Sunday, February 12, 2012

A Perfect Storm for Idiotic Expressions

This will be a short post.  I think.  (I always think that, and it rarely happens).  But I've been thinking about this for a while and was wondering why it is that people in finance like to use idiotic expressions such as these:

1) "take a haircut"
2) "skin in the game"

I've been racking my brain for other expressions like this -- because I know they're out there.  I know because I got really  tired of hearing them a few months ago and made a mental note to write a pointless blog post about the whole issue.

But forget the rest of the list; perhaps we are better off simply sticking with this list of two phrases which -- if I'm not mistaken -- both have connotations of getting "cut," and, therefore, possibly, bleeding.  

Maybe I'm wrong about that second one? I mean, my understanding of, say, the idiotic sentence,  "Most Americans don't pay taxes, so they don't have any skin in the game!" is as follows:  "I'm the big, dumb jock out here playing rugby, so I'm the one who's gonna get all bruised and scraped and come out of this whole economy bleeding! You pansies out there just sitting in the stadium and having to eat flies for sustenance don't know what suffering is!"

As for the second one, of course, when I hear "take a haircut," I don't think of my own cheap, once-every-two-months "non-tax-payer" haircut at Supercuts, with regular old scissors, for something like $18 plus a generous tip for my "non-tax-payer" stylist who could totally realize the American dream if she could just stop being so lazy and get a (fourth) job! (Duh!)  I think more of the kind of haircut that  I associate with fat-headed men and razor blades -- where one false move results in blood all over the place, so for God's sake don't talk about politics, alright?

Isn't it a little creepy that these Wall Street guys are so fond of these metaphors associated with injury and blood and bleeding?  I don't know; I think it's creepy.  Or maybe I'm just annoyed that people who can't think of anything more clever or original to say make something like five million times more money than I do and often, on top of that, weren't stupid enough to have gone into debt on something as silly as graduate school to get there.

Less is More

Divorcing stuff is easy; anyone can do it.  And despite what everyone thinks, you don't even have to be married first to cross a little bit of divorcing off of your bucket list.*

And let's face it; everyone could use a little divorce every now and then.

But how to begin, you may be asking yourself. No worries.  Nature has a way of making sure these things happen, with your full cooperation or not.  See, sometimes you initiate the divorce proceedings, and sometimes the stuff does.  And it's true that at first you may feel a little hurt and put up a fight:

"But Stuff, why? I thought we had a good thing going  here!"  In the end, though, you get over it, and the result is the same:  you have less stuff, and in its place you have light and freedom and air.

Here's an example:

In 2005 I broke my foot.  I was walking down the street wearing a clunky pair of sandals, each of which was basically just a slab of wood, a leather strap, and a buckle.  And I tripped.  And I mean, I tripped hard.  my bones met wood, which, in turn, met concrete, and the next thing I knew, I had landed three feet ahead and had left the shoes behind me.  

Thank God I'd finally gotten health insurance.  A journey to the emergency room, two surgeries, at least twelve trips to the podiatrist, four metal pins (plus a weird wire strung up through the sole of my foot), enough x-rays that I'm surprised a light bulb doesn't glow every time  I take one out of the package, and five months later, I was able at last to give up my crutches, just in time for spring and all that springtime can bring -- tulips and rain showers and back yard barbecues.

Including the one where I decided to throw my wooden shoes onto the fire at long last.

Let me stop here for a second to say that while I had not been married to those shoes, I certainly had loved them, as much as one could be said to "love" something.  I had, in fact, longed for those very shoes since the age of four or five when they had first been in style and I'd coveted them as I'd watched the 20-year-old college girls from the nearby state university walk by wearing them along with their Daisy Duke shorts, which, at the time, I confess, I also coveted.

"Be careful what you wish for" and all of that.  Fast forward 30-some years, and those shoes and I were done.

Apparently I had been on to something with this whole toxic back yard fire I had created, fueled by not just wood but also leather and some type of synthetic glue and/or finish that made the smoke turn a frightening black.  Our friend Jill (now happily married and a new mother -- but at the time freshly out of a relationship with a man whose idea of love seemed to be to buy you expensive things but then somehow trick you into paying for them yourself and lending them out to him) was inspired by my symbolic declaration of shoe divorce and decided that it was the perfect time to collect all of the old bills and receipts with which this relationship had cluttered her life and add them to the fuel.

Sure, the smoke smelled awful and raised the suspicion of the firefighters stationed at the end of the block who, I was sure, already thought we were weird, but the air cleared soon enough, and we could all move on to savoring the simple things in life.  Like toasted marshmallows.
------------
*Could someone please tell me who came up with the term "bucket list" -- which not only makes the idea of realizing all of your dreams sound like chemo therapy (among other thrilling things that might happen just before you die) -- but also has connotations of vomit?

Friday, February 10, 2012

It's out! I'm famous!

Well. Not.  Famous, I mean.  Not famous.

But.

I did have a writing professor in college who confessed to being a recovering poet who finally saw the light and converted to prose.  Have I? I hope not.  I mean, I'm thrilled to be getting nonfiction published and do hope that my whole memoir will get published and read -- but I hope I won't stop writing poetry either.

Anyhow -- here it is! And, if you read the author's note, you'll see that my cover is completely blown.  I'm bare!

http://www.sweetlit.com/4.2/proseWeaver.php

Saturday, February 4, 2012

Survival of the Fittest

Primates friends groom each other -- because other monkeys' lice matter too.
Having recently had a party to celebrate turning the big four-o, I am freshly reminded of the delicate issues that sometimes arise when compiling a guest list, and I will first take this opportunity to confess that I did invite my ex-husband, as well as a whole other array of people-- some of whom comprise a similarly questionable cast of characters.  Having said that, though, I stand by my decision; I wanted every single one of those people there and wouldn’t have had it any other way. 

In fact, it occurred to me just the other day that, among my guests, other than 1) a colleague from work, 2) my ex-husband himself, and 3) an old mutual friend of ours, plus 5) the gay boyfriend of many years who planned the whole event, along with some people I know through him, I had met every single one of these guests after my divorce was underway and, arguably, directly because of the divorce.  Basically, these were all people who have helped to make me live -- or who have reminded me in some way, in the years since, that I am, in fact, still living. But perhaps that is a blog post for another time.

What I want to talk about now is the fact that a party I had RSVP’d to attend the very next afternoon unexpectedly became a vivid reminder that there are some sacred boundaries to observe when it comes to whom to invite or not invite to an event.  A very obvious rule is as follows:  when your guest list includes a married person, unless the event in question is some kind of single-gender event such as a stag party, you either need to explicitly invite the spouse as well or be amenable to the idea that the spouse is of course welcome to join your guest. 

Especially if the event to which you are inviting your friend is a ceremony designed to legally join you to a spouse of your very own.

Duh; right?

Well, apparently, no.  One would assume that this is sort of common sense, but, as the saying goes, common sense is not always so common.

