Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Occupy This

For the last several weeks I've been trying to figure out what the "Occupy" movement is really about. Is it a grass-roots reflection of economic frustration in our country? Is it a project undertaken by bored, attention-seeking citizens to kill time? Is it a viable movement that will influence the outcome of the upcoming presidential election? I dunno. I've been watching the television news coverage of the gatherings of protesters in various cities in the United States, trying to get a feeling for what it is they're trying to accomplish, and I'm still not sure I get it. Maybe if my husband were to be laid off and we were not getting his healthy paycheck every two weeks, I'd be more inclined to feel camaraderie with the "ninety-nine percent". Maybe not. I have a few friends and relatives who think the Occupy movement is a great thing, but to me, seems  too diffuse, disorganized, and disruptive to be taken seriously.  As a writer and free speech advocate, I fully support the right of people to protest peacefully, Occupants included. However, when they choose to hold protests at hotels or ports or other locations where big businesses conduct their daily operations, the people who are hurt most are the employees of those businesses, not the executives, and that to me is at odds with what the Occupy movement claims to stand for. And I don't think I'm the only person who feels this way.

Saturday, October 29, 2011

Don't Take Candy From Strangers - Unless, Of Course, It's Halloween

Why is everyone so seemingly surprised that there's an obesity problem in our country? I mean, we do live in the land of plenty. Why shouldn't we be allowed to celebrate our wealth and abundance with a little overindulgence? Especially during the holiday season. Beginning with Halloween and continuing through New Year's, food is all around us, and not much of it is of the healthy variety. Have you been to Target or Wal-Mart this week? There's more Halloween candy, cookies, cakes, etc. on the shelves than produce. And that, my friends, is not necessarily a bad thing. We may be overweight in the United States, but at least we're enjoying our sweets. If God hadn't meant for us to enjoy sugar, she wouldn't have made our tongues with an entire section for tasting sweet foods, now, would she? I for one plan on eating my share of candy corn and chocolate mini-candy bars this weekend. Why should kids have all the fun? Yes, I'm 50, and yes, I should know better than to eat too much junk food, but the way I figure, if I've been getting away with it for fifty years, it must not be THAT bad for me. I don't have diabetes. I still have my teeth. And my friends always know they can count on me for a chocolate fix when they need one. And, well, if it does kill me one day, I'm gonna die with that proverbial smile (and a smear of Dove chocolate) on my face. Please don't pray for me to see the error of my ways and start eating healthier. If I go to Hell for overindulging in sugar, at least I'll be surrounded by kindred spirits.

Monday, October 24, 2011

Working Girl

After being unemployed and doing volunteer work for the better part of three years now, I'm not sure I'll EVER find a job again. I've had a few interviews during this period, but no offers. And it's not like I'm not applying for many jobs. I've probably sent/emailed/faxed more than one hundred resumes for a variety of jobs, all of which I was sure I was qualified for. It's quite discouraging.
I'm currently an "on-call" employee for the county library system, which means I work when regular staff are out sick or on leave. While I do get paid for this work, I hesitate to call it my job. My schedule is erratic, and there are stretches of weeks when I don't work at all. I guess anyone who's been a temp or a substitute teacher can relate to my predicament. I always try to do good work when I'm filling in for staff, but I have to admit that I'm not very motivated to do great work - I mean, where's my incentive? Doing great work won't get me a raise or a promotion. So I've settled into doing good-enough-for-government-work work. And it seems to be, pardon the pun, working for me. I get paid, I get called for shifts when they're available, and I now have a reason to get out of my house other than going to the grocery store. I have lots of free time for writing and house projects, and since my husband works and makes a good salary, we're not hurting for money. Still, I can't help but feel there's something wrong with this picture.
When I worked, I enjoyed bringing home a paycheck. I also enjoyed interacting with my coworkers and customers and getting to know them. And I had a schedule that gave structure to my week. In my current situation, it's hard to make plans and appointments with certainty because I'm never sure when I'm going to be working. I'm not entirely out of the loop with regard to who's who and what's what in the library, but I'm sure I'm missing out on a few things that would give me a clearer idea of what's going on with "the bigger picture."
I'm pretty sure I'll find a job sooner or later. I live in Northern Virginia, the land of plenty when it comes to jobs, so there's bound to be one with my name on it. I just hope that when I get the offer, I won't be so used to this on-call lifestyle that I turn it down. You'll be among the first to know if I do.

