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Getting over giving up.

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    Ho.Ly.Crap

    March 31, 2010 by NaysWay · 2 Comments 

    The weather in Cleveland has been wonky. It’s like Winter isn’t putting up that much of a fight to leave, while Spring is stopping long enough to pat everyone on the head to let it know it’s here. Winters in Cleveland are never this nice. This season, it has almost made me want to buy it flowers.

    While the days are still making up their minds to be Winter or Spring, the nights are still a bit frigid. I haven’t been able to let loose my grip from the beloved home thermostat. The one that makes me all nice and toasty but gives BFam night sweats. And we’re talking flash floods, here, people. The man is an everlasting hot box.

    There’s enough of a weather battle going on between nightfall and dawn, that you really don’t know what to expect of morning driving conditions. And, as I’ve been told by Mooter, I need to keep my eyes on the road because I’m a bad driver. Actually, after a rousing game of Relentlessly Tease The Eight-Year-Old, in a last ditch effort to redeem herself from my name-calling, she said, “Well, you are… you… YOU… YOU ARE A… YOU ARE A VERY BAD DRIVER, MOM!” In situations like these, one of two things is happening: 1) there is truth in the statement, 2) she’s really bad at name-calling, or 3) what she really wanted to call me is being stored in her brain until she turns 16. I’m going to go with option 2.

    Of course, when I told this story to BFam, he laughed. “Ha ha ha! That is so – ” My look must have made him reconsider. The look that says oh, yes. Please finish that statement because I am dying to kick you in the nards, because he then finished it by saying, “… funny. That is so funny was what I was going to say.” You weren’t going to say ‘true’, were you, honey? “No. No, no. Funny. Yep. Funny is definitely the word I was looking for.”

    So now that I’m the resident bad driver, I’m all eyes-peeled-both-hands-on-the-wheel-90-year-old-lady-driver. I may still have a lead foot but, c’mon! You’ve all but taken the joy of changing the song on my iPod and driving with my knees away. (For your information, I don’t do that last one. BFam does, though. Nobody calling HIM a bad driver. Sexists.) I work in downtown Cleveland, so I have to trek it in with the non-driving yahoos every morning. Nothing to distract me but those non-drivers I just mentioned. And I’m near spasm level with my rage, but I’m focused. And I’m at least five exits away from my destination when Stephen King showed up and decided he wanted to film The Mist in the middle of traffic. With all my senses a go, and my new found driving skills, I’m way more aware that I am driving into my potential death than I want to be. My mind races: how can I drive through a concrete median to turn around and go back home? What will I do if The Mist kills me? Should I start calling my family now and tell them I love them?

    OK, so it wasn’t The Mist. It may have been a combination of the low temperatures from the evening mixing with the suddenly-warmer-than-normal temps of daybreak. I am no meteorologist, so I like my explanation better.

    Of course, The Mist was all anyone could talk about once I’d made it past the parking lot and up to my Company offices. Did you see The Mist? Oooh, wasn’t it scary? I’ve never seen anything like that before, while I’m all OH MY GOD I ALMOST DIED IN THAT! Then, suddenly, a colleague within the bunch of us stopped talking, and stared beyond us for what seemed an uncomfortably long time. I was right, wasn’t I? The Mist was coming to kill us, and she just saw something. I knew it. I KNEW IT. After a few beats, she hazily says, “Turn around…” I’m a scary person. In ordinary circumstances, there’d be no way I was turning around. I’ve seen all the Friday The 13th’s. All the Nightmare On Elm Streets. Someone tells you to turn around, you don’t turn around. You run. But it was the way she said it. Not like she’d seen a badly disfigured neighborhood child killer, or seemingly drowned and also badly disfigured hockey mask-wearing psychopath. It was more like… like, she’d seen the Celestial Kingdom.

    Ho.Ly.Crap

    Ho.Ly.Crap

    For all of you who, after viewing those shots, are saying to yourself, “She just totally overreacted,” I want you to know I’m quietly hating you in my mind.

    Filed under Blog, living2 · Tagged with being

    The Flute

    March 30, 2010 by NaysWay · 4 Comments 

    The Flute
    Booger. She’s-a-sick.

    Again.

    And, if Booger’s sick, you know what that means…

    The Flute
    Whole house?

