Category Archives: miscellany

Allergic to…something


I am now entering week three of a minor throat tickle/headache/stuffiness scenario that is driving me absolutely batshit.  I’ll wake up feeling good in the morning, but by evening I have a headache and my throat feels meh and I’m all sniffly.  Is it possible to have an evenings-only cold?  Because if not, I have no explanation.  Perhaps I am allergic to…my winter coat? The HVAC system in my building? 4:12 p.m. sunsets?  Mysterious.

When I was teaching, and when I was in grad school, I would be sick every year at Christmas, without fail.  It was like my body held on as long as it could, but when it felt me relax into vacation- WHAMMO! Cold and flu, baby!  Enjoy your Christmas presents with a side of nyquil!

I’d really like that not to happen this year.  Perhaps since I don’t actually get any time off at the holidays, my body will not settle into vacation mode, and thus I will not get blindsided by some wretched pestilence?  (Now if that’s not a valient effort to find a silver lining in a schedule that has me working both Christmas Eve and New Year’s Eve, I don’t know what is.)

In the meantime, answer me this.  Humidifier: fabulous tool for decongesting, or tremendous waste of money?  Inquiring minds want to know.


Posted in miscellany | 12 Comments

I’m not even going to pretend to be embarrassed


Announcement: I have given up hope that the old fashion adage that “everything old is new again” might just…skip my junior-high to high school period.  It seems, my friends, that we are doomed to relive the ill-fated fashions of the late 80s and early 90s. There are so many fashion blunders from our collective pasts that I have been distressed to see making a reappearance.  Leggings, for example.  Jeans with zippers at the ankle.  Slouchy, off the shoulder sweatshirts.  And let us not even speak of shoulder pads.

But it seems that since the 80s have been back in for long enough now, and we are moving on.  And what came after the 80s?  Grunge!  And so with the new grunge, it appears, flannel is back.  And while I whined a lot about the new 80s, I am much less distressed about the reemergence of flannel.

As in: I bought a flannel shirt this weekend.  And I’m not sorry.  After several seasons of lycra and neon and, god help us, pegged boyfriend jeans, we DESERVE flannel.  Flannel is comfortable and cozy and easy to wear.  It is soft.  It is machine washable.  I look outstanding in flannel.  In fact, I spent the better part of high school wearing my father’s flannel shirts.  (He: 6’4”, maybe 230 pounds.  I, at the time: 5’10”, buck thirty.  It was a look.)

Now if only I could find a way for people to bring back that whole “wear your flannel pajama pants out in public like it was normal” thing that was briefly trendy in my sophomore year, I would be golden.


Posted in miscellany | 7 Comments

Awesomely bad wedding toasts


This is going to have to be brief, because I’m running late for work.  Yes, again.  I remember at my old job, when I was so smug and superior about how I was always early to work.  Turns out, pushing my start time back by an hour and increasing my commute by 15 minutes makes it impossible for me to get out the door on time.  Oh how the mighty have fallen.

John and I went to a wedding this weekend, our 6th of this season.  (One more this weekend and then we’re done until spring- we’ve had 6 in September and October alone, and that’s not counting the four we had to miss because we were double booked.  Dear friends: we love you very very much, but if in the future you could all stagger these joyful unitings of two souls a little more, our wallets would be eternally grateful.  Thank you!)

The one we went to this weekend was a great wedding, full of laughter and really obvious joy on all sides, plus the most delicious wedding food I have ever eaten ever.  In fact, we ate so much that we actual had to curtail our dancing for fullness-related reasons.  That’s a successful wedding buffet right there.

The groom at this wedding has two brothers, both of whom have themselves gotten married in the past year.  So this family has had recent some practice in the fine art of speech delivery, and the brothers did not disappoint.  They had a 15 minute presentation prepared, delivered in the style or a dissertation (their brother the groom recently got his PhD,) complete with flip charts and lab coats.  Now, a 15 minute speech has the potential to be an unmitigated disaster, but these boys pulled it off admirably, and had everyone laughing.

It reminded me, though, of a conversation we were having with some friends a few weeks ago.  One of them brought up the worst wedding speech they’d ever heard, in which the best man went on at some length about how he always thought the bride would end up with a different guy, one of the groomsmen, how she and that guy were perfect for each other, how their personalities complimented each other, etc.  He never really even brought it back around to the happy couple actually getting married.  Awkward.

