and I alone escaped to tell the tale...

just a simple country girl, but this country girl is nobody's fool


I was awakened first by the music in my head, a dance song, and there across the floor a man with his hand reaching out to me, his body already swaying to the beat. In my dream I rise from my chair like a angel, and matching his rhythm, I glide across the floor into his open arms.
In reality my feet hit the carpet by the side of my bed, my head full of cobwebs, my eyes fighting against the faint light of dawn. The smoky beat and the man are both gone. Morpheus too has deserted me for the moment as I stumble around the bed and find my robe. The black silk is comforting lying against my skin for only a second before my hand goes automatically to scratch the itchy plague on my ass, the one with a name that sounds like a biology project gone awry, lichen planus..
The condition is illusive, more like a punishment from God than the auto immune disease it is purported to be. No one can tell me how I got it, what will cure it, how long it will last, or even how to relieve the symptoms. The do reassure me that it is not contagious, a small comfort.
My little Chinese doctor (who does not have the disease) shows me a spot on her stomach where she had itching. “See, all gone.” I smile and agree, but her methods are doing nothing to relieve me. I let her put the needles into my flesh, I use the herbal wash she provided, and I faithfully drank the tea that looks like something cleaned out of an aquarium. None the less, I am worse. The only thing that has relieved the symptoms for even a little while are the steroids my western doctor gave me. Of course they also caused me to gain 20 pounds even though I was racing through my life like a hamster on a wheel.
I cannot separate the frustration with this condition from the tension of my life Indeed I am told I should not because the two go hand in hand. Work has been unbelievably frustrating for the last few months. Friends that I loved and worked happily with have been let go suddenly with the most flimsy of reasons. It is all about money and power and politics, subjects that I do not consider significant enough to warrant my time. That is why I suppose I will remain in middle management rather than rise to the top with the big ones. What I care about does not matter in the business world but I am suffered because of my talent. I am naïve enough to think that I have no enemies, that if I continue to produce no one will stab me in the back. I know it's a lie of course as I watch the firestorm pass over the cubes consuming good and bad alike.
My laptop says Fri. 6:06 AM, my one day off in two weeks. Still groggy from only 4 hours sleep I heat up some more of the wicked Chinese brew and take my cup to the sofa. The words on the screen soon blur. The cat comes and nestles in the crook of my arm as I stretch out on the sofa. I do not remember falling asleep...
My husband stands in front of the auditorium using sign language. He seems to be quite good at it because everyone is attentive to him. I sit in the silent audience without a clue as to what he is saying. A mumbled voice catches my attention and then a ringing phone.
I am awake and upright again trying to decide if it is the house line or one of the cells. By the time I get to the phone there is no one there. I check the ID and see that the window man has called and most likely my husband has talked to him in his sleep. I realize he may know nothing about it when he wakes but most likely it means our windows have arrived and will be replaced this weekend. I go back to my laptop. The time reads Fri. 8:31 AM, still my day off, but only from the office. I want to write. I always want to write. Sometimes I deny myself even this pleasure, this release. I keep the words and the anger all bottled up inside of me. If I have enemies they are surely kinder to me than I am to myself.
It is now Fri. 12:08, still my day off, but I have curtains to remove along with furniture that sits in front of windows. It means dust and laundry that must be done too. It is the last thing I want to do today, but do it I will. Although they do not know the exact cause of my condition the doctors all agree that it is stress related. I know that if I wanted to be better I would just get into my car today and drive somewhere warm with sand and salt water and the freedom of seabirds flying over my head.
Perhaps tonight I will dream of seagulls...
i lay there listening to the howl of wind and rumble of thunder while the needles imbedded deeply in my flesh did their work. An artificial sensation of heaviness held me fast to the table and any tiny movement sent a shock of electricity outward from the point of the needle like ripples in jello. I stared at my surroundings, a hastily painted room needing an additional coat of chalky white, the Venetian blinds held over from the 50's, clean and sterile. There are no familiar instruments or high tech gadgets, only a tray of glass domes and one closed cabinet, one table. My eyes keep going back to the three piece chart on the wall, a naked Chinese woman quite cheerful about her role as a porcupine for science.. My doctor enters the room in her white coat to check the progress of her handiwork.
"Stick out your tongue," she commands, illustrating with her own. "No, no, too much, like this," I look at her mouth, curious, not ever having thought about a wrong and right way to show a doctor my tongue. I mimic her, closing my wide open mouth and exposing only an inch of my what I hope is an acceptably healthy tongue. She stares for a long time, making no comment. Finally she turns away, talking mostly to herself, "I expect it pinker." I have no idea what this means, but she quickly distracts me by adjusting my metal spikes. "Hurt?" she asks solicitously.
"No, not really. It's just odd," I reply, truthful but hesitant. I need words to describe the feeling, words I don't have. Perhaps they are Chinese words, but having lived my life in ignorance of the language they would provide no more information to me than whales singing. She is busy beside me and I brace for more needles. I have three in each arm, four in each leg, and some around a marvel of Western medicine, my navel. The doctor could not keep the look of shock off her face when I showed her my stomach. "This your bellybutton?" she asks, astutely looking at the perfect contrived navel my plastic surgeon created for me. The scar below and above it have faded from an angry red to a thin white line, but the navel is still alien, totally unlike my original. I laugh with her and explain about the surgery again. She searches for the correct pressure points using my hipbones as landmarks. I feel only the tap but not the sting when these are inserted. I am grateful for once that I hate the crunches that build those muscles into a six pack.