    SICK-O!

    Between my two children, Booger’s illnesses are usually a walk in the park while Mooter ends up needing a ventilator and Costco amounts of antibiotics. We are whoa-begotten with Mooter. The world is a black cloud hovering over our house with that kid, while Booger is off tra-la-laaing it in a batch of daisy fields.

    The Flute
    Because Mooter is walking Ebola, she gets the medicines. Because you can find sibling rivalry in just about anything, Booger gets jealous. “I wanna haff sum menisin. Why cann’i nah haff sum menisin? Mommy, I sick, too *coff, coff, coff*.”

    Lately, Booger has been sick enough, she’s finally gotten her wish and received some much-needed “menisin” for her cold. And it is just that… a cold. Ask Booger?

    Me: Booger, when we get home from school, Mommy’s going to give you some medicine for your cold, OK?

    Booger: Becoss I sick?

    Me: Yes.

    Booger: Like Mooter?

    Me: Well, kinda. You don’t quite have the same thing as Mooter. Mooter has to stay home from school for her sickness. You aren’t that bad.

    Booger: Mommy? Whut I haff?

    Me: Nothing too bad, Boog. You’ve just got a cold.

    Booger: Whut? I haff a whut?

    Me: A cold.

    Booger: A flute?

    Me: A what?

    Booger: The. Flute. Doo I haff the flute?

    Me: [silence... thinking...]

    Booger: Huh, Mommy? Doo I? Doo I haff the flute?

    Me: [LIGHTBULB!] The FLU?! Is that what you’re saying?

    Booger: Yes, Mommy. The flute.

    Me: Yes, Boog. You have the flute.

    No. She doesn’t really have the flute. But how fun is that to say?

    Apparently, Booger’s “flute” causes her more restless nights than usual. Her sleeping behavior is more elaborate when she can’t breathe. And she will do just about anything to get comfortable.



    That’s one crazy flute.

    Filed under living, loving · Tagged with booger, sick

    FEAR No. 059 – Lemons And Lemondade

    March 29, 2010 by NaysWay · 2 Comments 

    I love lemons. As a kid, I saw one of my babysitters half one, salt it, then chomp on it like an apple. I couldn’t imagine wanting something, already so bitter, salty. But I was heavy into salt and bitter at the time, so it made sense that eating halved lemons doused in salt would be my next logical step. Years later, the consistent combination of acid and sodium chloride wore down on the enamel of my teeth, making my two fronts almost see-through. It’s a miracle my blood pressure didn’t top out at such an early age. I was a lemon abuser, and I was paying the price for my habit.

    Everything in excess is bad for you, I’ve heard. Feh.

    As much as I love lemons, I am not a huge fan of lemonade. Call me weird. Go ahead. No, really, BFam does all the time. Another one of my oddities? Love oranges, hate orange juice. I know. Real head-scratcher. Lemonade is – wait for it – too bitter for me. I totally understand if you’ve just washed your hands of me. I’m so curious, I stump myself sometimes. But don’t blame me. Blame my tongue. I have no control over that thing or its residing taste buds. I want to like lemonade, I really do. It just makes the most sense if I gave it a chance. But, alas, my tongue wants no parts of lemonade unless it’s fortified with enough sugar that a good shake or stir before drinking is the only way to stomach it. BFam, a true lemonade aficionado (by his standards), won’t drink lemonade in the same room with me. Won’t buy it for me, won’t make it from me. Won’t let me share it from his cup should he purchase some from a restaurant. “You taint the experience of lemonade with your… your… SUGAR!”

    I had no idea I was drinking such refinery. In that case, I’d like the 1982 Lemonade Blanc. While you’re at it, let me smell the cork on that thing.

    Read more

    Filed under Blog, living2 · Tagged with being, bfam, realizing

    The Wall of Inspiration

    March 25, 2010 by NaysWay · Leave a Comment 

    Getting in shape is boring. When I’m in the throes of exercise, in the midst of sweat and near collapse, I search my mind for things to hold my concentration. This is very hard to do because, while I’m stepping and squatting and lunging, I’m thinking of the glaze and chocolate icing donut I’m craving from my neighborhood Dunkin’ Donuts.

    And ways to kill this little size two exercise instructor barking orders at me on this stupid DVD.