It’s a great topic, though, bad wedding speeches.  We’ve all been there- the toaster gets a little too toasted before he or she takes the microphone and rambles on too long, or tells a story that’s a little too off-color.  My personal favorite was the wedding where the father of the bride said, and this is an exact quote, the memory is seared in my brain: “Well, we always thought [Christina] was going to marry someone really extraordinary, because she herself is such an extraordinary person.  But [Tom] seems great too.”

He was not kidding.  The silence was DEAFENING.

Please, I know we all have good stories, and some of us can’t share the very best ones on our own blogs for fear the parties in question might, you know, read them.  SO!  This is your chance!  Did the maid of honor call her sister a bitch?  Did the mother of the groom criticize the bride’s parents for being cheap?  Did the groomsman tell a little too much about the groom’s prior exploits?  What is the worst wedding toast you have ever heard?


Posted in miscellany | 13 Comments

Halloween Help


Okay, team, I need some help.  In less than two weeks, I am going to a rehearsal dinner for a wedding.  In an effort to discourage people from wearing costumes to the actual wedding, which is on Halloween, the bride and groom have elected to have a costume party rehearsal dinner.  I think this is going to be awesome.

But I am a little stuck about costume.  Usually, if I dress up at all, I really half-ass it on Halloween.  My all time favorite costume is the bloody mary: red shirt, red pants, red socks, red shoes if possible, ponytail with celery stick in hair.  (Get it?)  Yeah, I’m that girl who likes punny costumes.  Sorry.

But since this is, like, an actual costume party, it seems like I should have an actual costume.  My original plan, hatched several months ago, was to go as Kate Gosselin.  It was easy, it would pack well in my suitcase, it was topical- I even bought the wig.

kate gosselin wig

But I don’t know, guys.  I’m not feeling so good about this anymore.  I mean, this family has really gone even farther off the rails since I first hit upon this costume idea, and somehow it now just seems a little…mean.  I was going for funny, not mean.  So I’m reconsidering.  And I want your help.

My main criteria for a Halloween costume is that I have absolutely zero interest in dressing as “sexy [instert profession or animal]“.  As anyone who has ever been to a Halloween party can tell you, “sexy [insert profession or animal here]” costumes seem to make up 95% of the adult women’s costume market.  Some highlights from last night’s perusal of costume websites:

Sexy Soccer Player:

Yes, because I always wear heels when I play soccer.

Yes, because I always wear heels when I play soccer.

Sexy Limo Driver:

Isn't my hat jaunty?

Isn't my hat jaunty?

If you want to go for something that’s political as well as sexy, there’s always Sexy Border Patrol Agent:

Deportation makes me hot

Deportation makes me hot

And my personal favorite of the “sexy profession” genre: Sexy Prosecutor (Slynnro, can you imagine wearing this to court?):

sexy prosecutor

The state has no objection, your honor.

So I don’t want to be those.

I do have a few ideas:

  • A.    Roller derby, ideally as a Hurl Scout from Whip It.  Pros: girl scout paraphernalia can be cheaply had on ebay, would be super fun, Ellen Page is a bad ass, and I kind of have her coloring (though I am, no exaggeration, twice her size).  Cons: would require (a) purchasing and (b) wearing roller skates.  That could end badly, particularly at an event featuring many beers.
  • B.    Wednesday Addams.  Pros: I already have all the components in my closet, it is Halloween-y and fun without being trampy, and I would get to carry a decapitated doll.  Cons: maybe people wouldn’t get it?  My hair isn’t quite long enough to pull off the braids, so I might have to buy a(nother) wig.
  • C.    Kate Gosselin.  Pros: I mean, I do already have the wig, and I could just wear some mom capris and a sherbet-colored sweater- easy to pack.  Cons: mean (see above).

I am seeking input.  What should I be?  One of these? Or something else?  I am VERY OPEN to other suggestions, so long as they don’t involve a slutty costume made of highly flammable polyester, and can fit in a suitcase.


Posted in miscellany | 15 Comments

Hazards of safer sex


I was eating lunch with John a few days ago and complaining.

“Nothing interesting happens when you’re not working,” I said. “I have nothing to talk about. I am boring.”

Oh, famous last words.

(Heads up: what I’m about to tell you veers dangerously into TMI territory.  If you’re the squeamish type, best turn away now.)

Recently, as I mentioned, I was diagnosed with a sinus infection.  Sinus infections mean antibiotics.  Antibiotics do many good things (like cure sinus infections), but they also do some not so good things (like reducing the efficacy of certain once-daily medications designed to prevent babies).  So when one is on antibiotics it’s best, if one is not in the baby-making business, to call in some backup protection.