The doctor notes the blisters along my side and hips, the reason for my visit. All that Western medicine has to offer has been exhausted in a search for relief from the itchy rash that has plagued me since the new year rolled over. She is not offended that i come here as a last resort. She works philosophically from this moment forward. As she prepares me for the remainder of the treatment we chat about her life, my life, children, husbands, mothers. We laugh often, finding that we have much in common. All the while she looks for the correct spots, punctures my skin in four places with a needle she complains is too small, and then places one of the glass domes on the spots one by one, When the flame shoots up to heat the cups I must admit I felt like I was visiting the witch doctor, despite every effort to keep my mind open. After the first one I relax and put all my effort into believing.
The wind outside has stopped it's rampage by the time we are done. I am grateful we did not have a direct lightning strike while i am playing pincushion. I put on my clothes and meet the doctor in the front room. We sat and chat barefoot, both pairs of shoes a short space away on the front door mat along with 4 other pair. There is no concept of a receptionist in Eastern medicine, nothing to insulate or separate the patient or the doctor from each other. She writes notes on the form she handed me to fill out when I came in. She gives me a bottle of pills, herbs I am told. I am to take 24 per day and come back next week for a second session. I probe to find out how long to wait for the cure I have been promised. She finds a non offensive way of telling me that I am predictably impatient. I ask how much I owe her for the pills and almost two hours of her time. She details it but the total is $81.00, no debit or credit please, cash or check. I thank her and slip on my shoes, heading out into a world washed clean. There is a rainbow in the sky over the freeway and at least a dozen accidents being scraped up by wreckers and police cars along the way. I steer carefully around the debris and deep puddles, thankful that I was well out of it, and that for now I choose to trust the promise in the sky.







That would be Wrenn's dad holding him on the way to church to be christened. Beside it is Dad with all the family (Eva, Carl, Cindy in arms, Russ on the left and Wrenn on the right) at Camp Haley a few years further along. Next is my Dad,about to give me away. To the right is the 5 year old me, Daddy, and my sister, fishing in Florida. Yes, it was hot and pants only pants were not optional. I remember that trip vividly. We camped in a pop up tent that dad pulled behind the car, sleeping on little shelves they called beds over my parent's heads. All night long I fell off my shelf and landed on my sleeping parents. Oh, and my sister got chased out of the Gulf of Mexico by a crab that was almost as big as the mosquitos. I think we had way more fun than my parents.
Next row, Wrenn holding Jason in the hospital with a proud papa beam on his face. Almost as excited is the picture of Ben with the fish his Dad had caught earlier. I love the next one of a sleepy group, Eva, Dad, and Jason, all in their undies on the floor in front of the TV. Moving ahead a few years our trip to Disneyworld for the 15 year anniversary of the park. Then there is Dad in costume picked by his daughter, "giving" her away at the occasion that was forever to be known as "Wedstock" because of the two hurricanes. God spoke but we did not listen.
In the middle of the last row is a typical activity at our house almost 30 years ago, "horsie, daddy, horsie", and Dad was never too tired to play. To the left is our son with his firstborn and the proud papa beam. On the right, with an older and wiser version of the same look sits the proud Granddad...and the beat goes on...
Gloria Inch, my roommate, was a five foot nothing blue eyed blond. She had a irresistible bubbly laugh and incredible karma. She once sat next to Martin Luther King Jr. on an airplane from Atlanta to Florida. Her parents were elderly retired snowbirds, Canada in the summer and Lakeland FL when it grew cold up there. Everyone who met her fell instantly in love except my parents. They disliked her from the minute they met her for reasons I never understood. I wish I could see her now, but we managed to lose touch somewhere along the way in those pre cellphone, twitter, and facebook times. I know she lived in Hawaii for a while after she married, and then went back to Lakeland where she and her husband ran a marina. If she looks like someone you know, please drop me a line.The black bag my sister hands me is embossed with an “e”, our mutual first initial. Inside are newspapers, clippings, and letters I wrote; mingled stories of death and of a life that happened to a person I once was long ago. The letters come from a time in my existence when I believed I could just turn my face away, and walk in the direction I was pointed without consequences. I page through them, one-sided conversations from the past, a time capsule of people and things forgotten. I am soon overwhelmed, so I push them aside and pick up the plastic bag that is stuffed with newspaper.
Some of the obituaries are cut out neatly along the columns, but others are entire pages where I struggle to find the one she intended me to read. None of the names seem familiar and yet they have a commonality, like characters in a book by a favorite author. They are solid mid-western names mostly Scottish, Irish, English, and German, the sons and daughters of pioneers. Interspersed between the deaths are bits of life, fifty-year wedding anniversaries, new marriages, and a few babies. Confusingly the babies are grandchildren or great grandchildren of the people I once knew, the marriages between strangers whose parents I only vaguely remember. The funerals have all taken place months or years ago, leaving me weighted down with an emotion of untimely remorse, like the white rabbit, running and checking his pocket watch.
