Archive for January, 2006

in which the women’s movement fails me

First, the update I know you’re all dying to hear: I’m still not pregnant. But I have started taking my temperature every morning to give this whole ovulation-charting thing a test run, so that’s bound to be exciting. Nothing like a read-out on a thermometer to get one in the mood for sweet lovin’ with one’s spouse. Haaaa.

We had more septic tank problems over the weekend, which I won’t write about it in detail because I’m sure y’all are sick to death of hearing about it. The happy part is that it didn’t cost us anything because Dave fixed it himself. The infuriating part: apparently the last time the repair people were here, when we dropped a couple of grand on getting a whole new pump? The technician forgot to turn the damn system back on when he was finished. Luckily we discovered it before it flooded into the house again. And now we know how long we can go with a completely shut-down system before all the tanks are full (about 6 weeks). Which I suppose is useful information to have. But we were both pretty enraged that the dude didn’t even think to flick the power switch to “on” before he left. I’m going to get Dave to call and file a complaint - usually I’m better at that (we have a pretty nice “good cop/bad cop” routine; he’s the polite Brit, I’m the rude American), but I think that in male-dominated industries like that one, they just might take it more seriously if it comes from a man. Plus, Dave can be calmly angry whereas I’d probably just lose my mind and start screaming about what a bleeping bleep-for-brains bleep-head their technicians are. Only without the self-censorship.

Ok, enough of the rage. Total change of topic: on Saturday night, Dave and I watched “Rosemary’s Baby”, which neither of us had seen before. Very odd movie. Some of it was totally campy - I giggled at things that I’m pretty sure were supposed to be serious. I didn’t think it was all that scary, although the idea of messing with a pregnant woman really bothered me. (Hmm, wonder why I’m sensitive to that?) But mostly I was annoyed with Mia Farrow’s character for being so damn passive. What can I say, my feminist side got all riled up over a movie that was made in 1968. I’m silly that way.

I just realized that I claimed my feminism in a paragraph immediately following one in which I said that I thought people listened to my husband more than they listened to me. Hmmm… hypocrisy, anyone?

In fellow blogger news, The Boy Davis is vacationing at our humble home this week, which is fun since he and Dave are old friends and haven’t seen each other for a few years. Don’t ask me why anyone would voluntarily opt for a vacation in Duvall, but hey, maybe he really likes farm animals and depressingly bleak weather? Those are things we seem to have in abundance. (I know the weather situation is temporary, but god! Enough with the rain already!)

Anyway, I’m trying to hide out and leave them to have lots of male-bonding time. (See the anti-feminism flaring up again? Where does this come from?) This might even turn out to be the week that I finally catch up on all the shows I’ve DVR’ed over the last few months. Season 2 of “Lost,” here I come!

9 Comments »

back to present (crabby) day

Warning to sensitive male readers: this post is going to contain items of an oversharing, girly nature. Proceed at your own risk.

I seem to have a wicked case of PMS this week. (See, guys? I warned you!) I’m irrationally grouchy for no reason, my boobs ache and I’m going through a lot of that whole “give me chocolate or DIE!!!” thing. Oh, and don’t forget the zits. Forehead, cheek, eyebrow, chin: check! (There’s another one under my right ear that I swear you could build a ski lift on. Ow.) You should all send Internet sympathy hugs to Dave, the poor soul who has to live with me. At least I try to warn him and apologize in advance, so my bitchy outbursts won’t be totally unexpected. I’m just courteous that way.

It’s funny (not ha-ha funny, just odd), there is a noticeable difference between my PMS symptoms when I’m on birth control as opposed to when I’m not, and honestly? It is way worse when I’m off of it. Speaking of which, you know how when I made the decision to ditch my birth control, I said that we were just going to relax and see what happened? How we weren’t really “trying,” we were just removing any preventative measures? Ok, that’s fine and all, but WHAT GIVES?? I’m about to have my 4th period (fourth!) with no birth control and still nothing. I just assumed that I’d get pregnant immediately since I have a ridiculously fertile family - my grandmother had 7 kids and my great-grandmother had 16. And no, that isn’t a typo, the woman had sixteen babies - she spent more time pregnant than a lot of people serve in prison for murder - and she still outlived her husband by many years. I mean, how is it that every teenager who gets drunk at their junior prom winds up with an unwanted pregnancy their first time, and we haven’t been able to pull it off in 4 months? The hell? Annoying!

