Showing posts with label A.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label A.. Show all posts

Saturday, November 5, 2011

What if?

Whoop Whoop!

We got good news! A. does not have any manner of fatal or dibilitating plague! Big fancy neurologists have narrowed the issue down to things that are treatable and/or manageable and would almost be boring if the symptoms hadn't led us to believe she could be dying. The flood of relief is overwhelming.



We've been in "what if?" mode for months, which has of course had me slithering around  in the murky depths of my dark and twisty imagination where I store my encyclopedic knowledge of worst-case scenarios. It's been crunchy, for sure. But whatever, now it's awesome again! My catastrophic What Ifs have receded and my usual mix of oddly specific, fantastical, and generically anxious What Ifs are back on the scene.

Now that I've got my blogging pants back on,  I'll use this post to take a more interesting, less emotionally gutting look at the day-to-day What Ifs that populate my imagination. This is only a sampling, mind you. People as cursed with my special combination of anxiety, perfectionism, inappropriate humor and a highly analytic thought process as I am spend vast portions of our existence firmly planted at the bottom of theWhat If rabbit hole. I'll just take you for a quick tour. You don't want to linger there. It's a massive time suck, and it causes muscle tension.

Without further ado, here are my top non "my-spouse-is-probably-dying"-related What ifs:


1.  What if my cats could get their shit together?


I don't even know why I torture myself with this one; it's never going to happen. All three felines are irreparably self-involved, destructive to our personal property, and entitled beyond your wildest imagination. They are lazy as hell and contribute zero effort to maintaining the household. Even our black lab licks sticky spots off the floor, and he's not even smart. But what if they got their shit together?

If I could wave a magic wand there would be no further "litter crumbs" on my bedspread, nasty vomit-y hairballs on my dining room table, or mammoth, regenerating hair tumbleweeds on the bathroom tile requiring me to dust-bust several times a day. They would immediately cease whatever inane behavior results in all those weird kibble chunks in the water bowl. Berkeley would stop sleeping on my face and I would no longer fear suffocating in my sleep on a blob of ginger cat ass. Koa would stop hissing at shadows and alienating the dog. And Ashes, by far the most functional pet, would step the hell up with some leadership and stop dicking around on the windowsill all day.


2. What if I won the lottery?


This is a no-fucking-brainer: I would quit my ER job, buy a farmhouse back in Vermont near where I grew up, pay a bunch of people who need work an exorbitant amount of money to restore the shit out of it, and move A. and I over there where I would be a fabulously balanced and joyful writer and mother and she would run a collectibles business. We would also take all our peeps on a swanky vacation somewhere warm and lazy. And I would pay off all the student loans of everyone I know. And I would start a foundation that gives scholarships to rural kids from small schools. And I would buy us the fancy sperm from the expensive sperm bank so I can get pregnant with top-shelf sperm and not the discount sperm from the outlet mall  sperm bank we are currently using.



And I would buy a summer cottage on a lake or the ocean. And a sailboat. And sailing lessons. And then I would put all the money in an awesome credit union and hide it from our top-shelf kids so they don't know we have it and become all entitled like the goddamned cats. Come to think of it, I need to go buy a Powerball ticket...


3. What if my hair dryer dies?

This just can't happen. It just...can't. I will completely lose my shit.

I have had my hair dryer for almost 12 years. It is missing a piece silver plastic inlay and the air screen on the back falls off about 50% of the time. It blows the exact temperature and speed required by my hair styling approach, and every other dryer I have ever tried is either too strong, too loud, too hot, too weak, too weird to hold, or otherwise woefully inadequate. One of my most gripping irrational fears is that my hair dryer will bite it soon and I will be left alone, unable to achieve appropriate body, fullness and shape. I have tried to prepare for this day by testing other dryers. I have gone window shopping for new units, but I just can't pull the trigger because deep in my heart I know that there is no hair dryer like mine and I will never be satisfied with a lesser appliance. I know I need to cowboy up and steel myself for the day that I have to adjust to an inferior model, but I'm not ready. In fact, I'm getting a stress headache just writing this.