Monday, October 17, 2011

Let Go of Your Ego

I was sure that wrinkles and gray hair were the worst aspects of my frightening descent and bumpy landing on that rocky terrain known as middle age. But that, my friends, was before my colonoscopy last week. Yes, that humbling  rite of midlife passage, the one that so much has already been written about by humorists much more humorous than I. Since so much has already been said about this procedure and its effect on the body and mind of those who have had it done, I will try to keep this brief and only moderately self-pitying. But there are a few things I've learned from this particularly unpleasant medical exam that I'd like to share with you. First, I will never, ever drink a clear, lemon-flavored beverage again, for as long as I live. Even if I have to have another colonoscopy. That's how much I hated drinking it. Not only did it make me poop every twenty minutes, I felt like I was gonna throw up. (Luckily, I didn't, but even writing about it now I feel my stomach churning.) Second, I will never, ever complain again about a short bout of diarrhea. There's nothing like running to the toilet every twenty minutes all night and morning after drinking said lemony laxative to eliminate colorless, malodorous fluid from one's bowels to make an occasional  loose stool seem like a walk in the park. And lastly, and perhaps worst of all, was the part of the process when I was lying on the table being briefed about the procedure by my gastroenterologist and I realized that his jokes about colonoscopies were way funnier than anything I've ever said or written. To add insult to injury, I couldn't come up with any witty comebacks for him. Oh, the horror! I was so preoccupied with trying desperately not to fart that I had no mental energy  for bantering. 
Now that the procedure is behind me (sorry) and I am feeling good, I try to convince myself that it really wasn't that bad, and if I had to do it again I'd be fine. But that's a big, fat lie. Those forty-eight hours of preparing for the procedure, getting it done, and recovering from it seemed like forty-eight years. Hmmm...add that to my real age of 50, and I'm the equivalent of 98 years old now. No wonder I'm so tired today!

Monday, October 10, 2011

The Thing about Thongs

I was walking down the street the other day with a younger, hipper friend of mine when two lovely, leggy young women strutted past us wearing jeans that appeared to have been painted on their taut, curvy booties. With a mixture of envy and judgmentalism, I turned to my friend and said, "Okay, where are their panty lines? Haven't they heard of underwear? I mean, as cute as their little pre-baby-birthing butts are, do they really want the whole world to see them under their jeans?" She replied matter-of-factly, "Oh, they're probably wearing thongs. That way they won't have panty lines under their jeans. It makes their butts look nice and smooth." Duh! I hadn't thought that they might be wearing thongs. People my age don't wear thongs. Or at least we shouldn't wear them. Even our significant others don't want us to wear them. They just point up how saggy and flat our butts have gotten. I grew up in the pre-thong era (this was the era just after dinosaurs became extinct on the historical timeline) when panty lines were inevitable under tight clothing. But it wasn't a problem  because everyone else had them too. Nowadays, if you have the dreaded VPLs, you're showing the world not only your underwear, but also how clueless you are about making the most of your ass-ets. Well, at the risk of being labeled a prude or an old fogey, I'm going to have to say no thanks to thongs. Not only am I too "mature" for them, they're uncomfortable, they necessitate more shaving, and they don't sell them in multi-packs at WalMart, so I'm not buying them. I'm saving my money for my next pair of Spanx, thanks.

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

F-F-Fifty is not the new Forty

Take it from someone who just turned 50- you can just forget you ever heard that  pseudo-comforting phrase, "Fifty is the new forty." I celebrated my half-century mark on September 24th, and let me tell you, ain't no way 50 is anything like 40. The two ages are as different as Jon Stewart and Rick Perry. Nothing in common, nada, zilch, zip. Turning 40 was, for me, not such a big deal. I didn't really look or feel significantly older than I did in my 30's, and I was confident that most doors would open to me if I knocked on them hard enough . Oh, and I had a pretty good photo on my driver's license then, too, which made me feel good about my appearance since the DMV seems to take pride in making even the most attractive people look hideous in their driver's license photos. Turning 50, though, was a complete game changer for me. The only groups that court me and my money now are AARP, the alumni association of my college, and long-term care providers. Employers don't want me (I've had three interviews and no offers in the past few months) any more. Neither do fashion designers, whose new and trendy styles make me look like a woman who's trying in vain to relive her forties. Not pretty. Oh, and I had to turn in my driver's license with the flattering photo on it and get a new one with a black and white photo in which I am not smiling -- not because I didn't want to smile, but because smiling is not allowed by the Virginia DMV in driver's license photos. Also not pretty. Aches and pains are now a surefire conversation starter with my peers, not the conversation killer they were a mere decade ago.
I can only wonder with trepidation what other unwanted changes 50 will bring my way. Will I soon be partaking of the "early bird" special at my favorite restaurant on the weekend?  Will I happily accept the grocery store bagger's offer to carry my bags to the car for me? Will I be one of those people who doesn't request but demands the AARP discount at hotels I stay in? I promise to keep you, pardon the pun, posted.

Monday, September 26, 2011

I TURNED FIFTY - NOW WHAT?

Well, I'm happy to report I survived the Big Day. I am now 50 years old. Friends, family and coworkers are all telling me that turning 50 is no big deal. And to them I want to say, Shut the f**k up! It IS a big deal, and I AM getting old. There's no need to whitewash it. We Americans live in a youth-obsessed culture, and I am no longer youthful. Sure, there are times when I feel youthful, but that feeling only lasts until my tennis elbow acts up,  or I catch a glimpse of my butt in the mirror and see new dimples forming on top of my cellulite. I try to cheer myself up by reminding myself that along with age comes wisdom. However, this only works until I realize I don't know what today's date is.  I must admit I'm looking forward to a few things that will happen as I navigate my fifth century of life, one of them being that I will no longer have to buy or use tampons. That will be superb! I'm also looking forward to inheriting some money from my father when he passes away. That sounds awful, I know. I do not, repeat, DO NOT want my father to die any time soon, nor do I think he owes me any money when he does die. But if he wants to leave me a few bucks, I'd have to respect his last wishes, now, wouldn't I?  I definitely wouldn't spend it all at once. That would be very un-wise of me to do...
...but let me get back to the present. I'm adjusting to this new number that is my age as best as I can. I am grateful for friends, family and good health. I have a great husband and I live in a nice home. I wouldn't trade any of these things for another shot at youth. No, the only "shot" at youth I'm considering at 50 is a shot of Botox in between my eyebrows. Stay tuned...

