Saturday, February 28, 2009
Interiors
End of an era, the old phonebooth. This one is more than sadly neglected, the broken handpiece had some vegetation in between it's halves.
The first day it rained. Off and on and off and on and on. Something about the roads there, or the drivers who seemed remarkably sane and stayed to posted speeds, at least on US30, or the rental car a bit heavier than our own, but I had no anxiety about the drive along wet and winding roads. Good to get off my feet and out of shoes by the end of the trip. Then we wandered out to explore the damp town, without a map, but still found our way around just peachily.
We rather lazily just stopped at the Pig and Pancake the first morning. D ordered a western omelet, so when this came, he commented, "I was hoping some eggs would come with it." The almost exactly not unlike tea beverage was at least warmish. And D's meal turned out acceptable, after a while. Andrew and Steve's cafe the next morning was so much better, with excellent hashbrowns, the best French Toast I've ever tasted, and something much more like tea.
After the intensity of the beach, we stopped at Tokugawa Antiques to come down and warm up. Amazing gem of a place. Then off to the Columbia River Maritime Museum. Not sure of their photography policy, I only snuck in a few. That will get a post of it's own, later. Got hungry, so off to Rogue Brewery for lunch.
They had chocolate stout, the one beer I can never resist. And haut dogs, with chili, all done to perfection. That will get a post as well. Restorative meal, then back to the museum, it was that amazing.
Beaches
Wreck of the Peter Iredale.
South Jetty.
The very best part of the trip, although taking up the least actual time, was the time on the Oregon beach. Powerful winds, rain with sand imbedded, waves crashing. Complete resetting of the brain. Exhausting and exhilarating and exactly what we traveled so far for. If only it had rained more.
Moby did very well with ND hanging out with him, although he purred loudly for a good half hour after we got home. Then spent the evening chasing the mouse and flopping to be petted, alternately.
Friday, February 27, 2009
Intensity
Saturday, February 21, 2009
Books
Ok, a long one for you to chew on. Not leaving town until Tuesday, but I'm going off line for my sanity, adjustment, to get everything done. And a simple exercise in self restraint. Oh, I'll still read comics, do the crossword, read email, but no blogging, reading or writing, no long sessions online for a week. Will do me good.
So, The Beeb listed Big Reads, which is a list of 100 books. No idea of the criteria, and it does have a British slant - which is fine by me. Most I have not read, some I will not read under any circumstances.
The presence of four Terr.... Sir Terry Pratchett books may seem excessive, but only if you only think of him as a funny fantasy writer. Night Watch, for instance, is nothing of the sort. The humour distracts those looking for serious novels, which they are, at heart. And well plotted, with rich language, and a handful of ungodly puns. He tackles death and finances, parent child relationships, the function of police in society, tyranny, and the persistence of human stupidity, greed and depravity. While turning phrases amusingly.
Huge swathes of the list are children's books. The ones I read as a kid, and have an affection for, with few exceptions, I will not read again. I will never read The Lord of the Rings again, despite having devoured the series perhaps seven or eight times in my youth. Likewise the Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe, and Roald Dahl's The BFG, Maltida and so on. Several in young adult series, which degrades the list for me. Winnie the Pooh is another story, I think it really IS for adults, I didn't like the original book as a child. Ditto Alice in Wonderland.
I tried, honestly I tried to read Harry Potter. Nothing really changes, nothing really matters, the prose is simplistic, I don't care about any of the characters, I will never read another word written by JK. And you can't make me.
Glad to see To Kill a Mockingbird, though, such an enduring gem. Likewise anything by Austen - even when the plots fall a bit, I love her characters. Less affection for the Bronte sister's melodrama, but I'm sure nostalgia plays a huge part in these lists. Grapes of Wrath is still readable. And I love Gabriel Garcia Marquez.
I don't think Catch 22 was Heller's best novel, and I read it in a war zone. No one actually reads War and Peace, any more than they actually read James Joyce.
No one should admit to reading Gone With the Wind. Clan of the Cave Bear I hated past all reasoning. D read The Godfather, and was disgusted by the turgid prose, and he loves the movies.
Many, I suspect, are on there simply because successful movies were made of them, Cold Comfort Farm, Bridget Jones' Diary, The Thorn Birds, Memoirs of a Geisha, Captain Corelli’s Mandolin, and see a few above. (Gone With the WInd is a racist bodice ripper, trash, but worse.)
Very few off the list are books I would like to read. I know the vast majority, and have either read them, rejected them, or tried to read and threw the book across the room. I suspect this comes from having worked in libraries, I may not read them, but I know them, and know why I haven't.
You want the list? Masochists. Here Marked, Read, Won't, Threw, May, and Ignorant (me that is.) The Read pile is at 44. I looked up all the ones I marked Ignorant, and only want to read one of those.
1. The Lord of the Rings, JRR Tolkien Read
2. Pride and Prejudice, Jane Austen Read
3. His Dark Materials, Philip Pullman May
4. The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, Douglas Adams Read
5. Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, JK Rowling Won't
6. To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper Lee Read
7. Winnie the Pooh, AA Milne Read
8. Nineteen Eighty-Four, George Orwell Read
9. The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, CS Lewis Read
10. Jane Eyre, Charlotte Brontë Read
11. Catch-22, Joseph Heller Read
12. Wuthering Heights, Emily Brontë Read
13. Birdsong, Sebastian Faulks Ignorant
14. Rebecca, Daphne du Maurier Read
15. The Catcher in the Rye, JD Salinger Threw
16. The Wind in the Willows, Kenneth Grahame Read
17. Great Expectations, Charles Dickens Threw
18. Little Women, Louisa May Alcott Read
19. Captain Corelli’s Mandolin, Louis de Bernieres Won't
20. War and Peace, Leo Tolstoy Threw (carefully, don't want to hurt anyone)
21. Gone with the Wind, Margaret Mitchell Won't
22. Harry Potter And The Philosopher’s Stone, JK Rowling Won't
23. Harry Potter And The Chamber Of Secrets, JK Rowling Won't
24. Harry Potter And The Prisoner Of Azkaban, JK Rowling Won't
25. The Hobbit, JRR Tolkien Read
26. Tess Of The D’Urbervilles, Thomas Hardy May
27. Middlemarch, George Eliot Threw
28. A Prayer For Owen Meany, John Irving Read
29. The Grapes Of Wrath, John Steinbeck Read
30. Alice’s Adventures In Wonderland, Lewis Carroll Read
31. The Story Of Tracy Beaker, Jacqueline Wilson Ignorant
32. One Hundred Years Of Solitude, Gabriel García Márquez Read
33. The Pillars Of The Earth, Ken Follett Won't 34. David Copperfield, Charles Dickens Threw
35. Charlie And The Chocolate Factory, Roald Dahl Read
36. Treasure Island, Robert Louis Stevenson Read
37. A Town Like Alice, Nevil Shute Read
38. Persuasion, Jane Austen Read
39. Dune, Frank Herbert Won't, and Threw (hate Herbert for another book)
40. Emma, Jane Austen Read
41. Anne Of Green Gables, LM Montgomery Read
42. Watership Down, Richard Adams Read
43. The Great Gatsby, F Scott Fitzgerald Read
44. The Count Of Monte Cristo, Alexandre Dumas Read
45. Brideshead Revisited, Evelyn Waugh Read
46. Animal Farm, George Orwell Read
47. A Christmas Carol, Charles Dickens Won't
48. Far From The Madding Crowd, Thomas Hardy Won't
49. Goodnight Mister Tom, Michelle Magorian Ignorant
50. The Shell Seekers, Rosamunde Pilcher Ignorant
51. The Secret Garden, Frances Hodgson Burnett Read
52. Of Mice And Men, John Steinbeck Read
53. The Stand, Stephen King Read
54. Anna Karenina, Leo Tolstoy Won't
55. A Suitable Boy, Vikram Seth Ignorant
56. The BFG, Roald Dahl Read
57. Swallows And Amazons, Arthur Ransome Ignorant
58. Black Beauty, Anna Sewell Read
59. Artemis Fowl, Eoin Colfer Ignorant
60. Crime And Punishment, Fyodor Dostoyevsky Won't
61. Noughts And Crosses, Malorie Blackman Won't
62. Memoirs Of A Geisha, Arthur Golden Won't
63. A Tale Of Two Cities, Charles Dickens Won't
64. The Thorn Birds, Colleen McCollough Won't
65. Mort, Terry Pratchett Read
66. The Magic Faraway Tree, Enid Blyton Won't
67. The Magus, John Fowles Won't
68. Good Omens, Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman Read
69. Guards! Guards!, Terry Pratchett Read
70. Lord Of The Flies, William Golding Threw
71. Perfume, Patrick Süskind Won't
72. The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists, Robert Tressell Won't
73. Night Watch, Terry Pratchett Read
74. Matilda, Roald Dahl Read
75. Bridget Jones’s Diary, Helen Fielding Won't
76. The Secret History, Donna Tartt Won't
77. The Woman In White, Wilkie Collins Won't
78. Ulysses, James Joyce Threw
79. Bleak House, Charles Dickens Read
80. Double Act, Jacqueline Wilson Won't
81. The Twits, Roald Dahl Read
82. I Capture The Castle, Dodie Smith Won't
83. Holes, Louis Sachar Read
84. Gormenghast, Mervyn Peake Threw (really tried to read, honestly)
85. The God Of Small Things, Arundhati Roy Won't
86. Vicky Angel, Jacqueline Wilson Won't
87. Brave New World, Aldous Huxley Read (gods help me)
88. Cold Comfort Farm, Stella Gibbons Threw
89. Magician, Raymond E Feist Ignorant
90. On The Road, Jack Kerouac Read
91. The Godfather, Mario Puzo D Read, I Threw
92. The Clan Of The Cave Bear, Jean M Auel Read (hate, hate, hate)
93. The Colour Of Magic, Terry Pratchett Read
94. The Alchemist, Paulo Coelho Threw
95. Katherine, Anya Seton Ignorant (want to read, now)
96. Kane And Abel, Jeffrey Archer Won't
97. Love In The Time Of Cholera, Gabriel García Márquez Read
98. Girls In Love, Jacqueline Wilson Won't
99. The Princess Diaries, Meg Cabot Won't
100. Midnight’s Children, Salman Rushdie Won't. Will Throw.
So, The Beeb listed Big Reads, which is a list of 100 books. No idea of the criteria, and it does have a British slant - which is fine by me. Most I have not read, some I will not read under any circumstances.
