Thursday, November 22, 2007

A Stream of Conciousness Thanksgiving

I'll be adding to this throughout the day, perhaps the week, as I reflect on all the things - big, little, silly or profound - that I am thankful for.

Thanksgiving Day, 2007
  • The wind. It reminds me how fortunate I am to have shelter from which to escape it.
  • Pea gravel. Unlike the wood chips that were in our landscaping beds last winter, it appears it's going to stay put in the wind. Yay - 8 days of back-breaking labor and the purchase of 11 yards of pea gravel validated!
  • Mini Marintelli's Sparkling Cider. Since Steve is working and we're not joining anyone's Thanksgiving feast this year, drinking one of these is a fun little way to distinguish this day from most others. (Guess what I'm drinking as I type this?)
  • A refrigerator full of food. I may not be having Thanksgiving dinner today, but I have more than enough options for a tasty, nutritious meal.
  • Wealth. I've been sending our donations for this month, and even though we sometimes struggle to pay our bills, and we don't have enough money each month to equally tithe and save the 10% we'd like, we are still richly blessed and truly want for nothing.
Friday
  • My family. I didn't connect with them by phone yesterday, despite everyone's best efforts to do so (they were celebrating when I called; I was sleeping when they called). And though I have many, many reasons to cherish and be thankful for each of them, right now I'm most grateful that, since I've started my new job and am never available during waking hours to visit, they haven't completely written me off! Love to each of you.
  • My cats. Thanks for snuggling with me tonight, keeping all three of us warm and happy!
  • Our Select Comfort/Sleep Number bed. For the same reason I'm grateful for my cats today!
Saturday
  • The cats on my newspaper route: Big Boy the Raccoon Wrangler, Max Headrest, Helmet, Eskimo Pie and others I have yet to name. You give me a little something to look forward to each morning during an otherwise mundane and irritating task.

Friday, June 29, 2007

Great Expectations?

The trouble for me with blogging is that I have a million things I want to say .. a million things that would be so therapeutic to express .. and a giant, booming inner voice that is constantly judging what my fingers are itching to type.

"Nobody cares what you think," it yells at me.
"Nobody really wants to know your innermost feelings - that's what a journal is for!"
"Be careful," it warns. "You will probably offend so-and-so if you say that."

And on, and on, and on.

So I sit to write, and my thoughts freeze up. I prejudge what I'm about to write. I decide to write about something else. I delete. I try to write about what I think people might be interested in. And I realize I can't win, because I don't know who is reading this blog, or what they find interesting, or whether their expectation is to know the current weather conditions in Portland or my feelings on Isaiah Washington's accusations surrounding his firing despite the fact that I've never watched an episode of Grey's Anatomy ...

The deeper issue is that I have a problem with expectations. Wanting to meet the expectations of the people that I love, even without really knowing what they are, and blowing them up in my mind to disproportionately huge and unsurmountable demands.

It's silly, but very real, and horrifically, embarrassingly paralyzing.

Which is a simplified explanation of why I don't blog as often as I'd like.

I want to blog more. And I'd like to change my focus from being on the reader to being on me. Because it's my stupid blog. My readers can write their own stupid blogs. If I want to rant, I should rant. If I want to emote, I should feel free to do that. If I never want to post a picture of my cats or my house or my oodles of nieces and nephews, then I shouldn't.

All big talk, really, because I'll never not edit myself. But you get the idea.

In my last post, I ranted. Past rants have really never been commented on (which is another topic for another day), but this one was. I was so encouraged by Mike and Judy's comments. They made me feel heard and understood. It felt like someone "got" me.

And I think that's always been my ultimate goal for this blog. To give people a chance, if they want it, to "get" me. Not that I'm so very complex or that I live such an absorbing life ... but if that's what I want to try to accomplish here, well:

It's. My. Stupid. Blog.

If I say it enough times, maybe I'll give myself permission to act on it.

Stay tuned.

Tuesday, June 05, 2007

Boys Are Stupider ... Send Them To Jupiter

I talked to an expectant mother, the wife of one of Steve's teammates, at his softball game tonight. This will be their second child. Their first is a 21-month-old boy that she spent much of the game chasing after.

