Youth and Age

Here is today’s photo, my son and my aunt, the one 85 today, the other 22 since December. I myself am somewhat uneasily perched agewise between those two extremes and I’m not dealing with it very well. I know I’m not as old as 85, yet, and I know (although I resent it in a sulky, brooding way that does credit to my adolescent self) that I’m not as young as 22, but I don’t really feel that much older. Neither does my aunt and my mother, who was 83 when she died five years ago, told me that the bathroom mirror sometimes made her jump and wonder just who the hell that old lady was.

I actually have a lot more to say on this topic – reams, pages, screeds, rants – but I’m too tired. That would probably be because I’m getting a bit old to stand up all day and we oldsters need our rest. Argh.

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Fun With Winter and initials

Fun With Winter and initials

This is a picture of the Skyland Avenue bridge, taken as I was walking – in the extreme cold, yes – through the Habitat for Humanity store parking lot this afternoon. But what, Felicity, you say, were you doing at the Habitat store? Is it not true that a) you have too much furniture already and b) you are really scarily flat broke, as in there is no money, like none, like 0, in the bank and you ate the last eggs today? And the answer is yes, my children and oh sages, yes, these two things are so true but what else is true is that Habitat sells $10 space heaters and I found myself in need of two of them.

I woke up this morning and thought as I got out of bed, brrrr, it is cold in here! I was shocked because whatever else can be said about my house, it has always – well, since I replaced the Soviet boiler with the iBoiler, anyway – been toasty warm for very little money. Those low ceilings? Are filled with insulation. Also asbestos, but hey, the house isn’t going to burn down! Or at least not the ceilings! Look on the bright side, I say. Well, actually, no, I never say that, instead I usually say things about how much more interesting the dark side is, but let’s pretend.

Anyway, here I am dislodging the cat and saying hello to the dogs and getting out of bed, only to go to the thermostat and discover that while it was set at 65, the house was 55. OK. I thought, I will make muffins, warm the place right up, so I turned on the oven. A few minutes later Theo started to bark. “Shut up, Theo,” I said, as I do so many times every day that it’s an automatic response that I say in my sleep, but then I smelled the great smell of gas and realized that lo, the oven was not lighting but the gas was, I guess, gasing. I turned the oven off and started worrying about how I was dying of carbon monoxide poisoning. I worried about that for a while and woke A up and made her worry too and googled to see if gas lines could freeze and that was why I had little heat and no oven. Results were inconclusive and eventually, after I had terrified myself into near oblivion, I called the gas company.

They sent two super nice guys over. The nice guys dismantled my filthy oven and I pretended that my kids were still teenagers.
“I’m on strike,” I said, “That’s why the house is so dirty! I’m not doing the dishes until they do!”
The guys chuckled wisely. “That might work!” they said, and then they said, “See this here? This is why your oven isn’t working.”
This here is the thing that lights the oven, which is not a pilot, because those were deemed unsafe some time ago. “OK,” I said, “Can I light it with a match?”
“Oh no, no,” they said, “Can’t do that anymore. You can light the burners on top, sure, but not the oven.”
I know from last summer that you can’t get the gas to come on if the oven door is open, either, so that nobody can go all Sylvia Plath anymore. I am usually a fan of the nanny state but I really needed to bake a cake today and, incidentally, heat my house and failing that, I might well want to stick my cold head in the filthy oven, you never know. But, thanks Obama, can’t do either.

“Well,” I said, “But the heat isn’t working either! It must be the gas line!” So we all trooped downstairs, where, I am sorry to say, my daughter was sleeping. “Get up!” I hissed, “The gas guys are here.” She pulled the covers up over her head and pretended to become invisible, which had the magic effect of making me and the gas guys all also pretend that she was not there.

OK it was a little weird. But then things so often are, and what the hell.

