Not a Christmas miracle

I am sitting in an airport, waiting for a delayed flight home from a quick weekend visit to see a friend I may not get to see again. I came because my friend is dying, and it doesn’t matter how much he doesn’t want to because in the end, death wins. So before it does, I came to see him.

The last time I saw him he was larger than life, a giant of a man who looked as at home in a pink scarf as he did in full 1980′s Dr. Who mode (complete with fetching fedora!) It is hard for me to reconcile that memory of him with the man I visited this weekend, simply because I am used to him towering over me. I am not used to having to lean down to hug him, not used to him being bedridden, not used to him having a hard time focusing on the screen of an iPad.
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The Thing I Am Doing

It seems like everyone I know is doing some new form of exercise. My dear friend Jeni is trying P90X. Shawn is skating her heart out in roller derby. Jane has started running. My friend Angela? Is doing a race every single month this year, including three half-marathons for the Triple Crown and convinced me to run a half marathon with her. (TIP: Always run charity runs and you can write off all your registration fees on your taxes!)

That half-marathon was an eye opener for me. It made me realize that I am not cut out for doing just one thing over and over and over. I mean, I love being able to say “Yeah bitches, 13.1 miles WHATTA WHAT!” but on the other hand: dude, I’ve been in physical therapy since the end of March because of the damn bursitis that race gave my hip. So I decided to go back to the exercise program that never bored me and never injured me but always, ALWAYS exhausted me.

I started Crossfitting again.

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The world came crashing down

I’ve started and stopped this entry roughly 200 times. The first 50 times I had to stop because I kept crying when I started. The next 50 nothing I wrote made sense because my brain was just not working well. The last hundred times, I opened a file and suddenly found myself unable to find the words to say what I want to say.

My mother called me at 6:30 on a Sunday morning. When I answered all I heard was my mother saying “You have to come! She won’t wake up!” I asked all the usual questions (did you call 911? what hospital are they taking her too?) while Kevin threw on clothes because he had awoken to me saying “Oh my god, oh my god, oh my god” while hunched over the bed. Just before I hung up, I heard her say “I don’t think we’re going to a hospital.”

We didn’t talk during the entire 30 minute drive. I clutched my phone, waiting for my mom to call me again, to tell me that Jackie was awake and they were on their way to the hospital so I could meet them there. But she didn’t call. The phone didn’t ring and as we drove into my mom’s neighborhood, I saw an ambulance turning out of an intersection. No lights. No siren. And that was the moment I knew.

Jackie was gone. And our family will never be the same.

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Sudden death of someone close to you is a shock to the system, like dipping your soul into a bathtub full of ice. This is something I have learned over and over and over again because every person I’ve lost has gone suddenly, sometimes violently, always too soon. But this time was different.

She’d had yet another surgery, the fourth in 3 years. This time it was her sinuses instead of her pacemaker or her hernia or the giant 9 lb mass that filled her abdomen. She’d had pain issues afterwards but seemed to be doing better.

And then she was gone.

When I got to the house, there was a sheriff standing guard, because they were waiting for the medical examiner to come and pick her up. I have never cried as hard as I cried while my mom and I huddled on the couch clinging to each other. And then we stopped, and started walking around in a fog that didn’t life for the entire month of July.

I made so many phone calls that day, the next day. Calls that started with me being calm and ended with me trying not to sob into the ear of the person I had just called. I could not handle calling my friends, because I knew that talking to them would break me. So instead I sent the worst text messages ever.

“Can you tell Char I won’t be there this week? Jackie died this morning.”

“I won’t be at Bunco, Jackie died.”

“Can you call me when you have a chance. Need to talk, v important.”

I told Laura while she was sitting in the car on her way to the Grand Canyon. I told my uncle while he was at his lake house enjoying the holiday weekend with his grandchildren. I woke up one of my mom’s best friends and said what my mom said: you have to come over.

Jackie’s dead. We lost Jackie. She passed away, she’s gone, she died. I said it over and over and over again but it didn’t seem real until I came home to get some clothes and took a minute to tell Twitter.

And then I cried so hard I almost threw up.