So here’s the story: 

My ex-husband Steven and I were once again both invited to the same party, the afternoon after I’d just seen him at my birthday party the previous night.  It was a very family-oriented event where many of the less-jaded and younger members of our wide circle of friends had each arrived bearing not only a potluck item and a mystery gift but also a baby or toddler.  For the most part, the people bearing toddlers were a pretty reasonable bunch – both a) so exhausted by all of the years of parenting that they could no longer be bothered with acting like high-strung control freaks and b) finally over themselves and this idea that setting some of their reproductive fluids free into this world to do their thing was somehow the most important achievement in the whole history of humankind. 

I was talking to Steven when, out of the corner of my eye, I noticed that some woman had walked in holding a newborn.  Steven said to me,  “Oh, did you see Anna’s baby?”

I looked back into his eyes in search of some sign of mild retardation and said, “Uh, yeah – Anna.  Not much of a fan.  Not so much.”

“Really?”  he said.  “Why?”

“The wedding,” I said, and there it was – that same moment of embarrassment I’d read on his face all of those years earlier, followed by a rare flash of deep empathy that was registering at the realization that someone had treated me badly (someone other than him, that is, of course).

Oh,” he said.  “Oh my God; I’d forgotten about that.”

“Yeah,” I answered.  “Me two – but only because I kind of forgot Anna even existed, you know?”

It had been just a few months after Steven and I had started talking divorce, and we were attending marriage counseling.  One day, in passing, he said to me, “Did Anna send you you an invitation?”

“To what?” I’d asked him.

“She’s getting married.  She sent me an invitation.  I got it at the gallery.”  Steven had been getting a lot of his mail sent to the gallery even before the separation started.

 “Then why would she send one to me?" I said.  I mean, it does it have both of our names on it, doesn’t it?”

He looked confused.  “No,” he said.  “Just mine.”

I was confused too.  “Did Jill tell her what was going on with us?”

“No,” he said.  “Jill doesn’t even know.  No one knows.”

I shrugged.  “That’s odd,” I said.

A few weeks passed, and Steven told me he’d gotten a phone call from Anna regarding how he had  RSVP’d.  Apparently he had just written in that he was bringing one guest (me). 

She was calling to tell him that the wedding was already really big, so it wouldn’t be possible for him to bring anyone.

“Well, what did you say to her?” I asked.  It did, of course, occur to me that it was both touching and strange that Steven wanted so badly to bring me with him despite everything.  But really that was beside the point.  We were married.  Whether our marriage was on the rocks or not was nobody's business when it comes to sending out wedding invitations.  They could leave it for us to decide what to do with the invitation. The fact was simple and was all that mattered on their end:  we were still married.

“I – I don’t know.  I didn’t know what to say.  It didn’t make any sense.”

Neither Steven nor I had been huge fans of weddings; after all, we hadn’t bothered having one.  And it wasn’t like the bride and I were great friends in this particular case.  Very friendly to one another, yes.  But friends -- no. When Steven and I would have parties, she would show up at some point and ooh and awe over how toned I was, putting her arm around my waist in this suggestive way, trying to flatter me.  But that was about it.  Steven said he hardly ever saw her anymore but that he and his brother had literally been the first two people she’d met in New York, and that’s why she wanted them there.  “Otherwise I just wouldn’t go,” he said with this pained expression on his face. 

After the date of the event came and went, Steven went out of his way to tell me how awful the whole thing was.  “My big, fat Russian wedding.” That was how he described it.

“Oppulently tacky?” I asked, trying to play along.  This was a descriptor we had coined together during our visit to Moscow.

“Da,” he answered.  

He went on to claim that Anna had done something at the wedding that had offended Jill as well, but I don’t remember what that thing was. I just know that he was only telling me these things to make me feel better.

Now, if I were in therapy right now, the relevant comment that my therapist would make would probably be, 
“Yes, I can see how that must have hurt.  It must have made you feel rejected.” 

But then I would be thinking, “Hurt?”

I was upset, sure.  I had dreams, during the day, with my eyes open, in which I was making voodoo dolls that looked like Anna.  But hurt? Rejected? 

Wouldn’t I actually need to consider this person a friend to begin with to be able to feel rejected by her? 

What did I really care? 

So I would be tempted to say that it was my pride that had been hurt; only that didn’t quite work either, did it? To have my pride hurt implied somehow that she had embarrassed me.  The truth is, no one at the wedding would have had any idea why I wasn’t there with Steven -- and when they would eventually find out that we were getting divorced, they would have just put two and two together and assumed that I hadn’t wanted to be there -- or anywhere -- with him those days.  Actually, especially not at a wedding. 

The only person who knew the real reason was Steven himself, and he certainly wasn’t laughing at me.  If anything, he had that same look on his face as he might have had, in a more primordial setting, had an orangutan come up and made threatening gestures in my direction.  One could almost speculate that he felt protective toward me about the whole thing and wished he'd done more in my defense.

So what could the real reason have been? If I didn’t want to go to the wedding in the first place, and I certainly didn’t yearn for Anna’s company or friendship?  Why was I so offended that I could feel myself shaking with rage?

Well, for one thing, it had been extremely inappropriate of her.  One might say rude.  But even then, what did that really matter to me? She was the one making an ass of herself.  

I recently heard a good definition of “rudeness,”  and perhaps this is what really explains everything: we feel like someone is being rude when that person seems to be acting without taking other people into consideration.  If Anna had any kind of adult human concept of empathy and really given it any thought, she would have put herself in my place or even Steven’s for just a second and immediately realized how obnoxious it would be to be getting married and yet not allowing the spouse of one of her guests to accompany him at the wedding.

But again -- she was the one making a fool of herself by overlooking something so obvious. 

I put myself back into the mindset of my inner cave woman – the one who was about to be slapped in the face by an orangutan – and I thought, why do people have weddings?  Why bring a whole community together to witness this thing?  

The thing is, us humans, we count on each other for survival.  Not all of us are the best buffalo-hunters, so when one of us does luck out, we all get a share of buffalo meatballs. But Anna was carving up the meat without considering the fact that she wasn’t the only person who mattered.  I guess I must have somehow perceived, viscerally, that Anna’s behavior toward me represented a threat to my very survival.  She might as well have come up and punched an infant in the face – a helpless infant who happened to be strapped to my body at the time.  I could feel my killer instinct come alive.

And she had arrived to this party with the fruits of that thoughtless wedding of hers -- her most important accomplishment, she must have felt -- swaddled in her arms.  And so now what?  

Whether the stress of stopping at nothing to defend and care for that baby of hers will eventually cost her her own marriage -- make her just another divorce statistic too -- who’s to say?  I do wonder if the strength of her own arms -- the ones holding and protecting that child, as it is only natural to do --  will be enough to get her through that.  

And, if not, how many people would be around for her -- once that started to happen -- to help her in her own survival? This blog post is for my friends -- both the ones who came out to celebrate, with me, four decades of having been alive -- and the ones who wanted to have been able to make it.

Friday, January 6, 2012

"I gave you everything you ever wanted; it wasn't what you wanted."

A cliche is only a cliche when it's not happening to you:  "All is fair in love and war."  Blah blah blah.  I prefer these U2 lyrics though.  They say it better.  And even though I'm almost always at the receiving end when things end (and not the other way around), the words of this song are kind of scolding me right now, saying, "You're so cruel."