The gas guys ran gas tests on the boiler and concluded that the gas was okay but the boiler, now, the boiler was not doing well and they could not say why, but they thought I should get someone in to fix it, pronto.
“Who put it in for you?” asked Cute Gas Guy (I had, naturally, by this time divided the Gas Guys into Cute Gas Guy and Avuncular Gas Guy)
“Nameless Well Known Asheville Person,” I said,
“Oh, he’s the best,” said CGG. “You should get him to come look at it.”
“Uh,” I said, “We did not exactly part friends.”
“NWKAP?” said CGG, “You’re saying you didn’t get along with him? Well I’m shocked. Shocked,  I tell you,” and then he laughed for a long time, by which we all understood that I was not the first nor,  probably, the last person who could say such things about NWKAP.
“Well,” I said, “He’s not exactly easy to get along with, is he?”
“Well,” said CGG, “There’s easy to get along with and then there’s really good at what they do, and I’ve done this work for 27 years and he is the best in the business, so it’s all just business, is what I say, and you had better call him.”

I called him. He said, “You haven’t had me in to look at that boiler for three years and if you don’t have maintenance done I don’t know what might go wrong and it might need to be replaced and it’s an expensive boiler so you should have called me last summer.”
“Last summer,” I said, “It wasn’t broken.”
“Call me tomorrow, honey,” he said, “Call me tomorrow afternoon and I’ll see if maybe I can come over then.”
And that is where we left it, because I also called another place but they never called me back, and I can’t call the third place – there are only three in Asheville who deal with boilers, and that’s one more than there used to be – because I owe them $72.35 from October when I had a freak out and thought the heat was leaking, which it wasn’t. Anyway I didn’t have $72.35 then and I don’t have it now and I guess tomorrow I will write NWKAP a check and pray it clears on payday, which is fortunately the day after tomorrow. Although I won’t be able to buy eggs for a bit, then, and I won’t have an oven, well, until when. But more about abject poverty and the lessons therein later! Today we are talking about winter, which still had one lesson left.

After I put down the phone, my son came upstairs to inform me that the pipes to the washing machine – the pipes in the little room that was designed BY MORONS to freeze pipes – naturally froze despite my tent of blankets and lamp with old school bulb and dripping taps. So that is why I went to Habitat and got two little $10 space heaters – one for the pipes and one for A’s room, which is now up to almost 55 degrees. Whoo! Toasty now.

And so by the time I got home I had had enough and thus bethought myself of a jar of homemade Baileys that my friend Sabrina gave me for Christmas and the last of the Jamesons that was sitting on the shelf, so A and I had Irish coffees and watched the season premiere of Downton Abbey, which I guess was the last lesson of winter because it sucked donkey balls and I am so disappointed, I could cry. The hell with you winter, I say, the hell.

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Cold

Here’s today’s photo, Okra demonstrating to us that it is, in fact, cold outside. And yeah, as we know from the increasingly fevered voices of the media and the internet and the people who are walking in and out of the bookstore, it’s really fucking cold outside. In fact, just two minutes ago my daughter was nerding out and telling me with great excitement that it is 19 degrees below zero right now. She takes wind chill seriously. In the interests of journalistic integrity, I must say that Okra doesn’t, really, and that you could probably find her in a similar position on most days even when the wind chill is, like, 72.

Wind chill or no, I am extremely glad I quit smoking in November 2012 and thus no longer have to go out there every hour or so to try to kill myself slowly. In fact I actually had several meanass self satisfied ex smoker moments today and got to say HA HA like Nelson more than once. What? Being a bitchy ex smoker is one of the main reasons to quit smoking in the first place.

