Monday, 10 November 2014

Carrots



I was frustrated, annoyed that she didn’t seem to grasp how much time the task she took on would consume. I yanked out a wooden cutting board, dampened some paper towel to put underneath to secure it, and began peeling carrots with furious rapidity, my back to my mother as she cut cabbage at the kitchen table. I finished peeling and began julienning them, quietly fuming over my frustration that Mom would not let me choose what recipes we did for church but I was still expected to somehow make them all come together in under an hour.

Mom finished her cabbage, came behind me and grabbed some peeled carrots and brought them to her board on the table. I didn’t look up, just continued cutting, growing increasingly frustrated with my imperfect matchsticks and the dullness of the knives in my parents’ kitchen. Drawn by the sound of scraping, chopping and carrots rolling on wood, I glanced behind me after awhile, and saw my Mom struggling to keep the carrots from rolling and sliding as she tried to make neat lengthwise slices to reduce into small matchsticks. I could tell her knife must be even duller than mine; I could sense her frustration. In knifeskills we had learned to slice a bit off one side of the carrot to create a flat surface. This was to keep the carrot from rolling so we could make the rest of the lengthwise cuts more safely. Partly from irritation, and partly from not knowing how to go about implying to my mother, always so fast and self-assured in the kitchen, that she didn’t know how to cut a carrot, I didn’t say anything. I turned back to the carrots on my board. Still so many to cut. Why this recipe for so many people? Why not something simpler? Church was starting soon. I decided I’d just make slices on the bias and cut the matchsticks from that. Rougher, less uniform matchsticks, but quicker, easier, and it’s not like those goddam bachelors at church were gonna give two shits about the work that went into this. I knew how this would go. People would show up to mass just for the supper afterward, stay after to fill their plates and bellies with helping after helping, and promptly leave my mother and her family to do the cleanup. I resented the amount of effort my mother put in for these people.

I heard three sounds - a sharp chop, the scrape of a knife on wood and my mother’s sharp intake of breath - almost simultaneously behind me. My mother wasn’t one to make much of a sound when she got hurt. She was a tough woman, with a high pain threshold, and more often than not she’d just set her teeth on edge and breathe in sharply through them. I remember being about thirteen and so hugely impressed that she didn’t even make a sound when wasps attacked us and she got stung on the wrist.

I turned around. She’d set her knife down and was clutching her left index finger.

I set down my knife and walked over.
“You cut yourself?” I said as I peered at her hand

“Yeah…” she said, breathing in through her teeth again, and she removed her right hand so we could examine her finger.
It was bleeding a fair bit, but didn’t look like it needed stitches. I was so used to getting cuts from school now, so much worse than this, and relieved she hadn’t cut herself worse, so I automatically said, “Oh, it’s not too bad” and started to walk away.

I didn’t realize how unsympathetic I must have sounded until I her quietly say behind me “It’s bleeding pretty bad…I think I’ll need a Band-Aid.”

It was unlike my mother to stop her work and ask for a band-aid. It made me think of a little kid, who perhaps wasn’t hurt so much by the cut but by the fact that I didn’t seem to care about it. The unfamiliarity of that simple utterance made me pause. She was so tough, so quick to tell her kids to be brave little soldiers. She’d taught us for years to pick ourselves up and dust ourselves off. She’d work and clean and scrub and not seem to notice exhaustion or pain or cuts or scrapes or bruises or slivers until hours after she’d quit.

I tore off a sheet paper towel for her to put on it while I grabbed a Band-Aid, and walked back over to her. I handed it to her, she looked up at me, and my heart broke.

It wasn’t irritation or indignation at my unconcern written across her features – it was embarrassment. I wasn’t expecting that. My mom, who so often seemed in front of her kids like she was unshakably sure of herself, was embarrassed in my presence. She was embarrassed that she’d cut herself in front of me. It didn’t occur to me until that moment how she must have been feeling the whole time we were cooking together that day. Here I had been coming home on sporadic occasional weekends few and far between, this big shot culinary student from the city excitedly spouting off all the thing I’d learned, all the new, more efficient ways to do things that I’d been taught, and I had been making my mom scared to cook in her own kitchen. My mom, whose cooking was raved about for miles, who taught me nearly everything I knew before I left to go become a “real cook” was insecure, embarrassed, unsure of herself in front of her daughter who supposedly now knew so much.