I pick up the other envelope again, the one that my mother used to store my letters and mementoes. It is from the Office of Economic Opportunity in Washington. It once contained my application for VISTA, a program similar to the Peace Corp but intended to elevate domestic poverty. Everything from that letter is gone except for a note asking me to explain why I was treated for mental illness. I don’t know if I wrote them back or not. I am still not sure how I could have told them that my parents had insisted on me seeing a psychiatrist when I introduced them to my fiancée. That was only after they found out that you couldn’t actually have a child over 18 committed to a mental institution for wanting to marry someone you don’t like. I wonder if parental insanity could have been used to exclude me from the program?
I open a letter from my erstwhile alma mater and find a picture of myself that I never expected to see again. It is from my tumultuous sophomore year, one punctuated by threats and paranoia, set against a world stage of fear and conspiracy theory. My face is a mask of unruffled serenity, a believable lie. The poor quality photo is from the proof sheet of the school annual. I could not afford to buy my pictures that year. I was cut off from my parent’s financial support due to my stubborn attachment to the boy my father called “the asshole”. The tiny blurred image is made worse by the glue they used to affix it to the letter. The letter was ironically sent to my parents asking them for money. Even many years later when I was divorced, my parents refused to contribute a penny to the school. They blamed Georgetown for allowing the asshole to graduate with honors plus giving him a scholarship to UVA for graduate school.
I open another envelope and discover a terse note from said fiancée. I have taken some liberties with the names.
Dear Mrs. Future MIL from Hell,
Enclosed is $33.00 in payment for the sport coat Elaine bought me. I deducted $3.00 in payment for a collect phone call made by Elaine.
Sincerely,
“The asshole”
I remember the sport coat very well but knew nothing of the repayment. I bought it for him because he had nothing presentable to wear when we went out for dinner. I mentioned it casually to my Mom and she hit the roof. I must have said something to him about her reaction, and that no doubt engendered the letter. Let’s just say they didn’t have a warm friendly relationship and leave it at that.
I finally finish sorting the letters chronologically in an effort to gain control over the mass of emotions I feel. I read only bits of them, but moving on through time I find my entire courtship, marriage, and subsequent divorce detailed in monologue. Any response to my spin on events during that time is lost because, unlike my sentimental sister, I saved very little. Now I am faced with this embarrassing pile of words, most of which are almost too painful to read. It overwhelms me how much effort I put into trying to gain approval rather than validating myself.
I can bear no more and yet I cannot throw the letters away now like I could have long ago. I tell myself that my mother saved them for a reason, although I know she saved everything from notes to the housekeeper to dead flower arrangements. She had everything neatly organized and placed carefully in labeled boxes, tucked away in the gazillion tons of cubic space she built so she could save it all. My sister has become keeper of the flame of insanity that runs in out family and although I know she is trying to pass this particular torch over to me I have no inclination toward succumbing to the obsession.
I am ready to toss the lot into the recycle bin when one catches my eye. It is not from me but from my former MIL. It was written to my mother trying to plead the suit of her only son. I had just visited them so she tells my mother that I am a nice girl and a good cook. She says that until her boy met me he had never “gone steady” with a girl. Then there is this sentence guaranteed to put any parent’s fears to rest. “He bowled and swam with several boys friends and was unconcerned about girls.” I am shaking with laughter as I think of my parent’s probable reaction to this testimony. My MIL goes on to provide references in the form of a Baptist minister, once in DC and now living in Kentucky. My mother has written his address and phone number in her hand on the bottom of the letter. Later in the stack is a letter from the pastor to my mother attesting to the fact that John is a “good boy”.
I encase the letter with rubber bands and start to put them back in the black bag.
I take one final look at the newspaper clippings before tossing them. “One of only two crocheted Christmas Trees In the World” reads the teaser, and this one about Valentine’s Day at the local nursing home, and another that is simply a picture of a cubby nerd with the title “Fantasy Sports Guru”. I gather the papers and deposit them in the recycle bin, grimacing with the thought that some of those people are my relations. Like usual I am spinning my wheels, two steps forward, one step back, but I have come far enough to know that I no longer have the temperament to live in that narrow world.
If I could write a letter in warning to that girl from long ago it would make no difference, because she wouldn’t listen. She is insecure and afraid of losing control, although few people ever guess. She longs to be told she is beautiful, but she does not trust or believe the men who find the nerve to tell her so. The rest think she already knows, but when she looks in the mirror she only sees her flaws. Such is her self-doubt that she ignores men who treat her well and marries the asshole, thinking he is what she deserves. Looking back I have to admit I don’t miss her much, just envy her youth and resilience, and wish she had been more like me. I said a word about this to a friend, as we both looked at the picture of my younger self. Says I, “I had no idea I was beautiful.” Says my dear friend,
“You still are and you still don’t.” I do not blush and stammer. I accept the kindness and feel beautiful for the rest of the day. I repeat the compliment to my husband and he smiles and says,
“He is a wise man.”