Before anyone lectures me that if I stress myself out about it then I’ll never get pregnant, let me just say that this really hasn’t been bothering me that much. It’s only irritating me because every little damn thing in the world is irritating me right now. Honest. I know this mood will pass soon enough and I’ll feel silly for having written about it, but there you have it. Right now, at this very moment, I am annoyed.

And since it was bothering me, I started doing some Internet research (because, you know, that’s always a good idea) about how one goes about charting one’s ovulation. I found this website, which is full of fascinating tips. This is the paragraph about basal body temperature (BBT) that made me scream out loud:

Take your BBT temperature first thing each morning - as soon as you wake up. You must remain in bed (as physical activity can increase your temperature) and avoid eating or drinking or even moving. Either insert the thermometer in your mouth - or alternatively your rectum - and wait five minutes. Read the temperature to within 1/10 of a degree and record the reading.

Wait, “or alternatively your rectum”? Wow! Who would CHOOSE that when you have the option to take your temperature orally? Who on earth wakes up and thinks, “hmm, I think the best way to start my day today is to shove some foreign object up my butt for 5 minutes”?? Ok, don’t answer that question. I’m sure those people are out there, and I don’t want to meet them. I especially don’t ever want to shake their hands. Of course, now the only thing I can think of is that stupid joke where the punchline is, “Rectum? Damn near killed him!” I don’t remember the rest of the joke (I think there are about a hundred different versions), which makes it even more lame that it now seems to be on some kind of weird loop in my brain.

Now I’m off to my boss’s office birthday party, because hey, free cake! It had better be chocolate.

And GOD, I don’t want to imagine the Google hits I’m going to get because of this entry.

8 Comments »

and now, a funny apartment story

Ok, to get the visions of perverts and crazies and ghetto neighborhoods out of your minds, I now offer a much more amusing apartment-related story. Actually, it has very little to do with the apartment itself and is really more an example of my mother’s “Miss Fix-It-ness,” but I think it’s close enough. (Example of the Fix-It-ness: my mom stood on a step-ladder and rewired a light fixture when she was 8 months pregnant with my sister, because “it needed to be done, and you know your father is useless with that kind of thing.”) The older I get, the more I realize that I probably inherited this gene from her, and it frightens me.

So, this was also back in 2000. The reason why I moved home with my parents (see the story below) in the first place was because I had been living in a small town in Wisconsin called Appleton, which was great except that I had moved there on a whim for a temp job and then found out that it was almost impossible to find work there. My parents said that I could move home with them and they (along with my sister, who’s helped me out of many a financial crisis) would support me while I went to school for a Microsoft certification. Seeing as I had zero income at the time and no real prospects, it seemed like the best offer I could imagine, even though the idea of living with my parents at age 24 made me feel like dying. So my mom flew up to help me drive the U-Haul to Mississippi, as she is The Parent Who Helps All of Her Children Move. (She even helped my sister move to & from Italy. Which was totally unselfish of her, because really, who wants to spend a few days in Italy? Pshaw!) Since my mom has a bad back and I lived on the 2nd floor, I had arranged for movers to come help us load up the moving van. Did you know that you can hire two guys from a moving company to help you load a truck, even when you’re using a different company’s moving truck? Well, you can, and I did. I was set to move on a Saturday. On Friday night, the movers called and said that they had a cancellation, and they wanted to know if they could come a little earlier, at 10 a.m. rather than 11. Sure, great, no problem! After I got off the phone, my mom jokingly said, “What are you going to do if they don’t show up tomorrow?” Since it seemed totally preposterous, I said, “Sit on the steps and cry, I guess.” We had a nice big laugh about that. (Again with the foreshadowing!)