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Mom and I were talking the other day and we agreed that it was for the best that Jackie’s death was automatically a medical examiner’s case because of her recent surgery; if it hadn’t been, we wouldn’t have had any idea what to do as far as removing her body from the house (and we would not now know that they charge $20 for body bags). She hadn’t planned her funeral, other than putting down in writing that she wanted to be cremated. So we went to the funeral home and memorial park where so many of our friends had buried family members.

The funeral director looked 12, but she was sweet and efficient and completely respectful of my mother and her relationship with Jackie. We had everything planned before we picked anyone up from the airport. It was an odd way to spend the 4th of July, surrounded by sad people, quiet people, and a million boxes of Kleenex. I remember wondering what their monthly Kleenex bill must be; it has to be astronomical.

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The phrase I kept saying to my mother as I put away files and reminded her to lock up Jackie’s purse and put away things we didn’t want people snooping through was “Death makes people stupid.” Above all, I wanted my mother’s privacy protected. I fielded phone calls from family members asking what happened, how did she die, will your mom be okay? I searched through paperwork trying to reassure myself that she would be okay, that their lawyer had covered everything, that my mom wouldn’t have to sell the house and move to some horrible tiny apartment.

I ordered a case of wine and made Kevin pick it up to bring to my mom’s house. I taught my uncle how to make a good, strong Paloma. I bit my tongue when my family members acted like idiots and treated me like the flighty 12 year old I once was, and I poured myself another glass of wine. I took Jackie’s almost 4 years old granddaughter on “abentures” in the backyard that her grandmother designed and tended to so happily.

Family relationships have already started shifting. Jackie’s son and I are talking more now than we ever used to, but it’s good. Jackie’s sister is being too hovery and bossy for my mom’s liking but luckily, she’s in another state. My mom spends a lot more time on the phone and Skype with far flung friends who keep calling her.

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I feel guilty saying it but things are easier between my mom and I now. She and I worked out our shit years ago, through a lot of arguments and discussions and honest conversations. Jackie and I were getting there when she got sick in 2009, but then things got bad. She was in pain, she didn’t feel well, she worried about my mom, she worried about being out from work, and she missed her son and her grandkids.

And she took a lot of her frustrations out on me.

So it was hard, because Mom and I had to pick and choose how and what we talked about sometimes. There were things she would do for me without letting Jackie know because it was just easier that way. It was what it was, and I had every faith that things would get easier and more comfortable again once Jackie got healthy again, once they figured out how to get her heart beating calmly and her sinuses cleaned up so she wasn’t in constant pain.

But before that could happen, before we could get to that easier, more comfortable spot, Jackie died. Her heart wore out and stopped while she slept, and my mom and I are left behind to have the relationship we always had minus the tension. We text and email and call, I sit with her at meetings with the lawyer, she watches my dog when dogsitting arrangements fall through, she lets me do laundry at her house and I help her do her Costco shopping.

We are, above all else, friends. All those people who told me to take care of my mom don’t realize this, and they don’t realize that we take care of each other. We always have, and if all of this has proven anything, we always will.

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Losing a parent really fucking sucks. Knowing that I will someday go through this again and lose my OTHER parent is enough to make me want to crawl under the covers for good. But if there’s one thing I learned and that I know with all of my heart, it is that I am loved, by so many people. I had an Army of Girlfriends who called and brought lasagnas and wine and ice and babies to keep our spirits comforted, fed, entertained. They let me talk when I needed to talk and they let me cry when I needed to cry; they still do, to this day. I had friends who had never even met Jackie making CDs for the funeral, setting up for the reception after the funeral, sending flowers and Starbucks cards. They were my safety net.

They were my safety net, but Kevin was my rock. Someone once told me that the person you marry should be the person you can imagine standing next to your parent’s grave with. He picked up food for people, he made sure I had coffee and Jamaba Juice and Kleenex. He took care of me and my mother without any consideration for other people; we were his only concern, which was what we needed. He’s never once told me what I should or shouldn’t be doing or feeling or saying (except for the day he kept me from biting the head off of a very sweet employee at the funeral home); he’s let me just *be*.

Love seems inadequate to describe what he’s given me. I only hope I am half as good as him when it’s my turn to be his rock.

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Everything is settling now. The 40 days we had to wait before the house could be transferred is almost up. Mom’s looking for a CPA and a financial planner to figure out where to go from here, but she doesn’t have to leave the home she shared with Jackie for 32 years. She’s starting to clean things out of the house that Jackie refused to give up, and we’re getting into a new routine of emails and phone calls and text messages and biweekly visits.

