Bite me, dickweed.
Bite me, dickweed.
And yes, before all y’all internet doctors start, my first thought when I started to sprout tiny angry welts all over was “DAMN I WILL HAVE TO FIND A NEW SPORT AGAIN.” Second and third suspects after “attack of the pool water” were the body wash I used in the locker room—not one of my usual delicate brands of Fairy Kiss And Unicorn Blood For Whiny Babies With Skin That Tarnishes When Exposed To Goddamn Air Like It’s Silver Or Something, but a scented type that comes in a convenient travel size—and the new brand of lotion I used. Yes, we will be testing these hypotheses, but the I think I have already found the offender.
It’s my goddamn allergy pill.
Or lack thereof. While rummaging around for some antihistamines to slow the itchpocalypse, I remembered that Mom had a similar problem when she forgot to take hers. And I have let mine run out this week.
Which means that I now have two pills with a protection racket going on, where the withdrawal effects are worse than never starting the pills in the first place. They’re little chemical versions of the mafia. Rotten bastards.
But even though this may suggest that I can still go swimming, it really didn’t do much for my week. Maybe I should just cancel it altogether.
*We try to help out around the house, but after a lifetime of being useless little kids, it’s hard to break that habit of taking care of our immediate needs and either leaving other things for someone else to do, or noticing them only when they’re pointed out to us. Fortunately, I seem to do better at seeing what needs doing when Mom’s not around.
**My sister and I were thrilled with the outcome of Men’s Skating, right down to Lysacek winning and Plushenko raising a tantrum because silver is a blow to his giant thunderous sun-blotting ego. We would have been disappointed if he hadn’t pitched a fit, because one of the reasons we love him is that he’s a haughty diva who we’d probably kick in the teeth if we ever met him in person. He’s got a right to be a bit egotistical—his performance here was lackluster, but he’s a damn fine skater—but we trust him to take it and run.
Blah Kinda Day
Jan. 18th, 2010 06:25 pm– Yesterday , for some reason, I was tremendously out of sorts at work. In one case this became a literal thing, since I sorted half a cartful of DVDs and then went off to help another person check stuff in. When I got back to the cart I found my manager had unsorted it in order to find something. So I had to re-sort it, then shelve DVDs, which I really hate because my cartful of DVDs tends to collect browsing patrons like seagulls around a garbage barge. I politely tell them they can look at the DVDs after I shelve them because otherwise I get buried, so they wind up hovering around behind me watching me shelve. It’s obnoxious as hell.
Also, while I was doing that the same manager went and shelved the fiction cart I had queued up. I was looking forward to doing the fiction. Nobody ever chases me around to browse that cart. It only made me poutier.
– I think I managed to give myself cellulitis in my heel—there’s a knob on it like a giant callus, but it hurts like when you poke one of those deep zits when I stand on it. My best guess is I got too excited while trimming calluses.
I’ve been walking on tiptoes for two days when I’m barefoot; for some reason my shoes distribute the weight so it’s not on the thing. According to WebMD, I am going to die a horrible death alone and afraid, secure in the knowledge that nobody loves me, unless I go see a doctor YESTERDAY JEEZUS CHRIST WHY AM I STILL AT THE COMPUTER WASTING PRECIOUS SECONDS.
It already feels better, though, so perhaps, just perhaps, WebMD is exaggerating just slightly. Imagine that.
– I had a whole mess of crazy dreams and night sweats last night, even though I took my Fukitol. Mostly they were the usual fare, although there was also some dude called “Gary” who kept popping up through the dreams and delivering non-sequiturs, to which I replied “Shut up, Gary” and went back to whatever I was doing.
– One of the dreams involved shopping for art supplies, which I am going to do because I got me a paycheck, but these art supplies were all ridiculously expensive. Like, a length of copper jewelry wire was $63,485. Seems I’ve added to my repertoire of Dreams With Really Obvious Meanings.
– Goddamn, y'all, Peet's 2009 Holiday Breakfast Blend is one terrific tea. I am going to make myself a strong cup and give my hands a break to go read for a while. Perhaps later when my hands are less fatiguey and spongey from typing up Doctors!, I will tell you about these books, because they're quite good!.
*It was also Pajama Time last summer for a little while, but that was a fluke; late January is official Pajama Time.