Saturday, we got up early to finish the last of the packing and to get Teenie securely shut in the bathroom so she couldn’t freak and run out of the apartment while we were moving stuff. My friend Jen came over to help, and also to say good-bye. We’ve been friends since college, she was a big part of the reason why I chose to move to Appleton in the first place, and we were both very sad that I was leaving. Ten o’clock rolled around and no movers showed up. At 10:30, I called the moving company - they didn’t have voicemail, so it just rang endlessly with no answer. By 11:00, I was starting to get really worried, so Jen and I got in my car (my mom waited at the apartment in case they showed up) and we drove to the address that was listed next to the moving company in the phone book. It was a house, not a business. Fantastic. Thank god I hadn’t given these people my credit card number up front. I got back to the apartment (still no movers!), and was about to have a full-on panic attack. I literally sat on the stairs and started to cry, just like I had joked that I would. My mom, in total “if there is a problem, yo, I’ll solve it” fashion, told me not to worry, she would find a solution. I went back into my apartment to cry some more. Jen came in a few minutes later and told me that I had to go outside and see my mom. Apparently, she found a guy who was innocently walking down the street, she ran up to him, and said, “Excuse me, but I’ll pay you $200 if you help my daughter load her moving truck.” I swear I’m not making that up. I’m pretty sure she came up with the $200 figure because that’s how much we were going to pay the moving company, and she figured it was too much for one person to turn down. By the time I got outside, my mom and this dude were walking up, and my mom said, “This is so-and-so. He’s going to help us load the truck!” Jen hid behind me and tried not to pee herself laughing over my mom’s mad recruitment skillz.

There’s an interesting element of Wisconsin culture that my mom didn’t know: the bars all have last call around 1 or 1:30 in the morning, but a few of them re-open at 6 a.m. That way, the people who work graveyard shift can have a few beers when they get off work, because hey, it’s sort of like evening to them, right? And in blue collar areas like where I lived, there were a lot of people who worked graveyard - mostly factory jobs - and there were enough of them to make it worthwhile for the bars to open early in the morning. It turned out that this guy that my mom recruited was, in fact, a factory worker, and he had hit the bars around seven in the morning after he got off work. Four and a half hours later, since he was blasted out of his mind, he wisely decided to leave his car at the pub and walk home. That was when my mom found him. When she offered him $200, he did a little drunk math and figured out that it would make up for how much he had just spent at the bar, so his wife wouldn’t yell at him too much. How my mom didn’t notice his slurring, or the fact that he smelled like he had taken a shower in Pabst Blue Ribbon, I honestly don’t know. But dude was wasted. I mean, drunkity-drunk.

While we were moving stuff, he confessed to me that he was drunk, and actually said, “But don’t tell your mom.” Um, what? I’m sorry, are we co-conspirators in this? Are you my little brother and I’m going to have to sneak you in the house so mom doesn’t notice you smell like bourbon barf? (That’s actually happened with my brother, but we’ll leave that story for another time.) I think he was afraid she wouldn’t pay him if she found out. He obviously didn’t know just how desparate we were. With a few of the heavier items, like my washer and dryer, he tried to back out of moving them down the stairs. He was all, “oh, I don’t know, I’m afraid I might drop those….” (Because hello, he just might have!) And my mom would pull the, “oh pretty please, won’t you move the big heavy items with your big manly-man muscles?” on him. It’s worth noting that the guy was maybe 5′7″ and 140 pounds, tops. Nevertheless, she pulled out the full-on flirty accent, and she batted her eyelashes like a true southern belle. My mom knows how to get what she wants. It totally worked too, and miraculously, he didn’t drop any of my furniture down the stairs, although I imagine that we probably pretty well killed his buzz.

And… that’s the end of the story. I wish I had some great twist ending, but that’s it: my mom got a drunk stranger to handle all of my personal belongings. Then we spent 3 days in a U-Haul with a cat, but nothing really noteworthy happened. And that’s just about the best I can do on a Wednesday morning.

No Comments »

the worst apartment I’ve ever lived in

Angie just told a story about nightmare apartment neighbors, and it reminded me of my worst apartment experience. And rather than leaving a mile-long comment on her blog, I thought I’d steal the idea and make my own little blog entry out of it. (Can you tell I’m hard up for material? Life has been pretty dull lately. Good, but dull.)