The presence of four Terr.... Sir Terry Pratchett books may seem excessive, but only if you only think of him as a funny fantasy writer. Night Watch, for instance, is nothing of the sort. The humour distracts those looking for serious novels, which they are, at heart. And well plotted, with rich language, and a handful of ungodly puns. He tackles death and finances, parent child relationships, the function of police in society, tyranny, and the persistence of human stupidity, greed and depravity. While turning phrases amusingly.
Huge swathes of the list are children's books. The ones I read as a kid, and have an affection for, with few exceptions, I will not read again. I will never read The Lord of the Rings again, despite having devoured the series perhaps seven or eight times in my youth. Likewise the Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe, and Roald Dahl's The BFG, Maltida and so on. Several in young adult series, which degrades the list for me. Winnie the Pooh is another story, I think it really IS for adults, I didn't like the original book as a child. Ditto Alice in Wonderland.
I tried, honestly I tried to read Harry Potter. Nothing really changes, nothing really matters, the prose is simplistic, I don't care about any of the characters, I will never read another word written by JK. And you can't make me.
Glad to see To Kill a Mockingbird, though, such an enduring gem. Likewise anything by Austen - even when the plots fall a bit, I love her characters. Less affection for the Bronte sister's melodrama, but I'm sure nostalgia plays a huge part in these lists. Grapes of Wrath is still readable. And I love Gabriel Garcia Marquez.
I don't think Catch 22 was Heller's best novel, and I read it in a war zone. No one actually reads War and Peace, any more than they actually read James Joyce.
No one should admit to reading Gone With the Wind. Clan of the Cave Bear I hated past all reasoning. D read The Godfather, and was disgusted by the turgid prose, and he loves the movies.
Many, I suspect, are on there simply because successful movies were made of them, Cold Comfort Farm, Bridget Jones' Diary, The Thorn Birds, Memoirs of a Geisha, Captain Corelli’s Mandolin, and see a few above. (Gone With the WInd is a racist bodice ripper, trash, but worse.)
Very few off the list are books I would like to read. I know the vast majority, and have either read them, rejected them, or tried to read and threw the book across the room. I suspect this comes from having worked in libraries, I may not read them, but I know them, and know why I haven't.
You want the list? Masochists. Here Marked, Read, Won't, Threw, May, and Ignorant (me that is.) The Read pile is at 44. I looked up all the ones I marked Ignorant, and only want to read one of those.
1. The Lord of the Rings, JRR Tolkien Read
2. Pride and Prejudice, Jane Austen Read
3. His Dark Materials, Philip Pullman May
4. The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, Douglas Adams Read
5. Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, JK Rowling Won't
6. To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper Lee Read
7. Winnie the Pooh, AA Milne Read
8. Nineteen Eighty-Four, George Orwell Read
9. The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, CS Lewis Read
10. Jane Eyre, Charlotte Brontë Read
11. Catch-22, Joseph Heller Read
12. Wuthering Heights, Emily Brontë Read
13. Birdsong, Sebastian Faulks Ignorant
14. Rebecca, Daphne du Maurier Read
15. The Catcher in the Rye, JD Salinger Threw
16. The Wind in the Willows, Kenneth Grahame Read
17. Great Expectations, Charles Dickens Threw
18. Little Women, Louisa May Alcott Read
19. Captain Corelli’s Mandolin, Louis de Bernieres Won't
20. War and Peace, Leo Tolstoy Threw (carefully, don't want to hurt anyone)
21. Gone with the Wind, Margaret Mitchell Won't
22. Harry Potter And The Philosopher’s Stone, JK Rowling Won't
23. Harry Potter And The Chamber Of Secrets, JK Rowling Won't
24. Harry Potter And The Prisoner Of Azkaban, JK Rowling Won't
25. The Hobbit, JRR Tolkien Read
26. Tess Of The D’Urbervilles, Thomas Hardy May
27. Middlemarch, George Eliot Threw
28. A Prayer For Owen Meany, John Irving Read
29. The Grapes Of Wrath, John Steinbeck Read
30. Alice’s Adventures In Wonderland, Lewis Carroll Read
31. The Story Of Tracy Beaker, Jacqueline Wilson Ignorant
32. One Hundred Years Of Solitude, Gabriel García Márquez Read
33. The Pillars Of The Earth, Ken Follett Won't 34. David Copperfield, Charles Dickens Threw
35. Charlie And The Chocolate Factory, Roald Dahl Read
36. Treasure Island, Robert Louis Stevenson Read
37. A Town Like Alice, Nevil Shute Read
38. Persuasion, Jane Austen Read
39. Dune, Frank Herbert Won't, and Threw (hate Herbert for another book)
40. Emma, Jane Austen Read
41. Anne Of Green Gables, LM Montgomery Read
42. Watership Down, Richard Adams Read
43. The Great Gatsby, F Scott Fitzgerald Read
44. The Count Of Monte Cristo, Alexandre Dumas Read
45. Brideshead Revisited, Evelyn Waugh Read
46. Animal Farm, George Orwell Read
47. A Christmas Carol, Charles Dickens Won't
48. Far From The Madding Crowd, Thomas Hardy Won't
49. Goodnight Mister Tom, Michelle Magorian Ignorant
50. The Shell Seekers, Rosamunde Pilcher Ignorant
51. The Secret Garden, Frances Hodgson Burnett Read
52. Of Mice And Men, John Steinbeck Read
53. The Stand, Stephen King Read
54. Anna Karenina, Leo Tolstoy Won't
55. A Suitable Boy, Vikram Seth Ignorant
56. The BFG, Roald Dahl Read
57. Swallows And Amazons, Arthur Ransome Ignorant
58. Black Beauty, Anna Sewell Read
59. Artemis Fowl, Eoin Colfer Ignorant
60. Crime And Punishment, Fyodor Dostoyevsky Won't
61. Noughts And Crosses, Malorie Blackman Won't
62. Memoirs Of A Geisha, Arthur Golden Won't
63. A Tale Of Two Cities, Charles Dickens Won't
64. The Thorn Birds, Colleen McCollough Won't
65. Mort, Terry Pratchett Read
66. The Magic Faraway Tree, Enid Blyton Won't
67. The Magus, John Fowles Won't
68. Good Omens, Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman Read
69. Guards! Guards!, Terry Pratchett Read
70. Lord Of The Flies, William Golding Threw
71. Perfume, Patrick Süskind Won't
72. The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists, Robert Tressell Won't
73. Night Watch, Terry Pratchett Read
74. Matilda, Roald Dahl Read
75. Bridget Jones’s Diary, Helen Fielding Won't
76. The Secret History, Donna Tartt Won't
77. The Woman In White, Wilkie Collins Won't
78. Ulysses, James Joyce Threw
79. Bleak House, Charles Dickens Read
80. Double Act, Jacqueline Wilson Won't
81. The Twits, Roald Dahl Read
82. I Capture The Castle, Dodie Smith Won't
83. Holes, Louis Sachar Read
84. Gormenghast, Mervyn Peake Threw (really tried to read, honestly)
85. The God Of Small Things, Arundhati Roy Won't
86. Vicky Angel, Jacqueline Wilson Won't
87. Brave New World, Aldous Huxley Read (gods help me)
88. Cold Comfort Farm, Stella Gibbons Threw
89. Magician, Raymond E Feist Ignorant
90. On The Road, Jack Kerouac Read
91. The Godfather, Mario Puzo D Read, I Threw
92. The Clan Of The Cave Bear, Jean M Auel Read (hate, hate, hate)
93. The Colour Of Magic, Terry Pratchett Read
94. The Alchemist, Paulo Coelho Threw
95. Katherine, Anya Seton Ignorant (want to read, now)
96. Kane And Abel, Jeffrey Archer Won't
97. Love In The Time Of Cholera, Gabriel García Márquez Read
98. Girls In Love, Jacqueline Wilson Won't
99. The Princess Diaries, Meg Cabot Won't
100. Midnight’s Children, Salman Rushdie Won't. Will Throw.
Friday, February 20, 2009
Affection
Affection was demanded in my original family. I had to be kissed and hugged, I had to kiss everyone present "good night" until I left home. I stopped giving a kiss good night to my parents at about age 13, so that I would not have to endure my father's embraces every night. I would kiss my mother only if he couldn't see.
Much as I love being touched and touching, I must have a choice, must give the choice to others. I take a while to warm up to people. In contrast to my ability to open myself up in writing, or for my patients, or for what I know will be very short term connections.
Probably why it didn't really bother me that it took Moby two months to decide to sit on me. And another few months to sleep on us. Only made me respect his discernment. For all that I can give a very energetic first impression, useful in finding jobs, I am really rather reserved by nature. Exuberant greeting is the compensatory act of a painful shyness, and a bone deep distrust of everything and everyone. I can push it aside with great skill, in my heart, I am closed and careful. Only those of proven integrity, over time, after much reassurance, get through.
This is not a trait I am proud of. Just one I have to deal with.
Thankfully, D took no offense, and kept laying out more proofs, until I could only be convinced.
Vacation
Finally getting a full week's vacation, after longer than I can remember. A going away, full change of location vacation. ND is taking care of Moby, because unlike in Boston, the cat sitter services here never returned our calls. And he needed a little cash, despite mild cat allergies. Moby likes him, in a very respectful way. And we know Moby pines for us when we are gone, we've seen it often enough. So, doing good all around. And D needs a vacation, after finally finding work after a year of searching, and his employers are being good about it.
So, off to the Great Northwest (the new one, not Michigan which used to be the Great Northwest, but everything shifted west long ago.) It all sounded wonderful last August when we were sick to death of heat and desert and dryness. Still sounds good, if not quite as urgent. The weekend to clean and sort, pack and plan. We are planners, which alleviates anxiety. I tend to take my watch off for vacations, and try not to ask D too often what time it is.
