Monday, August 31, 2009

A Weird Way to Happy

So the GFYO speaks from the back of my car. It's late and his sisters are giddy.


We'd gone to a "bon voyage" for the Kid's parents, a send-off to retirement for a paid-for house in Florida. Which apparently means bawling and wailing and sobbing of the grown ups. Which fucking pisses me off.

I do not understand it, but I try: the Kid says they have lived in one place forever. I mention telephones and airplanes and email and he hugs me. They keep crying. A drunken uncle stumbles and takes out three kids like pin balls. I say I want to go: it's so morose. The Kid agrees and we split.

My husband is the only one, besides me, who doesn't cry. Somehow, despite his birth, he knows that change is the best part of being human and that, after all, we adapt. He kisses his mother, he hugs his dad. 

I crawl into him when I get the chance: we agree after all.



Friday, August 28, 2009

Wherein I Tell Lies In Good Company

It's the beginning of a long story (literally) thanks to Cii and Two Busy and Sweetney and guess what? I get to play with some wikkid smaht people which basically means someone got really drunk and asked me.

It's Polite Fictions which is a freaky experiment in story-telling, a mash-up of sorts. We're telling one story all together, the whole big bunch of us strangers liars (go see who). None of us knows where the story will go because we're taking turns telling it. We're passing the conch and crappy snacks and the story itself person to person like it's a bucket of water for a drained and maybe abandoned pool.

Fucking splash!

The beginning just begun.

Go. Now.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

I Can't Explain This

Things have been weird up in here. That's what I told my sister on the phone tonight. I followed it with something that sounded like "cry and whine" but what I meant to say was...


Everything seems tenuous or worse. 

The Kid is stressed and now inundated with opportunities, all of which see me packing my brood and house and splitting the Small Town. Which is cool and fun and incredibly terrifying. Also, my cousin is sick. I write the news to lots of strangers my cousin's friends and family about leukemia. It's my job, which I am grateful for, but I have to use medical words that scare me. Meanwhile, summer ends: I need to set up the PTO calendar 'cause I am the (naked) president after all. My kid's cast needs checking. The laundry is insane. I don't know when soccer starts, I'm not sure if I am coaching.

I spin and spin and splat.

A fifteen year old girl is struck by a car in the road of the Small Town and dies and I can't get myself to make sense of it. I can't bear to see her father's face, the face of my friend, her dad, but I do: I see his face up close (who is that man? so wrecked) and I see his face in my mind all the time since it happened. I can't string words together in my own head to say what I see, so for sure, I can't do it here.

I am sensitive to beauty as much as pain, I know that; it's a shifty, sneaky fortune cookie I am learning to live with. But this and all of everything us Picket's have had these last months, everything you've had, everything they have right now and right this awful terrible unbearable minute: I've been crying and I feel weak and breakable and so sad. 

I can't explain why this song helps, but it did.



Don't feel obliged to comment: this is a purge, and nothing more. Listen. Love your people and yourself.

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Waiting for Us, Part 2

When the wind blows the right way, a call gets through. A cousin, my cousin, gets new marrow from Germany, so we celebrate with salsa as cancerless cells pump through that girl's body. A small child, my child, is anesthetized by mask and snapped back into place. She wakes up casted pinkie to mid-arm with glow-in-the-dark medical papier mache and her hovering mother and daddy, bed-side and offering ice cream. There's enough spare pillows for her elbow to take one and the house waits and holds us all.

The house leaks everywhere like always, not so much from pipes but from its own marrow: walls weep water, floors drench from underneath, ceramic tiles sweat like the forehead of a fat man. We anesthetize ourselves from it with sun and bacon and beach chairs and the contents of an almost-always full cooler. We burn and eat burgers salted with sand and take blurry pictures of mostly teeth and throat which, it turns out, is the way laughter looks on film.

Still: children will whine and weep despite fruit snacks. Married people will hurt each other in the gracious company of other married people who understand. So when the cooler empties, we fill it. When shit happens, we bury it. When the waves come, we slide a plastic sleeve over her cast and watch her sheepishly creep in, then watch her jump off bridges. When the storm comes, we take turns watching the surf disintegrate a barrier beach, which is our beach, the place where we share our second growing up. We don't cry; shoulder to damp shoulder, we marvel at the force of the thing. Like a buoy that doesn't belong to us, we send our regret to sea and let the toughness of the place take over. 