Back in 2000, I had moved home with my parents for a brief stint while I went to school for a Microsoft certification. I was in Mississippi in the middle of summer, very depressed because I was 24 and living with my parents, and I seem to remember crying a LOT during that time. I also had a lot of migraines, most likely due to a combination of the weather (me no likey the heat) and proximity to my father (I love him, I just can’t be around him for too long or we fight). So when I finally finished the certification and got a job offer from a company in Massachusetts, I said yes even though I had never been there before. I figured that anything would be an upgrade from my current situation. (Blatant foreshadowing.)

So, the job was in Worcester, which the locals pronounce “Woostah.” Don’t ask me why. There’s also a town there called Leicester that’s pronounced “Lestah.” However, Dorchester is pronounced just the way it’s spelled, so I guess there’s something in that one little magical “h” that makes the world of difference between saying something properly and f*cking it all to hell. Whatever. So, I was in Woostah, or Worcester, or whatever you want to call it. I didn’t realize just how tight the housing market was in Massachusetts. This was my first major IT job, and I thought it was a pretty good salary, but I quickly figured out that there was no way I could afford most of the apartments in that area. I finally found one that I could afford - a very tiny one-bedroom for $475 a month. I should’ve known that was way too cheap, since most of the other comparable apartments were at least $1000 per month. Perhaps I should have talked to the other tenants, or explored the neighborhood a bit more, or driven through the area at night. Ah, hindsight.

Basically, it was a really old house (built in the mid-1800’s) that had been converted to apartments. The main cool thing I remember about the apartment was that it still had the original doorknobs, which didn’t turn, they had a button in the center that you pushed to make the latch retract. I had to explain to everyone who came over how they worked so they wouldn’t accidentally lock themselves in the bathroom. But that’s about where the cool features of this apartment ended. The dishwasher never worked properly, so it was more of a dish-drying rack than anything, and there was zero closet space so I had to get one of those free-standing wardrobe racks for my clothes. The laundry was in what I called the Blair Witch Basement - it was absolutely terrifying to go down there. As for the neighborhood… well. For starters, there was a methadone clinic four blocks away. Drug dealers lived next door. (I’m guessing a lot of their client base came directly from the methadone clinic, and vice versa.) Also, I’m pretty sure that my neighbors across the street were involved in some form of organized crime. Starting to figure out why the place was so cheap? Yeah, it was ghetto.

Besides the run-of-the-mill stuff that happens when you live in a bad neighborhood - like my car getting broken into, little neighborhood thug kids throwing snowballs at my windows because they wanted to scare my cat, and having what I’m pretty sure were obscene comments yelled in Spanish at me every time I left the apartment to go to my car, two major incidents really stand out in my memory. First was the guy upstairs. He was the landlord’s son, so there was no way to get him evicted. I’m honestly not sure if he was on drugs or if he was mentally ill. But apparently since his parents owned the place, he had keys to everyone’s apartments. There were 3 very pretty college girls who lived on the third floor (the converted attic), and they told me that he occasionally let himself into their apartment and would just hang out and babble about things like “God is a frog” and all kinds of random nonsense, and they had no idea what to say or how to get rid of him. (They thought maybe he was schizophrenic, since he didn’t seem like a druggie type, but who knows.) There were a few times that I came home and suspected that he had been in my apartment. He didn’t take anything, but certain things were “off” - Teenie would be hiding under the bed (she’s usually scared of men), items would be misplaced, the TV would be on a different channel than the one I had last been watching, that kind of thing. It was very creepy. He only came into my apartment once when I was home. It was a Saturday morning, I had been sleeping late, and he opened the back door, which just happened to be in my bedroom. Since the door was only a couple of feet away from my bed, I woke up when I heard him fooling with the lock, and when he opened it, I screamed. He quickly closed the door, and said, “umm, there’s a package for you out here.” Right, ok. So you just thought you’d come into my apartment and leave it on the bed for me? The hell? I said I’d be out to get it in a minute, and I waited until I heard his feet running back upstairs before I stuck my head out. There was no package. Surprise. I suppose that he thought I wasn’t home, or maybe it was my screaming that scared him, I don’t know.