I will be finally meeting another blogger, Dale over at Mole, who has been abetting my writing for many years now. And this makes me want to back up and hide a little. For all that I can jump into many situations with courage, social meetings bring out every shy impulse. I know Dale will be kind, will be comfortable and welcoming, but I draw in, and wait to see, wait to touch his hand for a first time and decide then.
I had an acquaintance from naginata class who went off as an exchange student to Japan. We emailed frequently during his sojourn there, a difficult situation for him, and I invested a lot of time and intention - gladly. When he got home, he ignored me, until I showed up at his naginata class, and he rushed me, picked me up in a bear hug, not noticing at all that I went stiff, tried to push him away. Even if I weren't angry with him for his snub, I would have hated being grabbed. I left without a word, have never seen him again. The guardedness remains.
Yeah, I need a vacation.
So, off to the Great Northwest (the new one, not Michigan which used to be the Great Northwest, but everything shifted west long ago.) It all sounded wonderful last August when we were sick to death of heat and desert and dryness. Still sounds good, if not quite as urgent. The weekend to clean and sort, pack and plan. We are planners, which alleviates anxiety. I tend to take my watch off for vacations, and try not to ask D too often what time it is.
I will be finally meeting another blogger, Dale over at Mole, who has been abetting my writing for many years now. And this makes me want to back up and hide a little. For all that I can jump into many situations with courage, social meetings bring out every shy impulse. I know Dale will be kind, will be comfortable and welcoming, but I draw in, and wait to see, wait to touch his hand for a first time and decide then.
I had an acquaintance from naginata class who went off as an exchange student to Japan. We emailed frequently during his sojourn there, a difficult situation for him, and I invested a lot of time and intention - gladly. When he got home, he ignored me, until I showed up at his naginata class, and he rushed me, picked me up in a bear hug, not noticing at all that I went stiff, tried to push him away. Even if I weren't angry with him for his snub, I would have hated being grabbed. I left without a word, have never seen him again. The guardedness remains.
Yeah, I need a vacation.
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
Dentist
Nothing quite like a couple of hours in a dentist chair. I've never afraid of dentists, but it's hardly comfortable, not a vacation. I try very hard to be a cooperative patient, but I have a strong gag reflex, and whatever that bitter crap is that they use in taking a mold for a crown caused me to retch reflexively. Gah and yuck and ptoooey. A small swallow of whiskey, and some maple sugar seems to have erased that. Not going to the Humane Society again, and I mind very much. But I am not bringing my worst stress to them. Going Saturday to learn how to teach shelter dogs manners, that will have to suffice.
But, the worst is over, only the permanent to go in a couple of weeks, after the vacation. He did a perfect block, that lasted long enough. Mostly, I'm not numb now, no extraneous drooling, no real pain. I took a decongestant and naproxen before I went, and they called to have me come in early, so all worked out better than could be expected.
I have only the most vague memories of going to a dentist as a small child, mostly an impression of leather waiting room chairs, and a play area, and then being in the chair and spitting. I wasn't to see another dentist until my father got dental insurance when I was 17. I had a few cavities, and saw a very young dentist who put mountain posters on his ceiling, and his fillings have held up over the years. Had braces when I was 19 when another insurance plan got better. I saw another in northern Michigan, who filled cavities occasioned by my post parental home cola habit.
An army dentist from our unit worked on both of us, at a discount and by payments, when D needed wisdom teeth out, and I had an abscessed tooth. We were both very grateful for the care. Another job, but with insurance, meant more attention, preventative cleanings and all.
D is not so genial when it comes to dentists, has a much harder time of staying still and dealing with the tastes and stresses. Had more experience of them, being more firmly middle class and insured. Even more sensitive to pain since the multiple surgeries on his elbow, then hand.
Mostly, I am just grateful to be able to afford such discomfort for the sake of "teeth in good repair" as physical assessments phrase it. My nightmare is to have my teeth crumbling in my mouth. Now that one has, I'm not handling it as well as I would like. I'm feeling worried and tired.
Monday, February 16, 2009
Clipped
When Moby pulls away his paws, I know he doesn't want his claws clipped. When he starts mewing/growling, I know he is insisting that he doesn't want his claws clipped. When he avoids me for an hour after, I know he REALLY didn't want me clipping his claws, and didn't like HOW I did it either. Generally, I only get to the first two stages of objection.
When Moby stands in the edge of the kitchen first thing in the morning, tail up, not moving, and I pick him up, he purrs and noses my face. So I guess that he wanted the hug, and is feeling affection.
When we step over him in the middle of the hallway, and he hardly notices, I assume that he trusts us not to step on him. Likewise when I lay my head on his body gently, and he yawns, that he is expressing trust.
When I sneeze and he looks at me with ears back, looking startled, and we say "It's ok Moby, everything is fine" and he puts his head back down, it means he was startled, but accepts our reassurance.
When he mews loudly at the front door, and his tail is all bushy, and he startles and runs, he is bothered by something.
When he stares wild eyed at me, in wide stance, then scampers off when I move a little, I guess that he wants me to chase him, or otherwise play with him. When i chase him, then he stops and flops, it means he wins the game, and I must now give him a cat massage.
When I reach to pet him and he walks away, I guess he is not in the mood for squishy stuff. When he comes and sits by us, we guess he wants to hang out.
When he sees the fluffy white bath mat on the floor in the bathroom, he assumes it is there for him to pee on. When he pees on the floor of the bathroom, either his litter boxes have not been adequately changed, or he misses (like many males do) or he just doesn't feel like using the tub, this time. I suspect his perhaps neglectful former owner didn't take care of the litter as Moby would have liked, and he has a list of alternative toilet areas, in case.
It took me a while to realize this wasn't any kind of malice on his part. Fastidiousness, yes. And me yelling was just proof to him that I was crazy and erratic. Not that he was doing anything wrong, since cats, not being hierarchical, don't think in terms of appeasing a more dominant animal. But when they love, they love. Which is part of why neither of us have scratch marks.
Taking care of the cat at the Humane Society the last time, the other volunteer sprayed her hands with the disinfectant, and the cat I had freaked. It wasn't until I got home that I realized why. The abandoner had used the spray bottle to punish the cat. Cats don't respond well to punishment, most animals don't. This is not new information. Cats in particular simply see the punisher as an untrustworthy being, and become fearful.
But if you have seen the Moscow Cat Circus, or the Vegas Greg's Cats, it's all a matter of observation and patience, and love. The same intention behind dog training (maybe better described as dog communication), using somewhat different methods for a different species with a different social structure. It's respectful, and expectant and positive.
But many people don't even do this for their children. So, what can we hope for?
A change. Slowly, or when we get to a human tipping point, or whatever it takes. When we finally come to know that we cannot punish, that retribution is not effective, that we have to start right at the beginning, and we cannot ever assume we know what anyone else intends.
When Moby stands in the edge of the kitchen first thing in the morning, tail up, not moving, and I pick him up, he purrs and noses my face. So I guess that he wanted the hug, and is feeling affection.
When we step over him in the middle of the hallway, and he hardly notices, I assume that he trusts us not to step on him. Likewise when I lay my head on his body gently, and he yawns, that he is expressing trust.
When I sneeze and he looks at me with ears back, looking startled, and we say "It's ok Moby, everything is fine" and he puts his head back down, it means he was startled, but accepts our reassurance.
When he mews loudly at the front door, and his tail is all bushy, and he startles and runs, he is bothered by something.
When he stares wild eyed at me, in wide stance, then scampers off when I move a little, I guess that he wants me to chase him, or otherwise play with him. When i chase him, then he stops and flops, it means he wins the game, and I must now give him a cat massage.
When I reach to pet him and he walks away, I guess he is not in the mood for squishy stuff. When he comes and sits by us, we guess he wants to hang out.
When he sees the fluffy white bath mat on the floor in the bathroom, he assumes it is there for him to pee on. When he pees on the floor of the bathroom, either his litter boxes have not been adequately changed, or he misses (like many males do) or he just doesn't feel like using the tub, this time. I suspect his perhaps neglectful former owner didn't take care of the litter as Moby would have liked, and he has a list of alternative toilet areas, in case.
It took me a while to realize this wasn't any kind of malice on his part. Fastidiousness, yes. And me yelling was just proof to him that I was crazy and erratic. Not that he was doing anything wrong, since cats, not being hierarchical, don't think in terms of appeasing a more dominant animal. But when they love, they love. Which is part of why neither of us have scratch marks.
Taking care of the cat at the Humane Society the last time, the other volunteer sprayed her hands with the disinfectant, and the cat I had freaked. It wasn't until I got home that I realized why. The abandoner had used the spray bottle to punish the cat. Cats don't respond well to punishment, most animals don't. This is not new information. Cats in particular simply see the punisher as an untrustworthy being, and become fearful.
But if you have seen the Moscow Cat Circus, or the Vegas Greg's Cats, it's all a matter of observation and patience, and love. The same intention behind dog training (maybe better described as dog communication), using somewhat different methods for a different species with a different social structure. It's respectful, and expectant and positive.
But many people don't even do this for their children. So, what can we hope for?
A change. Slowly, or when we get to a human tipping point, or whatever it takes. When we finally come to know that we cannot punish, that retribution is not effective, that we have to start right at the beginning, and we cannot ever assume we know what anyone else intends.
Morris
Ok, so the good folks over at narrowboat: the green man posted this preview. What amazes me is the idea that this is not getting general release, not making the rounds of the film festivals. So, I'm doing my paltry part in helping this go viral. I want to see this. And then get the dvd in a few years, with a commentary track by Terry Pratchett. I can dream.
I also wondered if one of the reasons Morris is a stereotypical cat name, was because of the proverb "to bell the cat," like a Morris dancer is belled. Just a weird thought.
I've done it again, bookmarked a blogger, thinking I'd caught the feed, but didn't, so I've accidentally ignored the site for months, assuming she just wasn't posting. This has happened way too often, and I feel rather dull to have done it again.