She only has 8 weeks left in her pregnancy. They haven't found out the baby's gender yet, and intend for it to be a surprise. I found this incredibly refreshing. I think that once we become adults, there are very few genuine surprises in life. Hearing "it's a girl!" or "it's a boy!" at the moment a baby enters the world seems to me one of the utmost wonderful surprises a person could ever experience. My new-found respect for this couple was quickly shattered, however, when I asked if they allowed their son to be a surprise, as well. Her reply, "No", was not in and of itself upsetting, but rather their reason for finding out.

Her husband needed to know the gender the first time because, if they weren't having a boy, he needed time. To prepare himself. For the huge disappointment a girl would have been.

Now that he has his boy, he couldn't care less what the next child is.

He has his little "mini-me". The precious offspring to carry on his beloved family name. The boy who will fulfill all of the dreams that his stupid, inept father couldn't in his lifetime. The boy that I secretly hope grows up to study ballet rather than baseball, who turns out to be gay and produces no grandchildren for this SOB.

Yes, I'm angry. No, it doesn't affect me personally. But it astounds and enrages me that we live in the USA in the year 2007 and people STILL place so much more value on boys than girls. This is neither a time nor culture in which I would expect people to abort their baby girls until they produce a first-born male ... until I hear garbage like this.

No, I didn't spit judgment and venom out on this unsuspecting new acquaintance. I couldn't just let the conversation die at that, however. "My husband needed time. To prepare himself if it wasn't a boy." Gah!!! The rest of the conversation went something like this:

Me: What would he have done if it WAS a girl?
Her: Oh, I don't know! Tee hee!
Me: Are girls so bad? YOU'RE a girl! He seems to like you well enough to, well, you know ... (wink, wink)
Her: To be honest, I'm terrified of raising a girl!
Me: Why?? Remember, YOU'RE a girl? Are girls soooo bad?
Her: Well, once I turned 13 (blah blah blah ...)
Me: They're all terrible when they're 13. My perspective is different, I suppose, because my brother presented some unique parenting challenges that my sister and I did not. (blah blah blah ...)

What's really ridiculous is that I've had a similar conversation with almost every one of my girlfriends. About how they would be happy with either gender, but if forced to choose they would choose a boy. It makes me sad - and yes, mad - that these women, consciously or not, abhor parts of their femininity so much that they do not want to pass it on. It infuriates me that women choose to have kids with men who childishly and selfishly cling to the notion that "boys are better than girls".

Steve has a female co-worker who married a fellow cop a year ago. They were not planning on having children. His father recently passed away, however, and this has changed his perspective. He now wants to have children. She still does not. It seems that, in order to save her marriage, she may soon cave. That is an intensely personal decision to make and a position that I do not envy. But here is where I take exception and yes, place judgment: he has told her, in all seriousness, "I don't want to have children. I just want to have a son."

Words escape me. All I can think is that in his grief, he is reflecting on how much he loved his father. And now he wants to produce someone who will love him with the same intensity (and he in return). Ultimately, he wants to guarantee that his son will grieve as bitterly at his funeral as he did at his own father's.

If I never see either of these men again, it will be too soon.

Chances are, dear reader, that you think I'm taking this all just a little too far. That's okay. I can practically guarantee that I think you don't go far enough. Maybe someday, once I've cooled down and you're feeling brave, we can try to meet halfway.

Saturday, May 12, 2007

A Cure for Ella

A more newsy blog is overdue and forthcoming, but time is of the essence to post briefly about something far more important than what Steve and I have been up to.

My friend Sarah is participating in the Great Strides walk in Portland on Saturday (the 19th). Great Strides is the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation's largest and most successful national fund-raising event.

Cystic fibrosis (CF) is a devastating genetic disease that affects tens of thousands of children and young adults in the United States. Research and care supported by the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation is making a huge difference in extending the quality of life for those with CF. However, we continue to lose precious lives to CF every day. That's why help is needed now more than ever to ensure that a cure is found sooner - rather than later.

Sarah's daughter Claire has a little friend named Ella. Her story is featured below (be sure to turn your volume up). Sarah and Claire are collecting donations for their walk on Saturday to help find a cure for CF and for little Ella.