Oh, also? If you left your clothes while they were in the laundry (because seriously, who can stand to hang out in the Blair Witch Basement for an hour or longer? I know I couldn’t, the spiders alone freaked me the hell out), he’d inevitably end up taking them out when the dryer was done, and putting them on the big table (which was there if you wanted to fold your clothes as soon as they came out of the dryer). But, my panties were always in a separate stack off to the side, all by themselves. Ew, ew, ew.

Now, incident number two might be even creepier than the dude upstairs, if you can imagine. I mentioned this apartment was tiny, right? So my bed was right up against the window, which had curtains, but they were very sheer, so you could see straight through them. I woke up in the middle of the night once to Teenie making a weird half-growl/half-meow sound. It’s the noise she usually reserved for when she found a bug, and since she was in bed with me, I thought I’d better open my eyes and check out the situation. So I rolled over, and I saw that Teenie was actually looking through the window, and… there was a guy on the other side of the window. If the window had been open, I could have reached out and slapped him, he was that close. I grabbed my cordless phone, pulled the covers over my head, and called 911. The operator was very cool, and kept me on the phone while she dispatched a squad car to the house. She asked me to peek out from under the covers and tell her if the guy looked like he was trying to open my window. I looked, and said, “No, he’s just staring really closely, but his hands are down low…. um, what on earth is he doing? I think he might be peeing on the side of the house, maybe?” I’m not sure if it’s because I had just woken up, or if I’m just really naive (maybe both), but I figured out a few minutes later that he was definitely NOT peeing on the house. Yes, folks, I had a window wanker. Gross. Keep in mind that it was February in Massachusetts, and there was at least a couple of feet of snow on the ground. Plus, I was sleeping in a sweatshirt and flannel pajama pants, and had the covers pulled up to my nose. But I suppose that I must have a particularly provocative forehead (since that’s all he could’ve seen of me), and apparently sub-zero temperatures do nothing to deter hardcore perverts. By the time the police showed up, he had finished his business and gone on his way, so that was pretty much useless.

The next day, I heard the maintenance man outside, and went to talk to him about it. He said that my next-door neighbor (another single woman) had seen the guy and reported him to the police at least 12 to 14 times, and the cops hadn’t been able to catch the perv yet. The maintenance guy rigged up some big floodlights all around the side of the house, which made my bedroom uncomfortably bright at night, but I never saw the window wanker again, so I guess it was worth it. I got really creeped out about how many times my neighbor saw him, and I wondered how many times he was watching me that I didn’t know about it. Or maybe he was just her personal stalker, and it was only that one time that he got confused about whose window he was looking into. I comforted myself by thinking that it was probably the latter and not the former. And I was very careful that for the rest of my apartment-dwelling years, as a single female, I would NEVER live on the first floor again.

Just to finish the story: the job in Massachusetts sucked, but they were the company that transferred me to Washington and paid my moving expenses, so I have no complaints about them. Of course, they transferred me right after September 11th, which happened to be right before the company started to go under, and I got laid off a few months after I got here. But I wound up in the state that I wanted to live in, so it all worked out in the end. And I’ve never had a window wanker since (that I know of).

5 Comments »

post-birthday wrap-up

So that whole turning 30 thing happened. I still don’t have anything to say about it, except that my one lone gray hair is now bugging me more than it did when I first discovered it two months ago. I’ve suddenly started considering things like highlights, or ooh! Maybe a perm! That’s probably a dangerous road to go down, but these are the thoughts in my head lately. Sort of a “change my hair, change my life” thing. Not that my life is bad at all (far from it), it’s just the age part that’s bugging me.

Anyway, I did pretty well this year, gift-wise. I got a pair of jeans from my sister (which give good booty), cash from my parents (my favorite!), pajamas from Kris, and both a massage and a manicure from other assorted friends. Dave did well too, he got me a very pretty bracelet with my birthstone on it, a heart rate monitor thingy for working out, and my favorite… a TiVo! And hopefully within the next few days, we’ll figure out how the damn thing works! Dave gets major points for that, because not only did he get exactly what I asked for (the TiVo, that is), he’s also handled all of the setting up business, which probably would’ve reduced me to tears ages ago if it had been left up to me. It’s not as easy as you’d think it would be, for a company whose logo consists of a cartoon television with feet. Hmph. I’m sure I’ll love it eventually, though. (And a random aside: this story about Mimi Smartypants’ daughter’s reaction to the TiVo logo cracks me up.)