When I mentioned in the last post about reading our animals, I of course meant projecting our own motivations onto them. People who say "my cat hates me" or "my dog does that on purpose to get back at me", and who mean it, are ascribing their own failings onto animals who have a much different agenda. Cats want what they want, dogs do what they need to do to ease anxiety, it's not all fraught with human manipulation. Moby stretches up to claw my butt, he wants attention for some reason, if he then braces and runs, he wants to play chase. He circles us in the kitchen, it's probably food. Lays nearby and purrs, wants to be petted or combed. That's pretty clear communication. It's that second layer of assumption that maligns them in their lack of our language.
Or as I put it, when Moby jumps up and away from us, I guess what he's saying is, "Gotta go. Cat things, you wouldn't understand."
Sunday, February 15, 2009
Real
Finally watched Lars and the Real Girl, a movie recommended so strongly to me that I resisted actually seeing it for, well, years. The description of the film is so odd, the potential for it being done wrong so high, kept me wary. D felt much the same. We started the dvd ready to turn it off at any moment.
I think of Groundhog Day, which could so easily have been utterly tedious and maudlin.
But, somehow, they did everything right. The story is weird without mocking, always retaining it's humor. Warm without being sentimental, sad without indulging in manipulation, often implying rather than being explicit. A supporting cast of fully real characters. Lars projects kindness on his doll, and elicits great generosity in those around him.
One element of the story is how we imbue the things around us with personality. Teddy bears, action figures, dolls... the problem being when we think we know what other people are thinking, what their motivations are. We don't know what our pets are really thinking, though we need to try. We especially should never project our own fears and frustrations onto others, always reading the worst of ourselves in others, denying our own failures and angers.
Mostly, just assuming good intention is the best place to start.
Saturday, February 14, 2009
Fraught
Head feeling weird.
The problem with having an underlying anxiety issue is that feeling ill is always fraught with questions of where it comes from. Is this all just stress reaction, or is there a real infection laying me low? And the answer always comes back, well, probably a bit of both. Feh.
D and ND got some really good Indian take-out last night, which after a day of a deep disinclination to put food in my mouth, turned out to be an enticing and nourishing meal. The left-overs made a great lunch today. I watch the snow come down, and here I am with no particular place to go, nothing pressing to do.
Save, maybe, finally getting the kitchen clean. Relatively.
Friday, February 13, 2009
Burl
Still fighting off the lingering goombah, as is my wont. A stronger constitution would make life easier, but so it goes, this is what I have. Like a swirling knot, a flaw, that gives me an appreciation for the marks left by suffering.
Friday the 13th. And Monday is a Federal holiday, so I get an extra day to rest. Oh, and Sunday is Half Price Chocolate Day.
As Isabelle offered me Interview questions, quite thoughtful and lovely ones, I extended the same to Jessica over at the Window Ledge. She answered with thoughtful and poetic answers, salted lightly with humor.
Wednesday, February 11, 2009
Lento
Still going slow. Staying home from the critters today.
I've been asked about the title and photo for this space, and I don't really have a clear answer for either. When I started writing, I chose single word inspired essays, the colors, the senses. A fairly formal protocol, handrails as I began my practice. When I moved to blooger, I kept the form, which inspired the title, which was not already taken. The address was from the Police song lyric, One world is enough for all of us... . As for the photo, I have never so much as sat on a motorcycle. She is so alive and interested, capable looking, my muse. I have no more articulate explanation.
I've been asked about my job, and I must gently chide... . Check out the job and surgery labels, I write about it quite a lot. The meme label will probably answer most other questions.
As for where I have been.
I'm not one for "favorites," especially not movies, books or music. I change all the time, letting this go, picking that up. Although I do have beverage fondness. I don't feel much need to rehash endlessly. Once I've written out a subject to my satisfaction, I'm happy to let it sit there on the shelf. I've tired of many of the ideas I spent the first few years gnawing on here.
I've been asked about the title and photo for this space, and I don't really have a clear answer for either. When I started writing, I chose single word inspired essays, the colors, the senses. A fairly formal protocol, handrails as I began my practice. When I moved to blooger, I kept the form, which inspired the title, which was not already taken. The address was from the Police song lyric, One world is enough for all of us... . As for the photo, I have never so much as sat on a motorcycle. She is so alive and interested, capable looking, my muse. I have no more articulate explanation.
I've been asked about my job, and I must gently chide... . Check out the job and surgery labels, I write about it quite a lot. The meme label will probably answer most other questions.
As for where I have been.
I'm not one for "favorites," especially not movies, books or music. I change all the time, letting this go, picking that up. Although I do have beverage fondness. I don't feel much need to rehash endlessly. Once I've written out a subject to my satisfaction, I'm happy to let it sit there on the shelf. I've tired of many of the ideas I spent the first few years gnawing on here.
Tuesday, February 10, 2009
Teeth
Like I wasn't feeling old and crumbly enough. Comedy is all about pushing to a ridiculous extreme, so I gotta laugh. And remember my cousin Liz, who assures me that fifty is easy. And I'm only looking at 47. And both my grandmothers lived into their nineties. If this is only half way, I damn well better buck up.
Every day last week, motivating myself to get to work was an uphill drag. Work itself was fine, just getting past the door out of the apartment pulled. Yesterday, feeling much the same, and after wrangling with myself, I decided to take a mental health day. Right after I called in, I had a second cup of tea, and some goldfish crackers. I felt a crack and intense pressure. At first, I denied the likely. After brushing my teeth, I could feel the sharp edge of a broken tooth, way in the back. Not a lot of pain, although it began to ache all the way to my ear. At least I wasn't eating toffee or popcorn.
I am irrationally upset by the whole thing. My nightmare is to have my teeth crumbling. I'm not at all afraid of dentists, I am afraid of broken, rotten teeth. My first surgery in the OR was a kid getting a tooth extraction from the outside of the jaw, because the abscess had been so long neglected. I had an abscessed tooth many years ago, the clearing of which was amazingly painful. I believe in dental care. At least we have decent insurance, this time.
My dentist got me in by 0930, and got a temporary filling in. Repairable, the cap prep will start next week. I'm very relieved, and the filling very smooth, beautifully done. I thought about taking the extracted chunk of tooth, but what would the Tooth Fairy leave for me? A torn bill? A broken coin? I don't want to get on HER bad side.
Felt rather crappy the rest of the day, but resolved to make it in to work the rest of the week. Then, yesterday evening, I get a call at five, it's slow tomorrow, would I like to be called off? Well, I have the sick hours to cover, and this won't count against me, in fact I'll get credit for the low census day. Yes, oh, thank you, yes. Am definitely off, using the time to rest and heal, head and body both.
Moby ate some of the catgrass yesterday, and as expected, horked it up. Along with a broken red rubber band. No idea where he got that. Just good it came up.
Monday, February 09, 2009
Interview
Isabelle has kindly offered to interview her readers. And has sent me these wonderful questions to answer.
If any of you would like me to send you my questions of you, leave a request below, and you can post them on your site.
1. You’re obviously very fond of animals. What do you think animals give to our lives?
The awareness that we are animals too. That we can never really understand another living creature, but must try anyway. To let go of grudges, and respond to the kindness offered at the moment. To trust, but to base that trust on actions. That cute, furry little beings can fight with tooth and claw when threatened. That justice must be extended everywhere. That it's a rough life all over, but we can give each other comfort, moments of bliss, care and love, even, especially, in the midst of suffering. I love petting them, feeling their bodies relax under my hands, how accepting they are of pleasure.
2. What country would you most like to visit (that you haven’t visited so far) if it could be done by waving a magic wand and being there at no expense or trouble? and why?
I've always wanted to be in Istanbul (which is to say, Turkey) from the first time I saw a painting of the Hagia Sophia. It is a place that seems to have the deepest cultural roots, age and history, but soaring domes above. But I am a poor traveler, and my citizenship and gender would make that part of the world less than ideal. Still.
3. What was happening in your life when you were 18?
I was working at my local public library, graduated high school, then went to a radio broadcast program. I saw a good number of movies. I drove a '76 Vega that broke down a lot. Didn't have any good friends. Wanted out of the house and out of Detroit and away as far as I could get, but had few resources.
4. Tell us about your favourite book as a child.
I had a picture book of Winnie the Pooh memorized by the age of three. That was the last favorite, due to my constant presence at the library. I rarely read any book more than once, seemed wasteful when there were all those other books to read. I wanted them all in my head. I'd take out the maximum three at a time, read them as fast as I could, then go get more. Weekends were the hardest, because I often ran out of books first. Completely omnivorous in my reading. I did get into the Lord of the Rings books for a few years, immersion and escape.
5. Describe yourself as car, a food and a flower.
I think I drive the car that expresses me, which wouldn't surprize the guys at Car Talk. A stick shift, no frills, silver honda fit, no bumper stickers. Quick, efficient, attractive only in a very practical way, a bit dirty... yeah, that's as far as I can take that.
Food? At this time of morning? All I can think of is what I just ate, which is maple cream of wheat, half and half with wheat germ, handful of chocolate chips in. Keeps my borderline irritable gut happy, but with chocolate. So, the grossly functional with a dash of silly.
Flower. Funny, I've always felt a fondness for dandelions. Most people hate them, or at least consider them weeds, but they are a lovely yellow, and very sturdy. And then they go all white and delicate and ethereal and blow away. Wouldn't want a whole field of them, but here and there. Wouldn't want too many like me around, either.
If any of you would like me to send you my questions of you, leave a request below, and you can post them on your site.
1. You’re obviously very fond of animals. What do you think animals give to our lives?
The awareness that we are animals too. That we can never really understand another living creature, but must try anyway. To let go of grudges, and respond to the kindness offered at the moment. To trust, but to base that trust on actions. That cute, furry little beings can fight with tooth and claw when threatened. That justice must be extended everywhere. That it's a rough life all over, but we can give each other comfort, moments of bliss, care and love, even, especially, in the midst of suffering. I love petting them, feeling their bodies relax under my hands, how accepting they are of pleasure.
2. What country would you most like to visit (that you haven’t visited so far) if it could be done by waving a magic wand and being there at no expense or trouble? and why?
