Packing up My Childhood

Oak Harbor, WA

I’ve been spending the last few days (and the next few weeks) packing up my parents’ house so they can move from their current residence on Whidbey Island to a new house on the island. I’m excited for them to be moving because the new house seems better suited for a family that likes to get away from each other. You know how it is, “I thought we were watching the game! Who changed the channel! Don’t come in, I’m wrapping presents! You snore, I’m not sharing a room with you!”

Anyhow, in the process of packing up the closets I have come across the usual pictures, old stuffed animals I loved the stuffing out of, letters to and from my sisters (which I read of course), letters to and from my parents (which again I read, I’m very nosy), and then there was the dreaded find of my high school life dwindled down to a box of crap.

First you have to understand who I thought I was in high school. I thought I was a writer; I perceived myself to be an activist; I fantasized that I was brilliant and thoughtful; I believed myself to be practical and anti-drama; Most importantly I envisioned myself to grow up to be a radical writer who fought for causes and affected people with my word. Now of course I have come down from all that and in no way do I think I am a good writer (how could I when surrounded by people like KB or my friend Kyle), but I was not prepared for the utter disappointment I found reading my old work.

Not only was I a terrible writer, but I was so typically adolescent, reminiscent of “My So Called Life.” I hated that my mom watched this show and remarked that it reminded her of me in high school. I hated it because I thought Claire Danes’ character was a wimp and extremely naive. But now I read my journals and my short stories and, eegads, my poetry and I cringe. Even my underground paper is burn worthy.

What I have concluded is that my mother was right all along. She always told me that I had potential, but that my refusal to proofread or rewrite held me back. I believed at the time that whatever came out of my pen in that spontaneous moment was a pure unique thought and by altering it in any way would alter that moment forever. I wanted to preserve the thought, the feeling, and myself by never rereading or rewriting anything. The result? I have a box full of crap that I would be ashamed for anyone to discover (or remember, for those who read it then).

I think about my first serious boyfriend, Sonny, who was definitely a tortured artist in both our minds. I read all the poems I wrote to him and the stories I wrote about my aching love for him and I want to vomit and then I want to call him and say, “Hey Sonny, so I’m, um, really sorry you had to read all that crap and pretend it was good.”

To worsen the blow to my pride, I went on to find my college papers and was appalled at my lack of effort. I don’t think I ever edited any of those papers (probably because I wrote them hours before they were due) and I’m embarrassed that professors, especially the ones I admired, had to read them and grade them. What puzzles me though is when they would assign the paper an A or a B and then say, “You have some great thoughts here” or “Imagine where you could go with this if you had time.” Little did they know that more time would only have meant more procrastination and I still would have written it hours before.

I think I am finally moving past the stage of “preservation of thought.” Even with blog entries I find myself rereading them and checking for errors. How’s that for an about face. I hope in the future I will have a chance to exercise my analytical muscle and write papers again, and this time maybe I’ll read what I write. And if it’s any good, maybe I’ll let you read it too. Until then, this is the extent of my writing and I offer it up knowing it’s pulp and not to be viewed as anything else.

Enjoy and toss. Please do not remember me for my poor writing.

Zen and the Art of Cappuccino Maintenance

Seattle, WA

I had a moment of Zen this evening from drinking too many cappuccinos. Let me clarify. We must go back to this morning when I awoke to the bright silver glow of my sister’s brand new espresso machine. A machine so impressive I think it comes with it’s own Official Barista Business License and a Certified Yuppie Plaque. After watching the How To Video (that she specifically required me to watch before using) I made the best cappuccino I’ve ever made in my life.

So walk with me for a bit. Throughout the day I have two cappuccinos, make a mocha for Tonja, and make sure to utilize the oversized mugs we never think we’ll pull out of the cupboard. Needless to say, my sister’s milk is all gone. Fast forward to this evening.

Tonja, Piet, Ruth, and I go to Trivia at Ol’ Peculiar in Ballard (which sucks because the guys there are making it way too obscure and hard, except for the Simpsons category where I bemoan Johnny’s absence). After opening a tab for a pitcher of beer and dinner, I help our team lose just enough to only win us a Claudia Schiffer WorkOut Video. Damn them for knowing I need faster ways to tighter buns. Trivia done, we head out and I note that the chilly Seattle weather feels a bit cozier with a couple beers in you.

Piet and Tonja drop me off at home, my sister schools me on how to properly clean the steamer on the machine (because I apparently left the last of the milk on the steamer rod), and then I break the news that I didn’t get a chance to pick up milk. Seeing that I had overreacted to being scolded about my clean up job, I tell her I will run out and get milk now. This seems very generous of me considering it’s almost midnight, but really I just keep thinking of that cappuccino I want to have in the morning which can’t happen unless I cart my little booty to the store. No problem, the store is a mere ten blocks away.