Tonight's Forecast Is Promising ...
Dec. 7th, 2009 10:58 pmI mean, here I keep extolling the virtues of living around here, including big piles of fluffy snow, and we keep getting this lousy half-inch dusting that mostly seems to serve as a conductor for vast amounts of crud. It’s wet and nasty.
This is not real snow. This is Eugene snow. This is the kind of snow my mile-high buddy Josh and I used to sit around and complain about. This is the gross, dirty, February snow I am only willing to allow because the snow in December is awesome. So where is it?
At least it’s cloudy. I get sort of jumpy when there are too many clear days in a row. Not sure why, but I feel safe under clouds.
If nothing else, it’ll make it harder for space to aim the rocks at me.
When I’ve worked for hours on a dress, fumbling with the unwieldy fabric and battling with eyestrain, only to try it on the doll and realize that, once again, the shoulders and sides of the dress JUST DON’T FIT.
Laurel may have to wear a non-red dress for Christmas, because while she really needs some red in her wardrobe, at this point, I’m too bitter to give it another shot.
A Healthy Coating Of Earth
Aug. 22nd, 2009 07:39 pmYes, we bathed the cats today. This is a big deal—our cats are the semi-feral Outdoor Cat type who rarely get dunked—except, you know, in extenuating circumstances. And the circumstances have become extenuating—Fern, especially, has spent pretty much the entire summer just sitting around in dirt. It’s her new hobby. Every time I go outside, somewhere in the front garden I can see a big ball of increasingly filthy fuzz just meatloafin’ around.
We were going to let it go till the end of the month, but Fern’s other hobby is meatloafin’ in the clean laundry hampers.
“I think,” Mom said, stepping out of the washroom with a re-washed stack of jeans, “that we should probably not wait any longer.”
Charlotte got a bath too—while she doesn’t trail around a Pigpen-worthy cloud of debris like her sister, she does like to pull off the heads of small woodland creatures, and that deserves some washing.
Anyway, on Bath Day the drawbacks of irregular schedules is made abundantly clear: perhaps if we bathed them more often they’d be more sanguine about it. As it is, however, there’s a reason we refer to it as “waterboarding the cats.” But with Mom and me on actual cat wrangling duty and Dad taking his job of cat taunting very seriously, we got ’em looking more or less halfway decent.
They’ve spent the rest of the day nursing their injured dignity* and, probably, wondering what they did to incur our wrath. As for me, I’ve spent the rest of mine nursing a couple of gashes down my arm.
Pets are great.
*By composure grooming and, of course, rolling around in the dirt.
Anti-Inflammatories
Aug. 13th, 2009 03:42 pmSo let’s say, to pick a purely random hypothetical example, that you have just CRUSHED YOUR MIDDLE FINGER when it got slammed between a door and the massive unwieldy book drop cart. The blunt trauma means your tissues will soon be swelling and the finger will become tender, and you figure cold compresses would work.
Me, I like to use refrigerated soda cans.
This has several advantages over ice—cold, but not enough for real ischemia, it’s nice and smooth, and it’s much less messy and wet and sticky than ice packs.
Plus, you can drink the soda afterward.
Not sure when I discovered this, but it’s worked nicely for me. This hypothetical soft tissue damage should clear up in no time.
(no subject)
Aug. 8th, 2009 12:46 pmFortunately, as this has been a bit of an ongoing problem, I have an old pair in an easily-found spot. And while they’re an old prescription, these don’t have an ever-expanding lump of superglue in the middle. I’d say it’s a fair tradeoff.
I’m sick of these invisible bastards anyway—prescription’s still fuzzy. I hereby declare that I shall be getting glasses I can see with, and perhaps I shall also get contacts! After all, even though my eyes don’t work, they are quite nice.
Raw Penicillin
Jul. 23rd, 2009 04:51 pmHAMBURGER BUN: Damn you kids! Get off my lawn!
AMELIA: … Hmm. You do seem to be getting on a bit. Any mold?
HAMBURGER BUN: Millennium hand and shrimp!
AMELIA: Nah, you look a little stale, but okay. Let’s make some sammich!
(AMELIA makes a nice ham and Swiss with mayo and takes a big bite)
THE UNMISTAKABLE FLAVOR OF STEALTH MOLD: You didn’t say hello to me!
