Friday, December 30, 2005

Things I learned this holiday season.

My family is very, very funny.

My father wanted a garment steamer for Christmas. He just wanted to steam his shirts. My mother, always aiming to please, bought the largest, most industrial strength steamer she could find—the kind they use on parachutes and the theater curtain at Radio City Music Hall. As my father struggled to extricate the mammoth Jiffy J4000 from its box on Christmas morning (it was really a three-person job; he nearly herniated a disc), my brother-in-law commented, “That thing should come with its own Chinese couple.” I laughed my way straight to hell.

Later, during a rousing game of Quip It, my mother invented a 60s-era superhero, clad in short-shorts and knee socks, sporting gold chains and a white man fro, named Psychedelic Man: “faster than an STD at a commune, more powerful than Maui Wowie, able to leap small sit-ins in a single bound.”




I am a material girl.

I’ve never actually wanted to marry an inanimate object before. But this new video iPod I got for Christmas? We’re already picking out china patterns.

(Mom: “I don’t care what you marry as long as it’s cheaper than your sister’s wedding.”)

The thing is shiny, sleek, and spreads joy wherever it goes. Its surprisingly sharp LCD screen glows warmly at me in a reassuring manner, as if to say, “Come. Let the troubles of your day slip away, and curl up with me for awhile. You know you want to watch that Fat Boy Slim video again.”

I’ve spent two days filling it non-stop with music and video files, slowly turning it into a little portrait of my pop-cultural self. I get unaccountably giddy when I see the playlists filled with every episode of my favorite old British sketch show, archives of SNL Jeopardy clips, and enough music to keep me entertained for the next 2,837 straight hours. By my calculations, I don’t really need to speak to another human being ever again.




Apple, bless them, needs to reevaluate its marketing department.

Dear Apple,

I *heart* my new toy, and I am wary of rousing the wrath of the Mac gods, so I don’t want it to seem like I’m being ungrateful here, but if I may be so bold as to make a small suggestion regarding the packaging and distribution of iPod accessories: try to make it not suck so much. Distributing vastly different products in IDENTICAL packaging, with one word in 5-point type being the only discriminating feature between the two, is not helpful.

Thanks! Kisses.
Meldraw




My neighbors will never have particularly good taste.

The family that lives in the apartment next to me decorates everything. I don’t care what holiday it is, they'll have a lawn ornament for it. They'll also have four door hangings, three statues, and forty five window clings. Their adornments take over the hallway. At Halloween, it was the creepy witch that watched me with shifty eyes. This season, it was a wreath, two stuffed snowmen, a couple of hand painted wooden signs (“Welcome to the Ginger Bread House!” and “Santaland Blvd.”), three nearly life-sized cardboard cut-outs of what I think are supposed to be wise men (though they kind of look like shady arms dealers), and a reindeer doorknob hanger that completely negates the function of the doorknob. And that’s just the hallway. You should see their back porch. On a particularly windy day, I saw an uprooted plastic Santa Claus and no less than four wayward reindeer go flying past my window. I think they were trying to escape.

I wonder what they’ll do for Arbor Day.




Good deeds are fun.

A man walked into my store a couple of days before Christmas to buy a bag for his wife. It was almost closing time, and he deliberated as I explained all of the important features of each bag. After inspecting the bags for a few minutes, he left the store, saying he would be back when he made a decision. As I walked to the front door to lock up and close the store, I noticed an envelope on the ground near the bags he had been looking at. Picking it up, I saw that it contained $150, and it had obviously belonged to the man who just left. I tried to catch him in the parking lot, but he was long gone. I was so disappointed—he probably didn’t realize it was gone; would he even know where he dropped it? And at this time of year, of all times… I really hoped he would come back.

I thought about him all the next day, wondering if there was any way to contact him. I didn’t know his name, and I didn’t know if his wife was a member of our store’s club. He hadn’t bought anything, so there was no charge card to look up. All I could do was hope he returned.