When I get up to the counter with my gallon of 2% (because it’s better to have some fat in your coffee drinks), and a six pack of Mirror Pond Pale Ale for my sister as a peace offering, I realize that I don’t have my Debit Card. The one I plopped down at Trivia. I use my credit card, jump back in my car with my classy gallon of milk and six pack of beer, and head back to the bar. In Ballard. For those who don’t know, Capitol Hill is not close to Ballard. At least not to me.

For those who do know Seattle, I take the I-5 exit to 50th and as usual there is a homeless man begging for money with his hat out. I ignore his glances, as is the typical reaction, but then as I am averting my eyes I catch sight of my beer on the floor of the passenger seat. After a few thoughtful moments (and checking the timing on the stoplights) I pick up a nice cold beer, roll down my window, and hold it out for him. He scurries over, takes it and wishes me a happy holidays (which is so PC of him). I return the sentiment and the lights change at that moment, which was my plan because we all know about the awkward wait after handing over change to a begger and then having to sit at the stoplight next to them for another couple minutes.

What is funny is how often we ridicule the homeless for begging because we assume they will spend the money on booze. Yet, when I saw my beer all I could think of was “This guy needs a little beer to warm him up.” I think I was right. Besides, when it comes down to it, I’m unemployed and running out of money so a beer represents what I could have given him if I hadn’t bought the beer, but also a bit of camaraderie. (Please don’t insert ridicule for how different our situations are. Just accept that sharing a beer can tear down those divisions.)

So tomorrow morning my sister will awaken to a gallon of milk and a 5 pack of beer, and I feel all the better for it.

Needless Reflection

I was told by a certain someone that I should not, under any circumstances, blog about how I’m about to go through a big life change and pontificate about the “where is my life leading” kind of spew. Hmmm…so what does that leave me?

Well, let’s just say I’m sitting here at my desk looking around at 3.5 years worth of receipts, paperwork, handouts, notes, pictures, white cheddar popcorn wrappers, and cuppa jo coupons and I’m wondering…how the hell am I supposed to fit all this in the itty bitty garbage can they give me? The truth is, I am packing most of it up and putting it in my car to take to my dad’s boat barn where the rest of my life is, but I’m wondering if I have the energy to purge any of it as I go. That’s about all. Nothing even remotely sentimental.

I think the general consensus is “It was a great run, now get out of my way, I’ve got a life to return to.” So begins what I am now referring to as my “cool down period.” (Sidenote: I couldn’t remember the term for post-workout exercise so I had to ask a co-worker, so here is the appropriate props to Ed for reminding me that it is called “cool down” as opposed to the obvious “warm up” that happens before a workout. Man, I must have really fried my brain to have forgotten that.)

Anyhow, with the road trip, Thanksgiving in Hawaii, the possible cruise ship training job, I figure all of this is my way of “cooling down” after a job full of travel. Sometime next summer maybe I’ll finally settle down and find a job like everyone else.

Oh god, that’s depressing.

Spider Update

There’s this habit in our family to put off pressing responsibilities or work by filling our time with cleaning or organizing. We comvince ourselves that the messy house or the filled e-mail inbox is due for a cleaning and that is a justified priority. So I was not surprised when I came home the other night to my sister’s apartment and the place smelled of amonia and reeked of procrastination.

Lo and behold, not only was the kitchen floor spotless, but the infamous trapped spider was gone. Apparently, it had built itself a web and made itself at home inside the glass so when my sister finally had the guts to pick up the glass, the spider wouldn’t leave. She place the glass right side up outside and we kept checking on him. We couldn’t decide if he were starving or trapped or just plain resting.

Later that night, something hit my ankle as I was washing dishes and I looked down only to find that, no not another spider, but a bee was crawling around by my foot. Now I am slightly less scared of bees so I calmly put a glass over it. The only difference here is that I was calm.

Never fear. After all the guilt I felt over the spider, it only took about five minutes for me to find a piece of card stock to slip under the glass and carry the bee outside. After releasing it I had an afterthought that maybe I should have thrown it into the glass with the spider. I’m pretty sure the spider needs food and water (he’s pretty dry, but not dead) so what do you think? Would the bee have won or would the spider have devoured her?

Balance or Karma?

So my Labor Day weekend would have been wonderful since I got to see my good friend Johnny (read his account of our glorious fun) but instead the gods decided to once again balance out my good fortune with some bad. My computer crashed.

