And he won’t come out (still)

Since writing my poem about the pantry, I’ve had a lot of people come to the house, walk into the kitchen, blink once and say “Oh. He really is in the pantry.”

Yes. Gene’s computer is set up in the tiny nook in the kitchen where we previously kept the garbage. The fruit basket hangs just over his head, the trash can is behind his chair, the spices are lined up over his monitor and he has to stand up if I need to reach my apron or recipe books. He still will not come out.

Yesterday I said “Look, if you’re really committed to the pantry, then I’m going to arrange the dining room more to my liking.”

“THIS is not your room,” he exploded. “THAT is your room,” waving a hand at the living room, currently carpeted in my books. “You don’t need to mess with THIS room.”

“But you don’t use this room for anything now,” I said innocently. “I mean, if you’re determined to stay in the pantry, that is.” I think I’m wearing him down.

Why does it bother me so much? I cannot say. It just seems absurd that in an apartment this size, one of us should spend most of his time here wedged into one square inch of space that smells like eggshells. Also, it’s harder to sneak up on him when he’s in there.

If anyone has a strategy for getting Gene out of the pantry, I’m all ears.

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Marzipan

Buffy: That’ll put marzipan in your pie plate, bingo!

Gene: What does that mean?

Me: She’s a robot.

Gene: I KNEW it!

Me: No, not normally. Just in this episode Buffy is a robot.

Gene: Oh.

Me: Silly bingo.

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Book sale

The San Francisco Library Book Sale is coming up next week, and I have cleared my “pending” shelf in preparation. Even so, we’re almost out of book room in this apartment. I’ve filled the shelf on my nightstand, moved all my photo albums into my closet to make room, I’m using the end tables…if I had to pick a way to die, it would be for my home to become nothing but head-high stacks of books which would topple over onto me when I was 97. Death by literature. Or maybe by comic British fantasy.

I don’t like to plug my writing gigs on Carthage, but if you just cannot get enough of my blogging — in other words, if you are my mom — you can check out my San Francisco blog here.

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I learned how to get along

I am writing an article about a rally being held just outside my house. I was all set to start my article when they started singing “I Will Survive.” Now I cannot stop singing “I Will Survive” in the style of Cake,* tapping my nails against the keyboard and grooving my head around. I wish this rally would stop so I could write about this rally.

*When I sing Cake I do it in a truly vigorous manner, as Michele and Sean have reason to know from certain road trips.

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Based on a true story

I was tired of my workspace being darkened like a cave

And of working in the gloaming like a dank and musty grave

So I threw my hands into the air and gave a mighty shout

And now Gene is in the pantry and he won’t come out.

We used to share the table in companionable clutter

But I got sick of sharing and I soon commenced to mutter

“If I don’t get more space and light I’ll never cease to pout”

And now Gene is in the pantry and he won’t come out.

His monitor and keyboard and his CPU are there

Whenever he reboots he gets turmeric in his hair

His chair is by the garbage; there’s no room to move about

Now that Gene is in the pantry and he won’t come out.

Now I control the lighting and the surface where I work

I’m queen of my domain but I am feeling like a jerk

I miss our loves and friendships. There cannot be a doubt

I drove Gene to the pantry. I wish he would come out.

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Call for novels

I’ve been out of books for about a week now and I’m grouchy as a bear at a baiting. My similes are also suffering.

Does anyone have a book to recommend? I don’t care what genre, as long as it’s totally engrossing. And ideally not too gross; no Brief Interviews With Hideous Men. (Side note: it looks like Jim from The Office is writing and directing an adaptation of that. If I didn’t hate the book so much I’d be really excited. I’m still kind of excited.)

Gene will be gone this weekend, and unless I have to go to an all-day immigrant rights summit I will have nothing to do but lie around and read. If only I had anything to read. Help!

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Smile

It’s eight a.m. I just called the Human Rights Watch to try and interview someone there about an upcoming immigrant rights summit, but the office doesn’t open until nine so I got the main voicemail. I listened to the patient, fresh-voiced recording of the receptionist as she carefully listed each name and extension, and I remembered sitting at the front desk of various offices, recording and re-recording that message until finally I could get through it without any mistakes. And then I think about what I am doing today — immigrant rights article, job interview, research, negotiating a payment method with three different editors — and what I would have been doing in that other life, and this Joker-sized smile is only partly to do with my coffee kicking in.

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Pam and Jim leads to Pimm’s

After years of resisting it because it felt too real, I’ve finally come around to The Office. I guess I have enough distance from that life now that I can laugh at it. I recently watched a bunch of episodes (all in one evening but we don’t need to go into that) and now I am more impressed than ever.

There’s a scene in season two where Pam catches sight of the camera just over Jim’s shoulder and abruptly stops saying whatever personal thing she was about to say. It’s genius because in that moment we realize that we the audience are actually preventing the drama from moving forward just by watching it. We are the person staring over Jim’s shoulder who reminds Pam that they’re not alone. And that makes you question all kinds of stuff, like is it really ok to read all the stories speculating about Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie’s private lives just because they’re famous? Is it okay for us to watch private moments that are based on the lives of normal people, of our friends and neighbors, but made symbolic and large in TV shows and movies and books? Who are we really spying on as we consume all this media? What dramas are not moving forward because we’re all peering in each other’s windows all the time?

But then later on the cameraman indicates something to Pam, something we the viewers did not know about, and we realize it’s not really us behind the camera, it’s whoever the character of the cameraman is. It’s not us spying on the characters, it’s that damn cameraman. So we can go on watching it and not have to ask all those awkward questions we were asking before. Relief!

And then there’s that time where Steve Carell says something that’s kind of almost sweet, but then follows it up with a really appalling remark and it’s so totally hilarious. Remember that time? See, there’s a lot to like about this show.

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Phone interview with politico organization

“…And we’ve been working on the Uniting American Families Act.”

“Great name, by the way.”

“Yeah?”

“Sure. It’s got the words ‘American’ and ‘families’ in it. Hey, I like those things! I’ll vote for it!”

“…”

“Sorry. That bitterness was directed at the voting public, not at you. I would of course vote for this Act even if you called it the Drowning Puppies Act.”

“Ok.”

“Though I would probably read the fine print really carefully.”

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Working from home: the recipes

PB&J Burrito

Ingredients:

1 flour tortilla (spinach tortilla not recommended)

smooth peanut butter

blackberry jam

Instructions:

Spread peanut butter and jam on tortilla. Roll. Eat.

Disgustingness stars: three of five

Satisfies hunger? Yes.

Recommended? No.

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