Storms of all kinds blow in, shift landscapes before eyes and then pass. Broken hands heal. Marriages rise and fall and rise again like waves.

We have waited for this week for a year, for this reclamation of who we wish to always be: mirror-less, unbelted, divine. We waited and waited and waited for this one week and like always, this house? 

It waited for us.

Monday, August 24, 2009

Waiting For Us

The house on Chappaquiddick, the one we like to believe we own but only rent, is a solid tank on a hill. Shingled and gray, with a massive mouth of a porch, it seems bust out from the earth, grown up from its perch. Its roots twist with the shrubby beach roses and the prickly grass all around it and all together, they burrow down to the ocean below.


Though I know it was built with metal and man-shaped wood, a massive chore one hundred years ago when oared boats hauled the lumber and nails from Edgartown, the house is as natural as every living thing around it. 

Which is what we become when we're there. 

Mushed in between our toes and diven deep in our salty pores, the dirt becomes our dirt, the sand our sand. Within hours of arriving, we are twenty prodigal children salty and come home. 

The porch rails bear welcoming gifts for us from the surf -- chipped clam shells, horseshoe crab carcasses -- and we add to it: bottles and cans and wet towels and clothes. The limitless lawn, untended in parts, fills with popsicle wrapper-hurling children and flying footballs, frisbees, and laughter. Our noisy chaos fills the inside too. We unpack massive amounts of food like professional eaters, unfurl sheets that will be damp-less for this last time, seek out what has changed and what will never change ("a new stove!" "that old chair!").

Meanwhile, the house ushers us in and out and waits. 

The house waits for our furious homecoming to settle. We take stock of growing children, of our cute dresses, of the weather. We debate dinner and decide quickly, like always: easy. We are organized and clean for the last time all week. We are happy and funny and flibberty and jibberty and we have no use for phones or TV or trouble.

A child, my child, snaps a bone by a football in a way that would make a weak stomach churn. Keys turn engines over and away she goes, packed in ice and smothered in kisses. She has a ferry ride, a drive, a hopeful journey away.

Xrays, weather charts: everything seems daunting. 

To be continued...

Thursday, August 20, 2009

AND AT LAST -- SURPRISE!

See, we kissed and made up, me and Middle Aged Woman. And though I doubt those dudes left any beer? She still came around. She's classy like that.



When You're Out, Go Out All the Way


When I went back to college in 1999, I discovered that the campus I attended

published a student directory every year. They were free. Miniature

telephone books that featured students names, addresses and phone numbers.

We referred to it as the Stalker's Guide to UM-Dearborn. 


I'm sure there have been sufficient clues in my blog, my comments on other

blogs and on Twitter to make stalking me none-too-difficult. I recently had

a post published on MidLifeBloggers.com, and I used my real name on it. At

my age, I feel the need to claim credit (or blame) for my stuff, I guess.


Anyway, since I'm 'out' now, I thought I'd do a meme I have found amusing in

the past. Go to Google. Type in your first name and the word 'needs' and

have fun with the results. Since my first name is Mary, there were lots of

results about how Mary needs your prayers. I'm sure Husband would agree with

this, but it's not really me. Anyway, here are some of my faves:


Mary needs to back off and let the dancers shine. Because I'm always getting

in the way with my damn narrative, and all my "Look at ME!"


Mary needs shadows. To complement the ones under my eyes? To contrast the

glory of my aura? I think I need shadows to hide in. When there's not a

convenient Men's Room.


Mary needs to piss. This is nearly always true. But better since the

surgery. At least I can sneeze without crossing my legs. TMI?


Mary needs to schedule appearances in better venues. I'm thinking it's time

to step out of the shadows (tie-in - get it?) and start making appearances

that really count, like on the payroll of Fabulously Wealthy Writers, Inc.


Mary needs sleep. At no time will this be more evident than at about 2:00

p.m. every damn day of the school year.


Mary needs numbers. Is this a paean to my blogwhore-itude? Or does this meme

know I am a math freak? I got to interview Chris at CSquaredPlus3 for

Citizen of the Month's Great Interview Experiment. My first thought on

visiting her site was ecstasy over the math reference. I have to go play

with my Star Wars action figures now.


Mary needs a bit of independence. This one is a little like taking coals to

Newcastle, a place that must be overrun with coal by now. I tend to be so

independent that I will search a target store for HOURS rather than ask an

employee where the thingamajigs are located. Husband can get very irritated

with my independence. I sometimes forget all that 'helpmate' stuff and

struggle along without asking for help because, I don't know, I'm just

stoopid about those things.