There were no words to describe how awful I felt.

I went and got my mom a Band-Aid. I don’t remember if she let me help her put it on or not. Probably not. All I remember is the realization that I never, ever, wanted to make my mom feel this way in her own kitchen again.

A week or two after she died, I was in her kitchen. I set a carrot on my cutting board...

I found myself sitting on the kitchen floor, still crying, hysterical with grief a full hour later.

Don’t ever ask me to julienne a carrot again. 

Monday, 30 June 2014

Cookie

My weekend...

My weekend was like if you were eating a really crappy, mediocre, chocolate chip cookie.

In fact that's my whole life right now.

You're eating it and you're thinking: "Oh my god, this is really stale and dry and unpalatable. This is so terrible I don't think I can finish it."

And then you hit a chocolate chip and think "Hmm. Okay. That wasn't so bad. That helps. I can do this." And you doggedly continue munching with your newfound chocolatey hope.

Big love to all the chocolate chips in my life right now. <3

Sunday, 1 June 2014

Secret Lover




Yes, she has a secret lover.

How long has this been going on? Well, apparently he just started hanging around after her mother died. I guess she was a little vulnerable then, and he simply never left. He lives with her, you know. Never asked her, just moved in one day and hasn’t left since. He doesn’t help her work or pay the bills, he just sits on her bed and waits. And waits and waits for her to come home to him each day. Now it suddenly makes sense why she entertains so seldom doesn’t it? She can’t bring friends over when he is home.

She takes him to bed with her each night and every time she wakes in the darkness, he is there.  She wakes in the morning with his head resting, so heavy, on her chest. She gets up, and though she leaves him behind as she goes out the door to work, to errands, to visit, he rests ever present on her mind, never leaving.

She can’t escape him. There is no where she can go without him calling her back, reminding her that she belongs to him now. And yet she’s desperately attached, she can’t let him go, she needs him. She can’t leave him yet. He has become familiar and though he can be so cruel, he is still a companion. Without him she feels alone, without him there is a void, a great unknown that she doesn’t yet know how to traverse. He is slowly killing her, but she can’t leave him. Not yet.

At times he slackens the noose a little, lets her believe she is in control, only to jerk it back in a sudden rage, leaving her choking for breath as he reminds her of his strength against her weakness. He will make her cancel her plans to go dancing tonight – the last time she went it left her too cheerful, too confident…too alive. He stood in danger of losing her. She will try and be social, try and be friendly, try to maintain other relationships, but it is hard, so very hard, because she must drop everything and come home to him once she hears his call. He recedes, only to reappear again in wild, unreasonable fury and deposits her, slumped on the kitchen floor, supper burning in the pan, her head in her hands and her lungs feeling like they can’t get air in between sobs that she has learned to make silent. She cannot bear for friends and neighbors to hear the vocal hallmarks of her weakness and endure the embarrassment of their attentions, the indignity of their sympathy. She cannot face the pitying glances that are meant to be kind, but are just sad reminders of how beneath them she is now, how far she’s fallen. They mean so well, but they don’t realize that they are all helpless. They cannot make him leave her. It must be her who leaves him.

He has asked her to marry him. To commit to being his, to belong to him forever. She still has strength enough left that she said no, she would not. She still hopes, still believes she will leave him someday. She will someday, she will, she tells herself.  Someday she will finally have enough, the sunshine will break through and she will walk, in painfully slow, aching steps, but she will walk, and leave her dark lover behind.

But every sip of alcohol, every lonely hour spent away from family and friends, he coaxes her. He whispers in her ear, feeds her strong drink, reminds her of how others have abandoned her, makes her believe he is all that remains to keep her company. He works away at her relentlessly, and each time he brings her a little closer to crumbling and uttering that fatal “yes”.

Yes, she has a secret lover. His name is Grief.


Thursday, 29 May 2014

(Insert Super Long Title That I Had To Delete Because It Was Super Long) Blah Blah Blah....Something....CAFFEINE!


Well hello there.............

Welcome to the first of what will likely be many posts chronicling the moving tale of my struggle with my severe, sometimes tragically debilitating, addiction. An addiction to one of the most commonly used drugs.....

Caffeine. 