The young girl sits and stares at the mirror, her face a mask, her eyes unseeing.

Good news! I’m going to have an over all body tan this summer! My insurance company, the one I work for, is sort of paying for it. I do cough up the co pay for the NBUV tanning booth at the dermatologist office, but they pick up the bulk of the money. I guess I’m getting ahead of myself here, but you know how I love starting in the middle of the story. Okay, let’s get into the way back machine and scoot on over to January. You may recall I blamed my rash on hedgehogs after online research. It seemed so obvious but well, I was wrong. The skin eruption so confounded my family doctor that he treated me for three different things, none of which I actually had. Finally, after I insisted, he conceded that I might need to see a specialist.
Chapter two in my saga began when I met my holistic dermatologist early in May. He was very excited that he knew almost immediately what was causing my relatively rare skin disease. Almost too excited actually, almost gleeful. It’s not that I mind when a very attractive young man finds me interesting, but damn, not because of my itchy red blotches. He numbed my wrist and cut a small shallow hole of skin from my arm. Two weeks later one of his minions, an English challenged lady, called me to tell me cheerfully that the doctor was right. I have an auto immune disease most assuredly related to stress. Well now, that’s going to be easy to fix, right?
I told my daughter about the treatment plan, cortisone cream and the ultra violet light treatment. She asked immediately, “Will you get a tan?” I ponder over this and savor the irony of going to my dermatologist to soak up the exact type of rays I have been avoiding for years because of the danger of skin cancer and premature aging. “Yes,” I reply, “I think so.”
After waiting for 45 minutes in the office for my first session a short attractive dark haired woman came into the waiting room asking for “Mrs. Holy”. I’m feeling a bit self-righteous these days so I raised my hand, picked up my bag and followed the minion into a treatment room. She gave me 3 minutes of instruction and a pair of yellow goggles while I peeled off my clothes. After all this big whoop about the miracle of the lights I am dumbfounded to find I only get 33 seconds per side on my first visit. “Ya vil git extra 5 seconds every time,” she tells me by way of explanation. Hum, this tan may take a while. Back in my clothes I hunt down the minion whose name I still don’t know.
“How long is this going to take,” I ask?
“You ready to go,” she says. It is a statement not a question.
“No,” I mean how many times do I have to do this?
“Oh, two or three month, depends.”
This is not the answer I need to hear. I want a pill for this, a miracle drug. Unfortunately there is very little research being done on annoying skin rashes in middle aged women. I know I should be grateful because I am truly blessed with good health. This is neither life threatening or debilitating. Business goes on as usual. There is no support group to join or special diet to follow. There is nothing I can do to affect the outcome except learn to relax and accept the things I cannot change. Damn, it’s going to be a long itchy summer but at least I will have my first tan in thirty years.
I planned on giving up OM after twenty years, but now that world finals are over, I’m not so sure I can. I put my arm around my husband tonight as closing ceremony fireworks lit up the Iowa landscape and thought back over the last three days. Elizabeth, a 12 year old from PA took apart her parent’s dishwasher to make a penguin and took her team to first place. The Canadian group, in total innocence, had a membership sign that featured Beaver flavored gumballs. Aye? Another cute bunch of middle school kids came up with a team name of “The Chubbys”. I watched animated meerkats be taught to serve spaghetti by waiters with fake French accents, sighed quietly through 20 or more fart and poop jokes, and saw at least 10 children from do the impossible because no one ever told them they couldn’t. Now honestly, how can I walk away from this crazy creative worldview?
The lady at Kroger asked me if I had fun plans for the holiday in that polite impersonal way store clerks have of making conversation. I actually prefer indifference in my checkout clerks, but I live in a small town, so unless I am talking on my cell phone, I am required to make nice. “No,” I replied, “but I’m going out of town tomorrow for the rest of the week.” I give no further details although she looks at me in an anticipatory way. Searching for a new topic she compliments my cloth bags.
“These are really nice,” she says, fluffing out the tiny pillow into a full size silky black and white stripped grocery bag. “Where did you get them?” I confess to buying them at Whole Foods and her enthusiasm is only slightly diminished. That’s when I realize that as usual, the bagger is putting things into plastic before placing them in my bags, thus negating my green efforts. For the umpteenth time I explain to them that they will not hurt my bags by putting the groceries directly into them. Their eyes do not betray a trace of comprehension.
“Have a wonderful trip,” intones the clerk, and then, like she was sending a soldier off to battle she says, “and be safe.” Her sincerity sounds genuine, but I am not tempted to share anything about my dread of today’s journey.
As I walk through the parking lot I rehearse the mind numbing drive to Kentucky and then on to Iowa, both places I would be happier seeing from 20,000 feet than up close and personal. This is my 20th and last year volunteering for the creative problem solving competition called OM. The fire I once felt for it has passed. It’s time to let it go. After the closing ceremonies on Saturday we will head back to Kentucky and the final gunfight at the OK Corral. The weapons will hopefully be words, but with my family you never know for sure.