Mary needs help with open bite wound. Because I'm thinking something I write

will one day come back to bite me in the ass.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Tiny Bodies Electric With Rage

Et tu, Two Busy? Sigh. Behold Two Busy:

Tiny Bodies Electric With Rage

I was living in a welfare motel.

It was, as these things go, rather large. You could imagine that it had seen finer days, perhaps when it was first built. You could picture it in the 1940s or early 50s as a sparkling, clean, sunlit motor lodge — a place where weary families traveling through Cape Cod might stop for a night or three, children running laps around the building, mothers and fathers shaking beach sand from towels and talking out the next day's vacation agenda. You could imagine it as a place capable of joy.

That time had passed. At some point, things had changed. Maybe the construction of the Mid-Cape Highway had stolen traffic from the road and quieted the heart of the business. Maybe it was a change in ownership, or a shift in the river that gave it a name and transformed the river's bend into a swamp, ripe with cattails and great clouds of hungry mosquitoes. Maybe it was the decision to put a roof over what had once been an open atrium — a choice made to protect against the elements that instead plunged it into darkness.

But now, it was a welfare motel. And more than that, a welfare motel on Cape Cod: a place stereotyped as a beachfront playground for families, a vacation home for the rich, a destination to which travelers could escape their problems and lose themselves in the warmth of the sun, the chill of the Atlantic, and the infinite promise of summer. As with many stereotypes, it held elements of truth — a truth, to be sure, but not the whole truth.

This was the hidden Cape Cod. A place vacationers never saw, nor would want to. A place of poverty and violence. A place where children struggled to grow up, and people went to disappear. Or hide.

That's why I was there. In an attempt to crawl from the twisted wreckage of an epic-romance-gone-bad - the self-immolating consequences of which had left me more than a little unstable and unhealthy - I'd made the logical choice to abandon friends and family and instead isolate myself hundreds of miles away. Alone. Working two jobs for minimum wage, barely making rent. Living in a welfare motel. Which also housed a vile dive bar the motel's owner had named in his own honor. Which, I discovered after I moved there, had been the site of two (2) stabbings during the previous calendar year. (Separate incidents. Not sure if that's better or worse.)

Have you ever seen One Crazy Summer? This was just like that, only swapping out the laughs with a creeping, all-encompassing sense of despair and removing any possibility of a Demi Moore-style romantic interest.

The fact that it was a summer of loveless was probably for the best, as my accommodations would have almost certainly repelled any and all female visitors. Beyond the splendor and glory of the motel itself, my bachelor pad proper was... somewhat lacking. It was, to begin, a single motel room. A motel room like virtually any other cheap roadside motel room you can imagine, with the great exception of the fact that since the atrium had been roofed over... the wall of windows on one side of the room were draped in always-closed curtains, lest they let the gloom of the atrium inside. Which meant, subsequently, that my room was lit in its entirety by a) a small table lamp with a 40-watt bulb; and b) a small, 3x2 window that did open... but did not have a screen. It did, however, offer a wonderful view of a large, overhanging eave and a small, decrepit parking lot in the back.

I also had no fridge. It wasn't something I really thought about when I first moved in, but soon enough the challenges of a life without refrigerated food or beverages - in the middle of summer - became apparent. Fortunately, I was almost completely destitute, and so my lack of refrigeration was somewhat balanced by the fact that I lived almost exclusively off leftover slices from the pizza place where I was being groomed as an oven jockey.

It had a bathroom, but the light did not work. It had yellowing wallpaper, slowly peeling at the edges. It had ridged carpeting — industrial carpeting, the kind you use at storefronts so consumers can wipe their feet before they enter. Beige, or something close to that. 40-watt light did not allow for nuance of color.

There was, needless to say, no air conditioning. So I always left the window open. I was relatively untroubled by mosquitoes, which was a saving grace, but otherwise the room was thick with warm, static air that never moved. The room felt paralyzed by humidity, and hidden far from the world.

Summer passed. I worked. I slept fitfully. I tried to socialize, and largely failed. I called my family once a week, to let them know I had not been stabbed.

