Some ham already

“I have the midnights,” I said. The midnights is what I call the overwhelming wave of hunger which I experience nightly at, you guessed it, 11:30 p.m. (The midnights extend for half an hour in either direction around midnight. Wait, did you not guess that?)

“It’s 11:18,” Gene said.

“The midnights are twelve minutes early tonight,” I said. “But they are very real. Could I please have a crumpet?”

“What’s a crumpet?”

“It’s not a real thing. It’s just another word for an English muffin,” I said, because that is my story about crumpets and I am sticking to it. “Will you get me one?”

“No, I don’t think you really want that.” Gene does not approve of the midnights and indeed exerts all of his considerable influence to prevent me from indulging in them. Ostensibly this is out of concern for my own health and unbroken sleep, but I think concern about crumbs in the bed also plays a part.

“I do,” I said earnestly. “I do really want that. Can you please go get me one?”

“When you say ‘get you one’…”

“We don’t have any in the house. Can you please go to the store and get me one? And can you get me some ham and brie to put on it?” (The midnights take a very specific form: bread, cheese, ham. This is what I want to eat five minutes before I sleep.)

I waited. Gene continued reading The Encyclopedia of Country Living, no doubt dreaming of that post-apocalyptic day when his survival skills have secured him a place in the new society and I and my midnight whining have been banished to the Poet Pit, or wherever they will keep people like me in the new world. Eventually I was forced to give up and go back to reading my English mystery novel, dreaming of the day when my ability to order crumpets and eat a late meal will make me a leading light in the British aristocracy and Gene and his Encyclopedia are relegated to the Peasant Pit, or wherever they keep husbands who would rather research how to milk a cow than go get their lovely wives some ham already.

 

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Fa la la la la

Gene and I got an eight foot Christmas tree this year. It’s a beast. Every time I walk into the living room, it’s like the spirit of Christmas grabs me by the throat and shakes me until my brain rattles in my skull. You guys, it is so festive and great! (Ow, my brain.)

I love this season so much. You can bake all kinds of things with cinnamon and nutmeg in them, the house smells like noble fir and everything is SUPPOSED to be covered with glitter, good taste be damned. Also, my mom has a lovable tradition of trying to puncture Gene’s dignity by making him wear felt reindeer antlers in photos. She seems to look at Gene and his dignity as she would a guest who insisted on keeping his overcoat on in the living room. She is determined to make him relax and feel at home, and if that means making him wear the bright red antlers with the bells, so be it.

Well, enough of this. Today I must be about the business of the season: I need gift tags, boxes, cards and eggnog, which I do not especially like but I feel like I should offer Gene some recompense for having to endure another year of enforced antlers. Also, it’s possible the stores will have other kinds of silly hats which might fit him. It turns out I am not such a fan of holiday dignity myself.

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The Mogwimples Walk To Town

Yesterday we went to see Into the Woods, which was being staged by the Alameda Children’s Musical Theater. (Because we will see any production of any Sondheim play. Period.)

“You know this is a cast of kids, right?” I warned as we walked over to the theater. “Ages seven through seventeen, it says on the website.”

“Sure,” said Gene.

“I think we’re going to have to pretend to be the parents of a kid who auditioned and wasn’t cast,” I said.* “Our little…Thornton. Thornton Mogwimple.”

“Should we refer to each other as Mr. and Mrs. Mogwimple?”

“Yes. Except I shall call you just Mogwimple, like in a Jane Austen novel.”

“Maybe our kid’s name is Thnornton.”

“No. That’s definitely wrong.”

“Thnornton would have played that role much better than this clown. Our Thnornton was robbed.”

“Stop it, Mogwimple!”

“Heh.”

*Marvel for a moment that I could easily be the parent of a seven year old. OR A SEVENTEEN YEAR OLD.

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Fun with Craigslist

Here’s how my post begins:

Curtain Rods (alameda):

We are giving away traverse curtain rods.

And here’s how the first phone call went:

“Hi, do you still have the curtains?”

“The curtain rods? Yeah.”

“Oh, but what about curtains?”

“No, we’re just giving away curtain rods.”

“Oh, I thought it was curtains.”

It’s curtains for you, illiterate Craigslist monkey.

But seriously, someone take these rods out of my house already.

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Writing this blog post was an outstanding achievement. For all of us.

Listening to Jonsi’s album Go makes you feel like every single thing you’re doing has tremendous emotional significance. It feels like you’re living the climactic scene in a film: lovers are reuniting, a scrappy band of upstarts is defeating the mega-corporation, there’s a four-hour montage of babies laughing. These songs tell you that everything in the world is exactly right because you have chosen to clean this toilet. Right here. Right now. I almost cried watching the preview for that stupid Matt Damon zoo movie just because it was backed by one of these songs, and I suddenly realized that sitting in the theater watching a movie preview was the most important and uplifting thing anyone has ever done.

Seriously. I challenge you to finish your menial chore, which you performed while listening to this album, and not feel like you’ve just saved humanity from something bad. Probably something that came from either outer space or our own scientific hubris.

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We can’t even think of a word that rhymes.