The fragile days are getting farther apart, but we can all see the rough spots coming up. Her birthday in September. Thanksgiving. Christmas. Everyone else’s birthdays. The Fourth of July.

I miss her. I miss being able to ask her how to fix things in my house, I miss arguing with her about whether my memories were wrong, I miss her pie crust, I miss her making coffee in that damn percolator.

I guess that part probably won’t ever go away though.

I Feel Pretty (Thanks, Igigi!)

The one thing about me and my personal style that has changed dramatically since my whole Weight Loss Saga started is that I am in love with dresses. This is mostly because somewhere along the way I shifted from being a definite pear shape to being more of an hourglass shape, but it’s also because finding a pair of pants that fits my big butt and stubby legs without causing me to spend the day fidgeting to make things fit right is pretty much impossible. Therefore in the Pants vs. Dresses debate, I have come down firmly on the side of Dresses.

The problem is that even finding good dresses that fit right is still a problem, because I’m a weird size. I’m a 14/16 but in today’s world of women’s sizes that can mean roughly 15 million things. So when Wendy Bix emailed us and said “Hey, Igigi wants to send us clothes to wear at Weetacon! Who’s in?” I said “Oh hells yeah!” and started picking out dresses left and right. And then I promptly forgot which dresses I requested because man alive, i was busy and shit.

So imagine my surprise when Wendy gathered us to explain that the lovely women behind Igigi were beyond generous and had sent us not one piece of clothing apiece, but instead multiple pieces…2, 3, 4 items to wear! And KEEP!! And next thing I knew we had gone from excitedly jumping around in the parking lot to frantically changing clothes together in the stairwell so we could put on a fashion show for the rest of the Weetacon revelers. (Please note: yes, I got to keep the clothes I am about to discuss. No, I was not told what to write and yes, these are my honest opinions.)

The first dress I wore was the Tres Chic Dress in a lovely black & white pattern. I love, love, love patterns on dresses; they distract the eye and hide any lumpy bits you might be trying to hide. This dress takes it a bit further and adds a princess knot that makes the front of the dress the perfect tummy cover and the cowl neck draws the eye up. I honestly wasn’t sure how I would like the cowl neck; it’s super tough for me to find one that doesn’t make me look dumpy. But this one hit just right, and I think the wider neckline kept it from making me look thick around the chin. The longer sleeves and modest neckline make this a perfect work dress, and the fact that it’s fully lined means no need for slips or Spanx. (I actually ended up wearing this to work my first day back from Weetacon since we had no time to do laundry!) Two thumbs up for sure on the Tres Chic!

The second dress I wore was the one that made Kevin drool; it was the Jackie 2-in1 in a lovely, lovely shade of royal blue. I love this dress. LOVE. BIG GIANT LOVE. Not only does it hug my curves as though it was made specifically for me, it has pockets! And can be worn multiple ways! The detachable belt can be worn aqua side up or blue side up, or it can be left behind entirely. Sleeves rolled up to show the aqua accent, sleeves rolled down or heck you can even wear the belt as a scarf (which would be a good way to cover up the top a little bit). This is definitely a dress I would grab for a night out; those pockets would be perfect to hold ID, lipstick and money (and yes, phone!). I went ahead and wore it to work but I will admit that I felt a little over exposed; I ended up putting some double sided tape on my bra to hold the top a little more closed. Next time I might try doing the scarf trick. Another two thumbs up plus a star because of the pockets.

Last but not least in my own personal lineup was the Carmella Lace dress, which quite a few of us got to wear. This is an absolutely lovely dress with tons of quality lace and little details like different lace edging around the neckline and satin belt. The cut of the skirt is one I would not have thought I would like on myself since it was somewhat trumpety and that shape always makes my hips look ginormous. But this one didn’t do that. What the Carmella DID do was confuse the hell out of me. It is a true wrap dress, and the satin belt was long enough to wrap around more than once so I wasn’t sure where I should tie it. I tried it on the side but then it was too loose and kept busting wide open; once I tied it in the back it stayed shut but then I felt like there was way too much ribbon hanging out over my butt. I did finally make it fit me right but  I think I need to try it on again when I have more time to fiddle with it than I did that night. I have a gala to go to in September and I think this dress will work well for it once I finally figure it out! So one and a half thumbs for the Carmella; that might get bumped up to two once I know how to wear it. (I think I might have been able to figure out the Venice Dress more easily but alas, that one is sold out in my size.)