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

FIfty is Nifty - NOT!

This is not an easy post to write. Not only am I reluctant to admit that I am about to turn f-f-f-fifty soon, but it's literally hard to write this because my fingers and hands are achy with what I can only assume is arthritis, the bane of those of us entering or in the half-century club. In a few weeks, I'll be fifty years old. Officially. I've been telling people I'm almost fifty for the past several months because I thought that would help to cushion the blow when the dreaded date actually arrived. But even so, I am still not loving the thought of very soon becoming a has-been to advertisers and employers. Fifty is NOT nifty. Not in my book. I'd gladly give up my AARP discount at the Holiday Inn in exchange for better eyesight, healthy joints, and naturally blonde hair. I know there's no way to stop the clock from ticking, but that doesn't mean I have to be happy about it. When I'm struggling to keep this aging thing in perspective as the Big Day gets imminent,  I try to remember something my father in his infinite and blunt wisdom told me. He said,  "You think 50 is bad? Just wait til you're 75!" Thinking about him saying that to me always lifts my mood a bit. If only it would lift my sagging face, too. Oh, well. I suppose that boost will have to be left to a plastic surgeon to accomplish.

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Happiness is for Suckers Like Me

Philosophers, pundits, preachers -- all of them have tried to tell us how to be happy in our mortal coils. While I greatly appreciate their thoughts on the matter, I have come to my own conclusions about the big H, and today I am going to share it with you, even though you didn't ask me to:  Happiness can be bought for five bucks at 7-Eleven.  I was truly, deeply happy for a few moments the other day when I had in my possession a fresh pack of Marlboro Lights and a cup of hot coffee that i had just acquired at said 7-Eleven store. With these items in my hands, I knew that the next few minutes of my life would be filled with pure sensory pleasure. I would get to feel cigarette smoke slide silkily into my lungs, and then chase that great feeling with another one, a sip of hot lightly creamed coffee slipping over my tongue and down my throat. Bliss! But, wouldn't you know it, right after this happy thought entered my brain and released a mega-dose of endorphins into my bloodstream, I was faced with the maddening reality of a match that wouldn't light after repeated strikes and a broken cigarette lighter. Shit! I wasn't going get to ingest that winning combination of smoke and coffee after all. Happiness, that fleeting moment of everything being just the way it should be, was jerked away from me, leaving me alone with an opened pack of cancer sticks and a rapidly cooling cup of weak, convenience store java. 
But have no fear and only limited pity for me, reader. Being the pleasure-seeker that I am and always have been, my search for happiness continues, and while I'm not sure where I'll find it, I'm gonna start patronizing convenience stores more often. Because, as it turns out, money can buy happiness, especially at 7-Eleven.

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Earthquake Shake

Earthquake you are
Not my friend
I don't like you
I won't pretend
Your destructive nature
Is beyond my ken

Earthquake you really
Dealt me a blow
Shook my foundation
Then you had to go
You didn't even give me
A chance to say no

Earthquake you shook me
To the core
Rattled my windows and
Shook my floor
Don't come back here
Any more






Thursday, August 18, 2011

How Do You Know You're Middle-Aged?

Let me count the ways...

1. You have stopped telling the cashier at Kohl's the elastic-waist pants you're buying are for your mother.

2. Your most exciting decision of the day is whether to eat Rocky Road or Cherry Vanilla ice cream.

3. You get pissed off when kids DON'T call you ma'am.

4. Your pets won't outlive you, but they can easily outrun you.

5. You listen intently to the ads for cholesterol and arthritis medications that run during the evening network newscasts.

6. You visit your old elementary school, only to find out that the teachers that taught you are either retired or dead.

7. Your favorite radio station uses the word "oldies" in its ads.

8. You go to a rock concert and someone asks you if one of your kids is in the band. (This one really happened to me!)















Friday, August 5, 2011

Happy Birthday, Mr. President

He was honored with a Nobel Prize. He oversaw the killing of Osama bin Laden. And he was the first African American to be elected President of the United States of America. But these accomplishments pale in comparison to President Obama's latest achievement -- turning 50. As of yesterday, Obama's youth, like Elvis, officially left the building. Huh???? Celebrities aren't supposed to age, at least not quite as publicly as our President does. Not that he has any choice about the world knowing his age; when you're the leader of the free world, you don't get to keep many secrets. And his hair has gotten significantly more gray since he took office, so his aging has not been a clandestine process. But I did hear that he's going to Camp David to "celebrate" his fiftieth birthday  this weekend. I'm thinking he's going there to have some privacy so he can shed a few tears over the fading away of his much-touted youthfulness.
And who could blame him? When I turn 50 on an undisclosed day next month, I think I'm gonna be a bit sad myself. I've spent a lifetime trying to stay youthful and cute, as if my stubborn refusal to mature and age gracefully would make me immune to the aging process.  But when I look in the mirror now and see wrinkles and fat where there used to be neither, I have to admit I'm getting older. Besides, I really wasn't that cute in the first place, so losing my looks shouldn't be as big a deal for me as it might be for someone REALLY cute, like, say,  Goldie Hawn or Demi Moore. When I turn 50, my family and a few close friends will be on hand to gleefully remind me that I am eligible for AARP membership, and I will obligingly groan about how I suddenly feel old. But, if I put on enough make-up and color my hair blonde enough that day, hopefully the rest of the world will be fooled into thinking I'm still a forty-something. As long as they don't call me "ma'am", it's all good.