After June 1 I am optimistic that I will never have to see my brother again in the flesh. I have searched my memory bank for happy stories that involve him, but the only one I can come up with is one winter day when I was 4 and he pulled my sister and I on a sled through the freshly fallen snow. I later found out that my mother made him do it to get us out from under foot. I sometimes feel a bit wistful when other people mention a relationship with a brother, but in truth I am mostly indifferent. You cannot mourn something you never had.
I ran a fever last night and my husband said to me, “You don’t have to go you know.” As tempting as that sounded I told him firmly, “Yes, I do.” I pulled my other suitcase out for him to start packing. When it was time for me to sleep it was open across the bed so he moved it to let me lie down. I woke at three with fever dreams and a sore throat. The suitcase lies on the living room sofa, open, with a cat sleeping comfortably inside. I made coffee and sat down beside the cat to write out the injustice in the world. I think about how my brother hates cats, hates me, hates himself. Last night’s dreams retreat just out of my reach except for this feeling that no matter how things play out I see clearly that I am the fortunate child in my family. Artemisia snores in a soft contented sleep, oblivious to hatred in the world
The screech came up from the basement with the tone and volume every Mom recognizes as a 911 cry. The allspice I was measuring dropped to the floor and I raced to the sound of her voice, my feet barely touching the steps. I was ready for anything, blood, fire, or perhaps one of the deer we saw last evening running amuk through the basement.
“Mom”, she screeched, “There’s a frog!! It’s on the computer plug. Oh God, I touched it!!” There were more explanation points that that, but you get the gist of the situation. Relieved, I did my best heroine routine, wondering how the child I introduced to bugs and snakes at such a young age developed this girly thing about tiny terrified creatures. She was standing there pointing toward the wall plug and looking like the child I remember waking in the middle of the night with a bad dream. Fetching a cloth from the ragbag as to not injure the sensitive creature, I picked up the half dollar size green frog from the top of the plug where it sought shelter and carried it outside. I asked her if she wanted to see it before I let it go but she answered with an emphatic, “No!”
I left him sitting there by the flowerpot, eyes adjusting to the sunlight and body coming up to the temperature of the warm morning. Exposed, he is such a small monster, but like the ones in my daughter’s long ago nightmares, he achieved mammoth proportions in her imagination.
Back upstairs I pick up the spice jar from the floor and go back to the task of making carrot cake, happy to still be useful to my oh so grown up daughter. Although the storms are never completely over between us, we navigate this mother daughter thing deftly, acknowledging our very different personalities and delighted to find we have much in common regardless. Despite her fear of tiny scurrying and hopping things, I have never known a braver soul. She has endured and grown stronger with each blow that would have destroyed a less resilient person.
I look for an end to this story, a moral, but I am too close to see one. This priceless relationship began the day she was born and will not end, even when I am gone. I live as long as she lives, as long as she remembers, as long as there are noises in the night.
I asked Brook if I could post this picture and she said, Quote: Sure-any except the one where my eyes shine red and my tongue is hanging out are great! Unquote. I hear and obey Brook. I will also keep my promise to CEO not to publish his picture because of that witness protection thing. Oh damn, I didn't mean to tell that either.Guacamole, mango salsa, and bean dip with Corn Chips
Goat cheese bites with Homemade Oat Cakes
Assorted crudités with Roasted Red Pepper Feta dip and Tzatzik
Maple Dijon Salmon
Tarragon Chicken Salad
Spinach Salad with Strawberries and Poppy Seed Dressing
Roasted New Potatoes with Garlic, Rosemary, and Olive Oil
Syrian Green Beans
Squash Boras
Frosty Lemon Squares
Wheat Free Dark Chocolate Orange Cake with Ganache
Spellbound Cabernet

I know it’s weird, but I love airports and really enjoy traveling. As long as I’m being honest, I also need to tell you that I really dislike my brother. I won’t bore you with details, but trust me if you met him you would too. You can imagine how conflicted I was when I realized early last week I was going to have to make room in an already jammed packed schedule to fly to Kentucky to face him down in court Monday afternoon. It was with very mixed emotions I sacrificed my frequent flyer miles to make what was suppose to be the last chapter in the endless saga of setting my father’s estate. Sunday I got a call from my lawyer. He advised me that the opposing lawyer had come down with an unlikely case of swine flu after visiting Texas and would not be able to make it to court. I told him my ticket was non refundable and I suspected that the only swine she has an association with was my piggy brother. He told me he would see what he could do.
An hour later he called me back and said to come anyway. I could give my deposition to the judge and the others could testify later. Not good, but the best we could do. This morning I got up at 3, walked into the airport at 4:15 and caught a 5:30 flight to Charlotte NC. My best black heels clicked authoritatively from one end of the Charlotte airport to the other, over a mile in around 10 minutes with the help of moving walkways. I was just in time for my flight to Louisville, but unfortunately it was not in time for me. The lady at the desk announced it was going to be delayed and I should be back around 8:45. I had an hour and a half, enough time for breakfast, so I headed down to the only place available, the NASCAR bar. I had overcooked eggs, really bad coffee, indifferent service, and a thirty something man at the table beside me who was delighted to get carded for the beer he ordered.