4. What if I had been born in the Olden Days?

Guys, I would have killed it in the Olden Days. No joke.

 I was born to milk goats and make quilts. I have the exact combination of rugged individualism, non-nonsense Protestant work ethic, and affinity for DIY that the Olden Days requires. In fact, when I was a kid, I often pretended I was Laura Ingalls Wilder or a member of Massachusetts Bay Colony for days at a time in my head without anyone noticing, even at school. I spent hours pretend chopping pretend wood, pretend spinning yarn from pretend wool, and making pretend stew from the last of the pretend potatoes and onions that we'd had to stretch through the very REAL (this was Northern Vermont IRL) long, cold winter. My family used to have frequent campfires in the summer and I learned to build a quick, perfect fire specifically to enhance my skill set for playing Olden Days. As an adult I have advanced my abilities to include basic gardening, sewing and animal care. Seriously, I would fucking thrive in Olden Days. My people would be warm and fed and no one would succumb to TB or the plague.



Other people would flock to my homestead seeking advice or aid and I would become a leader in my community, helping others to rise above hardship. Like an Olden Days Social Worker. I would also have the best dresses and pantaloons. Duh.

I'd like to think my What If tendencies are exclusively reflective of my creativity, optimism and general strength of imagination, and not also about my anxiety-fueled urgency to "future trip" and predict and plan for every possible outcome in life.

Yeah, I'd like to think that. I'm going to keep thinking that.

Because what if I don't?

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Gay Man, Teenage Boy, or Dyke?

Well, friends, it's been a while.

Things have been all cruh-zazy up in the LEON household due to some significant health issues A. has been having. We had to get all serious and focused-like. Frankly, I haven't been feeling very fucking  bloggy. I especially haven't been feeling artistic, and although my "drawings" may lack, uh, any shred of a certain level of talent, they still require me to be in a doodle-y, silly mood. Life has been a bit low on silly moods of late. So no drawings for you. None. Zero. Nada. No whining. I mean it.

The good news is that I have been seeking distractions and ways to blow off steam which has lead to the welcome resurgence of a beloved game I invented back in my 20's up on Cap Hill (aka "The Gayborhood") around happy hour. I was waiting for a blind date, and after several false alarms I realized that every goddamned person who walked by looked the same. It was like the entire city of Seattle was wearing an ironic vintage t-shirt and grey hoody.  I was soon catapulted to a deeply uncomfortable and confused place when I accidentally flashed my sexiest  "nice to meet you" smile at a decidedly-not-legal male skateboarder who shuffled hastily past me like I was a deranged pedophile. Awkward.

I started wondering how often this happened to other people, and informal polls of my lesbian friends revealed that this guessing game was a fairly common occurrence. Apparently, this phenomenon is well documented. I started keeping my eyes peeled at the bus stop, in coffee shops, at the movies, and--in cases where the individual could be sufficiently confirmed as a gay man, a teenage boy, or a dykey lesbian--I developed an impressive record for speed and accuracy. Out of this mini-obsession grew the official game:  Gay Man, Teenage Boy, or Dyke? Or, "GMTBD" as we playahs call it.

This game can be played anywhere you find good people-watching, and is spectacularly challenging here in the Greater Seattle area, as I imagine in will be in most diverse urban centers. It could prove challenging in rural parts, too! GMTBD can be played with friends or alone, requires no equipment or preparation, and is sure to provide hours of entertainment! Amazeballs!

Here is how it works:


1. Spot a difficult-to-identify stranger, typically facing away from you and/or at some distance away from where you are.


2. Guess if that person is a gay male, a teenage boy, or a dykey lesbian.


3. Wait until you can tell, then rejoice in your success or suffer the sting of defeat.

Here, let's try a practice round:


 Casual hoody? Messenger bag? Short, breezy haircut? It's a mystery!