That evening, the man came back to the store. He walked in, looking stricken and defeated. He approached me. “Hi, I was here last night—”

“Yes, I remember. I have something of yours.”

“What?”

“Your envelope.”

“You’re kidding.”

I laughed. “No. I’m so glad you came back!” I went to the register and retrieved the envelope from the drawer where I’d placed it the night before.

The man looked stunned. He couldn’t seem to believe that anyone would not just pocket the money. He opened the envelope, surveyed the contents, and shook his head, incredulous. He immediately bought our most expensive bag for his wife ($129.99) and told me to keep the change. I protested, but he insisted. “It’s not much, but I just…thank you.”

He was nearly out the door when I called to him, “Merry Christmas!” When he turned to me, his smile was huge, and a little shaky. It made my day.

Sunday, December 25, 2005

Jiminy Christmas


Samantha: "Damn humans. Do I look like a freaking Dress-Me-Up-Tabby?"


Clover: "Whatever, man. At least you just get a hat. I've got antlers because, apparently, we've invented a new species."


Samantha: "Now I know why they declawed me."


Clover: "This is degrading, this is embarassing—"


Samantha: "This is painful. I think I just broke a blood vessel in my ear."


Clover: "When this is over, I'm going to go throw up on somebody's shoe. Just on principle."


Samantha: "I should have known those catnip toys from earlier today were a bad idea. Everytime I get stoned, I wake up clothed."


Clover: "Um, hello, humans? I think you should know I have the ASPCA on speed-dial."


Samantha: "I bet you think it's funny to watch us slink around with these accessories strapped to our skulls as we give ourselves concussions trying to rub them off. I bet that's just another jolly sporting day for you. Well, I'm so pleased I can be the source of such mirth and merriment for you on this holiday. Merry f---ing Christmas. Where's my dish? I need a drink."

Tuesday, December 20, 2005

Happy Holidays, such as they are.

I don’t write incendiary posts. I find it exhausting and presumptuous to rant about a debate without giving the opposition an opportunity for rebuttal. I have opinions, but I don’t like to force them on others, unprovoked.

Plus, it’s way easier to just complain about my car.

Still, I’m going to break my soapbox out of storage for a moment, because this is on my mind, and Maya Angelou made me cry this morning.

The secularization of Christmas has been a Big Issue for a while now, and I’m a little baffled by the suddenly volatile debate about whether corporations and retailers should be saying “Merry Christmas” or “Happy Holidays.”

I am not religious. That is to say, I was not raised to follow a particular religious doctrine. My mother, who abandoned organized religion after years of being a Sunday School teacher, thinks this may have been a mistake. Even while she shies from the church and encourages me to make up my own mind about faith, she laments that I will never understand the power of religious belief or the sense of community it can offer, because I was never immersed in it. I see her point, but I honestly think that my upbringing provides me an objectivity with which to view various religions of the world, without being biased by years of preaching, for better or for worse. World religions fascinate me—all of them—and my analytical mind benefits from distance. I’m lucky not to have adopted that ugly characteristic that I unfortunately see in so many practitioners (and their opposition): contempt. It prevents me from grouping all members of a given religion into a lump stereotype.

I don’t know whether to be amused or aghast at the hostility toward the phrase, “Happy Holidays.” Bill O’Reilly has told us that when we wish someone “Happy Holidays,” we are buying a peak-rate train ticket to Hell.

Are Christian conservatives really so presumptuous as to assume that Christmas is the only winter holiday worth well wishes? (But there I go already with the grouping and the lumping, so let me amend that statement to apply only to those particular Christian conservatives that appear so affronted by the evil of that alliterate phrase.) Set aside for a moment the notion that other holidays like Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, and New Year’s seem to be belittled and sent from the room like a bratty younger brother, or Canada. I’m not convinced that Christmas is only about the birth of Jesus. We all know the man wasn’t even born on that day, and that, historically, the holiday was contrived by Constantine to eclipse the Pagan festivities that threatened his new Christianity, and which were the original celebration of the season. But even if you do view Christmas solely as a “Happy Birthday, Jesus” moment, I don’t think it’s unreasonable to accept that some people prefer to concentrate on the more abstract ideals of the season, like peace on Earth and good will toward men. To denounce those celebrators is to denounce the ideals of the faith you are trying to promote, and is paradoxically errant. Saying “Merry Christmas” wishes happiness to Christians. Saying “Happy Holidays” wishes happiness to all, including Christians. Why is this a bad thing?

