Thursday, December 31, 2015

WINTER: IT'S DUCK AND COVER TIME

I thought I lived in New England, Home of the Blizzard of '78, Land of the Record Snowfall of '15, The Great White Tundra of the Northeast.  Apparently, though, I live in Wussyville.

First of all, it sleeted all day on Tuesday, at least where I live.  No snow, no rain - steady sleet.  All day.  Sleet, sleet, and more sleet.  Inches and inches of sleet until it looked like snow.  But it wasn't snow; it was piles and piles of ice pellets.  Big-ass, slushy, whomping-heavy sleet.  Vehicles everywhere became cement-like blocks of frozen slushy muck, each car like an ice cube for Goliath.

I think they plowed.  Once.  I believe this is true because the end of my driveway suddenly and inexplicably became a giant igloo of razor-sharp, six-inch tall ice mountains with enough credibility to pop car tires.  However, the plows never came back. 

Never.  EVER.  Not to my street; not to any street. Now, every street around town is a frozen mess of ice doodoo. 

Tonight, for example, after dodging a giant chunk of ice the size of Baby Huey that flies off the SUV in front of us, my son discovers that he is a Master of Defensive Highway Driving.  We also discover that every side road intersection is covered with ice obstacles.  The conundrum of the evening becomes, "Do I drive across the center lane and hope I don't kill anyone, or do I drive onto the Frozen Patch of Death to avoid smearing the idiot jogger who is out on the ice in the street after dark in black gear?"

I say, "The jogger is worth ten points.  Hit him!" 

Alas, Master of Defensive Highway Driving is now also Master of Defensive Back Road Driving.  The jogger lives to run in the street and risk death for yet another day.  Personally, I never even see him.  He'd be a hood ornament in running gear by now if I were driving.

For a region that prided itself Monday night on how it was already salting and sanding as preemptive care (which is bullshit because that doesn't even work), they sure fucked up on the actual storm clean-up.  Explains why one of my homies went after a plow driver with a gun. 

Wait.  Wait a sec.  He actually FOUND someone PLOWING during the storm?  Must've been some dumbass who didn't get the memo: This is Wussyville.  It's winter.  Prepare to duck and cover.

Wednesday, December 30, 2015

WHY POETRY AND PAPERS SOMETIMES SUCK

I'm trying to write a paper for a class.  This class has been the most disorganized and irrelevant thing I've studied since attempting to take a poetry writing class at college.  Not that writing poetry is irrelevant; but this particular professor preferred poetry about grandmothers being raped than anything actually meaningful.  Not that grandmothers being raped isn't meaningful ... See?  This is why poetry sometimes sucks.

Anyway, this paper has no directions (plural).  Oh, it has direction (singular), it's just that I have no idea how to format the thing or what is actually required because the several references to this paper throughout the course have been ephemeral, at best.

"You should all be working on your capstone paper," the instructor (I hesitate to call her a teacher) says.

Ye Mighty Oracle of Ignorance, Ye Great Cahuna of Catastrophe, on what shall we be working since we've had no explanation as to what the final paper should be?

"It'll all roll together in the end," she assures us.

What will roll together in the end? Our grades?  Our skulls?  The weed you seem to be toking?

Between the six of us taking this course, we have five different instructors, and not a one of them has been able to give us a straight answer on this capstone paper: It's one lesson; It's six lessons; It's an entire unit; We can use previous work; We can't use previous work; Quote from the readings; Don't quote from the readings; Here's a sample; Don't use the sample; Follow the forms; The state changed the forms. 

On and on and on it goes; where it stops, nobody knows.

I've spent the entire day putting together the paper to the best of my ability (it's about 1/4 of the way done), and texting back and forth with another teacher who has a different instructor and is equally confused by the opaque participants' manual.  Here's a relatively (semi-relatively) clean version of our texts.

ME:  The trail mix you made me for Christmas is totally saving my sanity through this capstone paper.

SHE:  You like it?  It's healthy, too.

ME:  Freakin' LOVE it.  I won't let anyone else eat any.  It goes equally well with beer, wine, or gin.

SHE:  Do you have the capstone rubric?  I'm using that as a guideline.

ME:  And tea.  The excellent trail mix goes with tea.  I'm not a complete fucking alcoholic.

SHE:  I am.  Embrace it.

ME:  I haven't started drinking yet.  YET.  A key word we should know in every language.  That and beer.

SHE:  This is a nightmare!  It's going to take hours!

ME:  Fuck my life.  I went out and shoveled this heavy shit (slushy ice/snow) with a bad back.  That is how much I want to get away from it.

SHE:  Just one lesson?  Mine said all six.  This is so poorly presented.  She said it should be a journey through the unit.

ME:  Shit.  I just need a 50% to pass.

SHE:  I don't even care if I'm doing this right.  I'm going to get my hair done in an hour.  Thinking I'll be almost half done by then.

ME:  (posts a picture of my papers everywhere and sharpened pencils all over the place)

SHE:  (posts a picture of her lap top)

ME:  Fuck.  I just whacked my knee sooooooooo bad.  (table leg attacked me)

SHE:  Please murder me.

ME:  If it weren't solid ice outside, I'd meet you somewhere.  I just went to get the mail and it's a skating rink.  (first winter storm and it sucked -- 4 inches of sleet instead of real snow)  We have to include the readings, too, right?

SHE:  It doesn't ask for it in the template or rubric.

ME:  THIS FUCKING COURSE SUCKS ASSHOLES.

Now that I look back on the conversation, it is a little bit poetic.  Maybe I'll just burn the paper and turn my text messages into poetry.  I could make a fortune on my text messages and IM's.  I should start a blog!  I should ... I should ... Oh, frig it.  I should write this frigging paper.  After all, it beats grandmothers being raped.


Tuesday, December 29, 2015

EXTENDING CHRISTMAS

Unlike Scrooge, I am stuck with the Spirit of Christmas Present.  Yup.  I am not ready to give up the Christmas ghost yet.  I wake up this morning, turn on the television and and thrilled to see Christmas movies are still on the Hallmark Channel and the Hallmark Movie Channel. 

Yes!  Christmas extends a little longer.

It's no secret that I am in need of some doctoring -- my back/hip is so out of whack that I am starting to suspect I must've suffered some secret trauma because everything hurts.  I have a reasonably high tolerance for pain, but this is getting ridiculous.  My friend is suffering from an attack of sciatica, so she takes her hurting left hip, I take my hurting right hip, and the two of us go to the chiropractor for adjustments.  When we get into her car ... Christmas music is playing.  When we get to the chiropractor's office, Christmas music is playing there, too.

Yes!  Christmas extends a little longer.