I guess I deserve that.

Maybe it would have been less painful if I'd been better versed at delivering this kind of news.  I would have liked that. I don't like to cause pain.  But I guess it doesn't matter.  The truth would be cruel for you to hear either way:  "I can't change the way I feel."  Yada yada yada.   And for that, I am sorry.

When my ex-husband and I were in marriage counseling, I remember being told (by the therapist? or maybe I read it in something my own therapist recommended to me?), "If afterwards you feel regret, then you know that going your separate ways was a mistake.  If, on the other hand, you feel a tremendous sense of relief..."

Could this really have been the first time in my life when I knew exactly what it was that would bring me relief and did it?
***
I want to add that, quite by coincidence, my husband I watched Moulin Rouge -- from which the scenes in the attached video are taken -- together in a foreign country, without subtitles.  I like to imagine I know what it all meant, but I don't.

I am plumber; hear me roar.

Okay, so I realize that probably nobody cares-- and that this is probably precisely the kind of thing for which Twitter.com was invented -- but I just finished single-handedly fixing my 3rd plumbing issue in 48 hours, and I am PUMPED!  A few months ago, I spent almost $2000 to pay a plumber, having just learned that every single drain in the upstairs I was about to rent out had a leak in it suddenly. I can only imagine what the damages could have added up to this time, had I not tried to do these things myself.

Someone please remind me that I'm never allowed to leave town. Especially not in the winter.  Thank God that, while there was snow on the ground where I'd been visiting my family, there wasn't any here -- which means no tenant slipping down the unsalted homemade stoop steps that my ex had built.

Not so fast, though.  While I was away, the temperature did dip down into the twenties, and while I did leave the water dripping in that shack of a room that the downstairs extension/"kitchen" is (where pipes freeze in the coldest of weather even when the heat is on -- that's how ridiculous this so-called  "room" is) -- alas, I returned to find an icicle hanging from the faucet.

Really I can't claim much bravado (bravada?) for fixing that one.  It was sheer luck that -- yet again -- the pipes did not burst or crack.  (Thank you, God!) All of my subsequent placing of space heaters on and under that sink -- and downstairs in the basement where those pipes jut out through the original footprint of the house and out into the Arctic -- was just a matter of endurance and annoyance.

However, I get ahead of myself, as I will confess that I had already been dealing with -- or, rather, NOT dealing with -- another plumbing issue.   It has been at least a month since I last used my bathroom sink.  Times like these I really wish I had a landlady I could sue for these ridiculous living conditions! You see, there was an odd leak coming from the drain pipe area, under which I had placed a  bucket, but who was I kidding? That was just for the transitional period when I was still in the habit of thinking I had a sink I could actually use like a normal, civilized person.

I remembered changing the ugly plastic faucet of that sink back in April for a deceptively beautiful cheap Home Depot one that looks like silver and porcelain and says "hot" and "cold" on the knobs.  That had been quite the learning experience.  I've known for a long, long time how to shut off the water under a sink before tinkering with it -- no big deal there --  but I'd pushed beyond my comfort zone with that project and figured out that I'd of course need to disconnect the water hoses (in order to reconnect them to the new faucet) and that the best way, in this freakish case, to have access to do this was to remove the whole basin from the top of the pedestal sink -- which was honestly just secured in place by a wire looped through a hole in the underside of the basin on one end and a heat pipe on the other.  (Though I can't claim credit for my ex's creative fixes, I also can't say that I do things differently).

Upon changing the knobs those several months back, I'd learned that -- no doubt contrary to the requirements of the money-sucking entity that the City of New York calls "code" -- the sink drain was really just housed inside the drain pipe itself (and not, in fact, sealed together with it).  Which means, basically, that if some large clog forms, despite sporadic use of drain openers (like, say, a large and disgusting ball of hair -- not that that's what was there or anything!), the water won't have anywhere to go except to overflow, over the top of the drain pipe and onto the floor -- because it's wide open, not sealed.  Kinda gross.

I will spare you the graphic details.

Once the pipe was cleared, all systems were go -- well, I mean, in that relative sort of way in which all systems are "go" in this madhouse where I live.  Note to self:  find a better way to keep hair from going down the drain.  And use drain opener like clockwork as a prophylactic measure.

But this last plumbing repair is what takes the cake.  After learning on the internet what "backflushing" a faucet was, I followed all of the steps as best as I could, but it failed, and my tenant's kitchen's cold water continued to simply drip instead of actually flow.  One problem, I suspect, was that there didn't seem to be a way of turning off ONLY ALL of the COLD water in the house.  I won't bore you with the details.  Of course, another issue is that while simply stopping up a faucet with a dime or a "paper towel" seems to work just fine all over the internet, in my world...well, no.  Not so much.

But I wasn't going to give up.  I figured that as long as I could shut the water off under the sink and take the faucet and hose apart with a wrench, at least I'd be able to see if there was actually a problem with the cold water supply pipe just below the sink (in which case I'd have no choice, I suppose, but to call in a professional) or whether the blockage seemed to be in the faucet or hose itself. After going so far as to blow, with all of my might, into one end of the hose, as well as force water into the faucet opening that I'd now exposed, I put everything back together, and voila! All systems..."go."

Which is a relief because the way those things are connected together would so enrage a plumber that surely I would have felt it in the bill.  First of all, both the shutoff valves and the hose connections are all so smooshed up against a wall/ a pipe/each other, that it was almost impossible -- adding to the mix that ever-awkward posture of squatting under a sink -- to get at any of those things to completely loosen or tighten them.  But I did it.  Also, because this had been a replacement faucet on an old-fashioned deep-basin kitchen sink (I guess that's why) the faucet, while connected securely to the hoses, is held steady by...you guessed it:  some more wire, looped around some other thing to keep everything taut and more or less in place.  (Otherwise, the faucet would just sort of droop into the sink).

A plumber would have taken one look at all of this and sighed, "Who in the world did all of this?"  And there would be no good answer because the truth was "my ex-husband" (subtext:  I am just a little woman who knows nothing about plumbing; please financially rape me).  And a lie could have been, "I did."  In which case I would still face punishment -- perhaps an even harsher penalty -- because I certainly would have deserved that.

I want to end this with something cute or insightful, but I'm not feeling like I'm either of those things at this particular moment.  Rather,  I am crude and manly and all brute strength, through and through --  which sure takes a lot out of a woman.  So, if you'll excuse me, I'm gonna fix myself something to eat.

Thursday, January 5, 2012

The House Where I was Born

This is an actual photo of the actual house.
My oldest brother remembers everything.  He remembers when our parents were still together.  He remembers the storefront Baptist church where we were the only white people.  He remembers how my father had been friends with the pastor.  He remembers that I was only a baby and not at all happy to be there -- colicky and crying and otherwise throwing a fit.  (In my mother's version of the story, I was catching the Holy Ghost).  He remembers the neighborhood where we were living -- a bad neighborhood at the time and now even worse -- and how he rode his bicycle all day, all over.