    Oh, my thighs.

    A few years ago, before I took a look at myself in the mirror and all I could say to my reflection was “seriously?!”, I tore pictures of skinny celebrities out of magazines and threw rocks at them. And I’m being totally literal here. I tore out the picture, took Mooter’s box of rocks she collects from the backyard, went into the basement, taped the torn-out picture to a pole, and hurled. It was not pretty, and I am not proud. At the time, it was therapeutic to think I was hurting skinny people because, from the waist down, I was not. After a while, it dawned on me (and the pole in the basement) that I was only kidding myself. I needed to get my butt in gear. So, instead of taping torn-out pictures of celebrities I hated for what I wanted, I taped pictures together of all the bodies I liked and used them as inspiration to keep me lunging, squatting, panting, and sweating like a mad woman.

    I will have thighs like Beyoncé. Oh, yes. I will have them.

    Why it never dawned on me to use this same logic with the one thing I’m so fearful of and hindered by that I’m just about frozen in place, I have no idea. But one day, the little person inside of me, the one I’m slowly killing with my fear, walked up out of my soul, climbed the stairs to my brain, unlocked the door to the idea room and shouted “HEY IDIOT” really loudly.

    What? Doesn’t the person inside you communicate the same way?

    Soon, The Wall of Inspiration was born.

    (clockwise: Damon Lindelof, Jodi Picoult, Tyler Perry, Ruby Dee, Stephen King, JJ Abrams, Phylicia Rashad, Meryl Streep, Debbie Allen, Kimora Lee Simmons)

    I can put you to sleep with the countless amount of times I say I want to be a writer. Wanting and doing are two different things. Wanting without doing is what’s called insanity. Or stupidity. I need motivation. I need to be inspired. LOST is one of my favorite shows. Who am I kidding, LOST is my favorite show. Ever. So many times, I’m done watching the show and thinking to myself How? How did someone say “I’ve got a great idea for a story” and come up with this? It’s ingenious! It’s so detailed! It’s… well, sometimes it’s confusing! But, my God, it’s so satisfying! Successful people, writers especially, always say the same thing: I don’t know where the idea came from, and I had no idea it would be as wildly successful as it is/was. While this may be true, they didn’t hold the story in their minds and think “this is stupid”, now did they? I am frequently haunted by LOST‘s story long after the show is over. So much that I dream LOST. That’s right. I can’t watch an episode without dreaming about it all night. That, dear children, is called inspiration. And I want to go to there.

    Damon Lindelof: co-Creator and half of the brain behind my favoritest TV show ever, Damon is the main reason I stay up all night and can’t keep my mind from racing while I sleep. He is a self-proclaimed nerd (and that’s an understatement to his creativity).

    Jodi Picoult: One read of My Sister’s Keeper and I wondered where she’d been all my life. A woman writer who doesn’t write about chics all the time. Yes, please.

    Tyler Perry: My husband (along with most black men I know) is not a fan of his work, but anyone who can go from living out of their car, to practically owning theater, to shutting down Hollywood naysayers and doing movies his way while making kajillions? Inspiration central.

    Ruby Dee: Because she reminds me of my great-grandmother, Granny. She’s a legend in acting and the institute of marriage (she and Ossie Davis’ relationship is unheard of by today’s standards).

    Stephen King: My mother’s favorite author. He was supposed to retire a few years ago, but when you have a gift, it pretty much tells you when it wants to stop.

    JJ Abrams: I put him in equal billing as Damon Lindelof. They’re pretty much cut from the same cloth, shared parts nerd and all. (I must have a thing for nerds…)

    Phylicia Rashad: If you’re from my generation, you grew up watching her on The Cosby Show. And, like everyone in my generation, I wanted Claire Huxtable to be my mother. So pretty and elegant. I use one of her famous lines from the show on my children when trying to catch them in a lie: “Let the record show…!”

    Meryl Streep: If I ever had the calling to act (which I’m pretty sure I don’t), I would love to crawl into the mind of this woman for one day. She can play anything, yet she’s still a goofball and never takes herself too seriously.

    Debbie Allen: The crazy sister of Phylicia Rashad and phenomenal choreographer, she used to scare me on Fame. But I would dance for her in a second. She’s fierce, but she loves you. I like tough love.