Tomorrow is my day off and I’m going to bake a cake or at least something cake-ish for my auntie the Queen of Bohemia, who turns a delightful 85 on Wednesday. With a little gods given luck – and the pipes don’t freeze, I’ve got the taps all running, which is freaking me out about wasting water and money but then the plumber would be more, I guess, still it hurts – I will write some more tomorrow. The fucking pipes better not freeze. I went down to the Room of Freezing Pipes, one of the gifts given us by the previous owners of my house, who had a great deal of enthusiasm but, alas, very little money or skill, the other night after I got home from the bar. I nailed up a blanket more or less in front of the pipes as best I could plus I put a lamp with an old school incandescent light bulb in it going right under them, so we shall see and hope that does the trick. Stupid global climate change.

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Yesterday’s Photo of Lions

Yesterday's Photo of Lions

I need to get these photo a day, blog a day rules straight. It used to be easier when I just put everything up on Flickr, but the world is more fragmented now (I imagine my 2007 self laughing disbelief when I tell her that yeah, in seven years the world will be even MORE fucked up and the internet will be WAY more fragmented) and so sometimes I put pictures up on ipernity and sometimes on 500px and sometimes on Instagram and then sometimes I put them here. It would be nice to amalgamate them all here but I am having trouble figuring out how to get Instagram to play nice. I adore Instagram though and will forgive them almost anything; I think it’s the way all those squares all look marching down the page. Anyway! This is yesterdays photo and yesterday’s blog. Today’s is yet to come.

I will say however that I have long loved these lions, who linger languidly on the side of Swannanoa River Road. Heh. That was fun.

Anyway. They’re copies of the Biltmore lions, obviously, and they’re HUGE and probably way many heavy tons. I decided a couple of years ago that I wanted to own them and first I asked for them for my last birthday, but then I compromised and allowed my friends to take me to the beach instead, by which I mean HELL YEAH I HAVE THE MOST AWESOME FRIENDS IN THE WORLD AND I AM SO GRATEFUL. Well, I’m still having birthdays, people. In May. And I keep thinking that these lions would look just so. . . um. . perfect, yes, perfect is the word, in front of my unassuming mid 60s built by hippies little funky West Asheville ranch house.  Oh yes they would.

myhousewithlions

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Friends

Friends

I was going to make some background art for Annie today and clean my house and pay my bills and generally be an all around good American citizen but thank the gods, my friends called and I went to the bar instead. It was a balmy 39 degrees – that’s like 4 in those heathen Celsius degrees that you people who haven’t found Jesus and believe in math use – so we sat outside and laughed until we about cried. And there were presents. I gave jars of marmalade, which is lame and I suck, but my friends are not lame and do not suck and Susan thus gave me a post apocalyptic snowglobe in which gray ashes waft down upon the ruined city within and Jodi gave me a coffee mug she had hand painted with images of Moomins and psychedelic flowers. I am beyond lucky in my friends and grateful? There are no words. These are the two ladies who keep me sane.

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And Snowmes

And Snowmes

So it snowed last night, and the temperature has dropped to unholy lowness and when I got home from work – we fled work like scalded rats, actually, which was kind of interesting, because I usually expect people more managerial and Type A than me, which is to say, pretty much everyone, to be much more stoic about things like black ice and single digit temperatures – I finally got around to making cornbread and collards to go with the hoppin’ john I made yesterday while the marmalade was cooking. So yeah, we managed to have our New Years dinner on January 4. Doing well! High fives for efficiency!

I would have made the collards yesterday, but they had gone missing. It’s like Nancy Drew! I thought feverishly, Nancy Drew and the Case of the Missing Collards. I interrogated my roommates, also known as the adults who used to be my children.
“Did you make collards?” I asked casually.
“Oh yeah RIGHT,” they said. Actually, I asked them this separately – Nancy Drew is no fool! She doesn’t ask people the same question at the same time! – and yet they responded with much the same mix of sarcasm and incredulity. “I TOTALLY made collards in the middle of the night Mom because that is just the sort of thing I ALWAYS do. Yeah they were delicious.”
Using my secret Nancy Drew powers and the Clue of No Extra Dirty Dishes Plus There Is No Way They Would Make Collards, I decided they were prevaricating and took a flashlight out to the car only to find – wait for it – the collards! In the trunk! Not much the worse for wear because the car has been essentially a large mobile green refrigerator for several days lately and anyway, it is hard to hurt collards, even ones that weren’t all that great three days ago at the Sav-Mor.