I spent all day yesterday trying to troubleshoot the error messages. You know the ones. A BSoD (blue screen of death) with numbers like 0x000000C2 or 0x000000A5 and of course everything I read doesn’t really help. Every time I thought I had fixed the problem there seemed to be a new error message or number. I won’t bother you with the details, but after shedding some tears in a Best Buy yesterday because they refused to let me exchange the wrong memory card (which they finally did exchange by the way, just to try and get this crazy woman…namely me…to stop crying) and then being on the phone all day today with Dell, I finally got to the point where they said it was the motherboard. Then after another hour of waiting to be connected to the guy who was supposed to set up a time to come out and change my motherboard, I finally talked to Kurt.

Kurt has renewed my faith in Dell. Before I talked to him I had decided (and will actually probably stick to this) that I will never let another friend buy Dell. Horrible tech support. Non-communicative. I could really go into it, but I won’t. But Kurt, wonderful, beautiful Kurt, listened to me. Really listened to me. He asked the right questions, he explained why he was having me try a few more things, he described what he was looking for, and within 15 minutes he figured out it was the original memory card that was bad. Not the ones I had been buying. Now my computer works again and they are sending me a free memory card. Thank god.

So I ask again, was this to balance out the spectacular days I had on Thursday and Friday? I was on such a high and then this happened and I haven’t cried so much in one day for a very long time. (There was more to cry over than just my computer, but I’m sure I would have been more apt to yell instead of cry if it were just that.)

But as I’m writing this I’m looking over into my sister’s kitchen (my sister who’s couch I’m sleeping on) and I see this glass on the floor in the corner. A glass that has been there for about three weeks or more. Underneath this glass that is turned upside down, is a spider. A big scary spider that my butch lesbian ex-army combat helicopter pilot sister was too scared to deal with. And so am I. We are so pathetically afraid of spiders that we have trapped this poor thing for almost a month and neither of us want to acknowledge it’s still there. So maybe it’s karma. Maybe my lack of compassion for this spider is what led to my computer crashing. Hmmm… Our mom was here last night and she always took care of spiders for us when we were little (never forgetting to include a “I can’t believe you girls are such wimps” kind of mumble under her breath) so we asked her if she would take care of it since she was here. She just looked at us like we had to be kidding.

Alas, the spider is still here and my mother won’t take care of it, probably as some statement about us being adults now or something. Do you think I could ask the Dell Tech Support guy to take care of it? I’m starting to feel guilty.

The Dirt of Accomplishment

Yesterday I woke up feeling cranky. I’m not sure why, but for whatever reason it cascaded down into every aspect of my day. First I tried on 16 different shirts wondering how it is possible to have that much back fat. Where the hell does it come from? I mean, when girls are younger we worry about gaining weight, but nobody warns us it might show up on our back. Ick. Needless to say this made me even grumpier. To add to that, all my clothes seemed dirty, wrinkled, or missing due to the fact I’m living out of a suitcase (or exploded suitcase) at my sister’s place. I finally decided on a sweatshirt and proceeded to put socks on only to discover a hole in the toe of one sock. “Jesus Christ, throw me a bone!” I yelled. Well, God didn’t like that apparently.

As I’m driving to work, with Christina Aguilera blasting in my speakers, I realize there is some foreign noise happening with my brand new car. I turn off the stereo and decide, I must have a f*#@&ing flat tire. Strangely though it wasn’t pulling me one way or another, just making an inordinate amount of noise. I pull over and park, note the flat tire and think, “How can this be my day? Was my life going so well that it’s just time for me to have a domino of shit happen?” And of course, being that I have the worst car Karma, the tire didn’t get flat until the end of my two weeks home, leaving me only a day to deal with this.

I proceed to walk to work, but feel I have a bit of comfort in the fact I had thought to bring my IPOD and earphones with me. I start walking, put my headphones on, and hit play on my IPOD. Nothing. The menu doesn’t light up. Nothing. So even though I had fully charged my IPOD, what I’m assuming happened is that when I put it on Hold, I must have had it running or something and now it’s dead. Well, Goddammit.

When I get to work I start debating over how I’m going to deal with this tire. You see, for one, it’s a new car and I have yet to even look for the spare and jack. And two, my trunk is filled with junk from my move, including a big dirty dolly that Scott had borrowed to move his stuff. I have AAA and I know where Les Schwab is, but I just couldn’t wrap my mind around how I was going to go about this. I was starving and I didn’t have my AAA card on me (because it would be too practical to actually keep that in my car or on my person). To add more misery to my day, I discover the sweatshirt I have chosen to wear smells terribly. Leaving me no choice but to strip down to my tank top (which everyone knows I hate to do in public).