So I needed to make a trip to CVS.

Mercifully, our local CVS has a self-checkout line, to minimize human interaction.  Now look, I realize I’m a full-grown married adult and should feel no embarrassment whatsoever about making such a purchase.  But seriously, who wouldn’t avail themselves of a self-checkout line when one’s entire purchase consists of items of the prophylactic variety?

So I made my selection, checked myself out, put my CVS bag inside my purse, and went on my merry way.

On the way home, I decided to stop by a store in our neighborhood to check out fall sweaters.  Innocuous, no?  I walked in right as another woman was walking out, and as we passed, the store’s metal detectors went “beepbeepbeepbeepbeep” the way they do when they forget to take the tags off something.  The store associate came over, checked the woman’s bag, saw it was all fine and there were no errant plastic security tags, and let her go.

I browsed sweaters,  decided they were all frumpy looking, and made for the exit.  As I walked through the metal detectors, it happened again:  “beepbeepbeepbeepbeep!”

“I don’t have anything!” I say.  “It beeped on my way in, too, I don’t know why.”

And then I realize: there’s a substantial number of college kids who frequent our local CVS, and to prevent shoplifting of products popular with college kids, CVS puts those magnetic anti-theft stickers on a lot of their more valuable, oft-shoplifted items.

Items like condoms.

“Really!” I tell the sales associate who’s coming over.  “I don’t have anything from this store!”

“Ma’am, I’m going to have to look in your bag,” she said.

“No, truly, I didn’t take anything.  Didn’t you hear the thing beep as I came in?”

“Ma’am: your bag,” she said again, holding out her hand.

“I know what it is that’s beeping, it’s just something I bought at CVS.  I swear to you.”

“Show me,” she says.

“Um,” I say.  “I’d really rather not.”

“Then I’m going to have to look in your bag.”

“Um, okay, fine.”  I reach into my purse and hand her the CVS bag.

She opens the bag, and her eyes widen a little, and she giggles.  She walks through the metal detector holding the box, and sure enough, “beepbeepbeepbeepbeep!”

“Alright, ma’am, you’re fine,” she says, barely holding back her laughter.  “Go on ahead.”

“See?” I said.  “Not a shoplifter, just a responsible adult.”

I grabbed the box from her, stuffed it back in my bag, and made a hasty exit.  I can only imagine the laugh that the sales associates had at my expense.


Posted in miscellany | 9 Comments

Life Cycle of a Cold


Day 1:

Crap. Wake up with sore throat, and the deeply unpleasant sensation of snot running down the back of my throat.  Crap.  Really don’t want to waste a few days of my blissful time off having a sore throat.  CRAP. Sigh. Pop an Advil and head out on the errands I was planning anyway.

afternoon:

Snurfle. Snort. Dear god, this post-nasal drip is like someone is slowly, repeatedly massaging the back of my throat with a cheese grater.  Loathe.  Go to CVS to purchase decongestant.  YES, smug pharmacy tech, I want the real stuff.  The stuff you keep behind the counter.  The stuff that requires me to show 15 forms of ID and swear an affidavit promising I’m not running a meth lab in my basement.  That stuff.

evening:

More drugs.  Moooooooore druuuuuugs.

Day 2:

Sore throat improvement. Dramatic uptick in snot production. Begin rapid progress through family-sized box of tissues.  Proceed through day as normal, albeit at a slightly slower pace.  Fall asleep on couch at 8pm, sleep for 12 hours.

Day 3:

Still snotty. Sore throat has, maddeningly, returned. This feels unfair. Rhapsodize passionately to husband about my view that once a symptom has passed, it should stay gone. Finish family-sized box of tissues, begin carrying around a roll of toilet paper for nose-blowing purposes.

Day 4:

Snurfling continues, but marked improvement in number of nose-blowings and throat discomfort.  Experience a few delicate bouts of coughing.  State smugly to husband that I have “turned a corner”.

Day 5:

Lingering congestion.  Coughing has moved from “delicate” to “full-on consumptive,” but at least it’s bringing up the yuck that’s stuck in the lungs.  Sore throat gone. Decide I’m well enough to attend friends’ wedding this evening.  Yes, I’ve definitely kicked this.

4:30 pm, driving to wedding:

Hm. Throat is beginning to hurt again.  But! Wedding! Power through!

10pm:

Um, not feeling so hot. Well, more precisely, feeling far TOO hat. Demand husband test forehead using age-old back of hand technique. “Very hot,” he reports.  Room’s a little fuzzy.  Perhaps this is the moment to make our exit.