    Kimora Lee Simmons: I watch very little reality TV (read: The Kardashians are my limit). But after Kimora: Life In The Fab Lane, I love seeing this model/mother/mogul at work. She’s so crazy, and such a bitch! (That’s Miss Bitch to you. *snaps*) She puts the term “work it” on a whole other level. I love her… but I could never work for her. Chic be cuh-raaaaazy.

    As you can see, The Wall of Inspiration is not central to any one genre or creative outlet or gender. It’s potpourri, the “jo” in your mojo. Whomever gets you going, makes you want to get up off of your couch and do something, in whatever you long to do in life, belongs on The Wall.

    If you don’t have a Wall… what are you waiting on?! Hop to it!

    Filed under Blog, living2 · Tagged with being, FEARlessons

    I’ll Never Live It Down

    March 24, 2010 by NaysWay · 2 Comments 

    Where do I begin…

    It is the time of year at my job when we are being slammed with reports and projects and all types of interesting things that would threaten to keep me away from blogging. So far, it has been successful. But I have a story to tell. A story that I can no longer contain within myself. And I am foregoing every fiber in my being to tell you this God-awful story, willingly letting work pile up around me because I can no longer contain myself.

    You ready?

    OK, before I tell you, just know that I love you guys.

    And, don’t judge me.

    Please.
    ————————————————————————–
    When I was a kid, I was easily embarrassed. It didn’t help that I was always thought of as “the funny one”. Not because of my great comedic timing, but because I was always doing something I didn’t intend that got the laughs. On top of being a klutz, tall and lanky, goofy-looking, and the mouth of orthodontia folklore, I couldn’t keep myself out of embarrassing situations. I was legendary. To make matters worse, my family – small as they are – were usually at the helm of witnessing some of my most astounding moments. It’s probably because of them that I learned to grow a thick skin and laugh at myself. Before that, I used to cry.

    A lot.

    Until a few weeks ago, I thought I’d grown out of having what I affectionately call my Lucille Ball Moments. I have kids now, one who is so like her mother, even down to the embarrassing situations. And she cries! Oh, the TEARS, does she cry. She hides her face with her hands. Or the couch. Or a blanket. Or the hole she quickly dug in the ground when you weren’t looking. These kids were supposed to absolve me of my faux pas just by matter of transference.

    Then the universe said, “Not so, my child,” and hit me with a hot plate.

    I do not wear stockings. (Remember this because it will become important later.) I hate them. They make me hot and, for a big-legged person such as myself, they are just the kindling needed to light a fire between my thighs when I walk.

    That may have been more information than you needed at this moment but, remember. I’m providing you with visuals as they will all become important. Maybe. Or maybe I’m just sadistic and have personal issues I need to address.

    So. To summarize: Stockings = hatred and woe on me.

    On this particular day, the day of this instance I am literally humiliating myself to tell you, I decided my outfit wouldn’t suffice without… you guessed it. Stockings. My rationale? It’s getting warm. Spring is coming. They make my heels look sexy. I want to feel like a grown-up. They are fishnet and, therefore, breathable. The tighter-than-death feeling I get around my stomach when I wear them may not be so bad because I’ve been trimming down and, when that happens, my gut is the first to go. I can do this. Stockings are my friend.

    And I sat at my desk doing my desk job. And I ate breakfast. And I worked some more. And I ate a small snack because all the weight loss books say that’s good to do to help boost your metabolism. And I worked some more. And I ate lunch…

    Now. I don’t know about you, but the portions of my lunch are larger than my breakfast or a snack because, by midday, I’m a bit hungry. Yes, I had a snack. But you should typically eat more for lunch than you do for breakfast. I, historically, battle ulcers and other stomach issues. Most of my stomach issues are brought on by stress and a list of foods I haven’t been allowed to eat either at all or in excess since I was fifteen. Whatever of these factors – size of lunch; stress; eating a no-no food from my list – started the next sequence of events, I’m not sure. But I curse them all because, within 30 minutes, I was bubbly.

    And, no, not the Colbie Caillat-type of Bubbly.