One night, in early August, I lay in my terrible welfare motel bed. I was reading. Eventually I tired, and put the book away. I turned off the table lamp, and then turned over, closing my eyes and steeling myself for what dreams might come. Then, in an instant, the world behind my eyes turned white with pain — a shocking, burning pain that filled my skull with piercing light and clarity of purpose. I rocketed out of bed, and - holding one hand against my head - turned on the light with the other.

On my pillow lay a yellowjacket. Its wings were shivering, but it did not attempt to fly away. Apparently, I'd rolled onto it, and it had stung me defensively. In the head. I remember leaning in close to look at it, trying to understand what had attacked me. I remember looking at its stinger, trying to see the venom. I remember struggling to focus, with the dim light and my vision blurring from pain.

I crushed it.

Paranoid, I closed the window, and then studied the rest of the room as closely as I could. I checked the bed carefully, unsure if more yellowjackets lay in wait. Eventually, I fell asleep.

The next morning, I studied my room, trying to determine where and how and what had happened. It didn't take long for me to look over to the window, where I saw - unhappily - two other yellowjackets flying just outside.

I walked over and gently opened the window. Trying not to make noise, for fear of attracting their attention. (My head throbbed, and I lamented (not for the first time) my lack of ice.) I looked left, then right, then down. And finally, I glanced up. And saw, beneath the large eave that hung several feet over the window, one of the largest nests I'd ever laid eyes upon. Dozens of winged insects crawled across it, circled it, cycled in and then out again. Dozens, and dozens, and dozens more.

I don't know how I could have closed the window any faster.

Half an hour later, I was in the motel manager's office. We walked together to the back of the building, and I pointed out to him my small window... and the large nest that had been constructed adjacent to it. He nodded his assent that something had to be done, and walked away. I returned to my room, and a little while later I heard a knock. I opened the door carefully, and it was him. He was holding one of those cans of nest-killing poison; the kind you can use from 20 feet away. He told me to close my window.

So. I closed the window, and then peered out at him as he came around the side and positioned himself. He took careful aim, and then let fire. The fluid streamed through the air, arcing gently, and quickly poured across the nest. Instantly, hordes of outraged yellowjackets streamed out of the nest. Some were caught in the deluge and died; others flew and buzzed and circled with infinite anger and confusion. Then the spray stopped, and he walked away. I left the window and went down to his office. "Keep your window closed for a day or two," he said. "Hopefully they'll find another place to live, and you'll be all set."

Which is how I came to live in a small, unventilated room with my one small window closed. In August. But if this was the price of safety, I was willing to pay it.

My willingness proved irrelevant, as the following days made apparent that the poison spray had done nothing to dissuade the yellowjackets from living in the hive. It might have been more wet then before, but it was still their home, and they seemed disinclined to leave.

Two days later, I was back in the motel office. Soon enough, the manager accompanied me to my room. He held a long metal pole in his hand — the kind you can attach a brush to, in order to paint something up high. He positioned himself strategically within my room, and then told me to open the window. I did, and he maneuvered the pole outside... and then he struck. With three or four quick thrusts, he pummeled the yellowjacket nest, until a large piece of it - perhaps 75% of the nest - fell off the eave and plummeted to the ground.

In an instant, he pulled the pole back inside and I slammed the window shut. And they swarmed. Hundreds - easily, hundreds - of yellowjackets filled our entire frame of vision. It was a surreal sight, like something out of a movie. The hive mind was one with fury. "I'd, uh... I'd keep that window closed, if I was you" the manager said, as he left the room. Leaving me there, alone, to face this army of angry life.

I remember looking at my watch, realizing I was running late to job #2, and grabbing my keys as I quickly left the building. I remember thinking, "I'm glad that's over, more or less."

I came home late that night. Not sure why; probably another attempt at socialization. It might've even been one of the nights I made one of my first, furtive, failed attempts at social drinking. Grab a 'Gansett? Sure. (moron.)

What I do recall is waking up the next morning. I slept late, and awoke to a room half-lit from the outside. I remember being momentarily confused, as what I'd heard before I opened my eyes didn't jibe with the sunlight I saw. And then my eyes fully opened, and what I saw was so much more than sunlight.

I saw yellowjackets. Hundreds upon hundreds of yellowjackets. Hurtling themselves against my window. Over and over and over again. Hundreds and hundreds of them, blind with vengeance, sacrificing their lives to pierce this wall of glass. My eyes opened wide, in near disbelief, at the sight of so many living creatures united in hatred. They tiny bodies electric with rage, creating sheets of pulsating yellow and black that clawed and stabbed and stung and collided and collided and collided against my window. Against me.