Monday, July 11, 2011

TV Stinks! (or it will soon)

DVR, instant movies, internet streaming -- just three of the countless wonderful reasons to spend even more of your precious time watching TV in the 21st century. And now there's another enhancement to television viewing on the horizon that will make it even more irresistible. You may have heard the term "smell-o-vision" before, as it has been used jokingly to describe the concept of simultaneously watching and smelling TV programs. It's been speculated and dreamed about for many years now, and it looks like it might actually become a reality in the near future. I am so freaking excited about this new invention,  I just HAD to blog about it today. An article I saw online recently on Gizmodo said that scientists at UCSD, in conjunction with Samsung, are hard at work perfecting a device that will attach to your tv and will dispense aromas that reflect the subject matter of the program you're watching.  According to this article, "the technology works by using a 100x100 matrix of thin metal wires that heats any one of 10,000 smell-forming aqueous solutions, allowing for 10,000 different smells. The researchers tested two different perfumes, and found that the smells were perceptible up to 30cm away." How cool! I can't wait to watch the Food Network with one of these gizmos attached to my TV. And shows set on the beach will be so much better when they make my living room smell like tanning lotion and boardwalk french fried potatoes. But I'm hoping the gizmo will come with an "off" switch, 'cause I'm thinking there are some types of programming that would definitely NOT be enhanced by smell-o-vision (Post-game locker room interviews and cat food commercials are two that come quickly to mind.). Please,  Samsung, rush this product (with an on-off switch) through research and development so those of us who want one can pick one up at Target on our next trip to buy paper products and toiletries. I can't wait for the day when I can watch reruns of Charlie's Angels and I can enjoy the mingled scents of hair spray, cheap cologne, and easy money. I'm staying tuned...

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

SUMMER IS HOT!

Here's a little poem
In honor of summers past...


Ode to a Firefly


Firefly, flying by
Illuminating the dusky sky
Your fleeting glow catches my sleepy eye

Firefly, flying free
Not taking life too seriously
I’m looking at you, are you looking at me?

Firefly, flying past
Over the clover growing in the grass
Signaling summer has not yet passed

If I could talk to you
I’d ask you to explain
How your fire stays lit
Through the thunder and rain
I’d tell you how happy
I am when you're around
I'm eight years old again
And life is a playground.


Saturday, June 25, 2011

A Baby Changes Everything

This is a poem I have been "laboring" over recently and I wanted to share it with you. Please don't think I am a kid-hater after you read it -- I'm definitely not. I don't have children, but I enjoy spending time with my nieces and nephews and my friends' kids when I have the chance.


A BABY CHANGES EVERYTHING

When a baby is born
The first thing it does is cry
It knows this is the day
Its innocence dies

It takes its first breath
And quickly takes another
Looks around the room
For its so-called mother
Who forces a smile
Then goes to sleep
And prays the lord
Her soul to keep
She isn’t much more
Than a baby herself
How’s she supposed to
Take care of someone else?
Her friends all told her
It’s cool to be a mom
But in her mind
A baby is like a bomb
‘Cause when it drops
Your life becomes a mess
And it never goes back
To normal-ness

When a baby is born
It opens its eyes and screams
Because it realizes
The futility of its dreams



Thursday, June 23, 2011

Tall Tale

I've been thinking lately (okay, for the last few minutes) about how I feel about being a tall woman. I'm five feet eight and a half inches tall - not tall enough to model or play basketball, but taller than the average chick. Being taller than most of my peers has never really vexed me. It's something I've grown to accept if not celebrate, and it's a big (sorry!) part of what makes me who I am. But, having said that, I'll admit to occasionally wishing I were a more "normal" height. I'd like to know what it feels like to disappear into a crowd if I want to. It's embarrassing to feel like I'm making an entrance simply by entering a room. Oh, and if I'm wearing heels when I enter said room, I feel like I'm making an entrance on stilts. Not good. Maybe if I were tall and curvy, I'd like being five feet eight and a half -- then I'd be statuesque. But I'm 120 pounds soaking wet and I can get away with not wearing a bra most days, so from a distance I look a little bit like a lanky male teenager -- especially when I wear jeans and a t-shirt, which is most days of the week any more. I'm not asking you to feel sorry for me (unless you want to) for being tall, but I just thought I'd let you know that it can be a drag at times. But I won't be offended if you shorter ladies and gents need me to get something for you off the top shelf in the library or grocery store. Not only am I tall, but I've got really long arms too. But then, that's another blog post...