I won't keep you in suspense. The verdict is..........(drumroll).......:

DYKE
MSNBC's  Rachel Maddow

At this point, you're likely thinking: "Hey, LEON, this is bullshit. Rachel Maddow was dressed like a teenage boy. No fair."  To this I say: There is no "fair" in GMTBD. Let me illustrate:


GAY MAN
Singer Adam Lambert

TEENAGE BOY
The Biebs, AKA teen heartthrob Justin Bieber

DYKE
DJ Samantha Ronson

GAY MAN
Actor TR Knight

TEENAGE BOY
Twilight "actor" Taylor Lautner

DYKE
Comedian & TV host Ellen Degeneres

GAY MAN
Actor Zachary Quinto

TEENAGE BOY
Nick Jonas of The Jonas Brothers

DYKE
"L Word" Actor Kate Moennig

See? It's like half the planet is shopping at Aeropostale

The trick to GMTBD success is to play your odds. What are the odds that a couple of gay men are attending a lesbian parenting lecture? How likely is it that a couple of adult dykes are practicing jumping their dirt bikes off a ramp? Is it common for teen boys to hit the tanning salon? You get the picture. Two caveats on the common sense front: A) obviously, teenage boys can be gay men-in-training, so expect some cross-pollination in clues; and B) should you find yourself at a "mixed culture" event such as, oh, say, a "Glee" Tour concert, you may as well pack it in as you are basically S.O.L...

OK, so let's get guessing! Answers are at the bottom.

1.


2. 


3.



(The answers are waaaaaay down there)

















(Keep Going)

















(Almost)








OK!


1. GAY MAN!

Actor Wentworth Miller


2. DYKE!
Comedian Rebecca Drysdale


3. TEENAGE BOY!
American Idol sensation David Archuletta



Let me know how you did. And please, share GMTBD with your friends and neighbors. In these tough economic times we all could use a little low-cost entertainment, non? Pay it forward, y'all. 

(PS. Thanks for your patience in my absence. I know it's not really cool to launch a blog, drag you all into reading it, and then disappear for a couple of months. Lame. Please forgive me...you're super pretty.)




                        

Friday, July 22, 2011

Marriage: Myth vs. Reality

I’ve been thinking a lot about marriage these past few years. For one, A. and I got married last fall, so obviously we had to think about it the whole deal of linking ourselves to each other for the duration. We also happen to be lesbians who live in a state where marriage equality does not exist, (c’mon, Washington! Iowa is outpacing us?? That’s crap!) so we pondered the legal, political and social dynamics of having a wedding without the legal legitimacy that our heterosexual friends and neighbors enjoy.

Mostly, though, we focused in on the aspect of choice: we were committing to continue choosing to be together romantically, financially, domestically, sexually, etc. forever. Like, forever forever. In the words of the incomparable Natalie Dee , we would be living in each other’s fart cloud until we’re dead. Whoa.

In all the exploration of the whole “forever” part of what we were about to do, I had to dissect and dismantle a lot of the myths of marriage. I wanted to make sure I was choosing reality, not some fantasy of what I hoped being married would be. I’ve asked around, done some unsolicited ninja judging of other people’s marriages, and basically it looks like there are three primary myths that need debunking if we all want to stay sane and happy-ish while plugging along in the fart cloud. Right now I’m going to do all you unmarried readers a solid and lay these out for you so you can have all the cards on the table before getting hitched. Consider it an engagement gift. If you’re already married and any of this seems like a stunning revelation to you, well… um… yeah, I don’t really know what to say to you because it’s too awkward to tell you that you might have to get divorced. Good luck with that.

MYTH 1: You’ll have a hot sex life forever.









MYTH #2: You will always want to be together and enjoy being in each other’s personal space










MYTH #3: You will always understand each other





If you can be content with the decidedly unglamorous side of forever-dom, then you are well on your way to being a marriage success story. Enjoy the fart cloud, y’all!