Oh, and you might recall how I was supposed to be going to Memphis tomorrow to help Kris move up here? Well, her boss changed her end date, so she couldn’t come up here exactly when we’d planned. So now I’m flying down on Thursday, February 16th. It’s still less than a month from now, so I’m not totally distraught about the date change. In fact, it gives me time to (hopefully) fix up the house a bit before she gets here. So that’s fine. But I am a little sad that I won’t be seeing her tomorrow like we’d planned last month.

Totally unrelated: Back when I got this job in late November, I took my resume down from all of the Internet job boards where I had posted it. However, I still occasionally get contacted by staffing firms who have my resume stored in their database. This is only noteworthy because I get some of the oddest job offers ever this way. Case in point: today I got an email about a 6-month contract for a job that is totally not in my area of expertise, which just happens to be located in northwest Montana. It’s tempting to write back with something like, “You want me to abandon my husband, our home & our pets and move to Montana in January? Ha! Haaaaaaa!! Are you INSANE?!?” But I’m always polite and end up saying something like, “I’m currently staffed on a contract until the end of June, and I’d really be unable to relocate after that. But thanks for considering me, and have a great day!” I’d love to write back with something totally snarky someday. Sigh, dreams…

6 Comments »

beginning my third decade

So, I’m officially 30 today. I’d like to say something all deep and philosophical for you, but I’m afraid I don’t have nearly enough caffeine in my system yet. Instead, pictures from our little bowling party this past weekend can be found here. Enjoy.

4 Comments »

I’m going to start commuting via canoe

The weather lately? Sucks big time. I’ve pretty much gotten used to Seattle’s rainy winters during the last 4 1/2 years that I’ve lived here, but lately it is outta control. We’re setting records, and pretty much everywhere around us is in a flood watch or warning state. This morning, the main road that I use to get to work was flooded, so I had to go on a 8-mile detour. It’s worth noting that I only live 11 miles from where I work in the first place. It took me over an hour to get here. Good times. Thank the lord in heaven for my iPod and its FM adapter.

In other news, I have five days left of my twenties. Holy sh*t. I’m trying to let that information sink in, and I’m having a hard time wrapping my head around it. I keep saying the number in my head. Thirty. 30. Three-zero. I know it’s not really that big a deal in the grand scheme of things, but it feels really strange to think about it.

And on the subject of my birthday, this weekend we’re having sort of a little party/shindig thang. My friend Linda just turned 30 last Saturday (the 7th), so we decided to combine our parties into one big 30th birthday bash for both of us. We met up last Friday to try to pick a venue. That actually took a lot longer than it should have, but we had a very specific requirements list. My number one requirement: the bar must have vodka. (Translation: a big fat NO on the wine bar Linda picked out, which literally only serves beer & wine. Why bother?) Linda’s main requirements were that it be cheap (which I fully supported) and that there was some activity to do other than sit around a table and drink all night. Oooookay. That last part was the challenge. We thought about pool halls, dance clubs, karaoke, and finally settled on bowling. I know that sounds sort of white trash and sad, but here’s the thing: Saturday night is X-Bowling, which is all dark with neon, blacklights and loud dance music. It’s fun in a cheesy “aren’t we too old for this?” kind of way. Plus they have a few pool tables - and since we all know that I suck at bowling, that will probably be my activity of choice. (For the record, Linda used to be in a bowling league, and owns her own ball & shoes. She’s pretty hardcore. I will not bowl with her, for I know she will kick my ass.) They also have a relatively nice bar, with a good selection, and which is in its own separate room away from the loud music. Oh, and the whole place is smoke-free! Bonus points!

So there you go. I’m sure there will be many drunk photos, just wait & see.

8 Comments »