Thursday, October 23, 2008

No Time for a Nervous Breakdown

Ever have one of those days when you have a plan and everything turns to (crap) and gets out of your control? Then the (crap) hits the oscillating fan? The days that you feel pulled in 73 different directions, and you only want to go back to bed until you desperately need to pee? Juggling candles that are burning at both ends? Too much on your plate and no dog under the table willing to eat it? Driving with no steering wheel? In reverse? Well, I feel like I've had one of those months. Maybe I should have consulted an astrologist to help me plan a Thelma and Louise escape.

No single thing has been daunting on its own. It's just the cumulative effect. Overwhelmed, exhausted, spent. You get weaker the more you need to get strong.

All this venting to say, blogging became pretty low on my totem pole of doom. I was forced to put it on the back burner while I slammed my forehead on the front burner.

I can usually go with the flow even though I abhor roller coasters. But not lately. Maybe it's hormones. Maybe it's my meds or lack thereof. Maybe it's my midlife crisis. There must be something to blame it on.

Anyway, enough about my inability to control my reactions to life happening. Enough about my being acted upon. No more Poor Me. My character is building.

Now for some quick snippets I've collected even during my inexcusable and unexpected hiatus:

Katy's Quotes

Katy: "Mom, it's National Night Out. Can we go camping?"

Mike and I were drinking a bottle of wine, as we are wont (and want) to do. Katy says: "Ewwww, Mom! This wine is from 2006! Shouldn't it be rotten by now?" Reminded me of Steve Martin in the Jerk, "No more 1966. Let's splurge! Bring us some fresh wine! The freshest you've got - this year! No more of this old stuff."

Some Good Ones From Luke

Katy: "Mom, you can really work magic with the computer."
Luke: "And sometimes with the microwave."

I didn't know whether the dog was in the house or outside. (He tends to hide.) I knew I had let Buzz out, but honestly couldn't remember whether I let him back in. (Such activity being one of those automatic things that don't always register, kind of like when I put on deodorant or take my medicine.) I asked the kids if Buzz was in the house or not. They thought I asked if they knew whether he was in or out. They said "No." So, I open the back door and call outside for Buzz. Buzz comes running from one of his hideouts in the house. I say to the kids, "Thanks, you made me look like an idiot to the dog." Luke says, "Buzz already knew you were."

This is Me

When I look at wet clothes in the washing machine and see something pink, I hope it started out that way.

I got all excited when I found a $5 bill in the dryer, then I realized it was mine to begin with.

Does putting a fake tree by a window make it look more real?

I got a plastic silver-colored pirate sword for Katy's slutty pirate-wench Halloween costume. The Dollar-Store tag on it describes it as "Chrome Sword." Wow, chrome.

I got an email with a subject line that said, "RE: {SPAM} REPLY URGENTLY." Those Nigerians were kind enough to tell me right off that it was spam. That was nice.

I told my sister, "For some reason, I'm afraid I have breast cancer. Like God is sending me a message to get a mammogram." She responded, "Jill…this may be because it's breast cancer awareness month." Oh….

A Few Of My Favorite Quotes

"Money can't buy happiness, but it can buy things that make you happy."

"There are no stupid questions, just stupid people who ask questions."

One I need to keep in mind and apply much more often: "It's better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak and remove all doubt."

I like to think I made this one up while discussing my communication problems with an unnamed person: "We're not on the same page. In fact, we're not even in the same library."

A Few Words For You

Some old-person words/phrases that irritate me: gussied-up, Jim-Dandy (a contribution from Mike), Hot-Diggity-Dog (from Katy), and Cooter Brown (who, apparently was some famous old drunkard). Another is a word I have mentioned before, but it took on a most bothersome significance during the last debate: John McCain said cockamamie. Sure, what he was referring to (Biden suggesting dividing up Iraq) might have been a whack idea, but come on, cockamie??

Extras

I'll rant later about the obscene amount of money drug companies must spend on advertising, but I just need to mention this one. In the restroom at my doctor's office, the soap dispenser is provided by Cymbalta. (The "Where does depression hurt?" drug.) After I washed my hands, I told the receptionist that I liked that soap because not only were my hands clean, they were less painful and less depressed.

I was looking at a Party City catalog for "Spooktacular" (what a trite seasonal word, along with "Howl-O-Ween") costumes and I ran across this: A pimp costume called "Big Daddy" on sale for $17.49. The model is a white guy. Right next to it is a black guy modeling the full retail priced $49.99 "Super Mac Daddy" costume. Which pimp do you think will get more poon on Halloween night?

Luke has been enduring the humiliating torment of selling Boy Scout popcorn, so we have a garage full of boxes of it. The boxes are printed "FRAGILE" and list care instructions such as, keep from water, heat, etc. That's fine, but one of the notes I found funny. Even though it already says "FRAGILE," the instruction list reminds you: "DO NOT HANDLE PRODUCT IN A ROUGH MANNER." Don't rough up the popcorn, folks. Keep that in mind.

That's all for now. Who knew that blogging was all I needed to pull me off the ledge? I'm off for a girls' weekend tomorrow, so that should seal the deal on keeping me sane. At least until the stars line up against me again.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

as a fellow paranoid with a persecution complex, i know exactly what you mean when you say things all seem stacked up against you. it’s usually a successive series of traumas (real or imagined) which seem arranged by the conspirators perpetrating them to pile up, one after another, more and more anvil-like weight about your head and upper back- until you are bent over and broken, crushed under a pile of suffocating immobilization. the emotions that i keep buried deep… and deep… and out of reach- then start pushing up through the dirt like resurrected zombies, to buzz and swirl screaming around me. i hate their presence- it means i’ve lost control of them. i want to cry. i want to punch something as hard as i can over and over and over and over. i want to shout “FUUUUUUUUUUUUCK!!!!!!!!!” until my throat goes dead. i want to kill someone…maybe myself.

i LOVE those moments.

i’ve realized that most of life is tragically wasted, spent in a numb, soporific rut of routine and grind. it’s only at certain nodes of clarity along the way that we actually start living. sometimes those moments are of great joy- the birth of a child, the realization of a longtime yearning, the “i can’t believe i’m really here” feeling of traveling to some iconic destination, a great orgasm.
however, the torturous, painful moments described at the beginning are equally valuable, and should be equally cherished. they shake me out of my stupor, focus my attention, and bring a sharpness and vibrancy to an otherwise mundane quotidian. sure they suck to go through. but having survived, i’m grateful for the fleeting sense of being truly alive that they offered.