So here’s the very best part of all this generosity that Igigi has shown to me and so many other women at Weetacon….I get to pass on some of that generosity! Yuliya has given me the opportunity to give a commenter a $50 gift certificate to Igigi so that you guys can feel pretty too! (PrettiER, because my commenters are the prettiest already. All three of you!) All you have to do is tell me which piece you are lusting after and where you want to wear it, and then I will use some fandangled random number generator (probably random.org) to pick one of you to give a piece of Igigi. I’m even going to give you a couple weeks to do some window shopping before posting your comment. Winner will be announced on April 8th (because I know for sure I will post an entry then!) Yay! Contest! Pretty stuff to wear!

(Big thanks to Jorie Tappa for taking the lovely pictures in this entry!)

Things of Note

I bought a new trash can, and it made me much happier than I even thought I would be because of a trash can. Really, if anything screams “BORING MIDDLE AGED SUBURBANITE” it’s getting excited over a new trashcan. But here’s the thing. Our old trash can was one of those plastic ones with the swingy tops that always got caught on the trash we piled into it (because we are Uberconsumers, I swear) and I really, REALLY wanted one of those cool stainless steel ones with the little foot pedal but have you seen how much the big ones are?? EIGHTY DOLLARS. FOR A TRASH CAN. And I’m sorry but my trash can should not cost more than the trash it holds, so I refused to buy one.

But then I was wandering through Sam Walton’s Kingdom of Things Made In China and found this awesome Rubbermaid trashcan for $12. IN RED! So it matches my randomly decided red theme in the kitchen, keeps the dog and cats out of all our trash AND has a nifty lid. I am not at all ashamed to say that I bragged about my awesome $12 trashcan for a few days after I found it.
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I got a used bike, and I love it but I have yet to ride it. And this is because I bought it from my friend who just happens to be a good 4 inches taller than me and when she was fixing it up she neglected to lower the seat so when I sit on it I am barely able to reach the ground with my tiptoes. I am planning on riding it down to the bike shop this weekend and get it adjusted, and then I am going to get my new bike basket mounted and then I am going to make Sophie ride in the basket to the dog park. She gets exercise, I get exercise, win win!

Kevin keeps wanting me to buy a bike helmet despite the fact that California law doesn’t require me to. He forgets that I rode a beach cruiser through the streets of LA for two years without a single fall, injury or car incident. Also, I only get hurt when doing mundane things like walking so I don’t really know what he’s worried about.
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Speaking of car incidents, I got rear-ended last week. And not in the good way (BA DUM DUM!) Instead a dude in a Civic slammed into me, then got out and said “That was totally on me, sorry. My chest hurts.”

One of my friends texted me about it later and asked how badly I beat him up. I managed to resist beating the crap out of the non-attention paying idiot but I cannot promise anything when it comes to the mushroom-headed adjuster who is dealing with my claim. That dude may be in for quite a verbal lashing later this week since so far he has managed to A) not call me within the required contact time limit and B) tried to send me to a body shop near my house instead of my job even AFTER I specifically told him I wanted to go to one near my job.

Anyway, my lower back starts hurting if I sit for more than 20 minutes, wine is the only thing that makes it stop hurting, I wake up with headaches and I do not have time for this shit. So I am trying to fix my car and fix myself and ARGH. Pffbbbt.
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I am watching Rachel Getting Married. Will the wine help or hurt my enjoyment of this movie?
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Susan and Shawn came and stayed with us last weekend and celebrated the 4th of July with us. My parental units were even more charming than usual (thank goodness JM got a full night’s sleep the night before) (and also had 9 pounds of bitterness taken out of her last fall), the fireworks were awesome, and we drank a lot of wine and gossiped and it was like a weekend long summer camp.

I lurve my girls.
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Speaking of my girls, Laura had her baby!!! And he is my cute little boo, Kendrick Monkeybutt Squishy Shmoo. It KILLS ME that I am here and not there, and that I have yet to hold him but I am flying out there over Labor Day and then I will smother him with kisses and loving and cook casseroles for his mother.