You can help them reach their fundraising goals by clicking here:

http://www.cff.org/great_strides/SarahKennedy
http://www.cff.org/great_strides/ClaireKennedy



To learn more about CF and the CF Foundation, visit www.cff.org. If you are able to give, thank you!

Saturday, February 24, 2007

The Natural Number Following 34 and Preceding 36

Google "35", and you'll find nifty trivia from Wikipedia like:
  • In years of marriage, 35 is the coral wedding anniversary (uh, what am I supposed to do with that?!?)
  • Interstate 35 is a freeway that runs from Texas to Minnesota (a drive I might punish Steve with if he buys me coral for our 35th wedding anniversary)
  • 35 is the minimum age (in years) of candidates for election to the position of President of the United States (a position I can assume in a mere 3 years to enact further and more severe punishment upon Steve if he buys me coral for our 35th wedding anniversary and forces me to drive Interstate 35 from Texas to Minnesota with him)

Google "35 years old", and the oddities include:
  • A Budweiser commercial showing how a clerk being diligent about checking ID can make a 35-year-old's day (darn, when was the last time my ID was checked?!?)
  • A list of 35-year-old whiskies from Whisky Magazine, which exists to "celebrate whiskies of the world" (maybe I need to start buying whisky - or is it whiskey? - to test this ID thing)
  • A Moscow news article reporting a 35-year-old man who underwent surgery to be relieved of what had initially been diagnosed as a tumor, but turned out to be the embryo of his unborn twin brother (gimme a whiskey NOW, or I will never recover from reading this article and seeing the picture attached to it!)

Google "Age 35", and this neat stuff appears:
  • Lots of links to articles regarding pregnancy after age 35 (oh goodie, there's still time)
  • Tips on how to stay young after age 35 (I'm betting the chances are lessened if one also has those previously mentioned children)
  • More tips, this time on landing Mr. Right at age 35 (ha! same bet as above but this time I'm betting more emphatically)
  • A website designed to help you meet and make a love match with an inmate who is, you guessed it, age 35 (a good backup plan in case Mr. Right is never quite landed, I suppose)

After I publish this post, I'll have to try all these Googles again to see if my blog appears. Happy 35th birthday, Steve! May this um, tribute of sorts remain in cyberspace for all eternity.

Sunday, February 11, 2007

CSI: ND (Episode 1)


Just when you thought CBS had it covered with CSIs in Las Vegas, Miami and New York ... now, they're hitting North Dakota? Rumors are swirling that several cast members from the movie Fargo (including Frances McDormand, William H. Macy and Steve Buscemi) will be reuniting for the new series, their combined star power overshadowing the likes of David Caruso (CSI: Miami) and Gary Sinise (CSI: New York). My not-so-secret hope is that one episode actually guest stars Sinise as a sociopathic hit man who sends his victim, Caruso, through a wood chipper.

Kidding! (Except for that last part.) Besides, North Dakota is a state, not a town, so don't think I didn't know that. "CSI: Fargo" didn't exactly accomplish my purpose here, however, which was to create a nifty little acrostic for a new feature on our blog:

Customer Service Is Not Dead!

It's so easy to complain about poor customer relations, and I am far too often guilty of doing so. To help me achieve strides in my pursuit of greater positivity, I'm going to start reporting episodes of customer service ranking from PRETTY DURN GOOD to FREAKIN' FABULOUS.

Guest star: The Plant Lady from Home Depot

Action: I am carrying two ceramic pots that I picked up from the indoor selection of, you guessed it, pots. I wander out into the gardening area to peruse that selection, passing The Plant Lady who greets me warmly.

I find nothing of interest there, and wander back inside to look at potting soil. The Plant Lady has just hoisted a giant plant into a shopping cart. She sees me and asks if I'm finding everything okay. I have barely begun my search, but decide to let her point me in the right direction, which she does. I thank her and say something about just going to get a cart (since I'm about to wander off in the opposite direction of where she just pointed me). The Plant Lady immediately and cheerfully says, "Take mine!" She heaves the big plant out of the shopping cart before I can protest, smiles and waddles back out to the gardening area.