I remember nothing.  My sister is younger than I am and remembers even less.  I don't know why it never occurred to us to ask my brother before -- or why it never occurred to him in past years to offer -- but this year , for some reason, when we had lunch together, and he had the rest of the day to kill before returning to work on Wednesday, he said, The church is still there, you know.  And the house.  The last time I drove by, there were people living there.  Do you want me to show you?

We did.

This is the first time I'm using the real photograph.  It's not a photo I've stolen from somewhere on the internet to represent something else.  This is the house.  No one lives there now.


See that upstairs window on the right? my brother says.  It's bone-chillingly cold suddenly these past two days, and we're sitting in the car across the small street from it, just staring, because what is there to say, really?  That's the bedroom where you were born.

I zero in on the tattered blue tarp blowing lightly in the window.  I feel like I'm looking at a crime scene.  I think of TV news reports, when they talk about something horrible that happened, standing right in front of the house, not the least bit scared, speaking confidently into the microphone.  And then they zero in on the window.

Do people say, "House where I was born"? I search my brain but can't come up with an answer for certain.  I know that if someone says they were born in, say, Howard, Ohio -- they don't mean that literally.  I know someone from Howard, Ohio, and it's, at most, 5 blocks long.  There's a church, but there are no hospitals in Howard.  So if anyone says they were born there, chances are that what they really mean is, that's where the family was living at the time; the trip home from the hospital ended there.  The same goes for "house where I was born," if people actually say that.

But not in my case.  My parents were somewhere in the nether world between art school dropout and religious freak, and somehow that particular moment resulted in my being born at home, surrounded by mysterious circumstances that my father -- now deceased -- alluded to, but that my mother never fully explained and never will.

I looked at the boarded-up house.  I couldn't stop looking, and when it was time to stop, I took a photograph with my silly flip phone.  In some ways I felt this house explained everything about me, answered all of the questions.  Mystery solved.

But that's a lie.  It feels like evidence.  It feels like a clue -- just as the list of family names and birth years and places going back to 1910 feels like a clue.  When we got back to my brother's house, he showed me that list, which an aunt I never knew had written out and sent him after our father's death.  What use is that when my last name is just an ordinary word in the English language? There are millions of us.  And the house looks just like any other house that has been emptied of its contents over and over again -- just like any home that has been boarded up and left to quietly fall apart.  Still, I took that picture; I copied that list of names by hand without quite knowing why.

A Typical Holiday Family Gathering Conversation

Details have obviously been exaggerated to make a point.  No one is named:

Person A:  Okay, I'm going to go pick something up at the store.  Groceryfest is on the corner of Main and 1st, right?

Person B:  What did you say?! Listen to me.  LISTEN to me! Here's how you get there:  first you have to get in the car.  Now, in order to do that, you're going to want to open the driver's side door with your key.  Do you have a key? Because you're going to need a key...

Person A:  Look, I know all of that.  Just trust me, please.  I plan to get in the car and drive to Groceryfest.  I'm just saying that I was going to go down Main to get there, so all I need to know is if it's on Main and 1st.  I don't want to miss but never mind.  I'll find it.


Person B:  ...Make sure your door is locked.  Because men around here get funny ideas.  There are old men who look like they're regular people, but really they try to abduct you and enlist you into prostitution.  You really have to have faith and believe in God.

Person A:  Alright, alright! I'm leaving.  Oh, wait -- we were going to get wine, right? I'm trying to think of where there's a liquor store. I'm assuming you can't buy wine at Groceryfest, since it's just a grocery store.

PERSON C:  [Eye roll and sharp sigh].  WELL! I don't see why you wouldn't be able to buy wine at Groceryfest.  I mean, how is this city different than any other city in the whole country? Of course you can buy wine at a grocery store.

Person A:  [Laughing].  Oh. You know, it's funny because I'm just so used to having to go to a liquor store in New York if you want a bottle of wine that I hadn't really given it a second thought.  Come to think of it, I wonder why it is that they sell beer at grocery stores in New York but not wine.  I mean, liquor I can understand, but wine is another story.  Isn't that interesting? I wonder why that is.


PERSON C:  Whatever.  Call me crazy, but I guess I just don't find that that interesting.  Anyway, forget the wine.  Why don't you just buy some of that stout that the local brewery makes? That way we'd have something everyone likes.

Person A:  But I don't like it.  And yes  -- I know, I know.  I've tried so hard to develop a taste for beer, but I still just don't like the way it tastes.  It's...I don't know...even the good stuff tastes skunky to me.  [Laughing] Anyway I like my girly drinks.

PERSON C:  [Another eye roll and sharp sigh].  WELL! I mean, do you like oatmeal?  Because it's practically the same thing.  It's just stuff made of grain. If you like oatmeal, you should like this stout.


Person A:  [Shrug].  I do like oatmeal -- but I guess I like it because it's creamy and warm and you can add milk and lots of honey to it.  Beer is a whole different taste and texture; I don't know why -- I just don't like it.

PERSON C:  [While walking away to the other end of the room] You probably just haven't had good beer.  There's a lot of bad beer out there.  Suit yourself, though. Oh -- wait! Don't forget to get some brie.  I thought we had some, but I was looking in the refrigerator and didn't see it, so I guess someone ate it all.

Person A:   Sorry, I didn't hear you.

PERSON C [Turning] I said, don't forget to get some brie.  I thought we had some, but I was looking in the refrigerator and didn't see it.

Person B:  Oh, no; we're not out of brie.  I just wanted to make sure you saw it, so I took it out of the refrigerator and put it behind all of those boxes of crackers...

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

(UPDATED): hoping followers don't get slammed; I'm going to edit all my posts...

UPDATE:  It seems that if I "edit" a post and merely then "save" it (as opposed to "publish"), it sort of disappears from the blog until I do actually go back and "post."  So I am managing to go through and do some edits without my followers getting misleading emails notifying you of new stuff when really it's not going to be new stuff -- yet.  Eventually I will want to "publish" these again, though, so if any of my followers are reading this and know of a way to prevent me from making your life hell, please let me know.

In case you're wondering, this is not a New Year's resolution.  Rather, a piece of my prose is coming out in a journal in January, and when they asked me for "about the author"-type info, included was the opportunity to advertise my blog if I had one.  I've been anonymous all of this time, and I'm not gung-ho about changing that or anything, but I couldn't pass this up.  I just worry about cyber-stalkers/ what important people might think should they stumble across this work.

Why can't I just become famous or whatever (and rich) so I could be Jon Stewart or just steal him from his wife and none of this would matter? Why?

Saturday, December 24, 2011

Cafe Imagination

http://mosleyart.blogspot.com/2008/01/village-cafe-click-here-to-bid-on-this.html
"Never a Day Without Painting," this artist calls his blog. I love that.  Please support him!
It's somewhere east of Avenue A, but not as far east as Brooklyn.  It's somewhere south of 4th Street, but not even as far south as Houston.  It's a little like Cafe Pick Me Up across from Tompkins Square Park -- or like Life Cafe at the other far corner of it.  Something like that.

But the tables face a different direction, if it's possible even to know such a thing.