I set off to do some Christmas shopping yesterday with a heavy heart, dreading the Christmas carols that every store would be playing. I love the carols, but they do tend to stick in your brain teeth; putting those songs in your head is like giving peanut butter to a dog. (Side note: have you ever given peanut butter to a dog? Hilarious. Hours of fun.) Anyway, imagine my delight to find that my favorite store was playing “School’s Out for Summer.” They’re a second-hand shop, so maybe it makes sense to play songs from a previous season. Or maybe it was because it was so warm and sunny outside that even my thin linen jacket was too hot to walk around in. Hello, California winter, welcome to you! I’m over my need for sweaters. You may remain. Anyway, I get enough winter in the house, which compensates for its lovely summer coolness by being a big old igloo in winter.  But now that I know what heat actually costs, I’ve kind of adjusted. 62 degrees is completely acceptable. 65 is almost too warm. And, of course, when I get too cold in the house I can always just step outside into this sunshiny goodness. School’s out forever!

I’m sorry, I know there should be a good wrapping-up joke in here, but I actually do have more shopping to do and I gotta get moving. Excuse me.

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Nature’s best friends

Kris: Are you awake?

Gene: Okay.

Kris: I have an important question.

Gene: Okay.

Kris: Do you think that the more intelligent species on Earth like elephants and dolphins will keep evolving to be smarter and smarter, until eventually they form their own civilizations, and then they would be our friends?

Gene: I don’t think so. That would take billions of years, and we’ll probably have destroyed ourselves or the planet by then.

Kris: But MAYBE we wouldn’t.

Gene: Maybe. But I think humans might feel threatened by a civilization of intelligent elephants.

Kris: But maybe in billions of years, humans will also evolve to become more friendly.

Gene: Okay, sure. Then it might happen.

Kris: Hm…pigs are smart, too. Oh no, what if it’s PIGS who evolve? They’ll never be friends with the species who used to eat them!

Gene: Maybe they will.

Kris: No. They’re never getting past that.

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You’re only as old as your conversation with your husband reveals you to be.

I got home around 4:30 yesterday and made myself a meal, since I’d sort of skipped lunch and my internal clock was all off. I was just sitting down with it at 5:00 when Gene unexpectedly came in, about an hour before he usually does. I panicked, naturally. Here I was, draped under two afghans, eating dinner at 5:00 in front of an old episode of 30 Rock, like a sad octogenarian, while my youthful husband was just stopping at home on his way to a 25-person dinner party.

“Don’t look at me!” I yelled. “I’m hideous!”

“I’m confused,” Gene said.

“I am eating an early dinner in front of the TV like an old lady, and you caught me,” I said. “But you should know that I went out today! I had friend time!”

“What did you do?”

“Michele and I went to see…the…Muppet movie,” I said, “and, oh God, it was a matinee. I am eighty years old.”

I just re-read this, and I’ve realized it’s all wrong. We DID have this conversation, but what I remember now is that the first thing I actually said when he walked in the door is “Why isn’t the sound on the computer working?”

Yes, friends. While enjoying my pre-sunset dinner and preparing to watch a sitcom episode containing absolutely no sex, violence or Language, I also had a complaint about my electronics which I had to ask my more youthful relative to fix. And, yes, the problem was that I’d accidentally pushed a wrong button on the stereo. Infernal device! Malarky.

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And also

Because even I am tired of my own whining about being sick, allow me to steer this in a more holiday-themed direction with a short list of stuff I am thankful for this year:

  • French rap. No matter how foul your mood is, listening to Frenchmen trying to sound all cool and tough will make you smile. It’s just adorable.
  • The end of the third Twilight movie. Say what you like about the franchise, but as a recently married grown woman, listening to Edward tell the newly-affianced Bella that, far from being Bridezilla, she is instead being just TOO generous with her wedding planning and thinking just TOO MUCH about other people is richly rewarding. It could only be better for me, wish-fulfillment-wise, if he were also holding out a container of salted caramel ice cream and begging her to go watch sixteen episodes of 30 Rock in a row while he hangs some bookshelves for her.
  • My new fuzzy boot-shaped slippers. Yes, a muppet was skinned to make these slippers, but it was worth it. So worth it. Especially if it was Elmo, because you know I hate that guy.
  • My discovery that the pumpkin-spiced lattes at Starbucks are only amazing and life-changing the first time you try one. After that, they are way too sweet. Expensive addiction successfully avoided.
  • Pomegranates are in season. I love pomegranate seeds. It’s the closest you can come to eating jewelry without Gene getting all upset and prying your jaw open and trying to get you to spit out your garnet earrings, but you had to put them in your mouth because they were just…so…sparkly…

What are you thankful for?

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Dressing your pig

For you loyal six readers of Carthage, I apologize for the lack of updates lately. My recent illness wore me out and all my spare energy has been going to Thanksgiving planning and trying to hit my daily word count for NaNo. It’s going well…ish. I mean, I’m on track to finish 50,000 words at the end of November, even though they’re 50,000 words of a ridiculous under-achieving romance novel. When I go back to re-read, I disdain my prose and much prefer the comments of my own snarky internal editor, which I add in bold type just after I write any particularly repellent paragraph.

An example: This is simply wretched. I don’t know what you think is happening here, but no one comes to a romance novel looking for an abstract meditation on the meaning of communal life. You picked this genre, so work inside its limitations. Putting a bow tie on a hog doesn’t make a prom date.

Helpfully, I added a second paragraph for my future self to read right after this one: Your prose is the hog. The thoughtful and therefore out-of-place paragraph is the bow tie.

Oh, the fun I do have. At least when I’m talking to my future self in a Word document, I’m not walking around the house talking to the toaster and stuff. I’ve spent a long and fairly lonely couple of weeks on sick-leave from my social life, and I’ve formed some important relationships with the inanimate objects that surround me. But tomorrow my family arrives and I can spend four days talking to real people! I am very excited. Although I hope I don’t waste all my A-material on real people and can save some of my inspiration for being mean to myself in print.

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