The way to spread peace through Jesus is not to push away those people who try to celebrate the season with you.

Maya Angelou was on the Today Show this morning.

Growing up, I was a smart kid. But I was more concerned with having a quick wit than an encyclopedic knowledge of What Came Before, and I had more than a little aversion to authority. So when my public school told me we all had to read Maya Angelou because it was Important and Significant, and would make us all better people, I bought the Cliff’s Notes and went off to try and make Level 17 at Tetris.

If you had asked me at twelve about Maya Angelou’s place in the history of Great Writers, I would have told you she was probably in a pub somewhere with Chaucer, F. Scott Fitzgerald, and JD Salinger, all of them discussing the great Character Arc and the Metaphor and the Social Commentary. If you had told me that one day I would see Maya Angelou chatting up Katie Couric on the Today Show thirteen years later, I probably would have laughed at you while surreptitiously checking your medications, because surely Maya Angelou has been dead for a hundred years. I obviously know better by now, but she will always be one of those people I am surprised to see holding a cell phone or programming her TiVo.

Anyway, Ms. Angelou was on the Today Show, where she read an excerpt from her newest work, Amazing Peace: A Christmas Poem. I was flitting about the apartment, preparing to leave for work, but when Maya started to read her poem, I felt I should sit down and give it my full attention, because it might be Important or Significant. Also, her wise old voice was soothing, and made me want to be still.

Her words were clear and beautiful, and rang true. Her voice was somehow raspy and velvety at the same time, and she spoke with such…earnest kindness. She had longing and hope, reassurance and faith. Listening to Maya Angelou read her own words of peace was like being both calmed and stirred. By the time she finished, I realized I had tears on my face. If you know me, you know this is not normal, because I cry about as often as I clean my bathroom floor—which has geological layers of hairspray and dirt that can trace the passage of time—and I’m not really one for poetry.

But there I was, and there she was, and there we were together, both wishing for the peace on Earth I had never admitted I truly longed for. So anyway, Happy Holidays everybody, and Bill O’Reilly can kiss my alliteration.

Amazing Peace: A Christmas Poem
By Dr. Maya Angelou

Thunder rumbles in the mountain passes
And lightning rattles the eaves of our houses.
Flood waters await us in our avenues.

Snow falls upon snow, falls upon snow to avalanche
Over unprotected villages.
The sky slips low and grey and threatening.

We question ourselves.
What have we done to so affront nature?
We worry God.
Are you there? Are you there really?
Does the covenant you made with us still hold?

Into this climate of fear and apprehension, Christmas enters,
Streaming lights of joy, ringing bells of hope
And singing carols of forgiveness high up in the bright air.
The world is encouraged to come away from rancor,
Come the way of friendship.

It is the Glad Season.
Thunder ebbs to silence and lightning sleeps quietly in the corner.
Flood waters recede into memory.
Snow becomes a yielding cushion to aid us
As we make our way to higher ground.

Hope is born again in the faces of children
It rides on the shoulders of our aged as they walk into their sunsets.
Hope spreads around the earth. Brightening all things,
Even hate which crouches breeding in dark corridors.

In our joy, we think we hear a whisper.
At first it is too soft. Then only half heard.
We listen carefully as it gathers strength.
We hear a sweetness.
The word is Peace.
It is loud now. It is louder.
Louder than the explosion of bombs.