To my right there's a wall of windows, and I always sit facing the door where the customers come strolling through for their late-morning cappuccinos or after-work glasses of pinot grigio.

There's no time there.

I go there to step out -- into the world -- with a book or my journal. Or just to sit and take in the sun and the bustle of New York City and the smell of fresh coffee and the fading color of the sky as the day ages. I can have soup; I can have sandwiches on thick, grainy bread -- but also floury  scones.  I always have a scone.  They're never out of scones.

A little farther east there's a thrift store, and sometimes I go in to look around.  It's spacious and well-organized, and somehow I know there are no bedbugs.  Sometimes my college friend Teresa is there (she often shows up in these types of dreams of mine, as if to say, See? Life is easy!)  Effortless -- the way she balances her latest baby on one hip of that impossibly tiny body of hers, wearing one of those magical wraparound baby slings while bending down to search enthusiastically through a box of scarves and purses and brassieres.  Teresa and I see each other about once every two years in real life, but she frequents these particular dreams.

How can it not be real? I've gone so many times -- more times than my one real-life visit ever to Sine.  I remember that being my first year in New York.  There were stone walls and wide, worn wooden floor boards.  I'd scraped together money (I was in school at the time) and ate Irish breakfast there and drank my coffee and wrote -- but I can't even tell you where it was on a map without cheating.

It was all new to me.  I was new to it.  I was lost.

Which is to say, from there I could have gone anywhere.

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Give or Take a Mile

If my tenant had seemed like a good person, maybe I would have only felt bad for him when he told me all that time ago that he had bedbugs.  Bad for him and scared for myself.

But this was someone who played his music loudly enough at three a.m. to literally shake me out of a deep sleep two stories down.  Someone who, in exchange for his very, very cheap rent, felt he could treat me like a concierge when, right off the bat,  he locked himself out twice his first week here -- once at 3 a.m. and another time first thing in the morning on a Sunday.

Once, after my ex-husband had moved out, leaving me here to fend for myself, I noticed a water stain that hadn't been there before, under the staircase leading down from that top floor where the tenant was living.  That was odd, I thought; there was a whole story of house between that water stain and the roof, and there was certainly no plumbing anywhere nearby.

Then I figured out that, not only had my tenant taken cardboard storage boxes out of his infested bedroom to store in my insulation-filled crawl space (crawl space, not attic!), but he'd also opened up, from there, the hatch to the roof -- where I would then find coffee cups and ashtrays -- and left it open.  For God knows how long.  In the rain.

No, really, help yourself.  Make yourself right at home.

So I put a lock on not only the hatch but the door that opened onto the ladder leading there, past the crawl-space.

I didn't want to have to live like that.  To bolt every single thing in sight down because I had surrounded myself with selfish, immature (even at 30+) people with the kind of sense of entitlement that says, "ask for forgiveness, not permission."  And then would never even get around to the forgiveness. "Worse comes to worst, it doesn't hurt to ask."

For things you're not paying for.  For things you know you have no right to.  For things it's insulting to ask for.  ("Oh, you don't even use air conditioning in the summer -- because it's expensive?  Well, still -- I think 'utilities included' should mean I can use all the AC I want for no extra money.  What's that? New York City says a couple of hundred bucks a year is a reasonable flat fee? Tell you what:  how about I just  give you 50?"

Interesting.  So you're saying Mommy and Daddy taught you that the worst that can happen is that someone might say no?

Hmm.  Funny because my mother taught me to have some humility.  And to treat others as you would like to be treated.  Maybe "it never hurts to ask" actually does work for you sometimes.  But I'm here to tell you that I can't be the only one out there with whom it does not work.  For whom it sends up a red flag that says, "This person tries to get something for nothing --  and then will try to manipulate you into feeling guilty about it if you don't go along.  In the future, deal with this person as little as humanly possible."

Am I wrong about this? Just being uptight and narrow-minded? Lacking that ambitious attitude it takes to succeed? Maybe you're right.  Don't knock anything until you've tried it first, right?

Hey, Hipsterboy, I have an idea.  I was thinking that in addition to your rent, you give me 50% of the returns you're earning on that trust fund your daddy set up for you.  No, no, no -- no hurry; just give it some thought. I don't need an answer right away.  Oh, and when I came upstairs to see where the leak was coming from, I saw your new Mac sitting on the desk, so just a heads-up:  I took it.  You don't mind, right?

Monday, December 5, 2011

Prayer

The first time was in the Himalayas, and the air 
was hoarse; you were thinner even 
than before -- and on your knees more


than twice now, unable to will away
the thought even of water
with curry, of curried eggs and air, curried 




sleep. It is lucky to see the Dalai Lama; we didn't
know that -- it was just something to do far from the land
of camel safaris or running from thieving
monkeys  on the foggy  streets of Simla.  
A second visit, however, will leave your life


unresolved.  I needed to know that, years later,
and didn't.  And he was charming, wearing those
wire-framed glassed and amped up -- this time in Central Park --
cracking jokes in a language I did not speak.  We'd brought
malt liquor and a blanket.  But in the mountains, 
then, it had been much colder.


The hostels were full, and you were 
gagging in some restaurant's back yard outside
an outhouse.  Did an old man really come to us? 
Was that part real? He couldn't speak, but
his grandson said to us, "Come.  We go 
see God  tomorrow," and we slept
on an unpainted wooden floor by a fire.
And in the morning you'd never been sick


a day in your life.  You, Dalai Lama, little boy,
old man -- whoever the *** will
listen to me:  my passport 
has expired and there are things 
I cannot help.  Please, fix my life.

Thursday, November 24, 2011

Dinner Conversation

The ex and I got invited to the same Thanksgiving dinner this year.  I'm going, and he's not, but it doesn't really matter at this point; we're fine with one another, so it wouldn't have been a big deal. It might even have been fun -- reminiscent, even, of our first Thanksgiving as a married couple -- and not in a romantic way but a hilarious one.  That year, the eccentric old artist we'd bribed into being our elopement witness (bribed with alcohol -- it had been late enough in the morning by his standards) -- had invited us to Thanksgiving dinner.  The dinner was being held at his ex-wife's apartment and included not only her but a bunch of his screaming, yelling batcrap-crazy old friends whom he'd grown up with in Coney Island.  It was an experience.  Political conversations with lots of one person interrupting the other and a loving "shut up" interjected ever so often.

I guess you could say that it was the kind of divorce we would have aspired to.  And, in some ways, the one we got.

When Steven and I had first started splitting up, one thing I found hurtful was the fact that he saw our commonalities -- the things that had, in part, brought us together as friends and eventually more -- as sudden liabilities.  Because I remembered afternoons when my siblings and I would raid the refrigerator for ways of creating new types of condiment sandwiches (with the only "food" that was sometimes left at the end of the month) -- and because he remembered how he and his sister probably could have died of a Flintstone's vitamins overdose after munching down several handfuls of those things to ease a sweet tooth because their stomachs were growling -- we in some ways understood each other. Because each of us had fought our ways all the way to master's degrees but still just couldn't seem to get ahead, we had some common causes, one could say.