Seeing as I get insanely loquacious in the instances in which my resolve fails and I overdose on this substance (that most normal adults seem to be able to handle but causes me to react in the way I imagine the average person reacts to cocaine), I occasionally remember to stick my laptop in front of my twitching hands so that it can be documented. I have now decided to start posting such ramblings for your entertainment. Here is coffee relapse numero uno, enjoy....?



Hiiiiiii.......

So I may have fallen off the "no-caffeine" wagon.

Just a bit. Like a little teensy bit. Like just a little itty bitty teensy bit. Just a bit. 


Actually...it was more like getting forcibly flung off the "no-caffeine" wagon at highway speeds, rolling down the gravel hill of cravings, and landing face down in the muddy ditch of epic failure at self control.

But you know, close enough. No need to obsess over logistics.

And daaaaammmmn it feeeeeeeels gooooooooooooooooooooooood......


I like, seriously love you, Tim Horton's iced cappuccinos, you motherfuckers are my best friends...........all three of you...

Dating Rant


Okay. In the context of my talking about my sister’s recent nuptials, someone had some "helpful advice” today about my long-standing singleness, indicating that they seemed to consider it an unfortunate and pitiable circumstance, and one in need of repair. Well meaning, yes, but...grrrrrrr…

I need to rant. SOOooooo here goes…


Really?...Really?…Is that all you think there is for me? To wait around like a helpless Bridget Jones in suspense for my “Mr. Darcy” character to come save me from my humdrum existence? As though, if I didn’t have self-worth before a man came along, I suddenly will once he does? As though the most worthy use of my time, my main focus in life should be my appearance and not having any annoying mannerisms so that I can appear attractive to men? Acquire men? …..please men?

Who are these men to me, that I should need to please them? Tell me, what credentials do they have, what are their qualifications, that I should rank their opinions as ones that count? Are they psychologists, that they should be fit judges of whether I’m “normal” or “weird”? Are they career counselors, that I should hum and haw and fret over telling them what I actually dream of doing with my life, and be embarrassed of my present job situation? Are they world-class musicians, that I should be terrified to sing or play my instruments in front of them? Do they teach table manners at a finishing school? Are they dieticians or nutrition experts? Why should I be terrified to enjoy my food with wild abandon in their presence? What attributes do these people possess, besides a penis, that I should bend myself to their whims?  Why should I worry that I laugh too easily, speak too loudly, dance too crazily, daydream too frequently? Why fret about my hair being too short and my sentences too long? Why should I worry that I sound “too smart”, too “intimidating”, too “unapproachable”?

I can’t seem to flirt. You know why I think it is? I cannot reconcile myself to the fact that in order to get a guy to ask me out on a date, I have to begin under the premise of behaving as though I am significantly less intelligent than I actually am. If your jokes aren’t funny, I’m not going to fake a laugh. If I honestly don’t care what your favourite drink is, I’m not going to ask. You won’t catch me flipping my hair and twisting a strand as I try to catch your eye – I’ve cut it way too fucking short to flip, and if you’re not looking at me already, then what’s the point of trying to make you? I won’t hold your attention anyways.

The fact is, I am single because I have yet to date a man that seems capable of treating me any better than - or even on par with - the way I treat myself in my alone time. Why would I waste my time with someone who makes me feel shittier and lonelier than I do when I'm alone? I have yet to meet someone that can make me feel even close to as good as I feel when I’m totally alone, doing my own thing. What do you mean, I should date more? I date all the time. I'm friggin good at this dating thing - I take myself on better dates than any man ever has! Myself and I go swing dancing. I take myself out to random films at the gorgeous old theatre, and out for long walks in the rain in the park. I go on picnics with me. I go to concerts I like, I serenade myself with songs I enjoy. I may even work myself up to buying myself flowers sometime. God knows I already buy myself enough chocolate.

So forgive me if I’m not ready to dump myself for a fella just yet. :P

Saturday, 3 May 2014

Why greyhound makes me wish I looked like a weepy crackhead...

I am presently sitting on a greyhound bus waiting for it to leave, and I have come to this conclusion:

I wish I was scarier.