When I got back to the gate I still had an hour to wait before the sign rolled over to cancelled. An hour later I had exhausted all avenues and had to call my lawyer and let him know that the pigs won and I wouldn’t be in court today. My flight back to Richmond arrived a little after 12 at which time I had spent 8 hours traveling to Charlotte for breakfast. I decided to salvage the remains of the day by getting a short nap and then starting cooking for the party this Saturday. In case you have forgotten, it’s not to late to RSVP. My daughter has invited a lot of her friends at this point and the party promises to be a bit out of hand, but I can assure you that since I never made it to Kentucky you are safe from swine flu. See you there.


Like most of you I have had a very busy weekend. I am pleased to report that I actually wrote something serious for publication. Yeah! I also went to the gym for many hours, shopped, paid bills, did laundry, cleaned house, and went out dancing, the usual stuff. I was sorting out things in my husband's den Saturday morning and I found something that got my attention. It was the box that once contained a handgun. Now I am not a gun expert mind you. In fact, I have an intense dislike of weapons in general. What caught my eyes was the warning label on the box. You know the advisories they seem to slap on every thing today like, “Don’t use your hairdryer in the shower” and “Remove infant before folding stroller.” This is the note found on the outside of the gun box.
Warning!
- Discharging firearms in poorly ventilated areas, cleaning firearms, or handling ammunition may result in exposure to lead, a substance known to cause birth defects, reproductive harm, and other serious physical injury.
- Have adequate ventilation at all times
- Wash hand thoroughly after exposure.
I'm sorry, but what is wrong with people? It’s a GUN and they are warning me about lead poisoning? Shaking my head, I opened the box and there it is in small red print on the inside.
Warning
You risk injury or death by handling this firearm.
Damn, who knew?

Every spring my father would get that nostalgic look in his eye, often over Sunday dinner. I knew the story that was coming but my father had a rare gift. Even retold a hundred times he had such perfect timing that his audience clung to every word. “When Evelyn and I got married I had a brand new 1936 Packard Touring car. It had shades on the back windows….” He went on for some time about the glorious details of what seemed to me a Dr Seuss contraption, the most amazing car that was ever on the road. The story always ended the same, “… and if I had it today, can you imagine how much it would be worth?” I would sigh and grieve with him over the loss, remarkably like his fishing stories, “…don’t know how I let that one get away.” I calculated in my mind how my life would be different if we still owned it. The world would beat a path to our door to stand and marvel, and we would be rich beyond our wildest dreams. I found a picture of one in mint condition on line this morning. It is for sale for $22,500. Yes, my father did have a way with a story.
I thought of him this morning as I tackled an odious task, the cleaning of the garage. Now as far as I can remember the garage only had a car in it one time, back in the eighties when we moved into the house. I remember backing my green Pontiac station wagon into it to unload boxes. I believe some of those boxes were deposited in my attic and have been there ever since. You all must understand by now that I am in a mixed marriage. The husband and I are as different as night and day. In fact he sleeps days and I sleep nights, a perfect incompatibility and also likely the secret of our long marriage. His theory on a successful life is ending up with the most stuff when it’s over. My theory on success is being about to sort out trash from treasure, and coincidentally getting rid of the trash.
We each have a child like ourselves and one that combines our proclivities in a oddly bipolar way. My daughter and I have an understanding that if we want to throw something away we actually have to take it to Goodwill or the dump ourselves, else it will boomerang back to some secret corner of the closet or garage or even the car trunk to prevent it from being lost forever. I realize how much my middle child is his father’s son as I open the dozen plastic tubs he left here when he moved to Seattle. They are a collection of childhood toys, computer parts, firecrackers, gum wrappers, Chinese fortunes, old Victoria’s Secrets catalogues, excreta infinitum. There is no way to sort through them for him without invoking his ire at some future date, most likely on a holiday when he comes to visit, but I do consolidate them a bit and come up with one less plastic tub.
His father sleeps this morning, but knowing I am cleaning the garage, I am certain it is a fitful sleep. He has long ago given up on trying to stop me from throwing away his collections of plastic bags and bottles, cardboard boxes, and broken or worn out household appliances and goods. I long ago quit asking him if I could discard things. I let him hang on to the jeans and shoes with holes, but I draw the line at broken keyboards and monitors that are incompatible with any of our computers. I do give him a few places to indulge the chaos that makes him happy, his personal closet, a cabinet or two in said garage, his media room where I can close the door. We do not argue about it any longer. In this area of our life together I am determined and he is resigned.
My oldest, the composite child, is moving into his own home this weekend. He and his wife were snuggled comfortably in a lovely one bedroom apartment but one small baby changed that in short order. When he left for the coast some years ago he and my d-i-l discarded perhaps three quarters of their collected stuff. What he could not bear to discard he put in plastic tubs and I think you may be about to guess where those are stashed. I know he choose well on the things he kept. I am thinking of the delight of his son upon discovering a giant plastic tub filled with brightly colored Lego blocks, another with laser tag guns and helmets, not to mention the Lionel train set with all accessories. What he may not know is that under my bed I have hidden his favorite storybooks from childhood, something I simply could not let slip away. I like to think my father would be pleased.