I have to write a paper and get a presentation ready for right after the holidays.  As I sit here typing and destroying my office space with resources spread out and notes and papers everywhere, I am sitting right next to the television (you know, so close our parents would smack us), watching yet again the same Hallmark Christmas movies I've been watching since Thanksgiving. 

Yes!  Christmas extends a little longer.

Not homework, not pain, not even the calendar is willing to give up the Christmas ghost this year.  Christmas Present, you are welcome to stay as long as you like.  But, just so you're fair-warned, the decorations usually come down around the twelfth day of Christmas.  But since I'm under the gun with this paper/presentation, I'll grant you an extension.  After all, you've done so for me; it's the least thing I can do this holiday season.

Monday, December 28, 2015

LITERALLY BLOCKING THE PAIN

I've been slightly side-lined for the past thirty or so hours, semi-incapacitated with a tweaked back.  I need groceries, but that's not happening today because I cannot yet get in and out of my car without screaming in pain.  I am, however, able to sit and stand and go up and down stairs without clutching the side rail and taking one step at a time so slowly that a simple trip to the potty during the night takes about twenty minutes.

Nope, today rapid-release acetaminophen has been my friend.  Of course, I'm eating the capsules like leftover Christmas candy, but I don't care.  I can almost move at a partially-normal pace today.  I'm not pushing my luck, though.  I know the drugs are taking off the edge.  I'm staying home and I'm staying put.

I could read; I have several new books plus one a friend lent me, and I have months' worth of magazines backlogged.  I could nap since I slept like crap last night.  I could sit still and work on my final project/paper that is due in a week.  The only thing I know for sure is that I need to spend more time sitting than standing today.

So, I decide to sort out some of my sewing pile.  I discover a box full of quilt blocks that I sewed together probably three or four years ago, back before I was taking a full load of graduate classes straight through all seasons of the year.  I have a dozen blocks of this and a dozen blocks of that and dozens and dozens of blocks that don't really go together and yet might go together perfectly well if arranged correctly.  Or incorrectly.  I don't even care -- I just want these quilt blocks out of my sewing pile.

I plan and work out patterns on paper, adding borders and blocks to make patterns and then ... and then ... and then I decide, "Fuck it, I'll just sew a random forty-eight of the eight-inch-square blocks together.  Yup, I can use the crib-size batting (which is way too big for cribs, anyway) and make a huge lap quilt.  I set up the four piles and simply go across 1-2-3-4-1-2 for the odd rows and 3-4-1-2-3-4 for the even rows.  I pin, sew, pin some more, sew some more, until finally, the top is pieced, sewn, and ready to become a quilt.

I don't finish the project because the tying off of a quilt takes some bending over the work space, and I'm not sure my back is up to that yet.  And, please, do not look too closely at how well I do not line up the rows and blocks.  All in all, it's not a bad accomplishment for a day of infirmary and rest.  Now, if I can just be this productive when my back is fully recovered, I might get that project/paper done this week, too. 

Sunday, December 27, 2015

RESTOCKING THE MEDS

Christmas wipes me out; I'm not going to lie.  When I finally fall into bed around midnight, I sleep straight through until 6:30, get up to hit the bathroom, then power-sleep for another three-plus hours.  Yup.  Ten hours.  TEN HOURS.

When I finally do manage to drag myself out of bed, I shower then go on a mission to replenish my supply of acetaminophen, ibuprofen, and good old-fashioned aspirin.  I have $5 in Extra Bucks to CVS, so I head up and search for bargains.

In addition to perusing the pain relief aisle, I decide to see if there are any good post-Christmas sales there, as well.  I am hoping for Reese's Peanut Butter Cups, but all they have are the Reese's Peanut Butter Bells.  Mentally I understand they are the same as the cups, but I cannot convince myself that cups are bells and bells are cups.  It's just wrong, so I keep moving through the displays.  I do, however, find several things on sale that I think will come in handy for next Christmas: bows, wrapping paper, tissue paper, and holiday cards. 

That's right.  Fresh off the heels of a ten-hour, post-Christmas power-sleep, I am already gearing up for next Christmas.  Of course, I do not survive unscathed.  My back and hip have been tweaking for about a week now, and somehow getting in and out of the car, I manage to completely throw out my right hip (which has been given to nasty bouts of bursitis before).  Other than the fact that I cannot walk more than teeny steps and that the pain is so bad that it makes me nauseous, here's the truly ironic part of all of this:

Although I restock the pain meds, I fail to restock the naproxen.  I'm not going back out now.  I probably wouldn't be able to fold and unfold myself in and out of the car, anyway.

Oh, Christmas, you funny fellow.  You exhaust me, you wipe me out, and now you're beating me up on top of everything else.  If I can only get myself off the couch and up the stairs to bed, I might be able to sleep another ten hours, and if only the naproxen would kick in, and, if it doesn't, thank goodness for the back-up meds I have from my CVS jaunt earlier. 

Saturday, December 26, 2015

CHRISTMAS SURVIVAL GAME

Getting through Christmas is often like making it through a survival game.

First, the gift shopping has to be done.
Wrapping marathons soon follow.
Then, the grocery shopping has to be done.
Massive amounts of baking and cooking ensue.
Travel plans have to be made.
Schedules have to be coordinated.
Work has to be endured.
Illnesses have to be warded off.
Guests and family need to be made comfortable.
Exhaustion must be conquered and ignored.

I realize during Christmas Eve and Christmas day, while warding off a migraine, that I forgot to replenish my supplies of acetaminophen, ibuprofen, and good old fashioned aspirin.  I cradle the last extra-strength, rapid-release Tylenol like it's the Ebola virus in a fragile jar -- either's accidental destruction will lead to my immediate and painful death.

It has been a long time since I felt under-the-weather during the holiday season, but this is what happens when I run myself into the ground.  And speaking of under the weather, it certainly does not help that it has been almost 70 degrees for two days (Christmas Eve and day).  Between hot flashes, a hot house, and an occasional hot forehead, I'm ready to turn on all the fans and run around in a bathing (or birthday) suit.

My friend in Colorado is snowed in for Christmas, battened down by a blizzard that drops about a foot of snow on her town overnight and continues to rage on Christmas day.  Lucky girl: She gets a white Christmas and a reason to enjoy her bed a little longer.  I pretend to love my bed  by never changing out of my flannel pajama pants all day long, which is a fashion statement that also prevents me from going to the pharmacy for more acetaminophen, ibuprofen, or aspirin.  I could actually go several places for Christmas evening -- my sister's house, my friend's house -- but all I want to do is curl up in a big comfy chair with a blanket and maybe my homemade fleece scarf.