We tremble at the sound.
We are thrilled by its presence.
It is what we have hungered for.
Not just the absence of war. But, true Peace.
A harmony of spirit, a comfort of courtesies.
Security for our beloveds and their beloveds.

We clap hands and welcome the Peace of Christmas.
We beckon this good season to wait a while with us.
We, Baptist and Buddhist, Methodist and Muslim, say come.
Peace.
Come and fill us and our world with your majesty.
We, the Jew and the Jainist, the Catholic and the Confucian,
Implore you, to stay a while with us.
So we may learn by your shimmering light
How to look beyond complexion and see community.

It is Christmas time, a halting of hate time.

On this platform of peace, we can create a language
To translate ourselves to ourselves and to each other.

At this Holy Instant, we celebrate the Birth of Jesus Christ
Into the great religions of the world.
We jubilate the precious advent of trust.
We shout with glorious tongues at the coming of hope.
All the earth's tribes loosen their voices
To celebrate the promise of Peace.

We, Angels and Mortal's, Believers and Non-Believers,
Look heavenward and speak the word aloud.
Peace. We look at our world and speak the word aloud.
Peace. We look at each other, then into ourselves
And we say without shyness or apology or hesitation.

Peace, My Brother.
Peace, My Sister.
Peace, My Soul.

Saturday, December 17, 2005

Grow up.

Recently, a friend told me that she hates kids. Many years ago, she made a commitment to a “childfree” existence, and had a tubal ligation to seal the deal. I support her lifestyle decision, though it’s probably not for me. I talk all the time about how much I hate kids, because nine times out of ten they are snotty little brats that could benefit from one or two good rounds with a boxing kangaroo, but I know that someday I will want to be a mother. Just not anytime soon.

The following interactions with children all took place today. One day and I counted nine separate occasions in which I made a mental note to Google “childfree” as soon as I got home.



I passed two twelve-year-old boys on the street today, and as they approached me, I overheard the following conversation:

“…and I hate it when they all come visit, because they always refer to us as children.”

“Oh, I know, it’s so annoying.”

“I mean, seriously. We’re not children. We’re pre-teens.”

I let out an indelicate snort before I could stop myself, and the two boys looked at me, scathed. Kids.



Standing in line at Subway, I saw a little boy ahead of me, no more than seven years old. He was bored and twitchy, because some idiot manager had scheduled the girl behind the counter to be working alone at 1:00 on a Saturday afternoon, and the line was long. The boy hopped from one foot to the other, tried to use a straw and some ketchup to draw pictures on the wall, and pushed me aside to examine the inner workings of the trash can lid. In addition to thinking he was an annoying little twit, I suspected his mother wasn’t going to make him wash his hands before he ate lunch, and that made me queasy.

When they finally got their turn with the overworked sandwich girl, the mother began to order for the boy.

“Hey!” the boy suddenly yelled at the sandwich girl. “I want a drink!”

The mother and the girl ignored him. Uh oh, I thought. This can’t end well.

“I want a DRINK!”

The girl looked at the bratty kid, then looked at the mother. The mother continued to place the sandwich order, then looked down at the boy to ask him if he wanted turkey or ham on his sandwich.

“I WANNA DRINK.” The mother ignored this and asked the girl for turkey. What the hell was the matter with this kid? Did he just get back from Namibia?

Looking almost afraid to hear the answer, the sandwich girl asked if the boy wanted lettuce. “I WANT A...NNNRRRGGGGHHHH!” The boy had suddenly abandoned words altogether and opted for a tantrum where he just looked desperately constipated.

“Wow. That’s a thirsty kid,” the sandwich girl said hilariously.

When the mother assured the brat that he would, indeed, be getting a drink if he would just shut the hell up for one minute, the boy looked around, bored again. He turned around and looked at me. Telepathically, I told him that his drink was going to be poisoned when he finally got it, and I raised an eyebrow at him. The kid might have had a bit of the Shining, because he slowly backed away from me, terrified. I considered trying to trip him, but there were too many witnesses. After the kid got his blessed drink cup, he ran over to the soda fountain and began pressing buttons in a way that was sure to end in a sticky disaster, but it was my turn to order, so I put him from my mind.