AMELIA: AAARRGHPTOOIE!
HAMBURGER BUN: Buggrit.
So I have made a new sammich on some bread that’s in its prime, but now I’m afraid to eat it, even after a thorough inspection. Damn. I was looking forward to this.
How Was YOUR Morning?
Jul. 13th, 2009 10:01 amWhen you have a violent flu.
Our first patient came, stayed just long enough to barf all over everything, then vanished back into the shadows from whence he came. Or, at least, to head off to see the sort of doctor who deals with swine flu or whatever the hell he’s got. Leaving us to clean up.
Also, our travelin' aunt has come to Salt Lake City, evidently for the express purpose of criticizing everything we do.
Ever have one of those days where you’re pretty sure your best bet would be to just stay in bed? Because I am having one of those right now.
Consistency
May. 22nd, 2009 03:05 pm- Dither about whether to go out job-hunting or to wait for the results of the interview I’ve just gone to.
- Volunteer to go with my brother to beat back the demonically spreading aspens in the backyard.
- Nearly have a heart attack when the cat bats at the clippers.
- Go inside, stoically ignoring random pain shooting through skin. This is a normal response to being around junipers for me—merely brushing up against juniper causes me skin irritation and pain.
- Notice that pinky is particularly painful.
- See enormous splinter lodged in pinky.
- In the way of Schrödinger’s thought experiments or Wile E. Coyote physics, register WAY MOAR pain now that I can see the splinter.
- Dig splinter out of finger with carelessly sterilized needle and tweezers—while answering the phone.
- Decide that that is quite enough yard work for the day.
The other thing we learned is that even a shirt and a bra cannot protect your nipple from a big splat of scalding water.
OW.
You win again, hot water.
*sigh*
Well, since we can’t watch that either, we’ll have to find something else to watch. Thank y’all for the suggestions in the entry a while ago. I realized after reading a few that I had neglected to mention I have almost no patience for anime—I have enjoyed exactly one anime show in the last ten years, and that was Cowboy Bebop. Avatar may strain my endurance enough.
Meanwhile, I’m going to have to find something else to fall asleep to if I’m having trouble at night. It’s gotta be something mostly plotless and spoken. I suppose a random Rifftrax would work okay.
But MST3k works better. Damn you, Viacom!
Astronomy!
Feb. 1st, 2009 09:42 pmAnd as long as we’re on the subject, can someone explain to me why the reclassification of Pluto as a dwarf planet was such a big hairy deal? What I figured was that we found a lot of other Plutos, and it seemed a little ridiculous to keep one as a planet. Was it some sort of emotional attachment? The problem of having to retcon all the Magic Schoolbus-type books and shows? The sudden obsolescence of a poetic mnemonic? Or what?
Anyway, yeah, I’ve been on an astronomy kick lately—to the point where I was wondering if I should learn that instead of ASL interpreting or midwifery or medical technicianing.** Partly it’s because I’ve been worldbuilding again, partly it’s just my own interests. But yeah, I’ve been watching cosmic shows a lot lately.*** I like astronomy a lot—it makes me feel happy all over.
Plus, I get to fangirl awesome people like Neil up there. You know you’re in a good place where you can’t choose your favorite astronomer/astrophysicist because you have entirely too many of them.
*Which makes me wonder if this was a letter-writing campaign from a whole class of third graders, because that suggests to me that Ms. Wiggins or someone heard about Pluto's reclassification and was incensed and stormed into class one day with a bunch of paper and crayons and said, “Class, this bad man is trying to say Pluto isn’t a planet! Let’s write letters to him saying our opinion—which of course is that Pluto is a planet, because I just spent the last three weeks teaching this unit on the solar system, dangit, and I’m not about to start telling you they changed their minds because we had a hard enough time naming the stupid planets and the mnemonic is already memorized!”
**Why yes, I am my own distraction!
***The
A Great Fall
Jan. 12th, 2009 09:58 pmOh my GOD that was a spectacular trip. Caught my ankle on the chair leg and fell over two dining room chairs and a table corner. Dishes rattled. The cat fled. The family screamed. Tea spilled. A hubcap went rolling away. I’m pretty sure the shock wave changed weather patterns. It's a wonder I didn't burst into flames.