They sounded like rainfall.

(I swear, it sounded exactly like rainfall.)

This continued for days, until eventually it subsided. Not because the yellowjackets died, or went away, but because they started building a new nest. On. My. Window.

Which is how I ended up spending an entire month of August in a small room with no ventilation, and the window shut. Listening to the world outside as it tried to break in. A world brilliant with anger and the promise of pain and punishment.

Hiding.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Screw Soccer Moms

Oh looky looky: Kevin snuck in. Seems Ciii called him and was all " hey man! party at Picket's! I left some beer on the porch..." So I guess Kevin's Not Home, and he's hardly UnCool. Example 1:

Screw Soccer Moms

Some fellow Suburban Sperm Donors and I recently filled the void left by a misguided local ban on cockfighting. All it took was a half dozen hopped-up 6-year-old boys, a muddy park, some soccer balls and the fact our wives didn't expect us home for at least another hour.

It started innocently. A midday rain scared off half the league's players. A bunch of the coaches got together, combined their pitiful lot of attendees into one game, and started early in hopes of getting us out of the rainstorm and into a six of Sam Adams as soon possible. And I had doubted there was strategy involved in this game.

Halfway into the match, it stopped raining. The sun came out. Girls, their summer frocks rippling in the breeze, began serving highballs and canapés while we hearty Sperm Donors cracked bons mots
about the Dow (bathroom cleaners), our sporty foreign cars (Japanese minivans) and our palatial estates in the tropics (wormy rentals on the Jersey shore).

When the "real" game ended, half the group dispersed. But some of the (6-year-old) boys decided they had enough Gatorade and PowerBars in their systems to play some more. Thing 2 was one of the them.

Who am I to deny him the chance to fit in before he starts his inevitable, long journey to the middle?

What ensued, friends, was magical, hysterical and frightening all at once. See, soccer for the post-Barney, pre-Snoop Dog crowd normally goes like this:

Ball goes left.

Swarm-of-children-go-left-and-kick-each-other-until-ball-squirts-out.

Ball squirts rights.

Swarm-of-children-go-right-and-kick-each-other-until-ball-squirts-out.

But this … this was steel-cage, death match 3-on-3. Actual passing. Dekeing. Elbows flying. Simulated leather smacking into runny noses. Boys in black knee socks doing bicycle kicks while signing autographs in mid-air. That last part was a lie. I'm not sure any of them can spell.

But there was lots of shouting. From the dads.

"Take him, Doug*, take the ball from him!"

"Be aggressive, Prescott*! Don’t let him pass you!"

"Stop crying, get up and go after the ball, Bruce*. Just shake it off."

"Go for his throat, Berton*, or so help me you will be back with the babies in pre-K on Monday!"

Thing 2, meanwhile, decided be goalie. His game plan was screaming in the most guttural but annoying tone possible any time the ball came near him.

"HAAAAAAAW!! HAAAAAAW! WHOOOOO-HOOOOO-HOOOOO!!"

"Hey, buddy," I said to him. "Why don't you get out of the goal and see what you can do upfield?"

"HAAAAAAAW!! HAAAAAAW!! WHOOOOO-HOOOOO-HOOOOO!!"

"Dear Lord, my son is an idiot," I told Berton's dad.

Or is he?

The other kids scored only two goals on him. Thing 2's team scored seven. Plus, he walked away without a bloody nose (Doug) or a short-term future back with the Pampers set (sorry, Berton).

Maybe he understands that life is all about knowing where you best fit into the game.

HAAAAAAAW!! HAAAAAAW! WHOOOOO-HOOOOO-HOOOOO!! The little freak may beat
his destiny yet.

* Names changed to match those of the members of The Knack for no apparent reason other than I felt like giving the band a shout. Plus, can you think of four worse names for blood-thirsty boys in florescent jerseys?

Monday, August 17, 2009

House of Picket: Infiltrated

I'm hanging with Obama this week and we're gonna be kinda busy -- nationalized health care, the War(s), best methods for covering up the gray. Plus, the Secret Service has snagged my WiFi -- so much for "transparency." But fear not Picketeers: I've left the sliding door open and a case of beer on the back porch. It's kinda like chumming for awesomeness. And so, awesomeness? It cometh.


In the form of: Ciii from the Goat and Tater, (and Dadcentric) (yo) who is wikkid good at soccer, but shifty around a free case of beer...