Later, while I was eating my lunch at the same Subway, a young mother walked in with her two daughters. I guessed the daughters’ ages to be about three and eight years. They shuffled over to the table next to me and set down their coats. Suddenly, seemingly unprovoked, the three-year-old started to scream. I always thought that the phrase “screaming bloody murder” referred to how a person would scream if she were either the victim of, or the witness to, a homicide. It doesn’t. It actually refers to people around the screamer, and the sudden impulse you get when a child’s nagging, grating scream makes you want to reach over, tear out their vocal cords, and tie them around the child's neck like a bloody bow tie.

After a minute or so (God help me, I’m going to kill this child and go to jail before my 25th birthday), the mother quieted the young girl and instructed the eight-year-old to stay with the coats while she took her sister to get the sandwiches. Big Sister obeyed, and the mother disappeared with Little Sister in tow.

Big Sister stood by the table and looked around. She began to straighten each chair and fold the coats into neat little bundles. I had to admit, she was pretty cute, with her long brown hair pulled into a neat barrette. When each chair had its own coat-bundle, she sat down and looked around quietly. I was scribbling notes into my daytimer, and I could see her looking at me out of the corner of my eye. I wondered what she was thinking. Was she looking at me, this smartly dressed young woman writing something important in her very official-looking calendar, and wondering if that’s what she would be like when she grew up? I met her eyes and smiled at her, and she shyly smiled back before casting her big brown eyes downward. That’s it. I’m totally having a girl.

Just then, three-year-old Little Sister wandered back to the table alone, apparently appeased with a bag of chips. I think Mom probably threw a bag of Doritos at the kid and caught the next flight to Bermuda to get away from her screaming monster-child. Big Sister kindly welcomed Little Sister back to the table, and showed the appropriate enthusiasm about the chips. The two girls sat in silence for a little while, and then, glancing longingly at her sister’s chips, Big Sis asked quietly, “Can I have one?”

Lil’ Sis shook her head and hid the chips under the table.

“Just one?”

Lil’ Sis shook her head again.

The two girls were quiet for a while, and the three-year-old continued to shove Doritos into her mouth. Her face was now mostly orange. She looked over at me and caught my eye. This distracted her just long enough for Big Sis to sneak a Dorito from the bag. Lil’ Sister’s head whipped around and she—you guessed it—started to scream. Meanwhile, Mom was ordering another Mai Tai from the cabana boy who was waiting on her in Bermuda.

“Okay, okay!” Big Sis apologized about the chip, and Lil’ Sis glared at her. Silence.

A minute later, Big Sis tried for a chip again, and stuck her hand in the bag. But this time, Lil’ Sis noticed in time, and clamped down on the bag, trapping her sister’s hand. Then she did that thing kids do, where she screamed hard in her throat without ever opening her mouth. This kid had mad screaming skillz. The two girls were locked in a bit of a chip-frenzy, and the pitch of Lil’ Sister’s scream was starting to go up. Every patron in the Subway was looking at them. People outside looked around for an air raid. Dogs winced. Birds dropped out of the sky.

It was time for me to go. So much for wanting a girl.

Wednesday, December 14, 2005

Memory Lane is paved with PVC and candle wax.

It all started because I wanted to retrieve my flute from my parents’ basement.

Every Christmas I start to feel nostalgic about nearly becoming a professional flautist once upon a time. I think about how much the music was a part of me, and how good it would feel to let my fingers fly across the keys again. I dig my flute out of whatever box it’s hiding in and play Christmas carols with my mother at the piano. Inevitably, my sister makes a comment akin to, “Is it supposed to sound that way, or is one of you out of tune?” and my mother says the piano tuner was just here last week, and everybody looks at me. Then I take my flute and practice in private, where I realize that my fingers don’t fly so much as hop around hoping for a brisk wind, and I start to feel almost as inadequate as I felt in grade school that time I was left without a partner in square-dancing class and had to do-si-do with my six-foot-four gym teacher. Soon, I resign myself to the fact that I’m not a brilliant musician anymore, and I pack the instrument back up in a box in the basement and go off to find a chocolate bar and a stiff eggnog.

