Craigslist

Here was the first part of my ad:

“This coffeemaker and I had a little misunderstanding, wherein I left it on all day accidentally. It has a safety shut-off feature, but before it shut itself off it seems to have made a little hole in its bottom. Now when you pour water into the well, it comes out the bottom. It’s my belief that this hole could be easily fixed by an industrious person such as yourself. The coffeemaker still turns on just fine, so I bet if you patch the hole it will work again. I DO NOT KNOW THIS FOR SURE. But it’s free, so what do you really have to lose?”

Yesterday afternoon, an obliging woman came and took it away.

Since then, she’s left me two startled voice mails to say that the bottom leaks, and do I have the receipt?

Lady, YOU GOT IT FOR FREE.

The interesting part of this is that she is a native English speaker. She clearly had the capability to read the ad. I have to assume that her lack of caffeine is what’s confusing her, and goodness knows I can understand that.

On the other hand, stop calling me.

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Don’t Panic

I’m going to add one more item to my list of decorous behavior: Invest in some really high-quality, modest pajamas and wear only those when sleeping or lounging around the house.

BECAUSE, if you come downstairs at 9:30 in the morning and find the front door is unlocked and standing wide open and you are NOT wearing decent clothes, your sense of social decency will actually be strong enough to prevent you from stepping smartly outside in full (and safe) view of the neighbors, because you are wearing that weird-ass bulgy sleeveless sweatshirt tunic you foolishly bought last year, the one that is bright orange and literally makes you look like a pumpkin with a head. So instead of pursuing the safest course while you call your husband up (who can’t at all remember closing or not closing or locking or not locking the door that morning), you have to stand inside the house where your potential thief is lurking, while you clutch a screwdriver and realize you can’t even call the police because then they would see you in your pumpkin costume.

As an alternative, you could also choose to shower and get dressed at a reasonable hour. But if you had done that, you would have been showering while your front door was standing wide open, so probably respectable PJs are best.

Don’t worry though, everything is cool now. I stuck my head into the basement and no one cut it off, and now I have this screwdriver just in case someone’s still hiding in the pantry (or the thousand other places someone could be hiding in this house). I will just sit here quite happily, not trapping myself in the shower, dressed as a pumpkin, clutching my screwdriver, until Gene gets home at five.

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Decorum

Yesterday I finished reading The Fabulous Girl’s Guide to Decorum. This is pretty much the same good advice my mom’s been giving me through the years, bound into a book. You know this advice: send thank you notes promptly, don’t continue to date a guy if you can tell on the first date he’s not for you, well made clothes with reasonable hemlines are sexier than badly made clothes that show it all, etc.

It’s a comforting little book, but it needs a few chapters relating to the pitfalls of the modern world. Here are a few more rules I’d like to add to my life:

– At a show, don’t talk loudly about how you won’t buy the band’s CD because you can just as easily download it. (Oh yes, I have done this. Terrible.)

– Never talk on your cell phone in a public building, unless it’s an emergency. (I break this one all the time, sadly.) If someone calls you, you may answer your phone and tell the caller you’ll call back later, if you speak quietly. All forms of transit and transit stops count as public buildings, unless you have the train car or bus stop to yourself.

– Don’t text and drive. Forget the safety issues: it just makes you look so, so stupid. You swerve inside the lane (and sometimes out of it) like a 15 year old with a learner’s permit, and people staring at their laps while driving look like morons.

– If you live in an apartment complex, or in a similar close proximity to others, wait until you leave town to trash talk your neighbors. Other people’s homes, if they’re far from yours, are also acceptable. Otherwise, the minute you start imitating the loud sex your neighbor’s always having is the minute she will walk into the restaurant.

– Also, what are you doing imitating loud sex at restaurants? You are not Meg Ryan.

– At a certain point, it’s time to stop experimenting with your hair and find a style you can live with. Again, you are not Meg Ryan.

I haven’t learned to live by most of these rules yet (especially the hair thing), but it’s something to work towards when I get tired of working towards all my other stuff.

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Escapism

We spent the weekend in Portland for the Oregon Brewers Festival, which was held at a park in downtown Portland.

Do you know what else is in downtown Portland? That’s right. Powell’s City of Books.