Also, somehow in the intricate dance of gravity and the human body, I not only bruised both knees; I also managed to whack my boob on something.
I’m gonna feel that tomorrow.
The Feast Of Saint Emo
Jan. 4th, 2009 12:53 amWell, I only have a job for two more weeks, the holidays are over, my brother’s leaving us to go back to school in a couple of days, I have no fingernail, and it’s still winter. Life is something of a bummer right now.
So over dinner tonight, we discussed this and decided that we need another damn holiday to give us something to look forward to. Valentine’s Day doesn’t count, since after elementary school it’s all shmarmy couples, stressed out boyfriends, wad o’ diamonds commercials, and pissed-off singles. We need something all-inclusive. And something that isn't commemorative, like MLK Jr. Day, which is important but not exactly a fun-filled holiday you look forward to; it's more somber.
So I have decided. Given that the third Monday of January is supposedly the most depressing day of the year, I hereby declare it the Feast of Saint Emo. We will decorate with black and blue streamers, tear drops, and frowny faces. We will light black candles, listen to whiny indy music and sad love songs, maybe watch March of the Penguins or Hamlet. Maybe we can strew fake ferns and willows around.
We’re still trying to think of traditional time-honored foods. So far we’ve got pomegranates (actually traditionally and time-honoredly emo) and ice cream right out of the bucket, as well as lots of cups of tea.
Clearly, this is a prototype holiday right now, but I believe this could catch on. So I say to you: who is with me? Who thinks we need another holiday to get us though this? And what suggestions do you have for ways to celebrate our Pity Party on the Feast of Saint Emo? Sure, traditions are organic, but they have to start somewhere, and I’m starting this one now!
ETA: After some thought, my sister and I are going with our original plan of having it January 24, to avoid MLK Day. So it's moved back to then!
Snow Trekkin'
Dec. 20th, 2008 10:11 pmWell! This year’s edition of the Annual Holiday Disaster has come early!
Everything was going fine until yesterday at about 1:45 pm, when about 4 more inches of snow slammed into the ground with an audible WHUD. The various members of the Treehouse family had been out doing errands, but seeing signs of a classic Mountain Passes Closing scenario, we all decided to regroup and head for home. The last to get back was Mom, who had elected to stop by the liquor store first.
MOM: I figure if we get snowed in for days, we will at least have the essentials. I got rum, gin, and vodka.
DAD: Gin? What, were you going to mix us up some nice gin and tonics? “Oh, that snow shoveling looks like thirsty work! Come sit on the porch and have an ice cold G&T!”
MOM: (with dignity) I was thinking for martinis.
So we pretty much cancelled the rest of the day. I called in to work, and we spent the evening reading, playing video games, and talking before watching a nice comfy Christmas movie* by the glow of our ugly bubble-lighted tree. Then Dad and my brother went out to take one last look to see if the snow was still on the offensive.
A moment later, my sister answered the phone. It was Dad.
MY SISTER: How’s it looking out there?
DAD: Actually, the snow has cleared up! And the river and waterfall look particularly lovely under the streetlight!
MY SISTER: Dad, we do not live near a river or a waterfall.
DAD: We do now! The water main on the next street up broke.
MY SISTER: … We’ll get our boots.
By the time we got out there, Dad and my brother had built a barricade of snow and bricks in our driveway, which happens to be facing the bottom of the hill the water was running down. They had moved on to getting shouted at by Mrs. Next-Door-Left, who was taking her shouting job very seriously: “OUR HOUSE IS FLOODING OVER HERE! QUIT SHOVELING THE WATER IN OUR DIRECTION! I CALLED THE WATER PEOPLE BUT NO ONE ANSWERED!”
We decided that we had to unblock the gutter and get the water flowing—while the drawback to living under the water main was that water flows downhill, that became a plus when we realized we also live on what I will describe as, for lack of a better term, a freaking mountain. My brother and I also decided to wake up the Next-Door-Rights, in order to let them know that their driveway and garage were becoming a lake. Unfortunately, Mr. Next-Door-Right isn’t particularly enthusiastic, so his entire contribution to the project was five minutes’ shoveling snow into his Next-Door-Right’s yard, declaring a job well done, and wandering back inside.**
Meanwhile, the water guy and the snow plow had both come. The water guy proceeded to hold his map upside-down, while Mr. Plow industriously plowed all the slush we had just shoveled out of the gutter back into it and blocked up the water flow again.