Well, Christmastime is here again, and I’m getting a yen to play O, Holy Night in D minor. This weekend I went to my parents’ house with the intention to find my flute. My mother informs me that all of my “crap” has been packed into neatly labeled boxes and I am strictly forbidden from opening them unless I intend to pack them back up again. So, handing me a roll of packing tape and some bubble wrap, she sends me to the basement.

When I moved into my own place three years ago, I only brought with me what I felt represented me as a mature, independent adult. (Well, except for my talking Steve Irwin doll. “Crikey!”) Basically I brought a computer and a can of Pledge. But there were a few things from my childhood that I didn’t have the heart to throw out, so I put them all in cardboard boxes to throw out later in a fit of regret and depression. I kind of forgot about all that stuff, and when I started to open boxes and dig through the reminders of my prepubescent life, it was like glimpsing another lifetime.

Here are some of the thoughts that ran through my head as I unearthed treasures of decades past:

Awww…all my favorite stuffed animals! Here’s the Knight’s Horse I won at Excalibur in Las Vegas playing that game where you have to weave the little circular wand around the spinning metal swirly-gig without touching it. I totally ruled at that game. I knew I should have become a carnie.

Wow, I didn’t realize I had this many horse show ribbons. These might be more impressive if they weren’t all last place. Reserve Champion really looks snazzy when you don’t know there were only two people in the class.

One person should not have this many cat statuettes. This is not healthy. This is manic. This is only slightly less manic than the meticulous way my mother wrapped each statuette in paper using a stunningly structured packaging system.

Check it out! “Melissa’s Box of Tapes.” All my favorite music circa ‘89 B.C. (before CDs) in a shoebox covered with colored construction paper and several stickers of music notes and kittens. Janet Jackson’s
Rhythm Nation and Paul Abdul’s Spellbound nestled lovingly alongside every Disney soundtrack ever produced between 1988 and 1994. Oh, and here’s my tape of scary Halloween Sounds I bought for the marginally successful Halloween party I threw in junior high that involved lots of streamers and an appalling amount of peeled grapes. Good times. Oh, and my Tiffany tape. Okaaaay, let’s just put that back and pretend we didn’t see it.

Why does this box smell like I just walked into the experimental research department at the Institute of Aromatherapy? Ah. Candles. And about twenty broken sticks of incense. Apparently, I had an undiagnosed olfactory disorder as a child.

What is this? It looks like a gallon-sized Ziploc bag filled with…colored plastic? Oh, it’s my creepy collection of
lanyards. Because an uncanny knowledge of 53 different ways to weave together five strings of fettuccini-like PVC plastic was a requirement of adolescence in the early 90s. Somebody had to make your grandparents’ gimp keychains.

That is a truly horrific candle. I think it has eyes.

Oh, dude! This was totally my favorite stuffed gecko wearing a hula skirt with a suction cup on its belly EVER!

Huh. Every greeting card I ever got. Why did I keep all of these? Oh, I remember. It’s because I need tangible verification that people like me.

Wow. I had a lot of candles. Why weren’t my parents worried about pyromania?

Oh. My. God. Check out my
Casio PT-100 battery-operated tekkno-percussive 32-key polyphonic keyboard. This little beauty was the shining glory of 1987. Nobody, but nobody, rocked the pipe-organ samba version of Jingle Bells like I did. This baby probably set my parents back a good $35. It’s really too bad those piano lessons didn’t take. Last time I played a piano duet with my mother, we had all the combined talent of an ADD six-year-old with one hand and a hearing impediment.