But that also meant, he pointed out, that we had the same bitterness and rage, deep down, against the world.  Our bitterness only exacerbated the other's, he told me; we didn't know how to keep each other in check. 

I don't know that I ever came to agree with him on that, but at this point that hardly matters.

I want to tie this up with a clean, neat ending somehow -- with what? "You live and learn" or something of the kind?  But I guess the things we truly learn in life are never so cut-and-dry, are never really simple prescriptions for future choices -- what to do vs. what not to do. Our experiences are all a little bit like that  Thanksgiving table back in 2002:  a mixture of laughter and curse words;  people you'll see again and  people who will just be passing through --  men and women whose names or even faces you won't remember; a table full of potluck dishes we appreciated but forgot to even unwrap.  A carcass all but picked clean.  A feeling of at least having moved beyond desperate hunger.

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Passive Agressive

Learning when to say no has made me a kinder person.  I don't know why it took so many years of therapy for me to realize that if you say no calmly, knowing that you are saying it just to be fair, not out of anger -- and hold your ground -- you won't go on to hate both yourself and the person who may end up expecting too much from you.  You won't wake up in the middle of the night angry.  You won't stay up late doing favors for people that you never should have agreed to do.  You'll sleep well.

How had I gotten to be that way in the first place -- to such a point that I had to unlearn my anger? Was it just my temperament, my personality? Was it just the social contract of a woman to "help" other people at a great cost to herself?

When my brother started college and I was still in high school (both he and my parents had started college at some point, but I was the first one in my family to finish it), I somehow had agreed to wake him up in the morning for class before I left to catch the school bus.  He would never get up the first or second time, and, after being completely unresponsive, would finally yell, angrily, things like "Yeah, I HEARD you! Shut up!"


I mean, I know we were poor, but what -- we couldn't afford an alarm clock?  Why in the world did I agree to keep doing that for him?

My mother's limited interactions with other people probably had a lot to do with my passive-aggressive tendencies too, though.  She has mostly -- in all the years I can remember -- really kept to herself.  Never really made friends.  Occasionally she would develop some kind of odd friendship with someone, and it would always end badly.  And I'd always get to hear all about it and watch it like some kind of slow-motion car crash.

For instance, there was April, a woman who lived down the street from us.  April was married, but I can't remember if her husband didn't have a job or what the deal was; I just know that between our dirt-front-yard, splinter-floored rental and her grimy, bacon-smelling, dirty-diaper inhabited one it was like some kind of poverty smackdown, and April was somehow actually winning:  she didn't have a phone, and we did.

Now, we'd only had a phone for a few years -- starting after the grandmother I'd never met due to the price of airfare died in only her fifties, and her house got sold, leaving my mother with enough to buy a few pieces of furniture she still owns today (what's left of them, anyhow, since the cats got hold of them early on).  So we had a phone.  (And, by the way, in case this sounds like a story of the Great Depression era, let me clarify that I'm only in my 30s.  Yes, we were just poor white trash; that's all).

Anyway, I don't know if something particularly special had happened in April's life that suddenly necessitated her being on the phone all the time -- unless that special event was meeting and befriending my mother, who had a phone -- but suddenly this woman was in our house twelve times a day, sitting on the bare landing of our stairs and just gabbing away on the telephone.  I want to say that my mother was friendly to her at first and smiled a lot and tried to get her to talk in tongues and admit what a lust-filled hussy she was and that she needed to repent -- but I might just be generalizing here, since that's kind of how my mother's brief relationships with other adults just tended to go down.  All I know is, I'm not sure how long this phone-borrowing thing went on (except to say that it felt like forever), but at some point my mother began angrily telling us that April was too much "about the ways of the flesh" and needed to "get right with God."  Usually while she was slicing potatoes or otherwise doing something that made one not want to make too much of a fuss over what she was saying.  Why she felt like this was an appropriate discussion to be having with children ranging in age from eleven down to six, I can't really say.

So I know what my mother said to us, but I don't know what she said to April exactly.  I just know that one day the phone-borrowing thing stopped and that it couldn't have been pretty --  that it must have gone from all smiles and "let's talk about the Lord" to "Don't you set foot in this house ever again" on the turn of a dime.  I suppose one can't be witness to such things without internalizing -- and...normalizing? oh, dear God, literally  -- them just a little.

So anyway, it's been lovely, dear reader, having you sit here and listen with such interest to what I have to say -- but it's 12:30 in the f*g morning now, so what the hell are you doing in my house when  I'm tired and cranky and need you to get the hell out of here so I can go to sleep?

I mean -- ahem -- sweet dreams!

Thanksgiving/Pre-Christmas Post

Being poor wasn't always all deprivation and sadness.  Sometimes we got things other people would never get.   Like the Christmas when my mother, the art school dropout, sewed for each of us, without so much as a pattern, a completely unique stuffed dog puppet --  each one built upon a sock, covered by a realistic body of stuffing and fabric store fur and brown beads for eyes -- and noses molded by clay with two holes for sewing and then painted a shiny black before she'd attached them. The red fabric tongues that would hang out happily when we held them close to us and made them say whatever we wanted them to.

Original Blame and Shame

The man was Adam, the woman was and Eve, and the object was the fruit. 

And the feeling was a  curiosity.  And the mistake was consenting. 

We were in the bathroom -- playing with water, I suppose -- always a temptation.  To me, anyway; I was probably four.  It must have been a hot day.  Maybe my brother was there.  My sister must have been born by then but was too young to speak, too young to walk.  One less person to blame.  But definitely I was there -- and Stevie, the kid down the street, twice my age, whom my mother sometimes babysat. 

I remember the bathtub.  Put this in your hair, Stevie said, holding the tube of white toothpaste.  It'll make it white, he said -- just like Mrs. Santa Claus' hair.  Stevie must've been a good salesperson already at  the age of eight -- given that, looking back, what did that have to do with anything?  Christmas was months away.

Somehow, despite this, I  felt he had a point.  How could I resist?

Why is it, when I think back to this, I feel that  Stevie meant me harm?  Had he stayed back, laughing, while I ran for my mother with those stinging eyes ? I don't think that happened, so why do I envision it that way?

Why do I remember this at all; why do I come back to this over and over again like an anxiety dream that stands in as some kind of shorthand for shame? Was this the first betrayal in memory, the first time I would trust a stranger and end up regretting it? My body's way of remembering a future that hadn't happened but surely would? Was Stevie standing in as the spouse, the tenant, the Devil incarnate  -- all of these, all wrapped up in one?

Stevie didn't look like any of those.  He didn't look like anything.  Stevie was a blur; for me, at that moment, there was only me.  Me, running, yelling for my mother. Me, feeling stupid for what I'd gone along with; that was all. I ran, and my eyes burned.

Untitled Woman No. 5

Eyes, brownish, brownish hair, rooted in the land
of test markets:  ribless rib sandwich, Ohio, the heart of it all, 

that fatless fat that passes, unchanged, through the body, although
you may feel a little sick.  But why not say what happened.