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

5 Reasons It Really Sucks To Be A. Weiner

1. Upon learning of his lewd tweets, Weiner's pregnant wife will be both hormonal AND furious. Run, Weiner, run!

2. Photos sent to Twitter fans make photos taken by paparazzi look like fine art by comparison.

3. Charlie Sheen is potential roommate in "treatment center."

4. Weiner action figure doll sold in a set with companion inflatable doll.

5. Duh -- the last name!

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

HOT KINDLING

Okay, so I FINALLY downloaded something to my Kindle (well, actually, my husband did it for me, but that's beside the point). I've had it for over a month now, so I guess it's time to start using the darned thing.. As with all new techie gadgets, I enter the fray with unease and a mild fear of the unknown. I also wonder if I'll be able to sustain my nurturing relationship with my television once I get Kindle-savvy. Dinosaur that I am, I still enjoy watching television, especially on the "big screen" in the living room. But I think I'm going to enjoy my Kindle once I get the hang of it. I'm really looking forward to reading magazines on it. In fact, the "something" I refer to in the first sentence of this post is the current issue of Reader's Digest (I told you I'm a dinosaur!)
I do have one burning question  for the Kindle-makers and marketers - why oh why did you decide to name it Kindle? I believe the word kindle is a verb, not a noun. It's like calling a car, um, driven or motorized instead of car. I admit that the competition didn't do very well naming its reader either, but hey, at least "Nook" is a noun!!

Monday, June 6, 2011

Poetry is Still Hot

I got on a subway train
To escape from the pouring rain
I rode it downtown
Through tunnels underground
Until my clothes were dry once again

Sunday, June 5, 2011

A TIME TO CHILL

It must be Sunday, 'cause I'm tired and wanting to do as little as I can possibly get away with. Can't believe I'm saying this - I've always looked at every day as an opportunity to get things done. And I'm not a particularly religious person, so I don't subscribe to the whole "day of rest" concept.  But I am learning to enjoy a good day of relaxation here and there, and lately that day seems to occur most often on Sunday. It's probably middle-aged ennui or perimenopause kicking in, but whatever the reason, I find I need more "down time" now than I used to when I was in my 20s and 30s. A nap here, a couch potato day there -- it's all good. So go ahead, youngsters, and have fun running on fumes. Me, I'm gonna pull off the highway and refuel.

Saturday, June 4, 2011

Hot Shit

There are few things like a weeklong case of diarrhea to humble a person. Take it from one who knows firsthand. I've been having "watery stools" (one of the ways it's described on web pages) for a little over a week now, and I'm getting a very harsh (and smelly) message from my bowels that I am not in charge of my body. True, I may own it and live in it 24/7, and  I can eat right, work out, and get a physical every year, but that doesn't guarantee that I'll stay healthy. It makes me think about those poor victims of the recent tornadoes in the U.S.,  just trying to live a decent life when a tornado comes along and blows it all to pieces. Don't get me wrong, I'm not equating having diarrhea for a week with losing a home, but you get my point: life will throw curve balls at you and sometimes you just can't hit them, no matter how hard you try. All you can really do is duck and hope you don't get beaned in the head by the ball.

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Poetry is hot, again!

MIDNIGHT

A tall man arrives
As the withered one departs
The two meet at midnight
Under a street light
They exchange a glance
And a handshake
That says more than words
Could communicate
Two ships passing
One to port, one to sea
At odds, from appearances
Both steadfast in their duty

Sunday, May 29, 2011

Seeing isn't believing

Irony: Free wine samples are given out at grocery store to people who appear to be under the legal drinking age, but at the store's checkout a woman who appears to be in her fifties is carded when buying said wine.

Friday, May 27, 2011

Hot Stuff

Maybe I'm getting old (I am almost 50), but I'm just not as interested in acquiring more stuff like I used to be. Only a few hours ago, I saw an adorable purse in Target that a couple of years ago I would have bought in a heartbeat, and yet I managed to leave the store without it, opting instead to buy a box of sanitary napkins with the money. (Sorry, TMI, I know.). What is happening to me? Where is my urge to splurge? Has the recession taken the wind out my "sales"? Or have I finally gotten control of my spending? I dunno. All I know is It feels wrong, even un-American, to have lost touch with my inner shopaholic.  In this country, we're bombarded with advertising trying to sell us more and more stuff, the underlying  message being that we need it to be happy or complete. I'm not completely immune to this pretty persuasion -- I do enjoy looking at ads for clothes or shoes or makeup -- but  I no longer hear that little voice whispering in my ear telling me I need to buy any of it...
However disorienting this change in my shopping behavior is for me, it might turn out to be a good thing come September. I'm planning to move into a new home then, and the less schtuff I (and the movers) have to schlep from here to there, the better for everyone involved.

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

A Poem for Springtime

Upon arriving at the garden
An iron gate greets me
Gray and laden with scrollwork
Heavy guardian of beauty
I push upon it to enter
It resists momentarily, then cooperates

I gaze upon
A multitude of flowers in bloom
Roses, lilies, more roses...
A path of mottled bricks
To walk upon, to follow around curves
That bend like tulip stems
Bees rise silently from petals
And ascend into the fragrant air

How I wish I could live here
Among the flowers and bees!
I’d feed on the loamy soil
And drink from the brackish pond
And sing endlessly to the blue sky above.