My daughter’s voice came from the kitchen, “Are there suppose to be flames shooting from the pan on the stove?” She’s had a rough week of working noon to nine in order to train new staff, plus she had a job interview in northern Virginia on Monday morning. She got the news Thursday that she was top on the list of applicants, but unfortunately the contract for the job had been lost. They told her to check back the first of June. I’m so wondering why they headhunted her if there was a possibility they had nothing to offer. Not that this was the first thing on my mind at the moment.
I dropped what I was doing and made a “come as you are” dash to the kitchen. I had been in the slow process of getting undressed and the slacks and shoes I wore that day had already been discarded. I had on my white thong and the tight tee shirt I had worn under my jacket at work. I grabbed the pan off the stove and clicked off the burner. My husband ambles in looking sheepish. “I can’t believe I forgot about that pan.”
“What were you cooking,” my daughter asks, gazing at the still bubbling liquid in the skillet. Her father, unabashed, explains his theory on cleaning pans. “I always put a little soap and water in the pan and put it back on the stove. It cooks the grease off.” My daughter stares at him for a second. “My father sets water on fire and my mother is in the kitchen in her underwear. No wonder I didn’t get that job.”
I’m sorry dear. I wanted to give you a normal life.
There are two kinds of people in the world, ones who have to explain things and ones who don’t. Guess which kind I am?
Okay, I’m going to have a party and you are invited, but we need to get some stuff sorted up front. First, I do not do windows. I want that clearly understood. If you cannot abide the spider web collection in my kitchen windows bring a bottle of windex and some paper towels when you come. Second, the house needs painting, not the brick part mind you, but well, the windows, maybe a door or two. Third, if you are traveling from a distance or plan on being other than sober when the evening is over there are many flat surfaces on which to sleep, but privacy may be an issue. We’re all friends, right?
I know you’re asking yourself, “Now why would I want to attend a party at the home of this compulsive explainer?” I guess I should insert some positive notes. The house will not be immaculate but it will be acceptably hygienic. I am an excellent cook and I will be making fabulous food, food I am not allowed to eat, but you can. There will be too much of it and I will insist on you taking some home with you. There will be wine and beer and soft drinks and whatever you decided to bring. Wine will be served in wine glasses because I have about 500 of them. It’s a long story but I’ll be glad to tell you when you come.
You may get to meet my girl but you may not tell her that I talk about her all the time on my blog. She pretends she does not know about my blog. It’s a game we play. You will certainly get to meet Mr. Spellbound and you will most likely find him charming. You will get to meet my 5 cats and you will go home with cat hair on your clothing. I apologize in advance. Wait, that’s another negative. Did I tell you there will be dancing? I have ordered a warm dry evening and we can dance out on the deck under the starlight. If nature does not cooperate we can dance in the basement unless we have a hurricane. The two hurricanes we had on my daughter’s wedding weekend flooded my basement and the back yard had a river running though it. On a positive note bugs were not as much of a problem as we had anticipated for an outdoor wedding in August.
So, there it is folks, the date is May 16, the time is anytime you get here until you leave, but I might narrow that down a bit later. Breakfast will be served if you stay over. Mimosas and homemade biscuits will be on the menu. I have still not come up with a theme for the event so I may just go with my usual putting lipstick on a pig type of affair. As this is all rather amorphous but I will fill in the blanks as I go. Updates will be posted as things pop into my head. If you are not sufficiently horrified by the length and insanity of the invite put your RSVP in comments and I will email my address.
A dear friend of mine suggested I share this with everyone. I know I'm supposed to leave you laughing but occasionally I have the need to share something more personal, closer to my soul. The non de plume will be familiar to you I think and now you will know from whence it came. You will also see the date, so those who know me will also know I have reinvented myself since then. Still, spellbound lives always, right below the surface....
SPELLBOUND
I ran again in dreams last night, my feet not touching the ground
Barefooted through the clover field
Between the house where my grandmother lived and my own
Back when I was a light princess, free from gravity,
a time traveler headed for the marvels of tomorrow.
Waking I find that it is dark and windy
and I am held to earth by a string so thin and worn
That any minute it may break and I will be tossed and blown without control.
Again today I take precautions
So the wind will not lift me
Gathered many sweet and madding weights
and glued them fast onto my frame
and while my voice protests confinement
I've sealed all my escapes with bricks and
Trapped myself here inside protection
So I cannot float away
or even move.
Winter 2003
Saturday I planned to write for an hour and then clean the house. My daughter came upstairs dressed for the gym, with an agenda for the two of us for the day. Body pump at 8:30, a bit of cardio, and then power shopping. Two malls and many hundreds of dollars later I have one really cute outfit and a few lacy silk items, and she is weighted down with two shopping bags full.