Here is where things start to shift in my head. Rebecca from work tells me she’ll drive me up to my car if I like and help me with whatever I need to do. I decide what I need is food and then to empty my trunk. I could 1) have AAA change the flat, or 2) change the flat myself, or 3) instead of emptying out the trunk I could just have AAA tow it to Les Schwab. I can’t believe I even debated over all this. Once I got food everything changed.

Rebecca took me to my car, we were down to our butch tank tops and ready to go, so we started moving all the shit out of my trunk into my back seat. I put the dolly on the sidewalk, stuffed my face with few more bitefuls of Cashew Chicken and then we went to work changing the tire ourselves. Rebecca was mostly there for moral support, but it helped a lot. The sun was hot, the asphalt was hot, and the tire was cooperative. It was easy as pie. As I was driving to Les Schwab I thought to myself how funny the day had been.

Basically, here is where my point comes in. Prepare yourself for uncharacteristically reflective crap. Some of you know I’m planning a big road trip for when this job is done. Well, once I had eaten, changed the tire, and was well on my way to a better day (since Les Schwab doesn’t charge for fixing flats) I realized something sort of funny. Perhaps God thought, “How dare you think that the fact you have back fat and holes in your socks means you have it bad. How dare you actually bitch about your day when you are heading into work close to 10am and you probably aren’t going to stay very long. How dare you ask Jesus Christ to throw you a bone.” Okay, so maybe he isn’t that vengeful, so then I thought, “My god, if this hadn’t happened I never would have even considered what would happen if I got a flat in the middle of nowhere on my road trip.” Now I am thinking, maybe I shouldn’t bring much with me, I should keep my trunk easily accessible, and maybe I should consider getting a real spare tire instead of the flimsy ones that you can’t go very far or very fast on.

In the end, the stars had aligned to warn me that I have a lot more to think about than just whether or not I can carry mace on this trip. Not to mention how much I love being self-sufficient and capable. Changing that tire was another rush for me. I’ve done it before, but it’s always nice to know you don’t have to rely on anyone for anything.

One last note, and I think this is sort of funny since I was planning on blogging about this anyway before I even read Gretchen’s blog. When I was sitting reading my book in Les Schwab, I looked at my hands and noticed they were covered in dirt and blood (apparently I had cut myself during the tire swapping incident, presumably on gravel). I kept staring at my hands while I was flipping pages in my book, signing for my car, being handed back my keys. Despite the fact there was a bathroom in the waiting room, I didn’t wash my hands. There was something comforting about the dirt. Maybe it was the fact it represented accomplishment to me. Maybe it was a reminder of how the day had taken a turn from a miserable morning to an enlightened afternoon. Or simply maybe it was pride in having all these men caked in oil see that I had changed my own tire today before bringing in the flat. I know changing the tire was easy, but there was still a part of me that felt better about myself when I looked around at the other women sitting in the waiting room who had obviously had their cars towed in or had someone else change their tire. I was the only one who showed up with the flat in her trunk.

So I enjoyed the dirt of accomplishment for a good two hours before finally washing away the day’s events.

Talking to Strangers

Racine, WI

What a crazy couple of days. For those who know me best, we would all agree that I’m not shy, but I also don’t meet people on the road very often. I tend to sleep on the plane, therefore avoiding having to get trapped into conversation with a potential adulterer posing as an uber-Christian who then buys me the Left Behind book (this has happened). I also love the time of day when I go back to the hotel, usually with takeout in hand, settle against my headboard with my laptop and dinner and usually a terrible in room movie to keep me company. Thus, smiling, greeting, and any general “what’s your story, this is mine” kind of interaction is kept to a minimum. Just the way I like it. Or so I thought.

On Tuesday afternoon I decided that hanging out in the Wausau hotel with nothing to do was not going to hack it. I convinced the hotel to let me check out without a charge (it was 3pm in the afternoon) and I headed towards the Marriott in Racine enjoying the long drive and my book on CD that Leah lent me called Kitchen Confidential. Great book. I highly recommend it. Calling ahead, I begged the Marriott to let me check in a day early. As luck would have it, all they could put me in was their biggest suite. Finally, things are working in my favor.

According to Steve, this was going to be a great Marriott because it had a concierge level. I would say it is an old Marriott with a stale stank to it that makes my eyes tear up, but they do have a concierge level, which translates to free food and beverages, with alcohol to purchase. I decided I deserved a little hot tea and a glass of red wine (strange combination, but god I love the two). Upon entering the room, there were two gentlemen talking on the couch. The concierge was schmoozing it up with them and shamelessly showing them her glamour shots. I was going to take my goods and head back to my room, but the gentlemen seemed fairly approachable and interesting. One was gesticulating wildly about being a Master Colorist and Hair Stylist and I figured I’d settle in and eavesdrop.