Everything I needed to Know, I learned the Hard Way, 
or…..Fuck Robert Fulghum

Here's a little conglomeration of things that I have learned during my 38 years. For "Good or Ill".

When you're just a 'lil squirt and your Dad wants to put you on a sled and push you down that Huge hill, make sure his ass can get to the bottom before you because you have no idea how to steer that goddamn runner sled and you might plow into the fence at the bottom of the hill and get a bloody nose.

That dirt bike that your older neighbor has. You should 'probly not ride it, even though he says it o.k. and that it's totally awesome. You're only 8 and that's a big ditch that you could ride into.

The robot costume that your Mom and Dad made for your Kindergarten costume contest was 100 kinds of bad-ass. Even though it weighed 1.5 tons and you accidentally peed in it and told everyone that it was "Lemonade".

Even though it seems like everything you want while you're with your Grandmother magically appears, it is not o.k. to just walk out of a Candy store with a 24" chocolate rabbit. Employees of said store will chase you and you'll be all confused and crying and trying to eat said chocolate rabbit before "the bad guys can steal your chocolate" and your Mother will make you give back the half eaten item and apologize to the Shopkeep.

Don't eat that plant/flower/weed that is on the playground next to the slide even though the kid with the bad-ass Six Million Dollar Man t-shirt says its o.k. He's probably not a Botanist. And that shit might be poisonous and you may be force fed Ipecac so you vomit for a long time.

When you come home from your friends house, at age 8, all made-up like Paul Daniel "Ace" Frehley form KISS singing "Detroit Rock City", your Mom is going to freak out because she's a big Hippie that only listens to Joan Baez and she'll think you have the devil in you.

And that make-up only comes of with paint thinner or something else toxic like that. So.....you're going to school like that and you think it's cool as the other side of the pillow. Your Mother, however.......not so much.

It's probably not a good idea to jump off the roof of Brian Hickey's house with "Moon Shoes" on. Even though you both think it's gonna be awesome. Someone is gonna get hurt.

Think before you throw that slush-ball at Brian Hickey. He's standing in front of the drivers side window of his neighbors Corvette and Brain is fast, so he might move at the last minute and slush-balls are hard enough to break the passenger side window of a Corvette.

When you tell your mom that you're "going to run away" and then you go to Brian Hickey's house for a few hours, then call your Mom for a ride home and she says "no. you ran away. I wonder where you're going to sleep tonight." She's bluffing. But she won't pick you up until, like, 9:00 p.m. because even though she Is bluffing she's gonna teach you not to write checks that your ass can't cash. And, you'll cry in front of Brian Hickey when you think your homeless and he'll tell everybody at school you're a "crybaby" and you'll have to punch him in the stomach and you'll get paddled by Ms. Rexroat.

While violence of any kind is best avoided, it's o.k. to knock out cold the 8th grader that's trying to put your head in the locker room toilet. Even though you'll get sent to the Principle's office.

You might want to change out of those Umbros and Sambas before you go to the Danzig show. I don't care if you just ended a coaching session and BGD4 says the show starts in 45 minutes and it takes an hour to get to the Venue. Change that shit. Pronto.

That fight that broke out at the Danzig show. It ain't got shit to do with you. And they have knives.

The skinhead in the mosh pit during the Ministry set at Lollapalooza.......He'll kick your ass if you provoke him. I mean c'mon. He's using that other skinhead as a Battering Ram. Even though you may despise those Neo Nazi assholes there's more of them than you.

That Tony Hawk haircut ain't gonna impress that girl in the Ramones t-shirt. She's just gonna think you're a poser douchebag. She's right. Be your own man/woman.

When you're riding and elevator wearing nothing but a ski mask it's inevitably going to stop on every god damned floor because the Older guys on the soccer team pushed all the button, all 26 floors worth, and even though it's an all male Dormitory, there may be, on one of the floors you stop on, a young man walking his date down to the Lobby. And you'll be naked. And they'll call the zoo because they think there's an escaped Anaconda.

Make sure you're not too drunk to do that Flaming Dr. Pepper shot or you could spill the flaming 151 on you hand and not realize your hand is on fire until the bartender says "hey man. your hand is on fire."

If your out of rolling papers you can roll a joint with "flimsy" and Drafting Dots. Architecture supplies know no boundaries.

