mean, gelatin, in peanuts? They’re peanuts for god’s sake.

***
VEGAN ASIDE
And what’s wrong about gelatin, you ask? Well, as the very normal Wikipedia states: “Gelatin is a protein produced by partial hydrolysis of collagen extracted from the bones, connective tissues, organs and some intestines of animals such as domesticated cattle, pigs, and horses.” That shit nasty. And also, gelatin is usually a by-product of the meat or leather industry, and so this vegan chooses to abstain.
***
So anywho, I recommend this list to people who are thinking about taking the plunge into vegandom, or for people who look at the little vegan in their lives and think, Why on earth isn’t she a skeleton? I’ll tell you why I’m not a skeleton, people. Four words: motherfuckin’ chocolate crème Oreos.

7.27.2009

Mom

When I was seven years old, I was fat. When I was ten years old, I weighed more than what I do now at twenty-eight. But it started when I was seven. When before I was chubby, now I was fat. Just like my mother. Just like most of the other women in my family. Fat, we were all fat.

About this time in Hobart, there was a Katie’s Potato Chips. In the strip mall by Paragon Family Restaurant. At least I think this is where it was, in my memory it was, and so in this story there it is. My mother and I were in this strip mall, and I was whining, probably because I wanted candy. I was throwing a tantrum. I don’t remember any of my other sisters being there. This makes me think that maybe I wasn’t seven. Maybe I was five. Maybe this was before I started kindergarten, and it was just the two of us, me and mom. Just the two of us out running the errands that a mother needs to run, and she would rather not run them with her five-year-old daughter who was becoming fat.

So we were out on the sidewalk of the strip mall, and I was throwing a temper tantrum. Maybe Pop Rocks. Let’s say that I wanted Pop Rocks. I want Pop Rocks Pop Rocks Pop Rocks. We were probably just coming out of Save More. The grocery store. I want Pop Rocks Pop Rocks Pop Rocks. She wouldn’t let me have any, for whatever reason. Probably too much sugar. Maybe because I had horrible teeth as a child, she didn’t like the idea of me chewing on some Pop Rocks. Of course, this is all speculation, because it probably wasn’t Pop Rocks that I wanted. I’m just using them as a placeholder.

But I wanted something, and I wanted it bad. We were on the sidewalk of the strip mall, and I was throwing a fit, and all the housewives of Hobart were staring.

My mom tried to compromise. I wonder how many compromises she had to make with four daughters. I imagine she was wearing a threadbare lavender shirt, and her hair was messily pulled back. And she was fat, and we would all be fat with four daughters.

She tried to compromise. "How about we go to Katie’s and get some potato chips?" She grabbed my hand and we walked that way, and I dragged my feet and whimpered, “I don’t like potato chips.” I was probably wearing Velcro shoes. Cotton shorts that rode up my chunky little thighs.

Of course I liked potato chips. But I didn’t like to compromise. I was seven, I was five, I was a bratty little kid who had a mother worn down by three older children, a mother who was mid-thirties and whose huge spirit was hidden by her huge body and huge pain of all that had not gone right.

So I said, “I don’t like potato chips.”

My mother yanked my arm in the other direction, into the parking lot towards the station wagon. “Fine,” she said, her tone tired and angry. “Then you won’t get anything.”

I got nothing. That’s what I remember. The nothing that I got. I also remember that as soon as my mom yanked my arm, as soon as that tone made its way to my understanding, I felt like a horrible person. I was seven, I was five, but I understood that I had made my mother sad, that she was trying to be nice, that she was trying to be generous, but I was being a brat, I was being ungrateful, I was being a hurter of feelings.

This is my earliest memory I have of my mother. I have a poor memory, but I remember this. It was the first time I realized that I had the ability to cause pain.