AND I just found out that Niblet is going to get a sibling next February so it is Auntie M in full effect up in here.

Also, holy cats, as I typed that I got a text message that JM’s son (my stepbrother for all intents and purposes) just welcomed HIS baby boy (his second) an hour ago. This is why I don’t feel bad about not having babies, people. All these awesome, smart people are having babies around me, and I get to do all the fun stuff with them and just bask in my auntiedom.
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This movie is pretty boring so far. I think I need to find some Law & Order
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I have nothing else to say, so here is a gratuitous picture of Sophie on 4th of July. (And yes, I made the collar. Because that’s how I roll.)

Run. On.

I’m in a rut. Not a rut so much as well, a crevasse. I’m psychologically stymied. The ennui, I has it.

Who gets ennui in the springtime? Seriously, only me.

I think it is because I am an emotional sponge and there is so much fucking drama (DRAMA MOTHERFUCKERS) around me at any given time these days that I am kind of constantly exhausted. It’s not my drama, thank every deity of possible existence out there. But when one friend almost leaves her husband and another definitely IS leaving her husband and the stories that I tell about my job make my former boss tell me it sounds like an episode of The Office, I become prone to being distracted and skittery and tired and apparently, cannot speak unless it is via incredibly long run-on sentences.

In other news, I told Sheila I needed to take a break from going to her class, because it was starting to get to the point where I hated going. I hated driving down there (it tacked an extra 60-90 minutes of driving onto my day). I hated paying for it, because we are a household of broke ass bitches thanks to some stupid low profile tires I had to buy for my stupid car. I hated the fact that I was missing my husband because I never got home before 7:30 on the one night a week we were both home.  So I quit, and who knows if I will go back. I will call her, and I will stay in touch and I will have to come up with some kind of exercise program on my own that is cheap and that I will actually do because I feel like a slug right now. Luckily, I live in a crazy suburban world in the country and there’s all kinds of activity things going on. There is a dog walking group that goes out and hikes on Sunday mornings, which I think I might try to go do. Of course, the last time I took Sophie out for a hike we saw (from about 10 feet away) A GIGANTIC RATTLESNAKE so now we are having to look into rattlesnake awareness training for her. Because we live in the country, and country dogs need to know how to avoid rattlesnakes. (Of course, Kevin’s plan to avoid rattlesnakes involves just not hiking, but hiking is fun and I like it so rattlesnake awareness training it is!)

I did get to take a quick vacation last weekend over the holiday, and I flew out to Kansas City, MO to visit Laura and help her get her baby’s room ready for his imminent arrival (because yes, she is having a boy, which I told her the first time she had an ultrasound and I saw his giant head; his name is Kendrick and he totally roundhouse kicked me).  And then I packed Laura’s very pregnant self into the car and we drove over to the Kansas side of things and visited (the now boobless but still a hot cougar) Jane, who demonstrated her remarkable ability to find anything I wanted in relation to a liquor store. (Don’t knock it, that is a handy, handy trait to have.) It was a lovely weekend and on my last morning there we went and got coffee at an awesome little coffeeshop in downtown Parkville. It was run by a small gay man named Josh who was originally from (you guessed it) San Diego by way of Los Angeles, so we spent our breakfast chattering with him about North Park and East County and the Princess House crystal plates he inherited from his mother and then used in the shop. (And here I thought only my mother had the insane Princess House collection!)

So I’m taking the summer off from school and hoping to use the extra time to do something productive, like actually finish the Couch to 5K program. Of course, I’m also on the planning committee for the CF Foundation Gala so I’m going to be spending a lot of time asking people for money this summer too but you know I have no problem with that.  I’ll probably take at least one more trip good old Kansas City once my little Monekybutt is born, but other than that I think I’ll just plan on sitting next to the pool and yelling at the neighbor kids all summer. It’s cheap entertainment, which really, is always something I can use more of.

My head is harder than it looks

Remember how I went and had weight loss surgery? And then I lost all that weight and was all “WOO, I’m done! I never have to think about it AGAIN!”

Man, I am delusional.