And so we had Hoppin’ John and collards and cornbread at last – and marmalade, which turned out excellently if a bit too sweet – and there was much rejoicing, or at least some rejoicing, or at least I liked it and my son said the cornbread was perfect.

Also, it was all vegetarian because this fall, after many years of heedless omnivorism, I saw this Banksy video and became a vegetarian again. Yeah I cannot be moved by real farm animals but stuffed ones send me into tears and then cause a lifestyle change. Sometimes I worry that I have reached some kind of post modern singularity but probably it is just me being too emo again. Oh well! Dinner was good. And here is a picture of the sunrise.

sunrise through the kitchen window

 

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Marmalade Made

Okay, DAY TWO, same as day one only slightly different. On my day off I succeeded in taking down the Christmas decorations, making 7 jars of marmalade and the first blog post. Also, this one, so we have two.

I had never made marmalade before, although I am becoming all about the jams and preserves. I like things that take a while to make and last a long time but this marmalade, good gods. If I was being paid a living wage (ah ha! Ha ha ha ha!) and doing this for a living, each jar should cost around $35. It took hours and it never did get up to 225 degrees like it was supposed to. Nor did it gel entirely, but it’s a gorgeous color, tastes good if a trifle too sweet and LO I have seven jars of marmalade hanging out looking cool in my kitchen. The kitchen, however, does not look cool but instead as if a small, messy, sticky army has been camped out there for some weeks. Which, I grant you, given this household, it kind of has.

And as a new damn resolution I’m going to figure out how to get pictures from Instagram into these posts. But not today.

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Seven Years Later, We Begin Again

new years eve group on jen and kyles porch

OK! So I lied last time! This time, though, it’s for real, because for all intents and purposes, this is the first day of 2014. We are going to politely ignore yesterday because 1) like millions of my fellow Americans, I was hungover as fuck and 2) I had to drag my hungover ass to work anyway. Today, however, I am off, I’m going to make hoppin’ john and collards and cornbread and this is the day that the Photo A Day, Blog A Day project begins.

It has been seven long years since I did the Photo A Day project the first time around. My mother told me when I was small that all the cells in your body change every seven years: in effect, you are a different person entirely every seven years. My mother, please note, was not a biologist or a doctor and the gods only know where she acquired this factoid (or maybe fictionoid) but for whatever reason it stuck in her head and then it stuck in mine. So I figure seven years, and my life has changed enough that it’s time to start over again.

It’s past time, actually, because quite frankly the last seven years have not, by and large, been good ones. There have been good, even great, moments and many of them, wonderful friends, family, dogs and cats and fun but there has also been a whole lot of loss and sorrow, depression, anxiety, loneliness, terrible family drama, crushing guilt and angst and other very unfun things. I would like to see this year and in fact the next decade, be different. And I’m going to try to make it different. So to start, here’s yesterday’s photo and at some point later today there will be a new photo.

Yesterday’s photo features some of my best friends rather blurrily waving goodbye and hello at the end of a lovely celebration of New Years Eve. Look, it counts, it was after midnight as we knew because we watched midnight happen in New York along with Miley Cyrus in a full length fur coat. That kind of horror proves it was happening in this version of consensus reality because creatures that awful hardly ever happen in the other edges of the multiverse. So, we’ll call that picture number one and here we go, 2014, holy shit, it’s really the future now.

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Busy

I didn’t go away again, I swear. I have been busy, which is ridiculous when you factor in the fact that I’m a part time bookstore clerk, my kids are “grown up” and, um, some other reason why my being busy is impossible in today’s America. However! It is not true. I have in fact been ridiculously busy because I have a giant Project. I am, in fact, enjoying all the fun and games of moving without actually leaving the house: I’m completely redesigning my house.