Friday, May 20, 2011

Physical Therapy Good Cure for Swollen Head

If you're ever feeling a little cocky or smug, I recommend you hurt yourself. What do I mean by that, you are wondering? Am I advocating masochism? No. (Not that there's anything, ahem, wrong with that.) What I mean by that statement is that if you've ever been injured and have been to physical therapy, you will start to realize that you're not as strong and vital as you think you are. I should know -- I had a physical therapy session today for an elbow problem that's been nagging me for months now, and afterwards I definitely felt, well, humbled. When I looked around the room where I did my stretches I observed people of all ages struggling to do exercises that healthy people can do without any real effort, and it hit me: I was one of them. Suddenly I no longer thought of myself as the eternally young, invulnerable person that I delude myself I am most days. I also realized that I must get exercise on a regular basis to get well and stay well, even though I'm thin and healthy. And that wearing loose, comfortable clothing and shoes while exercising makes good sense, no matter how dumpy and frumpy and they make me look. Yep, I need to take care of my body, since it's the only one I'll ever get. But the most humbling thought I had after physical therapy today was this: I will spend hundreds of dollars on stretches and massages I could probably do myself at home, and I'll still end up with the same sore elbow I started out with. Ouch.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Regretfully Yours

Don't you hate it when a celebrity is quoted as saying they have no regrets? It's especially annoying when the celebrity saying this is someone who's who's been very public with his or her bad behavior and/or has gone to rehab in order to try and  get "better." Take Charlie Sheen (please!) - despite losing his wife, kids, and job, he's "winning." Ack! Call me crazy, but I just don't get it. And how about that other group of crazies, the folks who insist they live only for today and never look back? I just feel sorry for those misguided souls. Don't they realize that looking back is what keeps you going when you get old and have nothing to look forward to anymore?

Thursday, May 12, 2011

Poetry is hot!

Poets in the White House?
I am delighted!
My only complaint --
I wasn't invited.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/arts-post/post/first-lady-hosts-young-poets-at-the-white-house/2011/05/11/AF7bzorG_blog.html

Monday, May 9, 2011

My blog has a hot new name

Okay, so it's somewhat of a ripoff of the movie/book title, but it's godaamn clever, isn't it? I'll be posting more now that my blog name has changed and is inspiring me to greater things. Don't say you haven't been warned...

Thursday, April 28, 2011

STORMY WEATHER

What's the deal with all these awful tornadoes in the U.S. this spring? It seems like every time I turn on the tv news, another town or city has been ravaged by a twister. Traumatic childhood memories of watching Dorothy and Toto struggle to survive a tornado in The Wizard of Oz come to the surface when I hear the word "tornado." It probably doesn't help that when I was a kindergartener our family lived in Kansas, smack-dab in the middle of tornado territory. Instead of (or possibly in addition to) fire drills, we had tornado drills in school. Scary stuff for a five-year-old, indeed. And one tornado that touched down was so close by that my mother took me and my sister down into the basement to make sure we would survive if it struck our home (mercifully, it didn't).
So, I'll be really happy when this year's busy tornado season winds down (no pun intended). To paraphrase Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz, I may not be in Kansas any more -- but with this spring's stormy weather, I'm beginning to feel like I am.

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

The Weather is Hot, That's What's Hot

Every year at this time, I like to give a big, sloppy farewell kiss to winter, followed immediately by a long and welcoming hug to spring. I love the season that occupies the months of April and May and most of June. It makes me so happy to open the windows to let the spring breeze into my house and hear the birds singing again after their winter hiatus. Notice I said I like to welcome SPRING! NOT SUMMER, but spring! I say this emphatically because today it was in the low 80s in the metro Washington area, and if felt like summer had arrived -- two months too soon. Is it just me, or does spring seem to get shorter every year? Lately we make the transition from winter coats to tank tops in the space of a few weeks. Am I the only one who wishes spring lasted longer ? For me, spring is more than a season -- it's a period of rebirth and optimism that I find very useful in helping me clear out the winter cobwebs in my mind's attic.
Oh, yea! I just heard a meteorologist on tv saying the high temperatures in our area tomorrow will be in the seasonable 60s. I sure hope she's right. And I won't gripe about an April shower or two if it means that spring is going to stick around for a while.

Sunday, April 10, 2011

What's Hot in Music

I'll be 50 this year (yikes!), but despite my advancing age I still get a jones for heavy metal and hard rock music on a regular basis. Even the dead-on heavy metal mockumentary Spinal Tap couldn't stop me from loving Led Zeppelin, AC/DC, and Aerosmith, to name a few of my favorite bands of the genre. Lucky for me, when I get a craving for some hard-driving music, I can almost always find it playing on the radio, as there are a couple of stations that program it in the metropolitan Washington, D.C. market. And while I might not crank the volume up as much as I did when I was in my 20's and 30's when a great metal song comes on,  I still like it best when it's rather loud. A perfect spring afternoon for me would be listening to Zeppelin's Houses of the Holy while reading Creem magazine and smoking Marlboro 100 cigarettes. Rock on!

Monday, April 4, 2011

What's Hot In The Oven

Key lime pie, that's what. It's easy as pie (sorry) if you use bottled lime juice instead of fresh lime juice and buy a pre-made crust. And that tangy, tart, tantalizing lime flavor that tickles your tongue when you taste it is terrific. It's one of the very few desserts I love that don't have chocolate in them. I'd go have a slice right now but it's almost 1 a.m. so it's too late for a midnight snack.