Turned out to be a great idea; I ended up hitting it off with them. The hair guy, Lenny, was traveling for work, training stylists on how to properly color/highlight people’s hair with his product. He works for a big company that owns products even I am familiar with (and you know I have little or no knowledge of hair). The other gentleman, David, was originally from London {insert moan of passion over his accent here} but was now moving to Racine to work as an IT programmer of sorts for another big company. Long of the short of it, Lenny asked us to be hair models for him the next day and we accepted. My hair getting dangerously close to my butt and the highlights grown out below my ear, I was both embarrassed and anxious to get it fixed. Especially by someone who pretty much has his PhD in hair. 🙂

After sharing many glasses of wine, the three of us decided it was time to check out the bar scene and grab some food. We stayed out until almost 3am, enjoying the local gay bar where they helped us order some Italian delivery (can you believe I was able to find some non-pizza delivery after 11pm at night)? The next day we dragged ourselves out of bed for a day of beauty at the local salon. I felt like a princess. Everyone petting my hair, discussing how to make it seem more vibrant, less fine, and less frizzy…okay, maybe I felt a little picked over, but it was amazing.

We followed it up with another night of good food and wine, and then I worked their brains a little too hard with yes/no puzzles. Ah, the good life of meeting people. Tonight I might head up to Milwaukee for Jazz in the Park with David.

Moral of this story? When you have a good feeling about people, say hi. You could have great company and free hair styling for the rest of your trip.

The one thing people may be upset to hear is that I gave Lenny complete license with my hair and he cut off about 5 inches. No more long luxurious hair. But let’s face it, the hair was starting to get pretty nasty.

Better late than never. Here’s Lenny! He’ll hate me for showing the picture I took after a long night of wild dancing. At least it’s small.

Love your hair, hope you win!

Amateur Director

Whew! What a week. The video went extremely well considering how frustrated I was with it and how much I wanted to keep fixing it. At about 5:30am I finally just curled up in Kris’ bed and surrendered to the video as is (Kris was on the couch, zonked out by 11pm due to a hard day of travel that started at 3am). I must say, Kris has one of the most comfortable beds around, and I’m pretty in love with my own bed, so that says a lot. Still, his bed was not comfortable enough to make my few hours of sleep feel like more. Therefore, I ran on adrenaline for the presentation (during which Kris had to troubleshoot technical difficulties with four laptops and the projector, thank god for him) and got through it fairly well. But now, as we all remember from college, the day after is always harder. Hits you like a brick and you start to see tracers every time something moves in front of you. Who needs drugs? Sleep deprivation is cheaper.

My reward for all my hard work is this very Blog Kris designed for me. Since I wouldn’t let him touch the video and only used him for consulting on my ideas, he kept himself busy with this. You should have seen some of the cool designs he tried out. The night went sort of like this: “Hey Kris, come tell me if you think I should edit this part of the video…” “Hey Katie, come look at this template I’ve created for your blog…” “Hey Kris, do you think this song sounds okay for the video?” “Hey Katie, I’ve completely changed your template now, check this out!” “Hey Kris, I’m going to blow my brains out if I can’t get this to sync up…” “Hey Katie, let me tell you all the wonders of PHP, it’s way cool…” “Hey Kris, everything you are saying to me right now is coming out ‘blah blah blah’ so let’s focus on me, me, me and my video…okay?”

Well, something like that anyway. What a guy. The blow my brains out part comes to you care of Gary, who managed to work that phrase into my repertoire.

But what I’ve realized through the 30 odd hours of editing, is that I truly enjoy the whole process and regret that I ever strayed from the hobby. I remember in college I tried to get a job right away in the video productions department (not sure what they were really called, but that’s the side of it I wanted to work in) and the guy said he would love to have me since I had editing experience from high school, but due to the fact I was NOT on work-study, he couldn’t hire me. So we all know what job that sent me to. A sweet little local video store. And now look where I am. Well, okay. I guess the video store didn’t have any effect on my life in a negative way, but just think what path I may have followed, had I only been given the opportunity to fuel my interests and build some skills. Hell, I could be a female David Lynch by now. Or at least doing wedding videos on the side (ick.)

So this is my first real blog and I hope it was interesting for you. I’m off to pick up my friend and former co-worker Aaron Smith at the airport. He’s flying in from Maine because he desperately missed Seattle, as well he should. And as odds would have it, my sister Maddy is flying in on the same connection flight through Atlanta, so I get to do two favors in one easy shot. I love it.