And painkillers.  Why did I not restock my supply of painkillers?  Other than that and accidentally smashing a holiday wine glass in the sink after rinsing it out to use, it is a ridiculously smooth couple of days with friends, family, and all of my silly Christmas animated toys and a house full of oft-lit candles.  In a couple of hours, the survival of this year's Christmas Season will be official. 

Of course, this all means one thing and one thing only:  Time to start planning next year's holiday season.



Friday, December 25, 2015

WAY-TOO-WARM WISHES FOR CHRISTMAS

To friends and family --  Have a wonderful holiday.  Merry Christmas to all, and to all ... bring on the snow.  Sweating my butt off with the windows wide open on Christmas Eve is not my idea of  a New England Christmas holiday.  I keep humming "Christmas Island" and "Mele Kalikimaka" and it just seems so wrong.


Thursday, December 24, 2015

MERRY CHRISTMAS EVE

T'was the night before Christmas,
Which has so much meaning:
Cooking like crazy
And doing the cleaning

The stockings are washed
Folded up on the chair
In hopes that no one
Will see them left there.

The bedrooms upstairs
Are packed to the borders.
So messy it is,
I should be on "Hoarders."

But what to my wondering
Eyes should appear?
Guests bearing presents;
Guests bearing beer.

I simply don't care
That my house is a mess
Because it's a place full
Of much happiness.

So, I hear all exclaim
As they leave from my door:
"Merry Christmas to all --
Next year we'll eat more!"


Wednesday, December 23, 2015

THAT'S WHAT I GET FOR VOLUNTEERING

I'm taking yet another graduate class not because I want to but because I have to.  Eventually all teachers in Massachusetts will have to get on board with some level of this certification for Sheltered English Immersion, even though I technically could've bought myself a few more years on my recently-renewed license.

So, why volunteer to take the class?  Simple: This is the last time the state is offering it free of charge to any teachers "tagged," meaning we have English Language Learners in our classes.

Here's the problem, though.  This year I technically only have one ELL student who's still in the program.  Oh, it's not really a problem for me personally whether I have one or none or thirty with me.  The part of this that becomes a problem concerns my final project -- The Capstone.

I am no newbie to The Capstone.  I just completed one for my degree at Salem State a year or so ago.  Piece of cake.  I only lost months' worth of sleep and countless commuting time that I will never get back.  The Capstone itself is not the real problem.

The problem is that I have to lie on The Capstone. I have to lie not just once but twice in the document that is going right to the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education, the organization that decides whether or not I get to keep my teaching license based on my credit card's capacity to rapid-process once every five years.

The first lie is that I am supposed to present as if I have multiple ELLs in my classroom.  I have one.  Just one; at least, one who qualifies.  Tonight's class, our last official meeting before presenting The Capstone and teaching a mini-lesson to other adult-student victims who are taking the class with me, we are given time to work on The Capstone, due right after the holiday break.  I ask the magic question:  How do I modify for two different ELL levels if I really only have one ELL?

Ha.  Some of you know exactly what's going to be said.  I, on the other hand, am not so bright.  The answer to my question?

Make it up.  Make ... it ... up.

Suddenly I have turned into Foghorn Leghorn.  "I say, I say, I say, what did you, I say, what did you say?"   Yes, the answer to my legitimate question is quite illegitimate.  I am to lie through my teeth on a legal document to the DESE.

Make up a student and make up a history for that student.  NEXT!

I sit, dumbfounded, processing what I am being told.  Lie!  Cheat!  Put one over on The Man!  If I fail to do this, I fail the course.  It's kind of a conundrum.  On the one hand, being a writer, I can invent the shit right out of that make-believe student.  On the other hand, I'm LYING in a BINDING document that is directly tied to my integrity as a teacher and keeping my job. 

Yes, this is, indeed, a problem.

The other problem with The Capstone is that I am actually supposed to teach the lesson to my students and reflect on its success.  Um, the holiday break starts Wednesday, and The Capstone is due the Tuesday we get back.  When do I teach this random lesson?  Monday, the day before it's due?  Then write up the report on the fly in one evening?

No, I'm supposed to make this shit up, too.

I now understand how the political machine works.  A little wink-wink here, a little nudge-nudge there, ya know what I mean.  So, I'm required to be honest to get into the class, but I have to lie my giant ass off to get out of the class with a passing grade.  I teach the kids not to cheat, and yet ... and yet ...

No wonder I've had one mega-frikking headache for the last month.  Either that or I've developed a fatal brain condition, and then this whole course will be for nothing.  Oh well.  That's what I get for volunteering.

 


Tuesday, December 22, 2015

BAD TIME TO BE IN MY JOB

I don't know WHAT I was thinking ... going back to school and spending all that money on my education.  Honestly.  I mean, I love what I do.  I truly enjoy teaching, but the state and the feds have made teaching a terrible, horrible, awful, impossible thing to do.

I'm wondering (fantasizing, really) about retirement.  Right now my retirement plan is to die at my desk of old age so my kids can afford my funeral with the paltry life insurance pay-out they'll receive.  Unfortunately, the money I'm paying back in student loans for my continuing education and for my kids' education, I am stuck working or perhaps living in a state park somewhere.  My back-up plan to dying at my desk is living in a beat-up van in Wal-Mart parking lots around the country.  Honestly, that is looking more and more exotic every day.

Right now at the Christmas break, it's flipping nuts with parents emailing and parents calling and kids suddenly realizing their grades are falling and administrators running amok and field trips and tests and the list keeps going on.  Because taxes pay my salary, people seem to think they own me, that they personally pay me, and that I am supposed to be at their beck and call, as if I don't have 100 other students and two hundred (plus) parents insisting that they are the one and only priority in my life. 

Newsflash:  I'm a taxpayer, too; I pay my salary, too. 

It's a damn crazy time to be in this profession.  It's a damn good time to start thinking about my exit strategy. So please, Santa, for Christmas this year, bring me a winning lottery ticket.  Not just any ticket, either, but a true winner, a million dollar winner, a winner big enough for me to write that letter.  You know which letter I mean.  The letter that starts out:

Dear Superintendent, It is my greatest pleasure to announce that I will be retiring right ... this ... very ... second.

Monday, December 21, 2015

MY OLD KENTUCKY LINUS

I'm trying to rewrite the lyrics to My Old Kentucky Home to reflect my sentiments about the recent school play that was censored.  You know the one -- the play in which Linus's important speech about the origins of Christmas is cut completely out of A Charlie Brown Christmas

So, I do a little research and discover a song that has already gone through a required political rewrite for the use of derogatory racial terminology.