She was exported  (I was) forever:  a one-way ticket, and not for the sole
purpose of finding herself on a map.  You could look for her

but not toward that body of water to the West -- the one bearing
the name of a dead man.  Lower, to the East.  Moving still

farther eastward -- traversing the fastest route from Brooklyn to Queens, far
past where the streets are numbered.  Not the Hudson River, not the Lower

East Side, not the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway.  Here, they call it
like they see it:  the first avenue and then  the second one, and when you run out

of counting, there's the alphabet.  At the Center of the city, there
is a Park, and at the heart of her body, the heart.

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Mentally Unhygienic

One day last week, I left for work super early because I was craving a scone from certain Bed-Stuy cafe I will not refer to here by name.

The scones are amazing.  I mean, they must be; I have been known to wait in line for one for ten minutes on my way to work.  And by "wait in line" I mean, wait behind the ONE  other customer ordering something at the moment.  I mean, waiting patiently while the same person I've seen at the cash register for YEARS now (possibly the owner, I'd always thought), squints at the computer screen, moves the mouse around, clicking and clicking -- and then messes up and starts all over.  About 6 times.  Same woman, every time I'm there, for years, and yet she somehow doesn't seem to know how her own cash register works.  Almost every time I'm there (always to order nothing more than one scone to go), people in the line behind me eventually sigh and storm out because they can't take it any more.

Well, last night I walked past the cafe on my way home...to discover that the doors and windows had all been plastered over with yellow signs reading, "Closed by order of the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene."  I guess someone finally lost their mind trying to get a scone there, and the city said, enough already!

Which could probably happen almost anywhere in the neighborhood, to be honest.  I mean -- just to give one other example -- after no longer being able to take the idiocy of a small local pharmacy, I gave up and finally had my prescriptions transferred to the local Duane Reade, a huge NYC chain.  Bad move.  Chain or no chain, it doesn't matter.  Apparently people are pre-screened for idiocy before they are allowed to work customer service in Bed-Stuy.  Every single time I went to this particular Duane Reade, the line would be at least 5 people long, and 4 out of 5 people (I always being one of them, unfortunately) would find ourselves saying things like, "but I got a phonecall saying the prescription was ready" or "you said come back in an hour; that was three hours ago" or "I picked these up yesterday, but one of my prescriptions wasn't in the bag; the label says PLEASE REFRIGERATE.  Could you please go check in your fridge?"

And these people are responsible for dispensing life saving/life-threatening pharmaceuticals? Surely you cannot be serious.  Within a few months, I joined a once-a-week Meetup group that gathers on the Upper West Side, over an hour from where I live, so I had my prescriptions all transferred there.  How sad is that? The thing is, I've had prescriptions filled before at other Duane Reades -- ones that just happened to be down the street from the determatologist or whomever I'd just seen -- and they pretty much would have your order done right there on the spot, in something like ten minutes.

Oh, Bed-Stuy! Surely this cannot be good for property values.

The Nose Knows All Suffering

In the continued spirit of being melodramatic and tragical, I wish to share another story about my lifetime of suffering.

Last week I had an appointment with an ear, nose, and throat specialist who deals with sleep apnea.  I have no recollection of ever having been one to sleep on my back until some time in the past year when, on occasion, I started to wake myself up with my own snoring.

First, I want to say how glad I am that I had no idea how the logistics of this nose/throat examination would work; granted, it was completely painless, but only because of the use of a local anesthetic.  I will say no more on this topic except to tell you that once I had been nasally violated in the required fashion, the doctor informed me that yes, my suspicion of having at some point broken my nose at a very young age (I remember something about hitting it really hard on the bedpost and how it really, really hurt afterwards) could be confirmed:  to say that my septum was deviated would be the understatement of the century; my right nostril is, in fact, completely blocked -- and thus useless for breathing.

"It is obvious," he said to me in his slight Russian accent, "that this happened when you were very young -- because you do not even notice."

I told him that I had also discovered, as an adult,  for that matter -- after a lifetime of having cats for family pets -- that I was allergic to them.  I'd had no idea, I told him, that this kind of itching and sniffling was abnormal.  By the time I found out, it was too late; I had already given away the children because the cats were allergic (as my favorite bumper sticker proclaims).

He was fascinated.  "Do you exercise?" he asked me.  I told him yes, I'm a runner.  "But how?" he asked.  I shrugged.  "I've been doing it for 20 years."

He told me that a deviated septum, in his professional opinion, rarely causes sleep apnea.  However, he said, in my case there might be an exception.  The Sleep Institute would be calling me soon about setting up a study.  I could see that he was trying to contain his excitement, resisting the urge to rub his hands together like a mad scientist and say, "INNNteresting..."

I admitted that I'd always felt that I suffered a lot whenever I had a cold -- but assumed that maybe I was just being a whimp.

"Let me tell you something," he said.  "There are people -- when they fall down, they just stand back up.  There are other people, however -- when they fall, they demand the assistance of twelve orthopedic surgeons.  You are not the second type," he said.  "This is a good thing."

I thanked the kind doctor and closed the door behind me, sighing heavily through my one good nostril, and began my daily voyage out into the sea of suffering.

The Smell

"Burned Mattress & Debris in the Woods," http://www.flickr.com/photos/mundane_joy/2060779511/in/faves-29879040@N03/
A friend once said to me, "I love the scent of pine cleaner! It makes everything smell so clean."  I think we were in our twenties, and she was living by herself, in one of her first apartments -- still a smoker at the time, her apartment cluttered here and there with ashtrays and textbooks and laundry baskets.  Maybe we were splitting a gallon of ice cream, talking about boys while she mopped.

But I've never liked the smell.  I want to say, "because it doesn't really smell like pine" -- but actually I have no idea if it does.  I did eventually know what a pine tree smelled like, sure --  but by then it was too late.  I know that I learned at some point, for example, that there was a particular lip balm that was red-- and that it was supposed to smell like cherries.

Does it? To this day, I don't really know.  And if it weren't for the "grape flavor" label -- the purple color -- I wonder:  in our natural habitat, would we know to be reminded, when we smelled it, when we tasted it,  of that dark, sweet fruit?

Pine cleaner didn't remind me of the smell the plastic Christmas tree that came apart every January and sat in the basement for another year.  Pine cleaner smelled like my mother's efforts to keep us from being upset when the no-name brand roach motels didn't seem to be working that well.  Pine cleaner smelled like moving to a smaller, dirtier house, in a dirtier, less sunny neighborhood.

It smelled like the family that, for all we knew, was getting evicted that day when, the landlord told us, come and have a look.

It smelled like the house of the family that was leaving this place that would soon become ours -- though never really ours -- for a smaller, dirtier house, on an even dirtier, even less sunny street.

Friday, October 14, 2011

Newsflash! You Can't Get Bedbugs from Toilet Seats, but You CAN Get Them from Stuff that's Been in Someone's Infested Studio Apartment! Gasp!