That punk-rock girl that you met at the Beastie Boys/Henry Rollins show is a freak and later, while amorous, she's gonna try and put her finger in your butt. A little heads up, please, Elvira.

It's not right to get your cat high. I don't care how much he carries on when you spark up the Bong. Scavenger.

If you're eating Mushrooms make sure you're up on current event so that when the topic of conversation turns to the Clarence Thomas/Anita Hill debacle, you don't say "who the fuck is Clarence Hill?" and everyone will thing you're a dipshit and they'll laugh at you and you'll get freaked out and run out of the House through a screen door that you could have sworn was open. Just sayin'.

The bouncer at 328 Performance Hall is always right. You should stop when he tells you to.

That's it for now Kiddies.

Don't steal my booze. Ms. Picket, I'm talking to you.

-word.

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Baby is Lactating

I am translating this loosely from the Spanish so please bear with me:



"At last! A plastic baby doll that will pretend to suck
your daughters nipples!"















I think this one says:

"SLURP SLURP SLURP" 

or maybe

"OW! My nipplez iz burnin!"









How I wish I spoke Spanish, but I think this is pretty self-explanatory. After your daughter, or hell! why not! after your son pulls on the tank top with the plastic nipple attached, Bebe Gloton (which means "babydoll bites boobies") latches on, gets busy, and then cries with gassy colic (too much garlic perhaps?) until satisfactorily burped. The process repeats every 45 minutes until your small child goes frickin' crazy, buries the doll under an pile of Webkinz and hides in her/his closet murmering, "makebebeglotongotobed, makebebeglotongotobed."

I've seen this happen before. Minus the Webkinz, but still. 

Somewhere a helpful toy developer is engineering other brilliant toys like Mini Corrupted Laptop Never Works and Ick, I'm Sick: Make Toxic Mold In Your OWN Kitchen, and for fans of Bebe Gloton, Baby Barfalot, in which simulated vomit must be removed from a berber rug.

PS: Breast feeding IS a beautiful thing --- for grown-ups.

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Middle Aged Woman Called Me A Dolt**

This didn't happen at the grocery store which is a good thing: I am mean with the egg plant. And my half-frozen pork tenderloin right hook, all swift and thwack!? "You called me a what?" It's on: brawl in Aisle 4.


But this didn't happen in Aisle 4, or anywhere "real." And it didn't even happen to me exactly, but I felt like it did. Middle aged woman* (*not her real name) (maybe) made a comment on a blog (rhymes with wack jockey pleaseus) soapboxing that people who self-publish books are talentless dolts. Dart meet heart.

Maybe this middle aged woman didn't mean to imply that ALL self publishers (or independent filmmakers or musicians) are talentless, effortless dolts. Maybe she was just pointing out that in this one particular instance at Blogher, she wished to hear from "real authors" who have written queries and proposals. Which would be valuable information, absolutely.

But writing is a practice in precision; even if it's blurry, it's meant to be blurry -- a precise knife's edge scrawled in crayon and rubbed out just.so. So I gotta figure, since middle aged woman is a writer (*not her real profession), she must have precisely meant what she precisely wrote that "any dolt can do that. It's getting an agent and a publisher that requires some talent and great effort."

Oh dear. 

Am I taking this personally? Maybe (she says, grabbing eggplant, reaching for tenderloin...), but I get it. 

I suppose if I had what middle aged woman thinks is a better work ethic and more talent and more authenticity, I might have spent the last six months finding an agent and writing a book proposal. And who knows? Maybe that's what I'll spend the next six months doing. It's a noble and ridiculously difficult pursuit (hats off and god speed, Anna Lefler).   

But me and my co-authoress spent OUR six months in side-splitting hysterics on an adventure of headaches and highlights and what the hell, let's do it because it was...fun and funny. The fact that we actually saw our idea through to completion and  omigod! the horror!  self-published our epic tome with five kids and their laundry between us makes for a ridiculously sweet sense of accomplishment.

Because after a decade's worth of parenting and housewifery, completing something separate from my kids' good grades or my clean house is completely un-dolty, you silly, silly middle aged dolt.