Hmmmm.  Seems appropriate now that I rewrite it yet again to include religion as offensive.  Here goes, folks.  Let's sing THIS version at the next Kentucky Derby.  Truthfully, though, what in the hell were you people thinking that a school play with a soliloquy about the birth of Jesus was going to fly? 

Here it is.  Sing it loud and sing it proud.

Oh, PC shines bright in the Old Kentucky Home.
'Tis Christmas, and we're putting on a play.

Sentiments are ripe and the principal's all gloom,
While the students recite lines that they will say.

The young folks roll on the stage and on the floor,
All aren't merry nor happy - they frown.
By 'n by PC police come a-knocking at the door,

From my Old Kentucky Home goes Charlie Brown !
Weep no more, libtards, oh! weep no more today!

Linus kicked out from the Old Kentucky Home,
For My Old Kentucky Home - No Christmas play.

Sunday, December 20, 2015

LOCKED IN THE LOO (NOT ME THIS TIME)

Just when I start thinking I have kind of a sucky weekend with homework to do (I spend Saturday writing two papers and an Internet post on Blackboard for a class I'm taking) and exams to grade, I check out some of my friends' social media posts.  Two of my friends and my own daughter have all taken spills recently and injured their legs or feet.  Thankfully there is no snow nor ice on the ground right now, but it's still a shitty time of year to be on crutches.  Okay, any time of year is a shitty time to be on crutches.


So I'm thinking maybe my weekend doesn't suck so badly because at least my two feet seem to be in working order.  But still.  Crutches or not, they don't have to write those papers nor grade exams, and I do, so it still sucks.  Sucketty sucky mc-suckmasters.

Then ... I read about Gladys.

Gladys is an 80-something-year-old grandmother who was out shopping in England when she decided she had to go to the bathroom.  Badly.  Really badly.  As in "right this second" badly.  In order to find a bathroom, she did some exploring and found a lovely, brand new loo.  Popping inside to take a quick pee break, she promptly shut the door behind herself.

And got locked inside.

After peeing, because one should probably use the facilities anyway if one is locked in, she tried in vain to get someone's attention by banging on the door and walls to no avail.  She settled in for the evening, complete with her shopping that included yarn and other goodies and some mints.  She remained trapped inside the ladies room for four days, sleeping on her coat on the floor and using the hand dryer when she got cold.  After four days, a worker discovered her putting the final touches on a scarf she knitted while stuck there.

Having had my own adventure getting locked inside a school bathroom when the handle broke, I feel her pain.  The only problem for me was that the bathroom wasn't even close to large enough to sleep in, and it lacked a hand dryer for warmth.  (Luckily someone heard me and rescued me before I panicked too badly.)

Listen, if you're going to get locked inside a small cubicle, a bathroom isn't a bad place to be.  You'll have plenty of water to drink, and you never have to worry about being without necessary facilities.  I;m going to have to learn to plan better, though, just in case.  I might have to start carrying some puzzles and a deck of cards with me every time I go into the loo.

It all worked out for Gladys, though.  Since she had no phone at her house nor a cell phone at all, no one even missed her during her ordeal.  But, the family has now installed a home phone and gotten her hooked up with a cell.  Gladys decided it's time to get with the times.

Hm, I don't know.  Right now with the papers and the grading and the holidays and all hanging over my head, I'm not so sure total isolation for a few days would be so bad.

Saturday, December 19, 2015

MINI POLITICAL RANT

I'm not going to make it.  Nope.  No way.

 I'm not going to make it to the 2016 presidential election because I am already completely and totally disgusted and fed up with every single fucking idiot in the presidential arena, and that includes the moron in the White House.

I don't like politics.  I don't understand people who want to rule and boss around other people, tell them how to live and what to buy and what to do and where to get medical attention and when to drink and when to go to war.  Right now every single freaking jackass in the ring is acting like a spoiled ten year old who was once bullied on the playground and now wants to punish everyone with his/her "I'll show THEM" bullshit.

There's no way any of these vile leeches is remotely interested in the good of this country or of the people in it.  Don't even try to convince me otherwise because not only would it be futile, you would be dead wrong.  If any of the people in office or running for office gave one shit about you or about me, they'd find a way to compromise and communicate and let go the stranglehold they have on the American people. 

And, if you were truly honest with yourself, deeply and passionately honest, you'd agree.

The pensions, the corporate perks, the insurance, the paid-for offices, the government owned housing market, this regulation, that regulation.  I doubt this is what the founders (and the Constitution) had in mind.

But, what do I know about unearned pensions paid out for life?  What do I know about free healthcare for life?  What do I know about getting paid to show up to work on rare occasions and pretend to vote?

The more important question should be: What do YOU know, and why would you tolerate this?


Friday, December 18, 2015

DUM-DUMS

I'm waiting for laundry to finish so I can wrap up my day.  I'm not going to lie -- I am exhausted.  On top of being so tired that I have been accidentally mini-napping at my desk and at the kitchen table, I am suddenly craving chocolate.  Thankfully, I don't have any in the house.

Still, though.  I need something.  Something sweet. All I can find are Dum-Dums.

You know what Dum-Dums are; they're those small, round, totally horrible lollipops that come in flavors like grape and pineapple and sour apple.  I remember that my favorite has always been the root beer flavored Dum-Dum. 

What a surprise!  There's a root beer flavored Dum-Dum right on the top of the pile!

I unwrap the lollipop and realize it's not as dark colored as I remember it.  Oh, well, it's still root beer flavored, right?  I taste it.

Oh, gawd, it's horrid.  Putrid.  What the hell.  

I attempt to finish the lollipop.  After all, Dum-Dums are small, itty-bitty versions of what a Tootsie pop would be if it were a miniature piece of crap and minus its chewy center.  I cannot finish it, though.  There seems to be a saccharine aftertaste that's actually nauseating me.

This is what I get; this is what I deserve.  If I am going to scour the kitchen in search of something sugary-sweet to quell what is truly a chocolate craving, then I deserve every agonizing taste of that Dum-Dum.   

Never again!  Never, ever again!!!!

Until I'm craving chocolate again with only Dum-Dums standing between me and my car, with which I will drive to the nearest 24-hour pharmacy and buy out every bag of holiday candy left on the shelves.  I'm far too exhausted to drive up the street and stand in line for anything at this point.  I look around one last time.  Oh, well.  All I can find are Dum-Dums.

Here we go again.

Thursday, December 17, 2015

DIP ON A CHIP: IN MY OWN DEFENSE

I did it.  Also, I didn't do it.