I've always wanted to be in Istanbul (which is to say, Turkey) from the first time I saw a painting of the Hagia Sophia. It is a place that seems to have the deepest cultural roots, age and history, but soaring domes above. But I am a poor traveler, and my citizenship and gender would make that part of the world less than ideal. Still.
3. What was happening in your life when you were 18?
I was working at my local public library, graduated high school, then went to a radio broadcast program. I saw a good number of movies. I drove a '76 Vega that broke down a lot. Didn't have any good friends. Wanted out of the house and out of Detroit and away as far as I could get, but had few resources.
4. Tell us about your favourite book as a child.
I had a picture book of Winnie the Pooh memorized by the age of three. That was the last favorite, due to my constant presence at the library. I rarely read any book more than once, seemed wasteful when there were all those other books to read. I wanted them all in my head. I'd take out the maximum three at a time, read them as fast as I could, then go get more. Weekends were the hardest, because I often ran out of books first. Completely omnivorous in my reading. I did get into the Lord of the Rings books for a few years, immersion and escape.
5. Describe yourself as car, a food and a flower.
I think I drive the car that expresses me, which wouldn't surprize the guys at Car Talk. A stick shift, no frills, silver honda fit, no bumper stickers. Quick, efficient, attractive only in a very practical way, a bit dirty... yeah, that's as far as I can take that.
Food? At this time of morning? All I can think of is what I just ate, which is maple cream of wheat, half and half with wheat germ, handful of chocolate chips in. Keeps my borderline irritable gut happy, but with chocolate. So, the grossly functional with a dash of silly.
Flower. Funny, I've always felt a fondness for dandelions. Most people hate them, or at least consider them weeds, but they are a lovely yellow, and very sturdy. And then they go all white and delicate and ethereal and blow away. Wouldn't want a whole field of them, but here and there. Wouldn't want too many like me around, either.
Sunday, February 08, 2009
Dinner
Rope hunched over the fire, her canvas bed bag of leaves and litter a little too close to the embers, but the goopy-eyed child on it needed the heat. The autumnal chill would turn to frost this night, clouds notwithstanding. Not rain clouds, no pink sky to threaten snow, not yet. A spit turned, sending sputtering grease from the carcass to flare in an irregular syncopation.
"So? You seem a little awake, breathing like you might take another breath, now." Rope laid a hand on the shivering body, cocked her head to match the orientation of the smudged, pale face, "do you have a language? Or are you a feral child, brought up by wolves, who wandered amongst suicidal murderers?" Her tone remained conversational, underlain with icy exhaustion, not ready to keep talking much longer, not able to stop. "Bladdered up satellite wouldn't relay my messages, only got enough to mark my gips, and I'm not sure that recorded. So, no help on the way, not even to meet us. Just you and me, kid. Think you will live til we make it to the Abby? Maybe if fool mule decides to go home directly, they'll send a posse on the road, meet us up, shave a few hours off, the bitter ones, that'll count, come to think about it."
Rope poked a stick into the edge of the campfire, dislodging a leaf wrapped package, opened it with ginger fingertips on a flat rock, and scooped out a bit of the mash inside, in a fold of green. "Not quite done, but good enough. Here, yams and herbs, in a chard leaf." The small hand extended, accepted the food, and smeared it into her mouth. "Nothing hot to drink, got nothing to hold water."
"Enku. Leaf." She smacked her lips, and nearly smiled in the flickering light as the grey sunset faded.
"She does speak. And at least one word of Abbey. Is that your name, Leaf?"
The child pointed to the wrapped dinner, "leaf," and sat up awkwardly, rustling the makeshift bedroll.
"Ah. Still, a good Abbey name, Leaf. More? Well, of course more, you need all I can spare, here. No other name? Traumatized or just shy?" The child looked like a squirrel carrying nuts, but Rope stopped herself laughing. "Or just got your mouth full. Coypu needs to be well cooked, so that'll be a little while yet." They ate in silence, watching the fire in the gloaming. "Got any more words?"
"You. Black madonna?" The exclamation erupted, followed by hands clapped over her mouth, stuffing spat food back in, coughing.
"Ha! I know that one. No, no, it's ok, relax, relax." She patted the bony back tenderly. "Well, I've birthed three times, and I'm as black as humans come these days, so sure. My mother, my bio-mother, would call you sacrilegious for that, especially applied to me. Her old religion. Real Lalibelan, escaped from her tribe, and I'm the catalyst. Were those your folks, all the dead ones?" A terrified nod. "Bible people, like my mother's people?" Another nod. "So, you understand what I'm saying to you?" A nod, a shrug, a confused glance in the gathering darkness, the wind rustling the surrounding trees. "Some, huh?" Rope pulled back the spit to test the meat. It pulled away to her satisfaction and mild surprize. "Eat, sleep, talk when you're ready. We got another two days walk, if the weather holds. And I'd love you do do some of it on your own feet."
"I'll call you Leaf the Foundling, for now. Wanna hear the story of my Mother?" She assumed she heard assent in the greasy snarfling. Rope the Weather settled in beside to eat her own New Rat, sent thanks to her mums who taught her to always keep spices in wax paper up her sleeve pockets - making the strong meat edible, and her dads for teaching her to hunt the beasties and watch for tubers. She plucked out the warmed rocks from the sand around the fire, to keep their feet warm, and listened to the wind in the sky, and the bats flapping after moths, rodents scurrying on their business, other animal and earth sounds she found familiar, but could not name.
She knew she should check the actual numbers, pressure and humidity, do a proper spotter's weather report, but her arms ached from carrying the child since midmorning. And she didn't want to get grease on the pad, since the connection had already glitched. In the morning, she promised herself. She threw the bones in the fire, added a thick branch stump, and snugged around the warmish, stinking body of her find, and remembered her Mother. Dream about her tonight, she thought, as cold sleep paralyzed her, tell the tale on the road tomorrow, like Chaucer's pilgrims.
"So? You seem a little awake, breathing like you might take another breath, now." Rope laid a hand on the shivering body, cocked her head to match the orientation of the smudged, pale face, "do you have a language? Or are you a feral child, brought up by wolves, who wandered amongst suicidal murderers?" Her tone remained conversational, underlain with icy exhaustion, not ready to keep talking much longer, not able to stop. "Bladdered up satellite wouldn't relay my messages, only got enough to mark my gips, and I'm not sure that recorded. So, no help on the way, not even to meet us. Just you and me, kid. Think you will live til we make it to the Abby? Maybe if fool mule decides to go home directly, they'll send a posse on the road, meet us up, shave a few hours off, the bitter ones, that'll count, come to think about it."
Rope poked a stick into the edge of the campfire, dislodging a leaf wrapped package, opened it with ginger fingertips on a flat rock, and scooped out a bit of the mash inside, in a fold of green. "Not quite done, but good enough. Here, yams and herbs, in a chard leaf." The small hand extended, accepted the food, and smeared it into her mouth. "Nothing hot to drink, got nothing to hold water."
"Enku. Leaf." She smacked her lips, and nearly smiled in the flickering light as the grey sunset faded.
"She does speak. And at least one word of Abbey. Is that your name, Leaf?"
The child pointed to the wrapped dinner, "leaf," and sat up awkwardly, rustling the makeshift bedroll.
"Ah. Still, a good Abbey name, Leaf. More? Well, of course more, you need all I can spare, here. No other name? Traumatized or just shy?" The child looked like a squirrel carrying nuts, but Rope stopped herself laughing. "Or just got your mouth full. Coypu needs to be well cooked, so that'll be a little while yet." They ate in silence, watching the fire in the gloaming. "Got any more words?"
"You. Black madonna?" The exclamation erupted, followed by hands clapped over her mouth, stuffing spat food back in, coughing.
"Ha! I know that one. No, no, it's ok, relax, relax." She patted the bony back tenderly. "Well, I've birthed three times, and I'm as black as humans come these days, so sure. My mother, my bio-mother, would call you sacrilegious for that, especially applied to me. Her old religion. Real Lalibelan, escaped from her tribe, and I'm the catalyst. Were those your folks, all the dead ones?" A terrified nod. "Bible people, like my mother's people?" Another nod. "So, you understand what I'm saying to you?" A nod, a shrug, a confused glance in the gathering darkness, the wind rustling the surrounding trees. "Some, huh?" Rope pulled back the spit to test the meat. It pulled away to her satisfaction and mild surprize. "Eat, sleep, talk when you're ready. We got another two days walk, if the weather holds. And I'd love you do do some of it on your own feet."
"I'll call you Leaf the Foundling, for now. Wanna hear the story of my Mother?" She assumed she heard assent in the greasy snarfling. Rope the Weather settled in beside to eat her own New Rat, sent thanks to her mums who taught her to always keep spices in wax paper up her sleeve pockets - making the strong meat edible, and her dads for teaching her to hunt the beasties and watch for tubers. She plucked out the warmed rocks from the sand around the fire, to keep their feet warm, and listened to the wind in the sky, and the bats flapping after moths, rodents scurrying on their business, other animal and earth sounds she found familiar, but could not name.
She knew she should check the actual numbers, pressure and humidity, do a proper spotter's weather report, but her arms ached from carrying the child since midmorning. And she didn't want to get grease on the pad, since the connection had already glitched. In the morning, she promised herself. She threw the bones in the fire, added a thick branch stump, and snugged around the warmish, stinking body of her find, and remembered her Mother. Dream about her tonight, she thought, as cold sleep paralyzed her, tell the tale on the road tomorrow, like Chaucer's pilgrims.
Saturday, February 07, 2009
Telecaster
We have a tax refund. After he got hired, D admitted he did, in fact, want another guitar, a Telecaster. As he played in the shop, another man commented to me that I was very patient, his own wife wouldn't tolerate waiting more than two minutes in a guitar store. I always figured this was part of our deal, and I do so love seeing D happy. I stayed with him as he dithered in guitar stores in Colorado Springs as we waited to be sent off to Saudi, Gulf War I.
I'm not sure why he thought we should wait, but he expressed delighted surprize that I said "of course" to his getting the guitar he has wanted - today. I've always wanted to have a guitar for him under the christmas tree, but that's not really practical, since he'd still want to play the actual, particular instrument he chose first. This, "yes, sure, now is good" answer is the only way I can meet that ideal.