Now, I am not saying it’s unreasonable to expect me to stick around a beer tasting festival that I have agreed to attend, even if Powell’s is only a fifteen minute walk away. But I will say that it’s unrealistic. So, as you might imagine, I spent a very nice two days at Powell’s while Adam, Christine, Gene and Jon tasted something like 85 different beers at the park.

Powell’s is not actually my favorite new/used bookstore of all time. (That honor goes to Green Apple, though that may be because after shopping at the Apple one can pop into Burma Superstar to eat samusa soup and tea leaf salad while gloating over one’s purchases.) The prices at Powell’s are also not the cheapest (after you’ve shopped a library sale, everything else seems overpriced), and the percentage of used books to new books is not the best. However, the sheer size of it — it takes up a full city block, not counting its satellite stores — makes it a unique experience, not to be missed. I was delighted to take my little all-day field trip there on Friday, and though I had not intended to, I snuck off to Powell’s again on Saturday while people were hanging out at the festival. While there I browsed and purchased three etiquette books, and then realized that none of those books would condone ditching one’s friends to visit a bookstore, no matter how awesome it is. So I returned to beer.

In addition to Powell’s, I spent five days alone on the roof of the houseboat reading Henry James, and spent part of a dinner party trapping one of the hosts in the kitchen to talk about Henry Miller, so I guess the few hours I employed in tasting vegetable beers and being social were hours I could spare.

Here are Michele’s pictures from the houseboat. If you’re wondering why I am only in one picture, it’s because I was on the roof communing with Isabel Archer while almost all of these adventures were taking place. Time well spent, if you ask me, but no one was able to ask me because I was on the roof.

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How we play

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about how we, as adults, play. Goodness knows, I’ve got reason to think about it — nearly all our discretionary time seems taken up by one kind of playing or another. Gene and I play computer games, card games and board games; he plays role-playing games, I attend costume parties; we play on rope swings at the park; we build Lego sets and work on puzzles — we play so much that it’s a wonder anything ever gets done around here.

I’ve been watching other adults to see how they fulfill their need to play. Our friends, of course, play many of the same games we do — they’re who we play with, after all. My parents, as long as I can remember, have engaged in an endless series of wagers, which is its own form of play — they bet on who’s remembered that actress’s name correctly, or which year they saw that Presidential debate. For some adults, drinking takes the place of play, since it confers a similar feeling of lowered inhibitions. For some, I think, it’s gossip, which is the grownup version of Calvin and Hobbes standing in their clubhouse and refusing to let Susie Derkins come up the ladder.

But no matter who I look to, none of the adults I know play in the way that children play. Everyone’s adult play takes place inside a structure. All adult games have rules. Even messing around with Lego pieces has limitations — as an adult, you may build a structure, but you don’t go on to give the Lego men little voices and walk them around.

It’s not that all adult games lack creativity. Role-playing games, for example, are basically group storytelling, inventing the world and the plot as you go along. But even then, there are pre-determined structures, there are laws in the world, there are dice and character stats and boundaries. At no point do we ever suggest pretending and inventing in a vacuum, the way as a child we might begin “Let’s say this happened, and let’s say we are these people,” and go on endlessly from there.

Maybe my nostalgia for that kind of boundless play is why I cling to this idea of writing fiction, even though I’m so lazy about it. A blank white Word doc is the closest I come now to the worlds without end which I played in as a kid. But how do other people do it? How does the adult personality go on, day after day, with only itself to be, never turning into a rabbit or a mermaid or a spy? Is the regular descent into an alcoholic haze or the polite boundaries of a Scrabble game really enough of an escape from the wearying sameness of self? And if it isn’t, what other escape is possible once we’ve lost our milk teeth and acquired our mortgages?

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Walking on the sidewalk, hotter than a match head

What a lovely summer we’re having, eh? Last night I went to dinner in San Francisco wearing nothing but a tank top, jeans, a sweater, sheepskin boots, a down parka and a fur-lined hood. Hot town, summer in the city!

This is the perfect weather to get my outdoor work done without melting, of course. I could be out there weather-proofing the new lawn furniture that our guests obligingly put together over the Fourth of July weekend, or planting things in the front yard, or painting my shelves. Unfortunately it’s also the perfect weather to sit in my library with my purple afghan on my knees and re-read all my Lord Peter Wimsey mysteries, so guess which thing I’m doing.