I have nearly a ton of homework to accomplish for a class I am taking.  I start doing said homework this afternoon by meeting with a class compatriot for an hour and filling in paperwork.  Let me assure you, this is no easy task as the notebook containing information for the entire course weighs about twelve pounds.  Carrying this notebook around is akin to carrying a toddler on my hip.  The homework calls to me, taunts me, and screws with my blood pressure.

Alas; I do not do it.  I do not do my homework.

Sitting here at the kitchen table after finally losing the homework-no homework debate, I decide to mash up two avocados and add some fresh lime and salsa until I have the perfect guacamole.  I make some nachos to go with said guacamole, and I also decide that a gin and tonic is in order since the lime is already out and sliced.  I suspect that my son will come home later and wonder what has happened to those avocados.  Who ate those avocados, he will say to himself.

Alas, I do it.  I eat the avocados in a marvelous guacamole with some killer nachos.

Guilty as charged.  I did it (ate the avocados) and I didn't do it (my homework).  As I stare at eight nachos left on the plate along with a scoop of guac, I suppose I should feel a little bit like I'm being naughty.

Alas, I do a little tiny bit ... Oh, damnit, who am I kidding?  I don't feel the least bit guilty, naughty, nor remorseful.  Everyone is entitled to a little dip in work time and a little dip on a tortilla chip, right?

That's my defense, anyway, and I'm sticking to it.

Wednesday, December 16, 2015

MONSTERS AMONG US

Sometimes.
Sometimes there are monsters among us.
Sometimes we are bound by laws to keep silent.
Sometimes we protect "innocents" who are anything but.
Sometimes in our zeal to uphold the rights of minors, we become complicit in their crimes.
Sometimes a rotten apple really can be spotted from an early stage of degradation.
Sometimes we are frightened by soulless people around us, and
Sometimes those soulless monsters among us are mistaken for children.

Sometimes my heart is so heavy that if my feet didn't stop it,
Sometimes my heart would slip away beneath me from its own sadness.
Sometimes a jury gets it right.
Sometimes a light shines in the darkness.
Sometimes greater good follows unbearable horror, and
Sometimes heavenly hope follows hellish sorrow.
Sometimes words are not enough to heal, but they're all we have.
Sometimes there are monsters among us.
Sometimes.





Tuesday, December 15, 2015

BAH HUMBUG: ONE FINAL FIELD TRIP TO THE THEATER

It's here.  Finally.  I've waited years for this to happen, and now it's a reality.  I'm so excited I can barely stand myself.  The amount of work necessary to pull this damn thing off is exhausting, right down to the last second.

Finally -- This is the last year the school will be attending the theatrical performance of A Christmas Carol.

I hate field trips.  HATE them.  First of all, they're more work to plan than they're worth.  Secondly, the amount of paperwork is unbelievable -- this form, that permission slip, this invoice, that medical waiver... Good gawd, whatever happened to "one form covers it all"?  Then there's the bus ride with drivers who think going through Weston is the fastest way into Boston from Woburn (trust me -- it's not). 

The performance itself of A Christmas Carol is off-limits to me.  The pyrotechnics involved in the show give me migraines, so I put on a headset (there are speakers EVERYWHERE, even in the bathroom stalls) and sit in the lobby with puzzles and a book.  I drag my classes there every year and have never seen the performance.  Oh well.  Such is life.

What finally killed the field trip is the price.  The theater makes its money off the backs of school children all over this part of the state who pay through their noses for tickets and bus transportation, and my district has finally decided it would be cheaper to show the movie in our new performing arts center.  Next year, that's exactly what we will do.

Even worse -- I handed this field trip off to my teammates years ago after planning it all myself for a long, long time, and I thought it was permanently off my plate way back then.  Suddenly, this summer, the little buggah turned up on my docket again.  So it goes, and thankfully so. Finally.  FINALLY.  I can have December back.

I'll let you know how the final performance goes, but I can tell you this:  Just thinking about going to  the theater gives me twitches.  I imagine myself arriving back at the school on the big yellow bus, and it's almost 1:00, and I'm just about ready to turn the kids over to their general arts teachers.  Yup, that's when I'll finally be in my Happy Place.

Until then, this is all I can say about the theater:  BAH HUMBUG.

Monday, December 14, 2015

SANTA'S WORKSHOP

It's the most wonderful time of the year!  Time to set up Santa's Workshop!

Yeah, the only problem with all of this is that Santa's Workshop is in my den/office, the one room (other than the basement) that is still in a massive "sort mode."  I kick some thing sideways, move some stuff around, set up the card table, refill the tape dispenser, get myself ready to go, and ..

I cannot open the drawer of tags and bags and things because a large container of photos is blocking it.  I try to move the box of photos, but it is wedged in under two other boxes of photos.  How ironic -- Christmas Present is ruined by Christmas Past.

I suppose I should get this place organized so that Christmas Future doesn't have to deal with all of this.

In the meantime, I'll walk around the piles, maneuver in and out of teetering towers of stuff, and continue to wonder how I ever managed to fit in this room when it was my bedroom and I had a full-sized mattress set stuffed in here, as well as using it as Santa's Workshop.  I figure it must be like my waistline: If I give it enough slack, it will gladly and wholeheartedly over-fill the space.

Now, time to move downstairs to the kitchen where the shipping department is located. 

Sunday, December 13, 2015

OH, CHRISTMAS LIST

A Christmas song for everyone because I love you very much, but right now Santa does not love you very much.

Oh, Christmas list,
Oh, Christmas list:
When you don't make one
I get pissed.

Oh, Christmas list,
Oh, Christmas list:
Without ideas
Gifts get missed.

I cannot buy
What I don't know.
It makes me cry
To guess gifts so

Oh, Christmas list,
Oh, Christmas list:
I just might punch you
With my fist.

(You'll be singing that all day long.  No need to thank me.)

Saturday, December 12, 2015

DAILY DOSE OF BEAT-THE-BUS GAME

Every morning I play Beat the Clock with the traffic on my way to work.  The middle school where I work is connected to the high school, and there is only one access road.  One.  Uno.  Une. The object every morning is to reach the access road before the high school traffic and middle school parents jam up the whole commute.

This means every morning I have to leave the house a full forty-five minutes before I used to when the schools weren't connected and didn't share a road.

This entire operation seems simple except for the fact that I hate traffic.  HATE IT.  Also complicating my commute is the fact that I finally don't have children to drop off in the morning.  I used to have to hit three different schools before going to my own school in a neighboring town.  I think back on it now and wonder how in the hell I ever managed to pull that off every morning without losing my goddamn mind.

I should be loving my commute now that it's just me and a straight shot eight miles, no major highways and no speed limit over 50 mph.  But, no, I HATE MY COMMUTE.

Do you want to know why? --- School buses.  Two school buses, to be exact.