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

What's Not Hot About Religion

I wonder if my dad, the outspoken atheist, is finally rubbing off on me. I say this because I'm having trouble believing in God these days. I mean, if there is a God who can create and/or destroy anything He wants to, why would He have kept our dumbass human race alive for this long? I mean, if we're really made in His image, we wouldn't do stupid things like eat our boogers or watch reality TV, would we? And, more importantly, if God exists, why on Earth would He have let Harry and David go bankrupt? How are we humans supposed to survive, nevermind evolve, without Moose Munch and chocolate covered blueberries to eat? God, if you truly exist, and you truly love us, give us a sign or three. Make Charlie Sheen disappear. Make "Thou Shalt Not Belch" the 11th Commandment. Make my house sell for the asking price. Amen.

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

What Was That?

Was that a freaking train whistle I heard blowing last night at 3 in the morning? I mean, was that really necessary, Mr. Conductor? Are there that many cars or pedestrians on the road at that hour that you felt you needed to do that? I can't imagine that would be the case. Isn't it enough that I have to listen to your train's steel wheels rolling loudly over the metal tracks every day, morning, noon, and night? I live at least a mile away from the tracks, but it feels like I live right beside them when your whistle rudely awakens me in the middle of my much-needed beauty rest.

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

What's Not Hot In The World

What can I say that hasn't already been said bout the earthquake in Japan? There's no superlative that comes to mind that hasn't already been used. Maybe a new word needs to be added to our language to capture the terrible-ness of the situation. I can't think of one, but if you do, let me know. Not only am I unable to put my feelings into words, but I am unable to wrap my mind around the magnitude and senselessness of destruction that occurred as a result of the earthquake and tsunami. If there is a God, I hope (s)he is capable of figuring out what it all means, if anything. I'm not an atheist, but I have a feeling that even God in all his (her) wisdom is scratching his (her) head over this disaster.

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Daylight Savings Time - What the What?

As I get old(er), I find I am questioning the purpose of things I took for granted when I was young. Take Daylight Savings Time, for example. I used to like the fact that it stayed light longer, especially in the summertime. I could stay outside and play longer after dinner before Mom expected me to come home for the night, and that was awesome.  But now that I'm almost 50, fewer hours of darkness at night means less guilt-free time laying on the couch in front of the t.v. When the sun's up I feel I should be productive, or at least upright. Plus there's the whole losing-an-hour-of-sleep downside to setting the clock forward. I mean, besides watching television on the sofa and going to sleep what the hell do we grown-ups have to look forward to at night? I think it's time we join together and put a stop to this loathsome entity known as Daylight Savings Time, once and for all. We'll all sleep better at night -- well, at least yours truly will.

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

What's Hot About Being A Volunteer

1.  The world thinks highly of volunteers, even if your parents don't.
2.. Access to the Internet and office supplies. Sweet!
3.  No worries about whether your paycheck will cover your bills or not.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

What's Hot On TV

I was scanning the channels last night and stumbled upon Conan O'Brien's talk show on TBS. I had kinda forgotten he's doing a talk show since I'm usually watching the news when his show starts. It was great to have Conan in my bedroom (on my tv) late at night once again.

Monday, February 28, 2011

What's Not Hot At The Gas Station

Has anyone noticed how high gas prices are? Of course you have! If it weren't so difficult to figure out where and how to safely store and dispense gas, we'd all be hoarding it by now. I bet it's the high gas prices that are making Charlie Sheen so angry lately.

Friday, February 25, 2011

What's Hot in Hollywood

The Academy Awards are just around the red-carpeted corner, so here's a little something I wrote in honor of the event:

If I were Oscar
I'd want to be taken home
By Ms. Natalie Portman
Or Mr. James Franco
If I could go home with
Either one of those beauties
We wouldn't waste our time
Discussing the year's best/worst movies.
 

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

What's Hot In My Cup

Via, the powdered version of Starbucks Coffee that you add hot water to (and milk, if you're me) and drink. It's nearly as good as the fresh brewed stuff you get in the cafes (no, really, it is!), and cheaper, too. Is Starbucks putting itself out of business by making available a version of its coffee that you can make in a jiffy at home, or will Via enhance the coffee merchant's profile and profits? Will coffee drinkers shun it because it reminds them of those declasse instant coffees like Taster's Choice and Nescafe that their parents and grandparents drank in the '70's? Stay tuned....

What's So Hot About Aging?

Now that I'm approaching 50, I think I should try and look at the bright side of aging as I reluctantly succumb to it. I'll get back to you when I succeed.. Until then, however, I will cling tightly to my dour belief that aging sucks! Big time!!!!! Especially for us gals. Breasts shrink, chin hairs grow, job opportunities dry up along with your ovaries. It takes twice as long as it used to to do just about anything, and then it takes twice as long as it used to to recover from doing it. People I once liked and respected tell me I should be happy that I am aging, that it's better than the alternative. I smile and tell them I'm grateful for a lot of things, but, hey, sorry, getting older ain't one of them. Then I take my Centrum Silver and call it a day.

Sunday, February 20, 2011

What's Hot In My Closet

My favorite piece of clothing is always the one I'm about to buy, but having said that, the best thing in my closet right now is a cool faux leather vest with faux fleece lining and lots of snaps up the front -- it makes me feel like a faux biker when I wear it. I just need to get some temporary tattoos and a fake piercing, and I'll be ready for my close-up in Easyriders magazine. Vroom-vroom!