Pardon me, Gaudy Night and a pot of tea seem to be calling my name.

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Keep Calm and Carry On

I’m fascinated by the Blitz. I feel like this is a part of WWII that didn’t really get covered in school. I may be wrong — maybe the hugeness of the Holocaust part drove everything else out of my head. But I don’t remember learning about it, and now it’s the most interesting part of the war for me.

What I love is the way the British government and the people campaigned for cheerfulness. I mean, endurance and not complaining too much about all the little privations, and not losing your mind about the bombs falling every night, and helping your neighbors, and giving what you can and a bit of what you can’t. But you can sort of sum all that up into a nice Cockney “Oh well, mustn’t grumble.”

Can you imagine Americans today under those circumstances, with bombs falling every night and destroying large patches of the city you love and the people you know, and no way to get any of the little luxuries you’re used to or even many of the necessities? Do you think there would be a tremendous push for togetherness and Stiff Upper Lipping? Or would we all be hiding suspiciously in our houses, hoarding our duct tape and our canned sardines and bottled water?

Would our government be urging us to keep calm and carry on? Would our media?

The day Canada finally decides they’ve had enough of us is going to be a mighty interesting day.

Meanwhile, if you are interested in some light Blitz reading, may I recommend Henrietta’s War and Henrietta Sees It Through? These are compilations of epistolary columns written by a fictitious British housewife living in a small town during the Blitz, in which the author draws on her experience as a real British housewife living in a small town during the Blitz. They are funny, sweet, ironic and sad, and if anyone knows whether the full series of columns has been published anywhere, I’d love to know.

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IDM

Yesterday I tried making pina colada popsicles. (“But rum doesn’t freeze,” Gene said, puzzled, when I explained to him my genius plan. Face palm. Pina colada sludge.) This led to me getting one line from the Pina Colada Song stuck in my brain: “If you like pina coladas and getting caught in the rain…” Unfortunately, that’s the only line I know, so…there we were, me and this line, all afternoon.

Somehow that miserable little song opened a floodgate in my head to all the crappy songs I sort of know. I woke up humming Amy Grant’s “Baby, Baby” this morning. By the time I made coffee (which I am remembering to drink today, not that it matters in terms of burning the house down since I’m now operating out of a new French press), my brain had moved onto Janet Jackson singing that swoopy little “Allll riiight wiiiith me, allllll riiight wiiiith me” from, yes, the song called “Alright.” Just that, over and over.

I must make a shift, and soon. I must immediately listen to the world’s most complicated song, something so layered and atonal and inhospitable to the ear that it not only drives all crappy songs out of my head, it drives itself out as well. But where am I to find such a song now that Gene has gone to work?

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In Which: I nearly burn the house down over our heads

Coffee addiction, it turns out, is not psychosomatic. Yesterday I made coffee, I waited for coffee, and then I somehow forgot to drink coffee. And I was exhausted, cranky and headachey all day without knowing why.

And if you’re keeping track, yes, I nearly burned the house down over our heads by leaving the coffee maker on, but thank goodness it seems to have some sort of self-protecting mechanism and turned itself off. But only after it melted a small hole in its bottom so all the water now runs out when you try to make coffee.

And if you’re still playing along at home, you’ll realize this means I do not get any coffee this morning, on top of no coffee yesterday, and the headache is now a sharp stabbing point somewhere behind my left eye. But my dad is coming to have lunch with me at 11:30. I can wait until then.

I can wait until then.

I can wait until then.

WHY DID I GET RID OF MY STUPID FRENCH PRESS?

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All I need

Alas for my life, Ikea was designed with me in mind, because I am completely fascinated by almost all housewares and I have no sense of direction. It is perfectly possible for me to go around in the same loop in Ikea three or four times because I find new stuff to look at each time and because I consistently fail to see the exits I’m supposed to take. Meanwhile I am steadily filling my cart with stuff. It’s a system that works in Ikea’s favor about half the time I shop there, because eventually I find my way to a register with a cart full of impulse buys. (The other half of the time I stop somewhere in the middle of the third loop, near tears, and abandon my cart in order to search for the exit as quickly as possible.)

Basically, this is me in Ikea:

And that’s all I need.

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