If I don't time my departure exactly right, which often happens because I still have one (grown) child at home whose work wardrobe requires daily ironing duty, then I am forced to play chicken with two school buses.  One bus races me to the first crossroad, desperate to beat me to Main Street and route 28 then route 125 beyond.  The bus goes the same way I do, and, if it gets in front of me, I am stuck behind it as it stops every two houses to pick up (lazy) children. 

It's important to beat the bus so I can go to work the back way, which is my favorite way, through the state forest.  If the bus beats me to Salem Street, I continue straight on and turn later, driving along the forest perimeter and past my favorite pond, which is a pretty great commute, as well.  If all else fails, I drive up the main road, turn once (if I remember) to connect with the final leg of the back road commute and get the beneficial right-turn light at the school access road entrance.  Sometimes I forget that last turn and end up sitting at the light waiting ... waiting ... waiting through traffic to make the left, feeling like an idiot.

Some mornings I can see the bus stopping at the train tracks by my house, giving me just enough time to beat the bus in the morning, but today I miss the train track delay.  The bus cuts in front of me up School Street.  Knowing I will never beat the bus through the light by going up to the next street, I get behind the bus, strategically maneuver across a one-way to the left, and boogie onto Main Street about a hundred yards north of the bus, which is now at a long light that I usually avoid.

I make it through the light just as it turns yellow and notice the bus pulls out behind me.  SUCCESS!  But it is short-lived.  I notice that the bus has taken a side street behind me.  The bastard!  He's cutting across Prospect Street to beat me to the next light, allowing him to block my turn to the back road without ending up behind his every slow and painful student pick-up.  Damn him!

This game goes on every single morning, sometimes with me winning and sometimes with the bus winning.  Mostly with me winning, though.  Until today.

Today, after missing my classic train-track-mandatory-bus-stop tactic, I notice that the bus has turned another way.  Aha!  I've lost him!  Or, so I believe.  I get to my usual spot of waiting for the light so I can cross Salem Street and avoid the rest of 125 and its dangerous traffic of cars racing at each other at speeds in excess of fifty to sixty miles per hour.  There, blocking my turn, is a yellow school bus.

Holy shit.  I have been making this same commute every single morning this year, three and a half months of playing chicken with the school bus, and now ... now ... frigging NOW I realize that it's NOT the same damn bus.  All this time, all these well-developed secret routes to stay ahead of the blinking red bus lights, and I suddenly discover that I have not been racing ONE bus every morning; I have been racing TWO buses every morning.

Part of me feels dumb for being so .... dumb.  I mean, I don't know why I didn't notice that the buses weren't the same.  Then though, I feel a little triumphant.  After all, I can still go by the state forest, but it won't be as quiet and scenic a commute.

Best of all, though -- All this time I have been beating (or almost beating) not one but a duo of very competitive bus drivers.  Sometimes that's all it takes to make my (commuting) world right.

Friday, December 11, 2015

WHAT'S MY THEME SONG?

A friend posts on social media asking us all what theme music will play every time we walk into a room.

At first, I go right to the obvious: The Bitch Is Back (Elton John), or maybe She Hates Me (Puddle of Mud).  Perhaps I'm more Dr. Demento, and my theme song should be I Hate People or Fish Heads or They're Coming to Take Me Away.

But, no.  My life is a damn circus.  A frigging crazy-ass circus.  A ... a ... flying circus.

So, folks, from here on out, my theme song will be the Liberty Bell March.  You know it -- It's the theme music for Monty Python's Flying Circus.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=49c-_YOkmMU 

 It's appropriate, it's timeless, and, most of all, it's true.

Thursday, December 10, 2015

UNDER PRESSURE

One thing I noticed this week is that people around me seem to be having the same kind of shitty, nit-picky week that I am.  So much to do, so much to accomplish, and yet ridiculousness surrounds me. 

I'm trying to prep the kids for a major exam next week.  It's going to be a killer.  However, my schedule keeps getting interrupted for meetings or plays or sensitivity training or whatever else comes down the pike.  If it isn't a fire drill, it's bus evacuation practice. I haven't had one full teaching week yet this year that has NOT had some kind of an interruption or confrontation or minutiae.

This morning on my drive to work, I'm trying really hard to psych myself up for a good day.  I make a mental list of things I hope to accomplish.  I think over the possible outcomes for a contentious meeting I have coming up.  I mentally size up the ramifications to losing my cool during class yesterday.

Wait.  What the hell.  Why am I trying to appease myself?  I didn't cause all the problems, issues, and crap.  I'm not the one who needs to solve all the world's woes.

I crank up the radio as I tool along the dark back roads to work.  Tom Petty sings, "Oh, baby, there ain't no easy way out..."  No shit, guy.  "I'll stand my ground, and I won't back down."

Hmmmmm.  Decent advice.

Next song:  "Pressure ... raining down on me ... Under pressure..."

Holy smokes, it's the soundtrack of my life, or, at least, my life at the moment. 

As I pull into the parking lot at school, I briefly consider belting out the lyrics at the top of my voice.  There's only one other car in my end of the lot.  Who cares, right?  I notice it's one of the construction workers, still sitting in his car, sipping coffee with his driver's side window down.  This is when I decide that singing is probably not the grandest of my ideas.

I shut off my car just as two of my coworkers arrive in separate cars, so we all walk in together and do that perp walk through the deserted halls.  It's nice to have the strength in numbers, and we gab about various silly things happening in our building.  It's all okay, though, because truthfully, in the end, when it all starts to fall apart:

I'm under pressure -- but I won't back down.

Wednesday, December 9, 2015

PERP WALK

The hallway at work where my room is located is long.  Very long.  Two football fields' worth of long, as a matter of fact.  I know this because someone in the business office two doors away measured it one day.

I usually get to work early, about forty-five minutes before the students arrive, so the hallways are deserted, quiet, and weirdly illuminated as the sunrise slowly filters through the classroom windows.  My walk in includes one short hall, one medium hall, and then the supremely long hall.  My footsteps echo in the cavernous area ... click ... click ... click ...

It's the Perp Walk.  Yup, the Perp Walk, complete with cameras and the sinking feeling in the pit of my stomach.

Don't (or do) go reading any significant symbolism into this.  I am not (really) comparing the job to prison.  However, once those main doors close behind me, once the bell rings, I am held prisoners by the schedule, unable to scoot to the bathroom or have a cup of tea or grab a snack or breathe.

Maybe it really is the Perp Walk, which brings me to my next conundrum:  Should I wear stripes or an orange jumpsuit tomorrow? After all, if one is going to do the Perp Walk, one should dress the part.  N'est-ce pas?