But even the best delusions come to an end for me, so last week I buckled down and admitted that hey, I need to DO SOMETHING to get myself back on track with the whole eating right & keeping fit deal because good intentions were not getting me very far. My good intentions were instead getting my ass a bit bigger, because even if I don’t absorb all of the food I eat, if it’s mostly carbs and processed junky food, that food that’s being absorbed is still going to add back some of the pounds I lost. So even though my doctor says I look good and my bloodwork says I’m super healthy, I decided to go on a diet starting this week.

I know. I thought I would never have to be on one again either.

I remember the day I found out from my surgeon’s office that I didn’t need to go back to any Weight Watchers meetings because my surgery had been approved. I threw away all of the materials, and I felt so very good doing it. I never had to sit around and listen to people talk about how good that fake cheesecake recipe was! Or be told I was going to be disappointed with myself because I gained half a pound! Or listen to them talk about good foods versus bad foods and then watch my own binge eating disorder rear its ugly head on my way home from weighing in.

(You can probably guess where this is going.)

Yesterday I signed up for Weight Watchers Online, and I spent the day remembering one simple fact: Dieting is hard, yo. Thinking about what I’m putting in my mouth and deciding if it’s worth it. Weighing the difference between a scone (yum!) or a spinach wrap (also yum but not scone yum). Paying attention to portion sizes and vitamins and how much water I’m drinking (a lot, by the way). Telling myself that no, I’m not actually hungry, I’m just bored.

I would rather be back in Managerial Accounting, quite frankly, and I dreaded that class.

Before I told her I was doing the WW Online thing, Sheila suggested that I join an in person program that she is running, and I had to tell her I couldn’t. For one thing, it costs too much, but for another (more major) thing, I realize now that I cannot do that group diet thing. I cannot be told “This is good and this is bad” and listen to other people’s tricks and manipulations and weird food issues because they just trigger me to do my own tricks and manipulations. And that kind of setting has never done anything for me other than make me rebellious and bingey and unhappy. And I don’t want to be unhappy.

But this time I have a friend to help me through the “Dude, this SUCKS” part that always happens at the beginning of a diet, and I have a plan to follow without anyone policing me and most of all, I have an actual true desire to turn my behavior around. Dieting is hard, and it sucks, because it makes me be responsible for what goes in my mouth and it makes me think about things that I don’t want to think about and it makes me stop finding weird justifications for everything.

But weirdly enough, for the first time ever in all my years of dieting, I feel good about this. I feel good about eating a salad with tuna and going for a brisk walk at lunch because I know tonight’s dinner will be full of tasty, tasty calories. I feel good about finally taking my vitamins and drinking my water and eating breakfast.

Most of all, I feel good about being able to acknowledge that dieting sucks and is hard and does not feel good but still not considering giving up. Sometimes, uncomfortable can be a good thing. I get that now, in a way I never was able to before.

My therapist will be so proud.

This is what I sound like in real life, too

So hey, how about that February that just whizzed by? That was good times, right there. I think I did some stuff and saw some people and maybe did some homework in there somewhere. OH! I definitely went to LA and gave Shawn  the best birthday present EVER (the 1980 Black Barbie, complete with ‘fro, pick and pantsuit!) I also greeted Patrick at the airport with a giant obnoxious sign and ate cupcakes with Trish and Jared. And hung out with my dog and my husband and the little asshole cats.

In other words, I did the whole day to day life thing.

And then March came and Weetacon was finally here and real life went far far away and I cried in a bar about how awesome Wendy Bix is and I ate chicken fried steak at 2:30am (MISTAKE) and I drank the best home brewed beer ever and dropped my Nano in my bathtub and lost my voice and didn’t show my boobs, not even once. And it was magical and sparkly and awesome and then I came home and had to work and ugh.

I have to say, for someone who actually usually enjoys her job and its flexibility (hello, I am writing this entry while scanning business cards), I am easily annoyed by it. Maybe that is why I was told during my review that I tend to be “discourteous when feeling under pressure.” (Apparently that bothers me more than I let on, since I have told that story to oh, 50 people now.)