He's been playing all afternoon, telling me all about the history of guitars, including the Curt Cobain effect on cheap vs expensive guitars in the '80s. I have a good working knowledge of guitars because of 18 years with him. I have to admit, it really has a good, distinctive sound. He has not stopped thanking me, and expressing his "wow."
I also admit, it's good to still qualify as the "cool girlfriend" after all these years. The guy in the store, who D talked to more later while getting the guitar, made sure to tell him that I was "a keeper" and why. I just figure it says a lot about who D is, but, still, well. I do like to give D lots of reasons to still want me around. I know he'd love me no matter what, but my side is to always earn it, never take it for granted. He does the same for me, much better.
War
I grew up hearing it, "Let the leaders get in a ring and fight it out!" From my mother as well as my father, his brothers, all the old men in the neighborhood. A perfect solution to war and international conflict. Yeah, that'll stop war, change the reflex to violence. More personal violence. Perfect example to the rest of us. Go back to the principles of personal vendetta and fists.
I have on my email sig files this quotation,
"Problems that remain persistently insolvable should always be suspected as questions asked in the wrong way."
- Alan Watts
And I think this is a prime example. War, especially modern, mechanized, total war is not the answer. But neither is peace at all costs, not without a fundamental change in humans as a species. Conflict and chaos stir up the stagnant and complacent. Stupid and wasteful as it is, much as families grieve the deaths of their soldiers, expensive as the rehabilitation that follows, it does serve a function. And until we find another way to make drastic societal revolutions in the face of national injustices and ingrained corruption some other way, I suspect it will keep erupting. And not just for good reasons, but as an option that is always on the table.
Would we really want a president who would punch out a prime minister, then let both still govern? Could arrest both on assault and battery charges. The kind of behaviour disciplined in grade school. How many bullied children would choose rule by athletes? We hope more for politics from heads of state, when they fail, making them get in a ring with boxing gloves is hardly addressing the problem. It's as useful as imagining the stimulus package as a stack of $100 bills stacked in a pile. Money is as much a creation of mutual fiction as the glory of battle, approaching it with simplistic logic is applying the wrong set of rules.
Arranging deck chairs on the Titanic.
I have on my email sig files this quotation,
"Problems that remain persistently insolvable should always be suspected as questions asked in the wrong way."
- Alan Watts
And I think this is a prime example. War, especially modern, mechanized, total war is not the answer. But neither is peace at all costs, not without a fundamental change in humans as a species. Conflict and chaos stir up the stagnant and complacent. Stupid and wasteful as it is, much as families grieve the deaths of their soldiers, expensive as the rehabilitation that follows, it does serve a function. And until we find another way to make drastic societal revolutions in the face of national injustices and ingrained corruption some other way, I suspect it will keep erupting. And not just for good reasons, but as an option that is always on the table.
Would we really want a president who would punch out a prime minister, then let both still govern? Could arrest both on assault and battery charges. The kind of behaviour disciplined in grade school. How many bullied children would choose rule by athletes? We hope more for politics from heads of state, when they fail, making them get in a ring with boxing gloves is hardly addressing the problem. It's as useful as imagining the stimulus package as a stack of $100 bills stacked in a pile. Money is as much a creation of mutual fiction as the glory of battle, approaching it with simplistic logic is applying the wrong set of rules.
Arranging deck chairs on the Titanic.
Shoo
I dreamed I came home to a house, expecting to see a few cats, and there were none. Nor could any of the people around explain why. I walked upstairs, thought I saw Moby on our bed, except the size was wrong, and it turned out to be a large, black, very friendly bouncy dog. I coaxed him out and down the steps, returning to shut the door, and look for Moby, who was nowhere to be found. Later, I went back up to look for something for D, and the dog had snuck back up, and I scooted him out again. After a long search for D's item, Moby did appear shyly. I got so mad, that someone brought this dog to Moby's home, scared him off his own bed, and now wouldn't admit it. None of the people in the edges of the dream would take responsibility for the dog, but were chastising me for getting the dog on a leash to take him to the shelter. Nice dog, just big and energetic, not the dog's fault, not angry with the animal, but whoever thoughtlessly brought him in. The dream drifted off without action.
This house of my dreams is based on the house I grew up in. Whenever I dream I am in a house, it is a version of that one.
I have signed up for a training class, teaching shelter dogs manners. I think I will do more with the canines once I have better skills, it can't be all just acting authoritatively and watching It's Me Or The Dog stuff.
I've become aware that my age is showing, some bad photos this week. And it's not just that I'm looking at another birthday, there is a marked qualitative change, not just the grey hair either. I figured the drain of a few years with persistent pain is no small part of this. Worry over jobs and income. The slight easing actually is worse for me, as I tend to hold together tight in a crisis, then fall apart when the worst is over. I'm feeling crumbly this week.
Thursday, February 05, 2009
Wednesday, February 04, 2009
Polydactyly
First the circling, then perching, relaxing, then exploring. A cat with a few extra toes on each foot. Like a certain baby in the news.
Newbies
Mostly all new cats. L and I continue to name and rename, she grooms the long hairs, I do the shorts. She uses rose gardening gloves, fingers cut out, so I followed her example. I'm less hesitant about touching all the cats now, and they've saved me a lot of scratches and a number of bites. I get spoiled, because Moby doesn't bite or scratch.
Fluffy and very, very friendly and excited to be OUT! (Thought of the name Max, have suggested it to my volunteer boss.)
The other cat, paired with the one above, so active I couldn't get an unblurred photos. Suggested name, Millie.
Timon, a huge, wonky eyed, long term resident. Very sweet, badly in need of a good home.
Omar, oh, so soft, very fun and gentle.
Clarie who would gladly have just laid in my arms for hours and hours, just flopped and purring.
Fluffy and very, very friendly and excited to be OUT! (Thought of the name Max, have suggested it to my volunteer boss.)
The other cat, paired with the one above, so active I couldn't get an unblurred photos. Suggested name, Millie.
Timon, a huge, wonky eyed, long term resident. Very sweet, badly in need of a good home.
Omar, oh, so soft, very fun and gentle.
Clarie who would gladly have just laid in my arms for hours and hours, just flopped and purring.
Monday, February 02, 2009
Sunday, February 01, 2009
Findings
Rope the Weather pushed through, branches catching on her black trousers tucked into sturdy scuffed high boots. White cuffs and collar, hems, flashed out from the edges of a slim fitting boiled wool jacket, long coattails flowing behind, the stylishness belying the practicality of the tuxedo-like garments, with unexpected pockets and little to snag. She betrayed her own annoyance every time she shouted out.
"Fool mule! Sal, where are you? If you're headed home, you better have all that gear when you get there, Sal the Mule! Leave me out here three days walk from Abby!" Followed by snarls and yips of pain as brambles scratched and whipped at her face. Until she stopped, and sniffed, and her countenance changed, and silence engulfed her. She took a moment to tie back her dreadlocks, listening with her whole body, scanning. Then she saw the cinderblock, and walked toward it. She pulled a handkerchief from a sleeve, and covered her nose and mouth, and silently crept forward to what became a wall, then along it to a narrow opening, obscured with dead branches.
She shoved through, to crouch, to stare at her long repeated dream, a score of bodies with purple mouths and hands, mostly young boys, two men, a few ancient women -only they had their hair in elaborate upswept puffs, all like she'd envisioned. but the child in the old dream missing.
She dutifully pulled out her pewter, recorded her position, took photographs, finally noticed a large, decrepit building at the end of the filthy walled compound. The stench she analyzed in self defense seemed fresh-ish. Not more than a day old, less probably, given the warm sun. Her mind shut out further details, but the protocols moved her hands, and she pulled out the DNA swabs, and tested one woman - rictus pulling her lips away, a boy of perhaps thirteen but covered in bruises and scars, and she hesitated, with only one swab left, between the scrawny and pale white haired skeleton, and the face down slab of a powerful man.
She resisted the urge to laziness by the voice of her own dad, exhorting her to "always take the hard path, it'll wind up easier in the end, dear little one" followed by his infectious chuckle. She steeled herself and laid her boot, with an imaginary reverence, to the dead man's iliac crest, and shoved.
Beneath lay a pile of rags, and a small, nearly glowing, white arm.
Rope drew back, then leaned forward, and the tiny hand... moved.
Pushing the rags away with frantic hands, she uncovered a child, perhaps six years old, barely breathing, nearly skeletal, but terribly familiar. The child in Rope's nightmares, from her own childhood visions. She gingerly lifted the small body into her arms.
The swab still in her fist, she cocked her head to one side, and swabbed the cheek of the dead man, awkwardly around the stinking bundle of near life on her shoulder, secured the dropped pewter into a tail pocket, and, after a last look to memorize the scene for the forensics team and a potential source of salvage later, backed out of the wall opening, to begin the long trudge to the Abby, assistance, and expertise.
"C'mon little one, we'll figure all this out after we get you safe and warm and fed. Sal, you better be there when we get back. With all our gear. Mules, who ever thought mules were a good idea?"
"Fool mule! Sal, where are you? If you're headed home, you better have all that gear when you get there, Sal the Mule! Leave me out here three days walk from Abby!" Followed by snarls and yips of pain as brambles scratched and whipped at her face. Until she stopped, and sniffed, and her countenance changed, and silence engulfed her. She took a moment to tie back her dreadlocks, listening with her whole body, scanning. Then she saw the cinderblock, and walked toward it. She pulled a handkerchief from a sleeve, and covered her nose and mouth, and silently crept forward to what became a wall, then along it to a narrow opening, obscured with dead branches.
She shoved through, to crouch, to stare at her long repeated dream, a score of bodies with purple mouths and hands, mostly young boys, two men, a few ancient women -only they had their hair in elaborate upswept puffs, all like she'd envisioned. but the child in the old dream missing.