Saturday, February 19, 2011

What If A Suburban Chick (me) Wrote A Country Song Lyric...


Like Taylor you were swift
Like Keith I was urban
We fell in love fast and hard
Over ginger ale and bourbon

Like Johnny you made lots of cash
Like Leann I wrote rimes
About how I would save you
From your cheating beating heart

We went up love’s hill with faith
But it was rocky at the top
Found out it wasn’t no sugar-land
Now like Dolly we are parton

You’re moving to Alabama
With some girl named Elvira
Bet she’s one of those Dixie chicks
You used to hang out with

Me, I’m walking after midnight
Trying to forget about you
Like Merle I’m getting haggard
But I got nothing better to do.

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

What If...

...you could be someone else for a day? Who would you be?
I'd be nobody else, because then I wouldn't be me.
I wouldn't be able to write a poem or strum a little guitar.
I wouldn't be able to drive around in circles in my little green car.

But if I had to be someone else for a day
I'd choose my younger self
Around the age of 8 or 9
Before I went into my shell.
When I was happy and confident
Not fearful and morose.
I never wished  for anything other
Than what was real and close.

Monday, February 14, 2011

What's Hot in Music

The powerful and soulful singing of Christina Aguilera, Florence Welch, Yolanda Adams, Martina McBride, and Jennifer Hudson during the tribute to Aretha Franklin on last night's Grammy Awards program. I'm betting this was a one-time union of these five disparate talents, but I for one really wish they'd go on tour together.

Friday, February 11, 2011

What's Hot in TInseltown

Warren Beatty and Annettte Bening make marriage look both comfortable and sexy -- like I imagine wearing a flannel thong would feel.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

What's What, Tut -Tut

If you're blogging
You should be slogging
Through web sites and such
You gotta stay in touch
With what's going on
Around the world and so on
Or your blog will get stale
And won't be shared on email

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

What's Not Hot In Washington, DC

The mishandling of snow removal from streets during a recent storm, combined with the failure of PEPCO to restore power to homes within a reasonable period of time following that storm, has taken the Capitol City's stock value to a new low.

Monday, February 7, 2011

What's Hot On TV

American Idol rocks this year with the addition of Steven Tyler as a judge. To those who said the show wouldn't be the same without Simon Cowell, you're right -- it's better!

Saturday, February 5, 2011

What's Not Hot In The World

Protests, uprisings, revolutions. No matter what you call the recent events in Egypt, Tunisia, and Yemen, they have served to illustrate the upside and downside of gatherings of large numbers of angry people. Power to the people, yes -- but maybe not to mobs of disenfranchised people who seem to have honed their social skills in a mosh pit. Strength in numbers, for sure -- but when twice as many people show up to the party than the number that were invited, the music gets drowned out by the din of the crowd.

Friday, February 4, 2011

What's Hot On The Internet

Check out googleartproject.com. This way-cool site allows you to view and download a variety of works of art (mostly paintings) from museums around the world. Washington, D.C.'s own Freer Gallery is represented on the site with several works. The images are high resolution, so you can zoom in on them without any blurriness occurring . Granted, seeing art on a computer screen is not nearly as exciting as seeing it in person -- but on a bitter cold winter's day it's awfully nice to be able to visit a museum without risking frostbite getting there.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

What's What With Regard To Aging (Gracefully)

So, as of yesterday at 3 p.m., my midlife crisis officially began. That was when I had my first guitar lesson.
Being a good thirty years older than most guitar students and teachers, I was happy to find out that my teacher, Lola, is a couple of years older than I am (the poor dear!) and can rock an electric guitar. And it's nice to be able to drop names like James Taylor and Bob Dylan with her and not have to give an accompanying history lesson, which I was afraid I might have to do if my teacher had been a younger person. Let's hear it for girls (ladies) with guitars!

Monday, January 31, 2011

What's What With Regard To Aging (Gracefully)


Trying to balance my checkbook without a calculator nearby is like trying to read the instructions on the Tylenol bottle without my Walmart readers.

Sunday, January 30, 2011

What's Not Hot in Music

Concert ticket prices are out of control. $200 for a nosebleed seat to watch Lady Gaga shake her ta-tas? I don’t think so! Love you, Gaga, but this lady’s gotta eat.

Friday, January 28, 2011

What's What, Weather-Wise

It's a four-letter word, it makes people shiver, some people have even died trying to get rid of it. It's...
snow, people, and it sucks! I'm going to hell when I die-- at least it's warm there.

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

What's not hot on TV

I am not, repeat NOT, a violent person, but that horrible Koons.com commercial that is being shown during the local newscasts in the D.C. area lately makes me want to take an axe to my television. Heeeeeeere's Johnny!

Monday, January 24, 2011

What's Hot in Richmond, VA

While lots of you were watching football, I was watching babes with balls at Godfrey's Drag Brunch. I'm not sure who wears more padding - football players or drag queens! Adult fun for fun adults.

Saturday, January 22, 2011

What's hot on tv

Nathan Lane's stand-up-routine-cum-interview on Late Night With David Letterman last night was so funny that Dave just sat there and took notes.

Friday, January 21, 2011

Howdy

This is my first post on my first blog. I hope it's not also the last!