10:25 pm:

Not going to make it. Shivering. Teeth chattering. Pull over when I feel like I might pass out.  Make husband drive the rest of the way home as I sit in a ball on the front seat, hallucinating.

11pm:

Fever is 103.  Husband makes up bed on couch to avoid sleeping with wife who now appears to be dying of plague.

Day 6:

Death’s door. More fever.  More drugs. Sleep much.

Day 7:

Hack hack hack fever hack hack hack praying for death.

9pm:

Receive email from friend who reports that three of our mutual friends have been diagnosed with swine flu. Begin frantically googling swine flu symptoms. Become convinced I am dying of swine flu. Impose self-quarantine. Send husband back to couch-bed so as to protect him from deadly swine flu (from which I am clearly dying).

Day 8:

Wake up and discover that snot has turned dark, menacing green.  Call doctor.  Miraculously get appointment right away. Doctor, strangely, seems unimpressed by my recent exposure to many swine flu victims, does not think I have swine flu.  DOES think I have raging sinus infection. Receive antibiotics. Spend day on couch, catching up on very important tv reruns.

Day 9:

Finally start to feel human again.  Sort of.  Realize I’m hosting a bridal shower in 48 hours. Commence stone cold panic.


Posted in miscellany | 13 Comments

Hobbies


People, I’ve just completed a sewing class.  It was my fourth.  (!)  I have now sewed: five tote bags, a frillion little zipper pouches, a hobo bag, 8 pillows, 6 picnic placemats, several reversible headbands (anyone want one? I have extra!), 4 baby blankets, a Kleenex cozy (TOTALLY NORMAL), and, as of last night, a clutch purse.

You: Ooh, pretty!

You: Ooh, pretty!

I believe we’ve reached a point previously unrealized in the history of pseudostoops: the point where a new hobby actually sticks.

I have a bit of a checkered past on this point.  I am, I’m afraid, something of a serial hobbyist.  I’ve tried:

  • Rock climbing
  • Drawing (egad, I was HORRIBLE)
  • Candymaking
  • Knitting
  • Crocheting
  • Rollerblading
  • Short story writing (and I thought the drawing was bad…)
  • Wii playing
  • Ice Cream making
  • Photography (anyone in the market for moody, poorly-lit shots of my feet?  Wait, don’t answer that.)
  • Screen printing

I still do many of those things, occasionally. (Not rollerblading.)  But with all of them, I went through an initial period of frenzied, almost manic adoration, followed by a total “this hobby is dead to me” period, before achieving that “it’s okay once in a while” equilibrium.

Maybe it’s too soon to tell, but sewing seems to be sticking.  It’s been almost a year since I took my first class, and I still find myself sewing regularly.  I think this is attributable to three things:  (1) sewing is an excuse to buy pretty fabric, and I really really love pretty fabric; (2) it’s a great thing to do while watching bad television, so you can feel less guilty because you’re doing something “productive” while you contemplate the Bachelorette candidates; and (3) it’s pretty fast – you can take a small project from start to finish in the course of one showing Dirty Dancing on Lifetime.

Reason #2 is telling.  I have a hard time being idle- I hear my mother’s voice in my head, nagging me to do something useful with my time.  Whenever I just beach myself on the couch and watch television for several hours, there’s always a pesky undercurrent of guilt that accompanies my feelings of blissful relaxation.  I like sewing, a lot, because I am doing something “productive” but not mentally taxing.  I have watched a lot of trashy movies while sewing. I highly recommend it.

What’s that? You want to see more pictures of the clutch?  SURE!

I have no explanation for the lining fabric. I don't even like pink!

I have no explanation for the lining. I don't even like pink! But do you see that interior zipper? faaaaaaancy.

So even though turning the corners of that effing clutch purse brought me to the verge of tears last night, it was worth it.  I finally have a little bag for evenings out to replace the ugly 80s-era black one I stole from my mom 5 years ago, and (good friends might want to look away here) I think I know what a bunch of people are getting for Christmas this year!

I have a month off starting in two weeks.  That’s a lot of free time, and though I should be excited about it I’m already starting to hear that guilty voice in my head.  I’m going to need something to fill that time, and it’s a LOT of time.  Are there any other hobbies you think I should be taking up?


Posted in miscellany | 19 Comments

If you keep making that face, it’ll stick like that


Unless you live under a rock, you’ve doubtless heard of John Mayer:
SPL3466_038

I am not particularly a fan of JohnMay’s music, but if you read gossip magazines (and I do, people, I do.  No shame in my game!) it’s hard to avoid his rotating famous-lady girlfriends, his practical joke antics, his narcissistic fan cruise.