She dutifully pulled out her pewter, recorded her position, took photographs, finally noticed a large, decrepit building at the end of the filthy walled compound. The stench she analyzed in self defense seemed fresh-ish. Not more than a day old, less probably, given the warm sun. Her mind shut out further details, but the protocols moved her hands, and she pulled out the DNA swabs, and tested one woman - rictus pulling her lips away, a boy of perhaps thirteen but covered in bruises and scars, and she hesitated, with only one swab left, between the scrawny and pale white haired skeleton, and the face down slab of a powerful man.
She resisted the urge to laziness by the voice of her own dad, exhorting her to "always take the hard path, it'll wind up easier in the end, dear little one" followed by his infectious chuckle. She steeled herself and laid her boot, with an imaginary reverence, to the dead man's iliac crest, and shoved.
Beneath lay a pile of rags, and a small, nearly glowing, white arm.
Rope drew back, then leaned forward, and the tiny hand... moved.
Pushing the rags away with frantic hands, she uncovered a child, perhaps six years old, barely breathing, nearly skeletal, but terribly familiar. The child in Rope's nightmares, from her own childhood visions. She gingerly lifted the small body into her arms.
The swab still in her fist, she cocked her head to one side, and swabbed the cheek of the dead man, awkwardly around the stinking bundle of near life on her shoulder, secured the dropped pewter into a tail pocket, and, after a last look to memorize the scene for the forensics team and a potential source of salvage later, backed out of the wall opening, to begin the long trudge to the Abby, assistance, and expertise.
"C'mon little one, we'll figure all this out after we get you safe and warm and fed. Sal, you better be there when we get back. With all our gear. Mules, who ever thought mules were a good idea?"
Portrait
What would you have the painter put into paintings of you - apart from your loved ones - and why?
I found my way to Isabelle, who asked this question. And I love the idea, having seen so many portraits from all over the world, through the ages. Having posed as an art model, when younger and more tolerant of pain. And I think about why people choose what they chose to be near, to be seen holding, for all time. Not what the usual meaning is, why they wanted it. A friend mentioned seeing LA Ink, and a guy who wanted a tattoo of cheese, because he couldn't eat it anymore, and wanted to memorialize it.
I would, of course, have a black cat. Cats have to be earned, the good ones do anyway. They take time to trust and bestow affection, in their own time. Black ones are associated with many societal ideas that have nothing to do with who they are, aside from being smart. And they are beautiful in ways that are difficult to record or convey.
I would have bare feet, because that is my base, damaged and vulnerable and callused all together.
I would have a silver ring on my finger, an Army green blanket in the background, wear a dull red shirt and grubby faded jeans, to represent, in order, D's love, my military service, my OR experience, and my sense of working at anything needful. Perhaps a mac laptop peeking out from under a hand, no, under the cat, for my writing, photography, and my blogistan community.
Shifted
So, we shifted everything around, including two bookshelves and the couch, and took the futon sofa frame to the DI (read charity shop.) There is still sorting and closets to deal with next week, but the place feels much more open and workable now. Looking at small comfy chairs, nothing quite fits yet, but nothing much is open in this town on Sunday, and the furniture stores are at the far south end of the valley for the most part. NOT going to Ikea. I don't object to them as business, I just am repelled by their esthetic. I've seen many of their catalogues left at work over the years, and have never wanted one thing from them. Ever. D's parents gave us a lamp from Ikea that we both found creepy, which got broken in the last move.
D was worried that Moby would have trouble with the cat tree in the new location. I figured he's a smart cat, he'll figure it out. He did, no sweat. And he seems to love the couch in the new configuration. Funny, because when we first got it, he avoided going near it, didn't like the smell or the feel on his paws, something. Maybe the volatiles used in manufacture took a while to evaporate, who knows. He stretched out across half, while D and I sat on the other half, pleasantly squished together, eating the chili D made, with the tortillas I cooked. Not that I made, found. Uncooked tortillas, even a local product, just griddle up at home. The week we were wishing such a thing existed.
Mild week with decent air, feels indecent. End of the month, a few days in the Pacific northwest.
Friday, January 30, 2009
Gato
The Cat is less than thrilled that D isn't home most of the time. Very enthusiastic greetings, followed by almost-ignorings. He got purring very loudly, then perched on the back of the couch and purred. The white noise of the recording obscured it, sadly, so D took the video and made it into this little piece. Moby got up as I moved the laptop position, which caught some light, which caught his attention and he hurried off to chase.
Sorting
Nothing quite has the piquancy of being woken at two am by an incipient migraine. I eventually talked myself into getting up for drugs, and I did get back to sleep. The day dragged on me, though, in the side effect phase, and all I wanted was to come home, come home, come home. Knowing it would be a slow day added to my preoccupation. But the schedule dragged as well.
Not specifically in my room. Dr. SA isn't slow, but always works well, until all that can and needs to be done is done. He needed to get out, to fly to a conference, by noon. Both cases had complications, the second right on the verge of needing to run another two hours, or ending immediately. He decided the long repair would not work for this patient, would actually make the damage worse, so he closed up. Then had me call the fellow he was going with, already at the airport, to say he would be doing the extended work... . The friend merely laughed, didn't fool him for a minute. He reassured me that it was not my fault, but that he'd been expecting just such a call. After, we wondered what it would have taken to convince him if it had been the truth.
By 1130, I'd cleaned up everything I had to do, had lunch, then off to give one scrub lunch break, and by 1330, felt like climbing the walls, and taking a nap there. I did come home, then, and did take a nap. D feeling much the same, underslept, vaguely cranky, restless and tired. We went for dinner, and tried to go listen to a band, but the place was full, even though we were very early, and we wandered back home.
We talked, though, more than we have usually this past year. Gradually, we'd just avoided a lot of conversations, as we didn't want to talk about the big problems that were taking up so much brain-space. Tonight, decided to rearrange the apartment, and after some measuring and reality checking, decided to get rid of a few items, and maybe use the tax refund for a comfy chair, instead of the old lumpy futon love seat. Had to stop ourselves from just starting this evening.
Just what D wanted, a weekend moving books, now that his job is moving books.
Wednesday, January 28, 2009
Pet
I really do have a harder time with the dogs. But they mostly have good photos of them on the adoptions site, anyway. This one just wanted to be petted, as long as I would sit there and rub his neck, joy abounded. No, don't know his name. Another one sucked me in when I was on my way out. So I sat in his kennel and stroked him. (No point in even trying a photo in that awful light.) And noticed how long his nails were, so I let the staff know, and they'll get him trimmed up. The dogs just take so much more energy, and for my day off, this is as much as I can manage. The cats take a different kind of attentiveness, and give back a different kind of affection.
D is tired after his first real day working in the better part of a year, but he's very glad. And because the hours will be available, he can work up to 40 hours a week until July, the extra time shelving books. He's going to start off a bit more slowly, it's exhausting to start from no work to a full week at such a physically demanding job. He'll get up to speed soon enough. And Moby is going to miss him madly.
Names
Nearly every one of our re-named cats got new homes. Except the little long hair black fluffball, now named Abe. L and I have agreed to continue to make Wednesday Christening Day. I took her advice and got some rose gardening gloves, which are wonderful, better when I cut the tips off a few of the fingers.
I thought trimming this one's claws was going to be a battle of teeth and claws, especially when he started hissing and growling at me. But not in any way. I didn't do all of them, because he really seemed distressed, but not a tooth touched my hand, just lots of loud complaint and empty threat. A cat whose bark is much worse than it's tendency to bite, or claw. I had the cage card changed to note this.
This sweet lady wound up here because her people died. A bit thin, gentle, lovely dear.
This one is named Manly, which isn't good, but I haven't been able to think of better. D says he's one of them Holstein Cats. But I can't give him a cow name, like Elsie or Betsy, because male cats do better with male names, this one is just a little too much.
And Biscuit. Dear, friendly, playful Biscuit. Oh, maybe Graham. Next week, if he's still here.
I thought trimming this one's claws was going to be a battle of teeth and claws, especially when he started hissing and growling at me. But not in any way. I didn't do all of them, because he really seemed distressed, but not a tooth touched my hand, just lots of loud complaint and empty threat. A cat whose bark is much worse than it's tendency to bite, or claw. I had the cage card changed to note this.
This sweet lady wound up here because her people died. A bit thin, gentle, lovely dear.
This one is named Manly, which isn't good, but I haven't been able to think of better. D says he's one of them Holstein Cats. But I can't give him a cow name, like Elsie or Betsy, because male cats do better with male names, this one is just a little too much.
And Biscuit. Dear, friendly, playful Biscuit. Oh, maybe Graham. Next week, if he's still here.
Tuesday, January 27, 2009
Relief
D has begun work at The City Library. Part-time, and entry level, but with hope for the future, and a smattering of benefits. We have ordered pizza, sharing it with ND this evening, and enjoying the idea of having a little more income, and taking bites out of the student loans.
And he has a place to go every day, a making, in his words, a real contribution - which he is most happy about. A job in his field, in the middle of a recession. Not that bad.
Monday, January 26, 2009
Introductions
Stone the Jack found her way down to the kennels, easy enough, following her nose. Dogs mostly, but also yaks and alpaca, goats and a pair of water buffalo, and, she peered in amazement, a small horse? No, on second look, ears too big, a mule, but glossy as any Eastern stallion she'd known in early childhood, far away. A round of barking from the stalls, quieted by a tall and bony young meed, with all rough and confident ease of an apprentice dogger.
"You one of Hinge's?" she called out, over a rash of yelps and howls.
"Sh, sh, sh, sh... yup, Bouillon, down puppies, you Hinge's friend come for the wedding?" This back and forth, in a disconcertingly deep voice, without clearly delineating his target, prominent larynx in constant motion, continued clucking and hissing until the dogs calmed to discrete barks. "That cat you dragged in belonged to my predecessor, you know."
"Ah, that explains why thee didn't mind being dragged in. Did thee just stay here when the other apprentice left?" she asked.
"Naw, naw, it got all the way to the south of the Chain, over a thousand K to come back. Apparently didn't like the taste of the mice there, and disappeared two months ago." He sat on a sack of straw, strands of twine working in his hands, to stare at Stone.