Not sure how we ended up at the sex shop, I think it had something to do with my daughter wanting a plaid skirt. I had been in Priscilla’s one time before, but going with a companion emboldened me. I strolled over to the toy section to browse and after a few minutes she joined me. I am reaching back into all the books I have read on parenting and trying to form the appropriate words in my head for dildo/vibrator shopping with my adult daughter. Noting comes to mind. Right before the silence becomes uncomfortable the girl says,
“I want one with remote control.” I doubt that she was prepared for the response that came immediately to my lips,
“OMG so do I”! After that icebreaker all vestiges of hesitation were gone. We looped through the store examining and discussing everything. She rifles through the sale table. We take pictures to amuse our friends. We discuss options (very scientifically) with the little red headed clerk who puts the batteries in our purchases to make sure they work.
An hour later we left the store with a lot of things that used to arrive at people’s houses in “a plain brown wrapper, no returns or exchanges”. We sat in the car and opened our surprise grab bag, only ten dollars, guaranteed to be at least a $40 value. My girl hands me the one piece stretch lace body stocking and says, “This looks like you Mom.” I think it’s the nicest compliment she’s ever given me. I do hope she intended it to be a compliment.
Both of us were hungry at this point so we grabbed a coffee at Starbucks and walked next door to Panara for soup. Our conversation is punctuated with giggles. The girl says, “Well, that was an interesting thing to do on Easter weekend.”
I pause with my spoon mid way to my mouth. “Well, it is about resurrection you know.” We burst into laughter again, turning the dreary day into summer for us both.
Now I need to put on my saucy French maid outfit and clean house. Happy Easter all.


This was the headline on the email that appeared in my work inbox Friday morning:
ATTENTION ASSOCIATES: Due to system limitations we were unable to exclude you from this communication. However, this communication is not intended for you. Please disregard this communication in its entirety.
I pondered over this statement for some time before reading over the remainder of the epistle. Now like most of you, I get a lot of ignorable emails that I delete without reading. Normally this would have been one of those, but because I was told to ignore it I pored over every word, including the unintelligible attached document. It was about some legal issues I had never heard of and did not care to, but the disclaimer at the top compelled me to read. I was almost convinced that I was part of some twisted corporate psychological experiment but finally concluded that no one at my place had enough free time or was clever enough to devise this sort of plot. I determined that whoever sent it was an idiot and I certainly did not have time to entertain it further.
In fact work has been so exceedingly demanding lately even reading critical email is a luxury, but Friday I had a slight respite, as I was the only person in my department. Without interruptions I was able to accomplish much more productive work and even have a few minutes of free time, so I turned my attention to a small personal annoyance that has been plaguing me, a quarter size itchy spot on the inside of my wrist. It started three months ago as a blister of bee sting size and has gradually grown to the point of being unignorable. Being involved in the health care industry I have access to numerous on line diagnostic resources and just enough false expertise to think I can substitute that for a medical degree.
As I stumble about in the TMI graphic pictures of skin rashes, I am astounded and horrified by the pustules and lesions that can appear on the human body. Finally I discover one less horrendous that seems to look exactly like my minor problem. I page through the description and I am smugly patting myself on the back for the genius of my medical expertise until I come to the cause of my condition. The most likely culprit seems to be a fungal infection caused by contact with a hedgehog.
This stops me dead in my tracks of course as I walk backwards through my mind trying to remember any random hedgehog encounters. I know they are certainly adorable creatures and while I would find picking up one irresistible, they are not native to this continent. It seems highly unlikely I have that particular fungi and even if I had I did not know the treatment. It was time to call the doctor. I arrived in his office a few hours later and held out my arm. “Well,” he said very scientifically, “Looks like a fungus.” I am vindicated and braced for his question about recent encounters with hedgehogs when he moves on. “Of course, it could be some sort of autoimmune disorder. Maybe we should start you on a round of steroids.” I start shaking my head no before the words come out of my mouth. Both my husband and my daughter had been subjected to steroid drugs recently and I already knew the side effects.
“What would be the treatment for a fungus?” I ask, still trying to remember the hedgehog encounter.
“Oh, we would use a topical ointment for a week and see if it clears up. I could give you an injection of steroids if you prefer.” I can see he still favors the shotgun approach.
“Let’s try the cream first. If that doesn’t take care of it I’ll consider the steroids later.” I am thinking that I’ve had this for months now and another week is not going to mean life or death. He writes out the script and hands it to me. As he turns to leave he glances over at my iPhone lying on the counter.
“Is that mine?” He looks confused for a second and then realizes he has left his new iPhone on the opposite counter. My doc is a member of my gym and I noted he had been there playing with his new phone recently.
“You would know immediately if you tried to use mine. It’s password protected,” I explain.
“Oh, I just slide mine open, no password. I don’t really have anything on it except porn,” he quips with a wicked little smile that lets me know he’s joking. I think. Leaving the office I marvel at the strange relationship I have with my doctor, a man who has seen me naked, does my annual pap smear and breast exam while making every effort to be professional, and can still kid with me about porn when I have my clothes on. That thought is soon displaced by images of hedgehogs as I drive across the street to the pharmacy.
Back at work I check my email first and my other mystery of the day is still there. I can’t decide if I should delete it or not. Finally with impending meetings in the afternoon I dismiss my hedgehog theories, my young doctor’s porn comment, and my strange email with one final click, thankful that even my mundane world still holds enough mystery and intrigue enough to keep me amused.