JohnMay is ALSO famous, or so I’m told, for a particular face he makes while performing:

john-mayer-o-face

John, let me tell you: you’re lucky that your “lost in the moment” face is what it is, because just one twist of the mouth and you could be toiling away in obscurity.  Why? Read on:

This weekend, I donned a blue pageboy wig (sweaty! And also itchy!) and got on a trolley with 15 other wig-wearing girls to fete one of my best childhood friend’s who’s getting married.   We did all the bachelorette party things (Drinking! Pictures! Flashing the 17 year old boys who mooned us from the window of their  hotel across the street!)  (Wait, that’s not a normal bachelorette party thing? Yeah, I was the one at the back saying a silent prayer “please let them be of age please let them be of age I really don’t want anyone at this party facing charges for doing naughty things to a minor please let them be of age.”)

blue-pageboy

We went dancing, of course, at a club featuring a DJ backed up by a live bassist and drummer.  It was kind of odd, but it worked.  You felt for the live musicians, though – the  DJ was clearly the star of the show, and they were just playing along.

The drummer looked for all the world like he spends his days working as a CPA.  Pleated khakis, polo shirt, ear-protecting headset, semi-bored expression.  Good for you, dude, getting your musical kicks on a Saturday night.  The bassist, though.  Oh, the bassist.  He had long, 70s southern rock hair, and not in an ironic way.  He writhed and flailed and just generally gave the impression that he felt like this was IT, man, this was ROCKING OUT, despite the fact that he was essentially just mimicking the baseline of whatever the DJ threw down.  But the best was his face.  Instead of a JohnMay-style O face, we had the wince-grimace.  Seriously, I tried to get a picture of it, but the club was too dark.  It looked like he’d just been hit in the nuts, hard.  Seriously, like this:

grimace

Except somehow even more wince-y and pinched looking.  It was…kind of hard not to laugh, to be honest.  And as I sat there, throwing stones from my blue-wig-wearing glass house, it occurred to me: this guy could be the best bassist in the history of TIME, and he would still have trouble booking gigs because of that face.  That face may be the only thing standing between him and a real rock n’ roll career.


Posted in food, miscellany | 10 Comments

OH FOR THE LOVE OF PETE


Administrative note:  I was so tired this morning that I accidentally posted this to my old site, and didn’t notice until JUST NOW.  Because I am AWESOME and ORGANIZED.  Sheesh.  Sorry about that.

*************************************************

Dear creepy crawly thing who crawled up the leg of my pajamas last night,

Are you particularly dim, creepy crawly thing?  Did you get lost and panic when you could not find your way out? That is the only explanation I can come up with for why you did this:

Woe

It might not look that bad in the photo, but let’s examine it more closely, shall we?

Mosquito-bites

EIGHT BITES?  What gives, creepy crawly?  Were you not sated after one long draught of my tasty blood?  Or did you get stuck and, in a fit of rage at your predicament, decide that the best way to solve the problem was to bite me EIGHT TIMES within a 3 inch radius?

Helpful hint: if you crawl up someone’s pajama leg and get stuck, you can turn right back around to get out.  No need to bite eight times!  No need to then be so tired/lost/confused that you give up and DIE in the leg of my pjs, so that when I wake up in the morning and stand up, a dead creepy crawly falls out of my pant leg and nearly causes me a heart attack!

Truly, we both would have been happier had this situation ended differently.

Yours in Benadryl,

pseudo


Posted in blogging, miscellany | 9 Comments

Creepy coincidences on American Airlines


We are back! And it was awesome! And there will be a post! With Pictures! Eventually!

But for now, I have to share this thing that’s creeping me out:  on the plane home, American Airlines was showing an episode of some tv show, (I think it was Psych) which featured one of the main characters dressing up as Michael Jackson, moonwalking around, singing Billie Jean, etc.

“How unfortunate,” I thought.  “They must have randomly selected this episode for inclusion in the Late June Video Programming Package several months ago, but it feels a little…off, to be watching this campy Michael Jackson impression used for cheap laughs in the wake of his recent death.”

And then I turned my attention away from the tv and began reading the American Way Magazine, which featured a lengthy profile on….Billy Mays.

Weird, right?

There was also a feature on Bobby Flay in there- if anything happens to him in the next few weeks, I’m officially changing airlines.


Posted in miscellany | 6 Comments