And chaos reigned.
“Curse you, plow! I JUST SHOVELED THAT!”
“Goddamn, these boots are ruined!”
“We can’t let it flow too fast, or it just pulls in more slush and blocks up!”
“Don’t slow it down too much, or it’ll freeze and block up!”
“Hey, Next-Door-Rights? You want to maybe help out here?”
“QUIT SHOVELING INTO OUR DRIVEWAY! YOU IN THE TRUCK WITH THE ORANGE LIGHTS, SHUT THE WATER OFF! WE’RE FLOODING HERE!”
“All right, it’s in the next guy’s yard. I’m off to bed!”
“Holy shit the plow is coming back! And we just got this slush cleared from his last pass!”
“FLOODING!”
“We should probably clear the Next-Door-Rights’ gutter. It seems to be pooling here for some reason.”
“Don’t let it go too fast!”
“Or slow!”
“Have they shut the water off?”
“THERE’S KLINGONS ON THE STARBOARD BOW, STARBOARD BOW, STARBOARD BOW, JIM!”
“You know,” I remarked to my brother as we went around for the third de-slushing of the Next-Door-Rights, “after all this, Mom had sure better be waiting inside with some ice cold gin and tonics.”
“Perhaps without the tonic,” he agreed.
After the fourth round along their gutter, it was flowing without obstruction pretty well, and we judged the flow was slowing down, so they must have turned it off. Mr. Plow had given up, and Mrs. Next-Door-Left’s voice gave out. Now all there was to do was keep an eye on the water level, and check tomorrow to see if we would need a plow or just a Zamboni for the street.
And, of course, go inside and get a nice hot cup of “Russian tea.”*** It was better than any gin and tonic. Or, at least, warmer.
*The Dark Knight.
**He doesn’t like that neighbor.
***A gross recipe featuring a mix of Lipton instant tea, Tang, sugar, spices, and peach Schnapps.
Adventures in Retail
Dec. 16th, 2008 07:23 pmToday I got to work and my manager announced rather dejectedly that we were getting rid of all the men’s clothing*—organize it, box it, and send it off to a farm where it’ll have lots of room to frolic and play with the other shirts and pants another store that may be able to sell them better.
MANAGER: What this means for you is that you get to undress all the male mannequins!
AMELIA: Oh, sure! There are, what, fifteen? No problem!
Okay, I had no idea undressing men took that much heavy lifting.. Although I think when you’re doing it more recreationally, getting their pants off probably doesn’t involve reaching under their thigh and unscrewing a large bolt and then lifting the torso off the flagpole they’re stuck to.** Also most men can move their arms, so you don’t have to pull them off to get their shirts off. And mannequins don’t do much to facilitate the process—and men’s are also tough to get a grip on, especially with no arms, so I did a fair amount of wrestling.
And that would have been less weird if the manufacturers had been less weird—they’re your standard mannequins that go from neck to mid-thigh, man-shaped, not very detailed, except for two very important parts. First, the ass: the most lovingly sculpted, tight ass I have ever seen on anything that isn’t Michelangelo’s David. And as for the second, allow me to give you a succinct visual: David Bowie in Labyrinth.
I think this was the God of Irony’s revenge for my taking extra care to look nice and professional today.
Also, there is no way to pose those mannequins without scaring the customers. But at this point, we just don’t care.
I did, however, name the mannequins. Mostly things like Smash Lampjaw, Crud Bonemeal, and Beef Hardpec, but one I called Stephen Colbert because he was a Formidable Opponent. That display stand did not want to give up those pants, and that was only the beginning of my troubles ...
Discussion Question: Why are those Levi’s commercials all centered around finding opportunities to take ones pants off? You would think a commercial for jeans would show the person declining to take their pants off in the face of a great opportunity, simply because they prefer wearing the pants, wouldn’t you?
*[Steely Dan] Cuz we’re goin’ outta business … everything must go! [/Steely Dan]
**I have tried to make this passage not sound fetishy, innuendoy, or dirty, but there is no way to do that. So I gave up and stopped trying.