    I fidgeted. I moved around. I twisted several times before it dawned on me that my mid-section was being squeezed like a vice grip. I ripped open my desk drawer and produced a pair of scissors to cut the elastic from the support band holding all my insides together until they were a hot lava pool with the gurgling and hissing and popping. In situations like these, one snip is not enough. I’m to the point of eruption. I need 360 degree relief. Several snips later and my belly extended. Praise the ‘lujah, I’ve been reborn. But wait! It was too late! My belly was moaning and I was sweating harder than a Baptist preacher in July.

    The way my office floor is set up is our offices wrapped in walls, marble, and glass doors. Then, just past those structures, a long hall leading to the restrooms. Shared, public stalled restrooms. For the women, three to a facility, introduced by two bowled sinks. For the men… well, I don’t know because I’m not a man and I’ve never, never, ever, ever ever ever ever ever been in the men’s bathroom.

    A year ago, me and some female colleagues of mine sat around discussing our public restroom horror stories and phobias. We all agreed we could not, WOULD NOT, do more than pee in places such as this because who wants to claim ownership of the he-who-smelt-it-dealt-it card? More importantly, poop fright. Poop fright, if you have no earthly idea what I’m talking about, is similar to stage fright. People with stage fright suffer from being unable to perform in front of others. Poop fright? Same thing. Your bowels lock. Your face contorts. I don’t care how much you have to go, your intestines are all but having epileptic seizures trying to keep in what wants to come out.

    My mother, God love her, left the restaurant we were attending to celebrate my college graduation, just to kidnap the keys to my car and DRIVE to my nearby apartment to do her business in peace. Do you understand the gravity of the situation? Because I don’t think you do.

    One of these colleagues told the story of how, during one late night at the office, she was attacked by the call of nature. Since the women’s bathroom was being cleaned at the time she, in all her coolness and hipness, sauntered over to the men’s room. “EW!” we exclaimed. Tisk-tisk, she scoffed, because the men’s room, she explained, had the one thing our restroom was missing: one closed-off stall in a private room with a door. “Ooooooh,” we said, bitter that we had not known of this luxury. “Of course,” she added, “you do have to walk past the urinal. But hey. At least it’s private.”

    At this one moment, I thought of my cool, hip colleague and how that private, closed-off stall past the urinal sounded more than pretty good right now. It sounded heavenly. I checked the halls. Walked the offices, counting the men in-house. One guy on the premises, clickity-clacking away at his laptop, deep in thought. I could do this. I could sneak away to the men’s room unnoticed, do my business without fear, and leave lighter and less bubbly than I came.

    I didn’t have much time. My bladder was a ticking time bomb. I scurried ever so quietly to the den of forbiddeness, rushed to the private room, closed the door and locked it. Phew! Moments later, and just as predicted, I’m lighter and ready to face the world. Oh, private men’s bathroom, where have you been all my life? With a flush and a clothes check, I was ready to leave.

    [wiggles the lock] I said, I was ready to leave.

    [wiggles lock again] I said… I SAID I WAS READY TO LEAVE!

    Y’all.

    I am locked in this bathroom.

    I wish I was joking when I saw the lock wouldn’t turn. Wish I was joking when I say that, for one, desperate half-hour, I turned and turned and turned that lock, hoping to the sweet Jesus it would open. Wish I was joking when I say I took off my watch and shoe, obviously channeling MacGyver, looking for something metal and blunt enough to undo the screws holding the lock in place. Wish I was joking when I began to perspire through – I said THU-ROOOO – my shirt (bra, camisole), armpits a-flow. Wish I was joking when I say my mind raced because, oh my God, how am I going to get out of here? Who’s going to find me? Oh, for the love of God, WHAT IF A MAN COMES IN HERE AND USES THE URINAL? Will I go to jail for perversion? How long before they notice I’m gone? How am I going to explain this to my husband? How am I going to go to the Company picnic after this? How can I raise my head in anything other than shame because sweet mercy I AM FRICKIN’ TRAPPED IN HERE?!

    Wish I was joking when I tell you that it finally dawned on me how to get out…

    …and this was the end result:







    Good thing I spent all those years building up that tough skin. Yep. Goooood thing.

    [SPECIAL NOTE: I am not responsible for making that toilet grody. Yet I am the reason why no one can get in there to clean it. My bad.]

    Cover photo by ~Gothicjade

    Filed under Blog, living2 · Tagged with being, hell-to-the-naw, straitjacket

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