To that end, I moved my bedroom to where the computer room used to be and moved the computer room to where my bedroom used to be. This necessitated emptying the computer room, which was alarmingly full for a small room and then painting it and painting it, of course, did not turn out to be the simple, cheap one day job I had in mind. I have only a few things to say about the whole painting experience:

1. Antique white should not be beige. Corollary: OK I should have opened the damn paint before I got home.

2. Making lines of beige and red and black and using a sponge roller to kind of mix them over a strange and heinous blue that’s been there umpteen years does not, in fact, produce a deathless work of art that looks like storm clouds gathering on the horizon. Shocking, I know.

3. Beige will not magically start looking better even if you paint the entire room, including the stormy masterpiece, and use the whole gallon up. And beige over blue turns a kind of disconcerting dirty orange.

4. Light purple, even really light purple that you buy late at night at Lowes when you’re practically in tears, which is probably why you didn’t really grasp this, is still pretty goddamn purple.

And 5. Even though Auds came in and said, “whoa! This is my dream room – when I was 8.” and even though OK, there is a certain terrible Disney Princess feel to the color, I have gotten to the point in the last week where I actually really like it.  I painted all the trim gray – it turns out that if you want the exact gray of a Nantucket barn (if they still have barns on Nantucket; I’m basing this on some dimly remembered 19th century New England painting) you could do worse than to mix a little black with Disney princess purple – and that toned it down a lot. I’m hanging art, bit by bit, that helps too. And I gave the hell in and hung up dark purple curtains because, fuck it, I might be 50 outside but I’m probably 8 inside and my purple room with the purple curtains is pretty purply awesome.

Meanwhile, since I don’t spend enough time organizing books at work, I then had to clean and organize about 1000 books. I threw out a lot. I took a lot in to work to trade for other books (yes, I know. Me working at a bookstore is pretty much like sending the crackhead to work at the crack factory) and yet I still don’t have enough bookshelf space.  This should be impossible but then books and bookshelves do tend to break the space/time continuum a bit – it is known. Hee. Naturally, I have also now gone deep into a cataloging stupor and there are piles of books everywhere, waiting to be somehow reunited with other books by that author that I know are in some other – totally full – bookcase somewhere.

And I am rehanging art and cleaning things – everything, but everything, was covered with five years worth of horrible dog hair and dust and dead stink bugs, bleargh – and moving things around and doing things like opening boxes I haven’t touched for five years. This is how I wasted an entire afternoon reading my great 2nd cousin Louis’ memoirs (“we threw 2 or 3 small Cubans over the bar”) and my father’s age 8 diary (marble composition notebooks are eerily the same as they were in 1934 but not as many things are grand or swell) and my something cousin DeWitt’s booklet Leaves and Shoots of the Atkinson family, which contains four pages on a General who might or might not be related to us but DeWitt didn’t want to waste the research so he put it in. This is all fascinating but meanwhile, I am stumbling around the boxes and piles of books and the box of 750 phone chargers for phones we haven’t owned since the 90s. And this is just Phase One.

Yes, Phase One. There will be a Phase Two. I am eager to get to Phase Two, now, because Phase One has gotten piddly and boring and horrible and I want to get back to big, giant and horrible, but I’m not allowing myself to touch Phase Two until Phase One is completed.

Phase Two involves converting the living room into a dining room, or at least a room with a big table in it and moving the couch to the new computer room and moving the shelves in the kitchen to the other side of the kitchen and then, somehow, some way, making new shelves and countertops in the kitchen, all without spending any money. My entire budget for this remodeling has been spent – I had budgeted, like, $40 but I spent more than that on paint. I am not fazed. I have plastic shelves on the porch that I think might work out okay in the kitchen and I think Phase Two is going to be SWELL! And I might paint the living room!

Probably somebody should stop – or shoot – me now.