Tuesday, December 8, 2015

I CAN BOO IF I WANT TO

The talk around the Boston area is that I behaved badly yesterday.  Yup.  I did, you did .... Hell, just about everybody did.  Remember, I swore at the television and turned away several times from the Patriots' game when it got too painful to watch anymore.  Some of the game attendees audibly booed our own team and even left early so as not to be sitting on route 1 for hours in traffic.

Hey, here's my response:  Fuckyaselves.  Yup.  FUCKYASELVES.  And I say this with love in my heart.

You see, we're not booing some group of little kids or handicapped players or anything like that.  We're not total assholes.  But, folks, these players are professionals.  PROFESSIONALS.  This is their JOB.  When they suck as badly as they did on Sunday, we are entitled to groan, swear, and boo.  I mean, if you buy a burger and it's so badly charred that it is basically inedible, you don't shrug it off and say, "Oh, well, I'll get a better burger next time." 

Professional sports are products and we are the consumers.  Deal with it.  We are entitled to complain where complaints are due.

Take tonight, for example, when the Bruins choke near the end of the third period and I start laughing and say to my TV, "What the fuck, guys.  Really?"  I mean, tickets to the games can run into the hundreds of dollars.  I think for that price I should be able to be a bit of an armchair coach.

For those of you who say we shouldn't be booing our teams, don't call us fair-weather fans.  Saying we cannot boo when a team sucks is the same as saying we cannot cheer when they score.  You're probably a socialist and believe that everybody gets a trophy.  If you're offended that we boo our teams when they blow chunks, then you're a hypocrite and shouldn't bother watching events like the Superbowl.  After all, everyone wins in your world ... right?

I will continue to call-out bad playing just as I call out bad officiating.  You want to know why?  BECAUSE I CAN.  If it offends you, go stick your head up your ... cable modem.


Monday, December 7, 2015

MY FOUL MOUTH

I've turned into my father.

Anyone who knew my father will know that this is NOT a compliment.  As a matter of fact, any of my siblings reading this probably just shit themselves.  Watching football today, though, it's obvious I've inherited all of my father's gifts of language.

In other words, I can swear like a drunken soldier.

Okay, people who've known me pretty much all my life might be reading this and wondering how or why I think this is news since I swear every single day of my life.  What makes today a special occasion?  Truly, it's not like football is the only sport that brings out my colorful language.  I've been a hockey-swearer since long before I got my permit to drive.

For the last three weeks, though, sports in general and football in particular have been making me swear my head off.  Sometimes it's because a play sucks particularly badly, and sometimes it's because a play is phenomenally unbelievable.  Sometimes it the officiating, and sometimes it's the "professional" commentary.

Either way, the F-word has become even more of a regular in my vocabulary, especially on the weekends when sports are all over the television and I cannot escape myself.  I'm so bad that a friend gave me an F-Bomb ... really ... it looks like a bomb with an F on it.

I apologize.

It may be generational or it may be something of my own doing.  Either way, much like the father in A Christmas Story, I can weave a tapestry of foul language that might still be hanging in space over the Merrimack River.  If my sports teams keep playing the way they're playing (shut-outs one day, huge losses the next; fantastic passes one game, dropped soft passes the next), I should be getting plenty of practice using my foul mouth.

Sunday, December 6, 2015

I DON'T EVEN FEEL LIKE SMACKING ANYONE TODAY!


I almost fall for it.  Truly, I do.

I spend the previous evening canvassing emails and checking out ads and cutting out coupons and strategically planning a day of shopping for Saturday.  After all, the deals end Sunday.  I'm missing out!  I'M MISSING OUT!!!!!

I wake up Saturday a little later than I'd like.  I stumble downstairs, make some tea and oatmeal, and I sit at the table, staring at the coupons neatly organized in a colorful baggie that sticks out of the top of my pocketbook.  I'm going to do it.  I'm going to go out there and mingle with the mayhem.  I'm going to, I swear it!

And then I remember that I have to put together some storage bins (another story for another day), that my son's new gal pal is coming up for the day, and that I promised a friend I would attend her house party.  I also have homework for a class I'm taking, and, to be frank, I haven't showered and I look and probably smell like something that fell off a turnip truck.

I accomplish some things on my to-do list, including spending some time in the upstairs den/office/sewing room that now looks like the remainder of a bomb incident instead of the end result of a full-scale bombing raid.  Currently I am in between events and about to head out to another.  I have since showered, washed and dried my hair, applied deodorant, make-up, and clean clothes, and have almost entered into the human world. 

I even manage a quick trip out to CVS.  I know, right?  Does this count for hitting the stores?  Can I count myself among the masses even though there is zero line at CVS?  I mean, I don't even wait one second.  I walk right up to the counter and am through in no time.  Plus, I have a 20% off coupon that expires Sunday, so I guess my plotting last night really does help.

Oh, and just for the record, my friend's daughter is posting on social media that she is stuck in a long, loooong line at Kohl's in Salem, NH, and that the place is Crazyville and the people are asylum patients gone amok.

I guess I get the better end of all of this -- and I'm proud of myself.  I only fall for it a little bit, 20% or so, and I don't even feel like smacking anyone today.  Progress!  Merry almost-Christmas, kids.

Saturday, December 5, 2015

HAS THE DEER A LITTLE DOE?

According to the Three Stooges, the answer to this question is: "Why, certainly.  Two bucks!"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sL5FjvH3AJc

I can tell it must be hunting season in the nearby state forest.  No, I don't hear any gunfire; the hunters are only allowed to use bows and arrows, at least that's been the rule for the last couple of years.  I don't really know for sure if it's open season in the woods.  I can only tell you that the deer sure as hell think it's hunting season.

Driving to work I am careening down a relatively well-traveled back road when I turn a corner and nearly get sideswiped by a huge doe.  She's a beauty, and she's solid, an amazingly agile and meaty animal.  I stop for a moment in the road (no one else is around), and watch her duck into the underbrush and stand up against a wooden fence, where she is trapped from moving any further.  I look around and realize she must've trotted right up the nearby cul-de-sac like a four-legged jogger out for a morning run.

I'm still thinking about the doe later on when I drive home.  I decide to take another side street, one that is well-traveled even though it abuts the state forest and the pond where I like to kayak.  The exact moment when I recall the morning's deer encounter, another doe trots out right in front of my car.

Luckily, like this morning, no one else is coming.  I stop the car and roll down the windows.  I don't know why I do this.  What's the deer going to do?  Stick her head inside the window and greet me?  I seriously think my gut reaction is to hear her, to listen to her move from the woods on one side of the road to the woods on the other.