**I think I could re-title this: "No One Puts Picket in the Corner. No One. Because Corners Make Her Pissed."

Saturday, August 8, 2009

Alone in House Haikus

When clean and silent

Becomes lonely and pressure
Work is a burden 

Thought I might like it
more than I do; that was dumb
My heart pounds bigger

She smokes alone now
She knows her days are short now
Someday? Kids kills butts

Quiet is a word
Noisy is a word we hate:
All words are iffy

I miss them sort of
I sleep late all by myself
I wake: all alone

Haiku is easy
When at a loss for words yo:
I write anyway

Loneliness sucks balls
Happiness is a full house:
I knew that always

Kids loud and away
Echo here this quiet night:
I hear like always

Like always, I speak
a poem here, a word there:
sweet tart words: come home.

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Can You See Me Now?

Kids at a pool: it's the epitome of fantastic wretchedness.


They swim and dunk and dive and flop unattended and fully entertained and working up to an excellent exhaustion. The sunscreen melts off the minute it's applied, but their bodies are submerged, so: only shoulders get burnt, maybe noses. They paddle and flop and hunt quarters at depths taller than they are. They coordinate games named "Baby Dolphins." They get drenched and pickled and giddy all at once.

But the goggles are too tight or too loose or worse than her brother's. The towel is too soggy but worthy of a battle, a whippingatyou, smackingatyou battle. The sister's belly flop is half-assed and "mine will be better and hurt more than hers" and WATCH ME WATCH ME WATCH ME will echo across the chlorine, over the deck chairs, past my magazine, and straight into my face. Straight into my face over and over and over: WATCH MEEEEEEE!

I explain that I have but two eyes and even if one goes one way and the other another, I still cannot see Three Short Drunk People do Amazing Short Drunk People Tricks in the pool. So I say -- "you first" and "your turn now" and "hold on! hold up! do it again: I am watching." 

Watching what? Nothing really. A kid holding her breath for as long as little lungs can, a wobbly hand-stand where points are counted for pointed toes, a boy and his butt-crack attempting a cannon ball. Watch me! they shout. 

What they mean to say is: See me! SEE. ME.

I struggle to get through a page of the New York Post, which is pathetically impossible. I am commanded to WATCH ME every four to seven seconds but I realize something as I do as told, as I bear witness to nothing and everything: little changes with age. That impulse to be seen? It clings to the body like salt water or chemicals. It holds on past childhood.

New jeans, fresh paint, shiny car, a sleek tattoo: we dive in, we jack-knife, we swim the fastest, we make waves, we sink to the bottom, we do a dead mans float, we make up games and break the rules, we hunt for money at some depth deeper than we should, we float and drift to the stairs.

See Me! we say. We say it sometimes without speaking. We say it to people we love and to strangers and to passers-by. We are all sometimes just kids at a pool, fantastically wretched and soaked and half-naked. 

Watch me. 

Sunday, August 2, 2009

Dear Mother Nature

Listen. I know you are anothah mutha, so props for that, but dude: what is up?


Can we not make one plan that will get all my children out of my face for three to five hours (say) without you effing everything up? You shine the sun one minute, blow crazy wind the next. Sweaty heat, then need a fleece. Thunder, microfuckingbursts, raining slugs. Ummm? Not to be rude, but...

GET BACK ON THE MEDS, GIRL. Stat. 

I've been packing the beach bags/unpacking the beach bags for a better part of the last two months. Making plans, changing plans, canceling plans and then oh! look at you: you just made the frickin sun come out! At the cocktail hour dinner time no less, when everyone is so ridiculously thirsty crabby that we can't.go.anywhere lest we get strange looks and I have to yell very very loudly.

I have mushrooms growing between the boards on my deck. The weeds in my garden are winning.  And my hair? Oh dear god woman: have you no pity at all?

I recognize you have some issues, but dude, I am recycling every single one of my beer cans and you know my kids never ever flush the toilet (even when there's poop in there) so c'mon. A few inches of the radar map, that's all I ask. Just a few inches give/take 300 miles in every direction that are not splattered with green masses and red spots and ALERT ALERTs -- yeah, that'd be awesome. 

My children will thank you, my husband will thank you, our boat will keep its carbon low for you: and I will plant things or clean things or um, you know,  just sit on the couch by myself and make daisy chains and sing folk songs. WHATEVER YOU WANT, I will do it...

I swear I will not rag on you about the current condition of my thighs (my fault) and I guess the skin above my knees and below my belly button is (sigh) just the nature of things, so I will go with you on that and my grey hair too. Because girl, I do love those hydrangea. A lot.

But please, for all that is good and right and that tethers together the last shred of my sanity, please think of the children. Get it together. I need some quiet around here.

Sincerely,

Ms Picket