Oh and in other news, I have also spent an inordinate amount of time gnashing my teeth and wailing and rending my garments about the complete disaster at Flickr. I am so angry and so basically distraught over the bullshit that Yahoo is pulling over there. I’ll do a whole post on it, maybe – many others have – and meanwhile, the whole thing has disrupted the hell out of Phase One, because I’m moving all 10,000 of my pictures. Probably to 500px but while I like it there so far, it seems a little too intimidating and professional to put, you know, all my pictures there. Although I may yet but still, goddamnit, Flickr was a wonderful thing until Yahoo decided to fuck it all up last week and I will miss it but I no longer trust them as far as I could throw them, so that’s that for me, I’m afraid.

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So, What is This 6000 Onions Crap, Anyway?

Late at night – well, okay, early at night, because I am old now dammit, and I go to bed at like 10:00 – I find that doing math in my head helps me get to sleep. Sometimes I think about how much money various capitalists are making off the backs of their struggling workers and sometimes I think about how much money I could conceivably make if I had, say, some struggling workers to exploit and also possibly a large barn and some chain saws. (That is known as the running a haunted house for $$profit dream and it’s a good one.) Sometimes, I count up all the onions I have ever peeled and chopped in my life. And sometimes my math is a little shaky, because I can never get the same number of onions again. I think it goes something like this:

I have chopped, say, 3 – 5 onions a week for 30 years. What? Onions are in everything and I used to actually be one of those people who made that “dinner” thing just about every night. I’m not one of those people anymore and my onion consumption has gone way down but still, figure it this way: 3 onions x 50 (the extra 2 weeks makes the math too hard) weeks = 150 onions                                                                                                                              150 onions x 30 = 7500 onions and                                                                                                   where the hell did I get the 6000 number, anyway?                                                                      I no longer remember but 6000 Onions sounds better than 7500 Onions and no matter how you chop them, it’s one hell of a lot of onions.

In other news, it’s been three years. Hmmm. When I went to look back at the Hangover Journals I was actually surprised that it was still going on in 2010. I kind of thought I had stopped in 2008 – I think that was because in my mind, my life pretty much stopped in 2008. It has been, as I mentioned, a very long, mostly very bad, five years. It’s kind of oddly fitting that I came back to the blogosphere on the same day as (the vastly more talented than me) Allie Brosh and if you would like to read or have not yet read her extremely insightful and very damn funny takes on crippling depression, here’s part one and here, a year later, is part two.

Depression and anxiety – I have both, have multiple formal diagnoses, have had them for years, and they’re not going away anytime soon, like, actually, probably ever, thanks – are fucking beasts and I use the word beast in the new 21st century form of the term which combines the old fear “It is the BEAST! Flee to the forest, my children while I attempt to hold him off with my trusty stave!” with a certain new respect and awe “I am the fucking BEAST of the line, and they fucking respect that.” (tm my son the cook.)  Yeah, you must fear the beast but you can kind of admire him as well because the beast is so very, very good at derailing your life and making you think that it’s all perfectly normal.

I am just now beginning to admit that it is slightly possible, maybe just barely possible, that playing Minecraft for, basically, 6 – 8 hours a day for 3 years is not quite normal and maybe, just maybe, might not have been the mentally healthiest activity I have ever engaged in. It’s still the best game in the history of the universe and I am proud, yes, proud of my cities and towns and varied fantabulous Minecraft creations (which you can see some older ones of here gathering tumbleweeds and dust) but meanwhile it would appear that my real life was proceeding without me. Now I am kind of trying to wake up. This blog is going to help me wake up and, well, we shall see what we shall see.

And I’m still going to play Minecraft here and there, only not as much. This is in fact easier than it sounds because I broke it by discovering how to cheat and once you’ve started playing in creative mode, where you’re invisible to the monsters and have unlimited supplies to build with, it frankly gets kind of boring.

 

 

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