"I take it you checked the chip." Stone said this in as flat a tone as she could manage, avoiding his gaze. But he just grinned and nodded, once.
"I already got the report started, you can add your bit later," he offered.
"And the cat's name?"
He rolled his eyes, "Ginger. That may be the other reason thee came back. Apple knew diseases pretty well, but from what Hinge says, didn't really have a feel for the critters." A slow lift of his bony shoulders, his hands continued to twist fibers into cord.
"I'm calling him George. He didn't object," she offered.
"That's better, yeah, George, good old George, good name, more dignified, fits him. We both got a feel for animals," he proclaimed. "I'm not so good with disease. Injuries though... " a mock humble bow of his head, implying a deep connection with all animals. "Hey, do I get to examine you? I need to get my human exam quotient in, and everyone here is done, or done so many they don't have to let me." He waggled his eyebrows at her, intending to be suggestive, but coming off as hopelessly innocent.
"Sure. I got some very interesting scars." She felt so old, but glad of the protection of age, and safely flirted back. Not, she also thought, that I am old, but next to this young meed, well. "Not to mention some historical tattoos. Oh, reminds me, got a good dentist here?"
"Why does a tattoo remind you of a dentist... nevermind. Old one, but I hear she's a favorite with the town kids, so I guess. All she did was look at mine, which are perfect." He showed his teeth, pulling back his lips with one finger, without letting go of his project.
"Very nice." She didn't know what else to say to this, and waited in uncomfortable silence. "Um... "
"Hey, how many Travelers does it take to change a pot? Only one, but an Abby has to tell them how. How many Abby does it take to change a pot? Two, one to change it, and another to be told to check up on that one by the Program. How many Towners does it take to change a pot? Seven, six parents to teach the kid how to. Used to only be five, but ever since the Universal rule change... oh, heh."
"How did you know I am part of that?" She asked in strict neutrality, her mood closed.
"Hey, now, it's in the records. And I am sixteen... kinda pertinent, since that's the year my Mother birthed me. Didn't put it together with your name until Hinge started raving about how his best friend agreed to come to live here." He didn't notice her shocked face, as he scanned the kennels, but rumbled on. "Are you really his sister? You don't look alike, well, maybe your noses, sort of. Anyway, he told me a little about how you had four weird parents, and two were your bio-parents even, and only got help when you were already a kid, which is messed up. Anyway, I have a great bunch of parents, and I figure I got them all because of you, so that's cool." He assembled his long self in a more upright position, "Maybe I better get Master Hinge, since he told me to call him as soon as you showed up, so that you got all your orientation done and didn't go working or hunting today, so stay right here, ok." He shambled off before she could answer.
Stone leaned against the stone wall of the kennel, as a knee high, rumpled red dog gazed up at her in adoring curiosity. "Well," she told him, "this is interesting." A moment, then, "Bouillon? He's called Bouillon?" The red dog ruffed softly, standing, as if to politely ask a question, then sat back, licking thee's chops.
"You one of Hinge's?" she called out, over a rash of yelps and howls.
"Sh, sh, sh, sh... yup, Bouillon, down puppies, you Hinge's friend come for the wedding?" This back and forth, in a disconcertingly deep voice, without clearly delineating his target, prominent larynx in constant motion, continued clucking and hissing until the dogs calmed to discrete barks. "That cat you dragged in belonged to my predecessor, you know."
"Ah, that explains why thee didn't mind being dragged in. Did thee just stay here when the other apprentice left?" she asked.
"Naw, naw, it got all the way to the south of the Chain, over a thousand K to come back. Apparently didn't like the taste of the mice there, and disappeared two months ago." He sat on a sack of straw, strands of twine working in his hands, to stare at Stone.
"I take it you checked the chip." Stone said this in as flat a tone as she could manage, avoiding his gaze. But he just grinned and nodded, once.
"I already got the report started, you can add your bit later," he offered.
"And the cat's name?"
He rolled his eyes, "Ginger. That may be the other reason thee came back. Apple knew diseases pretty well, but from what Hinge says, didn't really have a feel for the critters." A slow lift of his bony shoulders, his hands continued to twist fibers into cord.
"I'm calling him George. He didn't object," she offered.
"That's better, yeah, George, good old George, good name, more dignified, fits him. We both got a feel for animals," he proclaimed. "I'm not so good with disease. Injuries though... " a mock humble bow of his head, implying a deep connection with all animals. "Hey, do I get to examine you? I need to get my human exam quotient in, and everyone here is done, or done so many they don't have to let me." He waggled his eyebrows at her, intending to be suggestive, but coming off as hopelessly innocent.
"Sure. I got some very interesting scars." She felt so old, but glad of the protection of age, and safely flirted back. Not, she also thought, that I am old, but next to this young meed, well. "Not to mention some historical tattoos. Oh, reminds me, got a good dentist here?"
"Why does a tattoo remind you of a dentist... nevermind. Old one, but I hear she's a favorite with the town kids, so I guess. All she did was look at mine, which are perfect." He showed his teeth, pulling back his lips with one finger, without letting go of his project.
"Very nice." She didn't know what else to say to this, and waited in uncomfortable silence. "Um... "
"Hey, how many Travelers does it take to change a pot? Only one, but an Abby has to tell them how. How many Abby does it take to change a pot? Two, one to change it, and another to be told to check up on that one by the Program. How many Towners does it take to change a pot? Seven, six parents to teach the kid how to. Used to only be five, but ever since the Universal rule change... oh, heh."
"How did you know I am part of that?" She asked in strict neutrality, her mood closed.
"Hey, now, it's in the records. And I am sixteen... kinda pertinent, since that's the year my Mother birthed me. Didn't put it together with your name until Hinge started raving about how his best friend agreed to come to live here." He didn't notice her shocked face, as he scanned the kennels, but rumbled on. "Are you really his sister? You don't look alike, well, maybe your noses, sort of. Anyway, he told me a little about how you had four weird parents, and two were your bio-parents even, and only got help when you were already a kid, which is messed up. Anyway, I have a great bunch of parents, and I figure I got them all because of you, so that's cool." He assembled his long self in a more upright position, "Maybe I better get Master Hinge, since he told me to call him as soon as you showed up, so that you got all your orientation done and didn't go working or hunting today, so stay right here, ok." He shambled off before she could answer.
Stone leaned against the stone wall of the kennel, as a knee high, rumpled red dog gazed up at her in adoring curiosity. "Well," she told him, "this is interesting." A moment, then, "Bouillon? He's called Bouillon?" The red dog ruffed softly, standing, as if to politely ask a question, then sat back, licking thee's chops.
Sunday, January 25, 2009
Napping
The weather has come and cleared out the garbage in the air. We are all enjoying breathing again. And realizing how much our sleep has been disturbed. So we have taken to the bed, watching Ovation, with Moby companionably napping betwixt our feet.
Last night, I had my arms above my head, and felt a strange push on the left one. Took me a moment to feel the sides of teeth, and realize it was a cat rubbing his face on my elbow, several times. And purring loudly.
Saturday, January 24, 2009
Thumb
See her Amazing Healing Powers! (I did say it was worse than it looked.)
Really, cayenne and immediate ten minutes of pressure make a difference. Good night's sleep, too. Down to steri-strip, and elaborate non-bumping rituals.
We both woke up too early, and attempts to go back to bed for more sleep didn't quite work. Moby had already taken his late morning spot on the bed, where D's feet would be. So we just gave up, and watched him, and the tv. Catching up on The Daily Show, and a couple of Animal Cops episodes.
He really is a wonderful cat. I love that he is SO black, aside from a few white strands, the small bare spot on his back- where the fur is growing in whitish, and the brownish undercoat, only visible on his belly, in strong light, when he's stretched out on his back. He doesn't bite or scratch, gives plenty of signals when he's not in the mood to be bothered, his affectionate trust has to be earned, but he is also very tolerant. He's not over friendly, but is politely sociable. Very much the strong, silent type. He has taken to rubbing his face against my big toe while I put on my socks in the morning, when I got ahead of him once, he ran over, and looked rather disappointed, until I put my foot back up for his benediction.
D says he is a cat with gravitas. Even when extended full length on his back, top of his head on the blanket, one eye open, paws crossed, watching us.
He also seems to like finding dark colored cloth. If we can't find him immediately, if not in his Fortress of Solitude, he is likely on the sofa on a black wool skirt, or the navy polartec blanket. After years of photographing him, lighter color cats are almost too easy. Nothing is exactly easy about Moby, but he is utterly worth the time it took to get to know him and earn his respect.
But then, I've always preferred people who don't just give away their regard too readily. I like the cranky and the demanding, if they also want to be pleased - just a little underneath. The ones who trust that they are worth some effort to get to know. I distrust surface beauty and facile charm, along with gushing friendliness, always strikes me as pushy salesmanship, to hide a second rate product. Real stuff doesn't care if you want it, best to wait for someone who can appreciate it.
Going out for art and brunch. We've needed a date, and with rain, and more breathable air, today is the day. That and I'm not doing much cleaning up at the moment. Too much screaming when I inevitably hit the damnthumb.
Friday, January 23, 2009
Scrape
Ok, so it is Friday. All went well, in that no one is hurt, everyone is alive, and everything turned out very well. But one patient's IV failed in the middle of surgery. Not as bad as it sounds, the surgical area had an anesthetic block. He seemed to just rouse and try to pull out his airway, and was given gasses to get him back under until a new IV could be placed. The resident anesthesiologist did as well, and did exactly what, a full attending anesthesiologist would have done, and rather more calmly than some I have witnessed. Our staff were in the room helping well within a minute.
A little while later, I realized I'd sustained a few good scrapes that bled a bit. I applied a dressing, and continued. Hurt a bit, rubbing on the desk surface, despite the occlusive film.
Got home, we decided to use the old bread to make stuffing, and I took to cutting it up. More blood ensued. Looks worse than it is, held pressure a good ten minutes, soaked the offending digit in cayenne paste, then bandaged the hell out of it so it wouldn't hurt, and not start bleeding due to being knocked about. Enjoying giving D the "thumbs up!" Which amuses.
Think I'll go lie in bed and read the Fortean Times that came in the mail today.
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