I wish I looked creepier or more intimidating so that I'm not the perceived "safe person" that the late boarder chooses to sit beside when she has to pick seats. All the scary dudes and bawling crack addict ladies have lovely, spacious benches to themselves. They can stretch out their twitching legs and drool wherever the hell they want without reproach. Creepy people get plenty of room in their personal bubbles. You'd think because I'm considerate and keep to myself I'd earn the karmic right to have space to sit cross legged like I want to but nooo, because the fundamental, default features of my appearance - five foot three, blue eyed, short blonde hair, thick rimmed, bookish glasses, not bawling, bleeding, smelly or swaying where I stand/sit - make me look like a nice person, I don't GET to. Harrumph. I'm very grouchy right now.

I'm really not that nice you know. You may have made a very grave mistake. I might fart. And I wouldn't even feel bad.

Ugh. She just reached across me to plug in her cord.

She just reached across me to unplug it again. We've only been moving for three minutes. MAKE UP YOUR MIND.

What lengths do I have to go to to look like a shady travel companion?? I have skulls on my bag, my wallet AND my scarf! I'm wearing my faux leather jacket! I held my unusually sharp elbows at rakish angles to demonstrate how easily and carelessly I would probably jab her in the ribs if she sat down. I look like hell - I have dark circles under my eyes, my mascara is probably smeared across what is no doubt a bitchy expression because it's twelve fucking forty one and I've been awake since six and I'm not a night person and I want to be asleep in my bed right now. I even fixed her with my broody, frowny, "don't come near me 'cuz I might jab you with this mechanical pencil I'm holding" gaze as she glanced at me and evaluated my suitableness as a six hour seat mate. What's it take to look unapproachable??

Maybe I should start crying uncontrollably. That seems to work for the crack ladies.

Apparently If I could resemble a box of human blood that would be good. Boxes of human blood have tons if leg room. I don't know what the hell boxes of human blood are doing sitting in the first bench you see when you board this bus, and I really don't feel like it bodes well, but I tell you one thing - no one is sitting anywhere NEAR the boxes of human blood...they've got more space than the smelly, stoned-looking guy in sweats with the bruised knuckles and the shiner.

Maybe the driver's a vampire and that's his breakfast smoothie.

Maybe they're all vampires....

OH MY FUCKING GOD WE HAVEN'T EVEN PASSED THE CITY LIMITS HOW ARE YOU SLEEPING ON MY SHOULDER ALREADY?? Woman, I AM NOT A PILLOW! Sweetheart I may have a haircut like a man but assure you I don't swing that way. I am not your tall dark stranger to lean on while you sleep. You are like nine inches taller than me, this isn't going to work. And your hair smells alarmingly of smoothies. Maybe if I tilt my phone so the glare from the screen shines in your eyes you'll wake up...

After considering my own commentary on this situation, and realizing that she has probably noticed me leaning as far away from her as physically possibly while typing furiously into my phone as I shoot unpleasant looks in her direction, a new and alarming thought has occurred to me...

...what the hell kind of level of unstable and crazy are the creatures in all the other seats if she thought she'd be safest next to ME?

Thursday, 10 April 2014

The things you left behind...

Do you ever wonder what possessions of yours people will want once you've died?

I don't mean the big things - house, car, property, expensive jewelry, the things you leave in a will. I don't even mean the smaller things that people will tell you they would like you to leave to them when you pass on - dishes, rings, a well made coat.

I mean the little things, silly objects, things you'd never think to mention in a legal document, or even think to ask for, things that only have value because they have value to someone....things with significance you never would have imagined, they were just the things you used or owned...things of yours that even they didn't know they wanted until they became the things you left behind...

What objects that I care about now, or even don't care about now, will have even lasted that long? Will I move and lose some of it? Will I split from a lover who throws some of my belongings out in spite, or keeps them as a painful reminder of mistakes not to make again? Will some of them burn in a fire?

What silly trinket of mine is going to mean something to someone when I'm gone?

Will I own a silly, crumbling straw hat that my one grandchild wants because she remembers me wearing it to her birthday?

My dancing shoes...will they look much the same as they do now - unscuffed and shiny, still with the awkward stiffness of trying to learn something new? Or will they be battered and relaxed, almost worn through with use? Will they have been worn to disintegration and replaced once? Twice? Three times? Will you be able to see the unique shape of my foot in the sole? Will I have danced for years?
...Do I get any good?