But I mean come on. There was apparently drama about who was going to answer the door while I was gone (our facility is locked down and people ahve to be buzzed in, whoo whoo TOP SECRET SHIT HERE), because apparently everyone else is JUST TOO BUSY to answer the door. Amazingly enough, they discovered that having to answer the door constantly means that a person gets interrupted all damn day. HELLO, WELCOME TO MY WORLD. Ask me again why the Big Giant Filing Project isn’t done. It’s because I am basically chained to my desk until 2 or 3 in the afternoon, that’s why. And this is why I’m getting an MBA, so I can get unchained from the front desk (By the way, I totally aced Managerial Accounting somehow.)

So anyway, I got to come back and listen to the fall out from that drama and I really just wanted to tell everyone that they were grown ass adults and to stop complaining about it because damn if it’s going to keep me from going on vacations (especially now that we have found out that my coworker is basically the best petsitter ever in the history of the world.) But then I remembered that I really like my coworkers and I really like my hours and I really, REALLY like the fact that my company is actually successful in these uncertain times, so I shut my mouth and ate some chocolate.

Speaking of chocolate, have I mentioned that I have an entire chocolate drawer in my fridge? This is because my dear friend David sells chocolate through Dove, which now has this whole home party enterprise. Think Tupperware but for chocolate. And it’s actual good chocolate so I buy some or I host a party and then whammo, chocolate drawer. I’m like the worst WLS patient in the history of the world.

Speaking of worst WLS patient in the world, I’ve had these weird symptoms lately that sent me over to my doctor asking if there was a possibility that I could be starting menopause early. Or maybe it was my thyroid! Or something! So she took a ton of blood from me (because my doctor does not pshaw her patients’ concerns) and tested me up, down, left and right and declared me perfectly normal. (Aside from the hot flashes and dry skin and usual insanity, of course.) So I’m telling my friend this and drop in there that oh, well, I haven’t been taking my vitamins lately (I KNOW) and she basically smacked me with her eyes and sarcastically said “Oh, maybe you should try taking them then? MAYBE?”

So I’ll start taking them again, I promise. Because I really don’t like the hot flashes. And I hear beri beri sucks.

It Is What It Is

I had a party to go to this weekend, a fantastic and fabulous party that is given annually by two of my favorite people in the world and this year, they threw us an 80′s Prom.

“Yay!” thought my inner prom queen, “I can finally use that bridesmaid’s dress from Laura’s wedding again!”

A few days before the party, I realized that hey, maybe I should try it on, seeing as I hadn’t worn it for a year and a half and things change. Butts get bigger, workouts get missed, the holidays ahd just happened, etc. So I tried it on and praise be, that size 14 bridesmaid’s dress still fit. Hallelujah, etc. I packed it up and headed out to have a good time.

The dress worked well for the party, especially with the addition of fingerless lace gloves, giant hair, copious amounts of blue eyeshadown and a veritable pile of long, plasticy necklaces. And the party was nothing but a good time, surrounded by fun people and many glasses of champagne and a husband who gambled enough to win me a stuffed Smurf. But somewhere around the 5th hour of wearing the dress (which was described as one of my friends as “very complicated” when he helped zip me into it), the dress started trying to kill me.

The built in, long line bra contraption started poking me in the ribs. It rode up and made me itch. If I pulled it up, the stays jabbed a new bruise into an unmarked part of my rib cage;  if I pulled down, the dress threatened to release my boobs in a small tsunami of unfettered flesh. In other words, the dress and I were having a disagreement, and the dres? Was totally winning.

I started joking about finding Mo’s suitcase and stealing some clothes from her, since I did not have anything in the car to change into. When I made the joke to her, she immediately offered to give me pajama pants and a tank top so I would survive without permanent scarring. As I was changing I told her I had forgotten how stabby the dress was, and that it was even stabbier since I’d put on probably 15  or so pounds (at least) since the last time I wore it.

“Is this a bad thing? Or a good thing?” Mo asked, since she knows about the weight loss surgery I had. “Or a neutral thing?”

I shrugged and said “It is what it is. I’m just glad I don’t have rickets!” And then we went back out and rejoined the party and had a very good night all around.

So yeah, I’ve gained back some of the weight I lost. And no, it’s not my favorite thing in the world to admit. That’s partly because I never hit the goal I wanted to hit in the first place and partly because admitting I’ve gained weight back (beyond my 5 pound “bounce back”, which I totally wrote off) feels like admitting I’m a failure. And that is pretty much stupid, because statistically, I am a weight loss surgery success. I lost 65% of my excess weight and have maintained that for 2 1/2 years. My cholesterol dropped like a stone, my blood pressure followed suit, my blood sugars are actually tending toward the low end, and oh my GOD, I can jog now! For extended periods of time even!