Holy cow. I forgot I had so many dangly earrings. (
Everybody always knew when I had picked up a new hobby or developed a new interest, because I would inevitably show up with a pair of earrings to illustrate it in a new and creative way. I had flutes that hung down to my shoulders, and giant koala bears that looked as though they were clinging to my neck like so much eucalyptus.) I’m a little surprised the holes in my ears aren’t stretched to size of coasters like those people I’ve seen in National Geographic. Small favors, I guess.

Finally! There’s my flute! Thank god, because this stuff is really starting to make me wonder how I had any friends as a kid. I was a freak. I think it’s time to go mangle some carols. Where's my eggnog?

Thursday, December 08, 2005

@#$%!!!

I was planning to write a blog entry today filled with quaint suburban observations brimming with Christmas charm and simple elegance. It was going to be sweet and charismatic without being saccharine. It was going to be funny in a refreshingly non-bitter sort of way, and it was bound to make you feel warm and comfy, and maybe a little sleepy.

The VenJetta had other ideas for the blog.

The car has been out of the shop for a week and half. Foolishly, I assumed it would not need to go back until at least late December, but this morning I was reminded yet again why it’s so satisfying to watch cars being compressed into little cubes of metal by those big crushers in the junkyard.

When I left for work this morning, I was late. That in itself is not unusual, but I neglected to notice that an overnight storm had dumped a thick slab of snow onto the VenJetta. The snow was not wet enough to cause a terribly exhausting ice-scraping session (it’s too damn COLD), but it was just powdery enough to snake its way up inside the sleeves of my coat and wrap itself vindictively around the skin of my wrists that was not covered by my $1.49 one-size-fits-all stretchy gloves. By the time I got into the car (COLD!) and finally wrestled the car up the slippery hill and out onto the highway, I couldn’t feel my fingers.

Eventually the heater finally started to thaw my extremities, and I figured I could probably make it to work with about ten minutes to open the store. I exited the highway, and thought about all the things I could get done at work today if business was slow. I could smell the hot coffee in my travel mug, and was looking forward to wrapping my hands around it when I got to – what the…? I was stopped at a stoplight at the end of the exit ramp, and the car was shuddering slightly. I turned down the radio to listen to the noise. It was quiet, subtle. I couldn’t hear it so much as feel it, and anyone not so well-acquainted with the inner psyche of the VenJetta might have missed it. But I could feel what the VenJetta was thinking, and one thought passed through my mind: No. NonononononononononoNO!

One second passed. Two. And then…utter quiet. The car died.

I looked around. I was surrounded on all sides by cars that had just left the highway and were waiting for the light to turn. Oh, lord. I hit the clutch, turned the key, tried to turn the engine over. It tried to start (good damn thing since I just had the damn starter replaced LAST DAMN WEEK), but just when I thought the engine had caught, it whimpered into nothingness. After about the fifth try, I put my hazard lights on.

By this time there was a line of about eight cars behind me, and the light had turned green. Hazard lights don’t appear to represent anything in particular to the average American driver, so I had to gesture frantically for the cars behind me to go around. Four people shot me dirty looks as they drove by in their completely normal and un-haunted vehicles, like it was MY IDEA to set up camp in the middle of an intersection. I rifled through my purse for my stunningly well-used AAA card and called for emergency roadside assistance. I half expected them to see my account number and say, “Oh, hey Melissa. Shall we send your regular driver?” Instead they said, “Where would you like us to tow the vehicle?” and I very nearly told them exactly where I wanted to put the car.

After being assured that I was top priority on AAA’s list of people to rescue, I started to make phone calls to find someone to work for me. I called the only other employee whose phone number I had stored in my cell phone, and left a somewhat hysterical message on her machine. Then I called the owner of the store, who is, cruelly, on a cruise in St. Bart’s, and left a message there for no other reason than to dampen her day. Then I scrolled through the rest of the entries in my cell phone, and wondered aloud why I thought it was necessary to have Pizza Hut and the local radio station on speed dial, but I didn’t see fit to record the phone numbers of my other coworkers. Oh, well. The store would just not open. Sorry, teeming masses.