Rating: PERFECTION - What I wouldn't have asked for as a customer but most likely would have done as an employee. Lots of gold stars for you, Plant Lady!

Thursday, January 11, 2007

A Crown for a Drama Queen

I hate going to the dentist. Hate, as in, it practically makes me go into seizures. As in, I hate it more than you ever could even though you also think you hate going to the dentist.

Going to the dentist finally became more palatable, however, when we moved last fall and I got a new one. Dr. Smith. Or as I like to call him, Dr. Fabulous.

"You've had braces," Dr. Smith said to me, rather matter-of-factly, the first time I met him. It wasn't a question, but rather an assumption.

"Nope," I replied, smiling broadly.

I've had this exchange with dentists before. I have tons of fillings from my childhood, which have turned into two (so far) root canals in my adulthood .. but by golly, my teeth are nice and straight and fool 'em every time.

"And they're so white and bright," he went on to say. (Were I a single woman with a vivid imagination, I might have let myself read a little "I wonder how they'd look in candlelight, say, at dinner tonight?" in that. Have a mentioned that I really like this dentist?)

I smiled more broadly.

"Do you bleach?"

I scowled. So much for impressing Dr. Delicious.

Thus, because I have, indeed, bleached my teeth in the past, and because my last root canal wasn't properly completed, I was sent to the dental lab for a "shade match" for my new crown. Today was that day.

I arrive at the lab and peek in the windows. People are bent over their work stations, busily working on, I don't know, teeth? It all appears very "employee only" and not where I should be checking in. So I walk back to the reception area and wait to be helped. The reception desk is quite tall, and I am quite short .. I can barely see the receptionist through her computer monitors and plant collection. She is finishing up a phone call.

"Can I help you?", she barks at me. At least, I think it's at me. I try to position myself where we might actually be able to see each other.

"Yes, I'm not sure if this is where I should be. I have a 2 pm appointment ..."

"Mary?", she interrupts, "I don't have a Mary on the schedule."

I look at her blankly. Is she talking to me? Or is she still on the phone? She's wearing a hands-free headset and I can't be sure ....

She stares at me. "Did you say your name was Mary?"

She must be talking to me, I decide. My mind is scrambling to figure out why she thought I said my name was Mary. "No", I finally manage to blurt out, "My name is Ronda. I was saying that I'm here for a shade match and I don't know where to check in."

"I thought you said your name Mary," she says flatly.

"I didn't say what my name was!", I exclaim, not so flatly.

She's no Dr. Smith, I grumble to myself. That man can understand every word I gurgle and gargle at him when he's working on my mouth. "Gllecchhh aaahhlggrrr", I'll tell him. "Isn't that fascinating," he'll murmur in return.

Ms. Charming instructs me to return to the lab. I do so, and am promptly escorted back to the reception area (as one apparently needs protective eye wear in the lab, and my $8 sunglasses perched on top of my head just wouldn't do. No working on teeth for me!). Thankfully, I am brought directly into a room and seated. "Oh, you have Or-ellll," my escort tells me, drawing out the second syllable of his name in such a way that I can't tell if this is a good thing or a bad thing. She scampers out of the room before I can clarify or protest.

Orell, as it turns out, is a portly, middle-aged foreign man who is balding on top but sports a nifty comb-over. He eyes me and immediately tells me I look familiar. I eye him and immediately decide he looks like a serial killer.

"Do you work for Kaiser?", he asks me. 'Do you kill people?', I want to ask him.

He doesn't say much else, except to grunt instructions at me in his thick accent: "Turn your head .. more .. open your mouth .. more .." I desperately miss Dr. Smith's velvet voice and his polite requests: "Can you please .. that's just perfect .. thank you so much .."

As Orell pokes at my lips and gums, I sit there imagining his co-workers being interviewed on the evening news, utterly shocked to find that he has killed multiple patients. "I just can't believe it. Orell? He's a little quiet, but he's so nice. He would never do anything like this!"

I finally complete my shade match, and then am forced to fill out a survey. Blessedly, it is short. I don't have anything nice to say. On the plus side, I now had something to blog about. And hey: completing it brings me one step closer to another dental office date with Dr. Dreamy, when he'll give me my new crown.

Now who else would treat a girl so good?