No sooner do I watch her descend into the gully when another doe jumps out and practically over the hood of my car.  She's a little smaller than the other one, and both are smaller than the beauty I encountered this morning.  It seems like I am sitting in the road for a long time, but the entire encounter takes probably fifteen, maybe twenty, seconds.  I see them safely into the bog, both moving slightly into the water among the reeds and branches.

(Not my picture; not my deer)
Pretty cool but not enough time to grab my cell phone camera.

Part of me worries that an errant arrow will come flying through the window and pierce my skull for interfering with what might be a hunter's pursuit; part of me cannot tear myself away from watching the two deer.  A car comes along the other way, and I decide that I should probably keep moving, especially since I am within spitting distance of the state police barracks.

It's all right, though.  It has been a three-doe commute today, and that's much better than my usual two-school-buses-and-some-traffic-lights commute.  Reminds me why I live around here and not in the city.

Friday, December 4, 2015

I'LL BE DEAD SOON

Guacamole ... Guac Guac-amole... (Not me, BTW)
Sometimes I don't mind people; sometimes I don't want to be around people at all.

This becomes extremely difficult in my line of work: middle school teacher.  I am pretty much surrounded by people (of various ages) all bloody day long, and sometimes I'll play along, and sometimes I won't.

I have a former student who likes to stop by every morning on her way to her own homeroom in the hallway that connects to where my room is located.  This particular morning she stops by and encourages me to join her in a mini dance routine.

So ... I join her.  It doesn't matter to me that the entire hall is choked full of students.  We dance, laughed at by students and teachers alike.  Who cares?  I'll be dead soon, anyway.

Later, though, I'm feeling burnt out.  It is after school, the bell has rung, the students (for the most part) have left the building.  Suddenly, in the hall outside my room, I hear my favorite former student and one of my current students plotting to come surprise me in my room.

I glance around. There is no second access to or from my room.  I am trapped.  I do the only thing I can do:  I hide under my desk.

Mind you, I'm wearing a dress and suede boots, so folding myself under the middle drawer of a metal teacher desk is no easy task.

"She's not here!" I hear them lament. 

Ah, safe.  I'm safe!

No.  Wait.  Another teacher passes the girls and says, "Oh, I was just talking to her.  She is definitely in her room."

Damnit. 

I don't move.  I'm not even sure I'm breathing.  I stay completely still.

I hear the girls' feet shuffle back into the room.  One of them repeats the belief that I'm not there.  Suddenly, I hear my student shriek:

"SHE'S UNDER THE DESK!  SHE'S HIDING UNDER HER DESK!"

Busted.

Oh, well.  Sometimes I just want to be left alone, but, to be honest, they worked really hard for this; they earned it.  I pop up, chat for a while, and let them make fun of my morning dancing.  Oh, well.  Like I said before, I'll be dead soon.  No big deal.

Thursday, December 3, 2015

AIN'T NO F*&%&#G THELMA HERE!

It's that time of year again when all the bizarre charities call.  You know the ones I mean:  Save the Children with Dimpled Cheeks Fund, Money for Missing Dryer Socks Foundation, and The Secret Order of Belly Button Lint.

I will admit, though, that I like to answer political surveys.  It's one of my favorite pastimes fucking with people's heads.  (What is the biggest problem facing America today?  SPAM!  We need more Spam in case of an apocalypse!)  So, sometimes I like to answer the phone, but, then when I find out it's a money-grubber trying to get cash out of my pocket for the Sewer Workers Lunchtime Hoedown, I act all indignant.

Tonight I am in the basement, futzing with the laundry, moving the wet washed stuff to the dryer and putting the new stuff into the washer and transferring the dried stuff to the laundry basket.  All of a sudden, the phone rings.  I fly around and rush to answer it in case it's one of my kids or a political activist.

I think I might have mentioned, or perhaps I did not, that I am eventually going to rearrange the junk in my basement.  Anyhow, when I whip myself around to head up the cellar stairs to answer the phone, I forget about the folded-up treadmill and whack my hand on it so hard that I feel and hear my wrist snap.

Oh.  Shit.

I very carefully move my wrist while taking the stairs two at a time, all the while swearing my bloody head off.  I see the caller ID as some Somerville number I don't know.  Here's how the conversation goes.

ME: (picking up phone receiver) WHAAAAAAT!!!!  (Dead air)  (sighing, then sharply) What do you WAAAAAANT?!?!

SHE:  Um, is Uhn-DRAY-yuh there?

At this point, I can honestly feel the blood boiling in my head.  My wrist hurts a bit, my hand is unsmooshing itself, and there isn't any Uhndrayyuh here.  I take a deep breath and reply in my best Aresnio Hall Amazon Women on the Moon impersonation ...

ME:  THEY AIN'T NO FUCKING THELMA HERE!

If you've never seen the first four minutes of Amazon Women on the Moon, you simply must watch it.  Here's a link (that won't link so you'll have to copy and paste into a new window).  Short of the bookcase, this is exactly what happened to me this afternoon.  I swear it.  I would only exaggerate a teeny bit.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EHSoN8t6x3M

I am pleased to report that my wrist is fine, my hand only hurts a little, and that bitch from Somerville, whomever she may be, has not called me back, and yay for it because I have more laundry to finish, anyway.


Wednesday, December 2, 2015

KILL THE WABBIT

The other day at work I'm trying to find some music to pump me up in the morning.  I now have some kickass speakers mounted into the ceiling of my room, and I've been known to blast everything from Dropkick Murphys to Big Band music.  I'm having a particularly shitty morning on this particularly shitty day, so I head for Pandora's symphony station.

On comes Ride of the Valkyries, or, Die Walkure, by Wagner.

You know this song.  Yup, you do.  Even if you don't know classical music, you know this one.  It's the one from Looney Tunes when Elmer Fudd sings, "Kill the wabbit, KILL THE WABBIT!"  Here, try these links (you might have to copy and paste into a tab):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V92OBNsQgxU
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wGhQ2BDt4VE

Anyway, even if you don't click on the links (or copy and open them), suffice it to say that I had Wagner cranked to the rafters, which is a daring thing to do since the superintendent's office is three doors down from my room.  I just felt the need, though, because some days at work are just like that.

My limited knowledge and a few clicks of dictionary.com tell me that a Valkyrie is a Norse mythological figure, a woman, actually.  She represents one of twelve handmaidens to Odin, and they choose slain warriors from the battlefield to enter into Valhalla (which reminds me of another song, Vahevala, by Loggins and Messina).

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XiDOkRJ1w20


Some days I want to ride with the Valkyries, plucking up the dead ideas thrown at me at work and leading them into oblivion where they belong.  Other days, I just want to kill the wabbit, kill the wabbit ...