Now I had been sitting in my car without power or heat for about ten minutes. The seven degree weather was seeping into my car, and my toes were starting to lose feeling. No sign of the tow truck yet, and I was starting to wonder if my hazard lights were actually working because people kept pulling up behind me and putting on their annoyed faces when I gestured for them to GO THE HELL AROUND.

I was pretty sure I could hear the VenJetta laughing at me, and that disturbed me, so I thought about who else I could call to take my mind off it. I was freezing and cranky and miserable and did what anyone would do if they just wanted to bitch at someone for a few minutes: I called my mother.

“Hi, Mom.”

“Hi, honey, how are you?”

“Oh, I’m peachy. My stupid car died at an intersection in the middle of Omaha and I’m blocking traffic and waiting for the tow truck and I can’t feel my toes and I hate this car with the fire of a thousand burning suns.”

“Oh, no.”

“Oh, yes. I’m supposed to be opening the store right now, and I can’t get a hold of Kathy, and I don’t have Lexi’s phone number, and Gina’s at her other job, and Becky’s in the Caribbean. The store’s just going to have to not open today.”

“Do you want me to come pick you up?”

“No, I’ve already called Triple-A and I’m hoping they arrive soon because I’m getting sick of explaining the meaning of hazard lights to half the Omaha population.”

“The car just died? It just stalled?”

“It stalled at the light and won’t start again.” To punctuate my point, I turned the key again. The car started. “HOLY CRAP.”

“Your car is a piece of shit.”

“Yeah. Mom, I gotta call you back. The car just started and I better get it out of the intersection before it falls asleep again.”

I practically threw the cell phone onto the seat and peeled away from the light. Trying not to press my luck, I somehow managed to avoid stopping at lights all the way to work. When I got to the store, I called AAA and told them not to send the tow truck, citing “supernatural forces” as the reason for cancellation.

I don’t know what’s going to happen when I try to go home this afternoon. When I locked the car this morning, I’m pretty sure the horn went “HA!” and I have no idea what further adventures the VenJetta has planned for later.

Now I’m sitting here at work, trying to regain feeling in my toes as the increasingly grating 24-7 Christmas music plays on the overhead radio. Somebody keeps singing, “Do you hear what I hear?” Well, if you’re hearing the sound of a couple tons of gears and metal siding being crushed into a cube the size of a shoebox and then being wrapped in shiny paper and ribbon and put under my tree like the best Christmas present EVER, then yes, I hear that.

Monday, December 05, 2005

Common Sense: More uncommon than you think.

Because sometimes people need these things spelled out for them:

  • When you walk into my store in the middle of December, during a snowstorm, and say “Wow, it’s chilly,” as you shake the snow off your FLIP FLOPS, it’s going to take me a minute to form a coherent response that does not include the words “moron,” “Sherlock,” or “DUH.”


  • Scheduling a very loud Christian Worship rock band to perform at the same time as the Jewish Community Center is holding their holiday party IN THE NEXT ROOM, while amusing, is perhaps a lapse in event planning judgment.


  • Placing a giant banner for the “BEST BARBECUE IN TOWN” right underneath the sign for the Nebraska Humane Society might deter more people than it attracts.


  • Wearing earmuffs made out of sound-proof material might be a good idea for construction workers and record producers, but is perhaps not so smart for Omaha-area police officers patrolling the streets of downtown. The desperate cry of “Help, Police, I’m being attacked and depending on an officer of the law to save my life and apprehend this criminal!” loses something in lip-sync.


  • Fleeing the police is never a good idea. Doing it on a riding lawn mower takes a special kind of stupid.


  • It’s probable that if a man approaches you with an offer to sell you a magic potion that will turn plain paper into money, it just might be a con. One would think that if someone were in possession of such a potion, he would not need to sell it. Also, it’s completely retarded.


  • Sometimes the best course of action is to just shut up, already.