Anderson Cooper is hot even when he says, "Cooties!"
I don't read stuff on Bedbugger.com much anymore; I get too irritated by the whole landlord/tenant blame game that goes on there, along with the mass hysteria they seem to inspire.  (As you may have guessed, I've spent way too much of my life reading anything and everything ever published on the web about bedbugs -- including all kinds of discussions of scientific research -- and  that site is the only place that's ever led me to think that people in the middle of a bedbug crisis need to protect the rest of the world from their nastiness by basically either developing obsessive-compulsive disorder or never leaving the house; they don't say it like that, of course, but that's the message.  To be fair, it's obvious that they don't mean to make people feel that way.  They are indeed an advocacy site --  but people there are obviously so shell-shocked by what they've been through that they seem to think you can get bedbugs from someone just by looking at them -- and that this is a risk that one must not take).
So, my Google Reader alerted me to the fact that Bedbugger.com had recently commented on a Slate article called "How Contagious are Bedbugs, Really?", and I couldn't wait to read it.  I read both the original article and the commentary, which...well...irritated me.  Namely, the following quotation:
“The poor often live in housing where bed bug infestations are neglected or poorly managed.”

To which I replied with the following rant, which I wanted to share:
Let’s not forget that the quotation above is only ONE point that that Slate article — which deals more with how the whole problem starts to begin with — is making. We wouldn’t even need to talk about how to “manage” infestations if people would just get a clue and stop thinking that thrift store/vintage shopping, etc. is okay in this day and age. (Here’s my OWN emphasis):
“The poor are at risk because THEY OFTEN CAN’T AFFORD EXTERMINATORS and may have unresponsive landlords—factors that increase the duration of infection. THEY ALSO FREQUENTLY RELY ON DONATED OR SECOND-HAND FURNITURE, INCREASING THEIR CHANCES OF CATCHING BUGS IN THE FIRST PLACE.”
Don’t forget that 1/3 of Brooklyn residents rely on small-time landlords who rent out part of their homes as a means of being able to pay their mortgages and not face foreclosure; they, too, “often can’t afford exterminators.”
While a corporation may be able to spend $10,000 here and there just because a tenant brings home furniture that has been discarded FOR A REASON — having no personal financial stake in being informed or careful — ordinary people who are already struggling to stay employed (and stay in their homes) can’t.
I know that I personally can’t afford to buy furniture — and rarely can even afford to buy clothing, even at Kmart! But what do I do about that? I deal with what I already have and let my stuff fall apart; the same way I’ve never bought a flat screen T.V. or a microwave or an iPhone/Pod/Pad or even a DVD player, I go without a couch too. It hasn’t killed me or anything; you’d be surprised.
If bedbugs are just an inevitable part of city living, then the city should be involved in getting rid of them, the same way it’s involved in putting out fires. But if it’s true, on the other hand, as the Slate article implies, that bedbugs pretty much arrive in infested “stuff” — not just because people ride the subway or work in an office or have children in school or just sort of live their lives — then I can see why the city shouldn’t bear the responsibility. But then neither should landlords.
I realize that this whole thing is a complex issue, but if “‘the movement of stuff’ carrying lots of bed bugs, rather than contact with individual people who might be toting a hitchhiker, is what puts us most at risk of getting bed bugs,” can we please stop putting our emphasis on blaming landlords and concentrate on real prevention education — by which I mean and not this whole voodoo of “oh, if you have bedbugs, then it’s irresponsible of you, you filthy pariah, to even leave your house without having just taken a shower and changed your clothes”?
I for one am glad that the Slate article makes an effort to dispel this kind of hysteria, along with the idea that there’s nothing you can do to keep from making your landlord go broke, short of never going to work or taking public transportation and just keeping your luggage in the bathtub and your fingers crossed when you travel. Please.

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Scarlet Fever

I am eight the autumn when my skin
blooms along the wrists, a patch of red that spreads
like the glow beneath hot coals.  The teachers,
concerned, swoop in, moving closer

and also away.  Who ever fails
the third grade? But I almost do.
One minute, sitting Indian-
style (we'd actually called it that),

in Cranbrook Elementary's multipurpose room --
for some reason I won't remember -- and then
escorted away, through rows of other Natives
and to the school nurse, who will sentence me to five

hours of waiting.  That, and bloodletting
in the E.R., through the smallest of openings
in a finger that refuses to betray me.
My neck has stiffened and will swell.  I know

I am going to die because my father
has appeared in my life; I need to be driven there --
yesterday -- and he drives.  And then:  home
for a month -- feverish, asleep, consumed

suddenly with citrus fruit and a type of cheese
my mother has bought on a whim; it's on sale --
and I read Little House on the Prairie and am alive
in the wrong century, fading in and out

of eighteen eighty something.  Of all things,
also, that I will never remember, there, on television,
is Laura Ingalls in braids, in calico bonnets,
her body like mine straining past hemlines --

she and I each swelling in anticipation
of winter, of hunger, of Almanzo
Wilder.  We are both waiting for the one
where her sister goes blind.

Monday, October 10, 2011

Oh no they DIDN'T...

 Okay, so...I will let you guess who is responding, below, under the name of "OverEducatedUnderPaid," to these anti-99%ers/ anti-Occupy Wallstreeters.

Then, if you'll pardon me, I might have to go vomit.


****


c3033 on Oct 4, 12:35 PM said:
Get a life, get a life, get a life....these people need to get a life. Why are we paying attention to any of them.

Why does society need to be responsible for these people and the choices they have made???
 
...

The "builder" put "out of business" twice...really...you would have thought that you might have saved some money after the first time...


It is about time people start taking responsibility for their own actions...
c3033 on Oct 4, 12:38 PM said:
@c3033:
Oh and cry me a river for the adjunct whiner, I mean professor....you work 4 hours a day max and get paid 70k+.....really!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
OverEducatedUnderPaid on Oct 10, 2:05 PM said:
@c3033
 
Since when does an adjunct only work 4 hrs a day? And since when does he or she earn $70K? Actually, one of the biggest scams in the corporation that is higher ed (don't be fooled into thinking someone's not making big money off of this part of the American dream racket) is that, as much as possible, colleges and universities try to ONLY hire adjuncts (along with some graduate students, who, as if it were humanly possible, earn even less) to teach the most "important" classes that everyone has to take -- like freshman composition. And most of the people who teach those classes do it as their sole livelihood by teaching at 3 or 4 different institutions at once. It's estimated that writing instructors spend something like 25 min. per student paper they read. If they teach 3 classes a semester (a.k.a. 60 students -- considered a heavy load by full time tenured people earning 2 or 3 times their salary, which isn't even always saying that much), they are lucky to make $39, 150 per year -- and that's ONLY IF they're lucky enough to a) be able to also get a full class load during the summer (unlikely) and IF they're lucky enough to live in pricey SoCal, which pays substantially more than elsewhere. (If they live in pricey NYC and meet all the above conditions, make that a whopping $26,100 annually. Now, let's face it: you can't even wipe your a** in NYC on $26,100, and, mind you, these are people who generally need to be paying off graduate school loans). Oh -- and did I mention that these jobs usually offer no health insurance or any other benefits. But no, these folks occupying Wall Street just need to stop crying and go to school ("oh, young people are the future!" "Education is the key!" yada yada yada) and get a job...so they can aspire to...what, exactly?