What photos will hang on the wall and lean on shelves? Do I ever even get around to printing any? Are their frames covered in dust or clean and new? Have they hung on the wall so long that the paint has been bleached around them by years of sunshine through the window?

Will the scarf I just bought new today, the narrow, sheer, white one with the yellow polka dots, be someday held to someone's tear-stained face? Will the faint smell of my perfume on the fragile cloth be breathed in by my grieving spouse? My daughter? Son?

Will there even be anyone?

Maybe there will be no one. What if there's no one left? Maybe my property will be sifted through by a kindly next door neighbour, who never knew me in my early years, never knew my whole story but was the closest thing the police could find to the next of kin. Will I have had to watch every one I love leave before me? Will I be all that's left?

Will people know right away when I'm gone? Will my loss be felt instantly, intensely? Or will it take time for someone to even notice? Will I fade quietly away...slip away unnoticed through the back?

Monday, 7 April 2014

Call Me When You Get There



Yes, I'll call you when I get there Mom,
I promise I'll be alright
I'd love to stay a little longer, but
I've gotta go, I'm losing light

Hi Mom, I'm here, I'm sorry
After I checked in and showered
I forgot I said I'd call you
I've been here about an hour

I didn't mean to make you worry
Tell Dad the car ran great
Relax now Mom, I'm sorry
My phone call was so late

Thank you for this vacation Mom,
You would not believe this bed!
I'm so grateful that you got me here
Now I'm off to rest my head

Hi Mom, I'm having so much fun!
So much to do and see
It seems I haven't thought too much
Of how you're missing me

I'll call for sure tomorrow Mom,
We'll have a nice long visit then
It's not like we won't get the chance
To talk ever again...


Hi Mom.


I'm not sure if you can hear me now...
She just called and said...

                                You're gone.

We didn't know that you'd be leaving
Or that you'd be gone so long

I promise I won't drive like this
They're coming here to take me home
God I wish I could still call you
While I'm waiting here alone

I wish I'd known that you were leaving
I wish I would have called
Though I don't know why you had to go
I know you won't come back at all

I call sometimes when Dad's not home
To hear your voice on the machine
It's all backwards now, I'm calling you
Wondering what places you're between

Can you just call me when you get there Mom?
I'm praying there's a way
That you can reach me, say you made it safe
Please tell me you're okay

I don't know the place you're going
But I know you won't return
So can you tell me all about the trip
Before the day when it's my turn?

Please tell me all about the drive
The scenery on the way
Maybe it will help me navigate
When I make the trek someday

So call me when you get there Mom,
Please, I just really need to know
That you made your journey safely
Now that you're the one to go.



Saturday, 5 April 2014

Eraser




Have you ever used an entire eraser? I mean an ENTIRE eraser, right down the tiniest nub that’s impossible to hold between your fingers. I know I haven’t. Not for lack of making mistakes. I’ve condemned many an eraser to a premature death though.

I can only begin to list all the unspeakable atrocities I’ve committed against those small sections of rubber or vinyl. I used to stab them with mechanical pencils, breaking the lead off inside them and then practice “surgery” to remove the slivers. Weeks later I’d be furiously labouring over a question for school and trying to remove a mistake I’d made, and then find myself utterly bewildered when the eraser removed my answer, but replaced it with a large, scratchy scribble, due no doubt to a long-forgotten pencil lead still embedded in the rubber. Such a neglectful surgeon I was. And then the question would be forgotten for the next ten minutes as I tried again to extract the ancient shrapnel from the wound under the glaring light of my lamp, on the operating table that was my desk…

I’d cut them up into makeshift stamps. Stick thumb tacks in them and turn them into tiny pigs. Carve them up and turn them into little pretend cameras with a small pencil eraser on top for the button. Draw on them with pen. Draw on them with pencil. Chew on them. Try and melt them (a venture I would certainly not recommend, the smell is just awful). Use them as pincushions. Stab them with jackknives just for the hell of it. Throw them at my sister’s head. Poor, longsuffering member of the desk drawer.

Such a noble little object when one thinks of it. Think of all the errors in calculation, the imperfect lines in sketches, the misunderstandings in language, the rashly written notes that all would have remained etched permanent if not for this small marvel. Just a humble little rectangle of rubber, and yet it holds within it all the promise of second chances.