But I will admit that this weight gain has freaked me out. I was on the verge of a total downward spiral last month, until I was shopping and tried on some size 16 straight leg Levi’s (that’s a misses size 16, not a women’s size 16) and they fit perfectly. I’m still 6 sizes smaller than I was at my largest, and I’m still fitting into all the clothes in my closet, and I can still buy things without trying them on because I know they will fit. So I was able to step back and take a breath and tell myself “It is what it is.”

There is a change that needs to be made though, because even though my numbers are good and my fitness is decent and I’m active and working out and wearing the same size as I did 18 months ago, I am not feeling my best. I am not making nutritionally sound choices, I am not taking my vitamins on a regular basis, I am not drinking enough water or getting enough protein or avoiding sugar. And it’s making me feel bloaty and rundown and making my intestinal tract unpredictable and cranky. My brain doesn’t operate as well and I’m not as happy as I could be because my body is not getting what it needs. So while that number on the scale is what it is, it’s time to get honest with myself and do what I need to do to get back on track.

If only there was an easy way to do that. Guess all I can do is keep trying.

She’s Kind of An Asshole, But I Love Her

Back in 1999 or so, when I was 24 and bored and dumb,  I went through a phase that involved a lot of first dates and a lot of…discovering my sexuality, we’ll say. (I think I jokingly called it my Slut Phase at one point, but have since reconsidered that classification.) Anyway, one night I went on a date with a guy that I knew was not the right guy for me, and I knew I was not the right girl for him. But we were in Old Town and had dinner and some margaritas and then decided to head down to a local pub that served beer by the yard in these ridiculous tall glasses.

And so we drank a couple yards of beer and talked shit to each other and flirted despite ourselves. Eventually we’d had enough to drink so we went out and started wandering around Old Town trying to clear our heads enough to drive home.  It was cold and a little foggy and around 1am so there wasn’t anyone around when we wandered into the little cemetery that is right smack in the middle of Old Town. We ended up sitting on a bench, bullshitting and flirting and being drunk. One thing led to another (as it does when you are 24 and dumb and drunk), and then we quickly progressed from making out to searching frantically through my purse for a condom.

Afterwards, we were wandering back to our cars and Nick (that was his name, by the way) was walking the opposite direction when suddenly he stopped, turned around and said “I’m going to tell my grandkids this story someday.” Creepy, yet flattering.

I, of course, told my best friend a mere 6 hours later. (It would have been sooner but she objected to 2am phone calls if I wasn’t bleeding or in jail.) Laura was positively shocked, because in the 16 years we had been friends I was always the Good Girl. Scandalous liaisons in shadowy public places were more likely to be a story from Laura.

Fast forward 10 years to last week.  I’m at work and my cell phone rings.

“So I’m down in Old Town with the kids,” Laura said “and I’m in this little cemetery….” (Here’s where she started snickering.)

“You are such a brat!” was all I could say since I was at work. She just laughed and laughed.

“I want to see the famous spot where it happened!” (Insert peals of laughter here.)

So I told her, because it was kind of funny that 10 years later, she’s down there with her stepkids telling them “Oh, let’s go look at this cemetery” just so she can taunt me about a hilarious, stupid, daring thing that I did when I was young and dumb. The bench isn’t there anymore, but Laura still is.

This summer, she and I created yet more memories to add to the pile when we drove across the country to bring her back to San Diego, just us and the pug. Sophie has been having play dates with Auntie Laura and Ike and Tina, the Puggletarys. We started working out together with Sheila, and she’d make me lunch once a week or so. She’s pregnant with her first baby, my little niece or nephew.

She and her husband are moving to Kansas City for a year, so he can do school at the Army War College. It’s the third time she’s moved since she met him; such is the price of being a Navy officer’s wife. They leave in two days, the morning of New Year’s Eve.

I know we’ll still make time to call and make fun of each other, because we always have despite living miles and miles apart for the past 10 years. And I know I’ll see a lot of Kansas City over the next year, but my heart is still breaking, just a little.

At least she won’t be able to call me from any memorable cemeteries in Kansas City.

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