Sunday, December 31, 2017

To The New Year

Without meaning to sound cynical or mean, I'm tickled by people's New Year's sentiments and the "defeated but not discouraged" little notes they write. They talk to the year. "2017, you were a real challenge but we made it through to the next chapter of our journey."
 I chuckle a hateful laugh. "This year brought joy and pain..." 
That's a side effect of being alive. Do people expect to have a year without hiccups and blunders? 
"This year will be my year!" Well I sure hope so for you but you didn't have to wait until January 1st to go after your dreams. It's not a magical day. The Earth doesn't even know what day it is. It's just looking out from the merry-go-round at it's star buddies that it hasn't seen in a year. 

Perhaps I just don't get it. I know Ellen takes the New Year quite seriously. She countdowns from weeks out. She likes the fresh start. Except that I don't see it that way. Last year's problems will still be there. If all the years were a fresh start, we'd never learn anything or remember what we spent the last year doing. Ellen had a tough year... but she hasn't really solved her problems yet. (don't worry Ellie - none of us have) So what about January first clears her head? I want in on this. 

For now I'll keep on keepin' on - sleeping, snacking, and telling myself I'll finish my paintings someday, you know, when the time is right.


Thursday, December 28, 2017

Soapbox

In an effort to put-off doing what's expected of me, I went down memory lane. Yes, one year in the captains chair of Ole Lux n' U will create an alley of lovely moments, carefully captured and edited so that you don't see any of that icky stuff we like to pretend isn't there. 

These are some of my couples from this year and they're all lovely and whatnot and I really am excited and happy for them. I love Love. I love happy beginnings! I like to get to know them and hear about the people they have in their lives and things like that. I like to imagine what their lives will look like. Sometimes a couple seems so right for each other and sometimes you don't understand what brought a pair together or why one of them puts up with the other. Sometimes it's nearly jealousy inducing love and sometimes I wonder if I'll get a call to do flowers for the bride's second marriage in a few years - but that's a rather mean thought. 





I've done lots of big thinking on weddings and marriage in the last year. It's hard not to compare all of these relationships with each other and also the ones I see with the people in my life. If there was a quantifying chart of sorts that could lay things out for a couple, I wonder how many would look at the chart and still go through with it. Would anyone, if presented with an outline of the life they'll have with this person, say, "Yeah. That's good enough."? Because it's not going to be a perfect, flawless chart. You'd probably have hoped for more for yourself - looking at it all played out like that, even though choosing someone else would just be a different set of trials. It's more like choosing what annoying things you think you can tolerate. Marriage kind of seems like a romantic crapshoot. You don't really know what you're getting. You kind of know but you can't fully know because you haven't gotten through life yet. It's important to really like that person an awful lot.

The more weddings I decorate the less special each wedding feels. On the one hand, there's no having an original wedding anymore - everything has been done thousands of times over, except for garish things and those have no place at a wedding. On the other hand, that shouldn't matter. People seem to forget that a wedding is a celebration of the marriage, not an elaborate photoshoot for you at your fake best. I've become increasingly uninterested in lending a hand for a wedding that's lost it's morals along the way. Somehow I've also become slightly annoyed by weddings that only go through the motions instead of adding a little personality to it. People take this whole wedding show propaganda way too seriously. The wedding industry is a greedy monster that promotes all the wrong things and I'm often embarrassed to be a part of it. A wedding doesn't need music or flowers or specialty linens. That's all so far from the point. Have a little fun with it. What's with the somber music? And why are weddings and funerals the only times people give speeches about how great you are?

That soapbox said, some couples are very easy to believe in and I delight in their celebration (and find myself not charging them for things because I'm just too excited - don't tell Dad!) I feel I should say that I'm excited to get married someday. I believe in marriage. It's the big stressful show that I don't feel great about. 




Monday, December 18, 2017

This Year - A Photo Recap

As I pulled pictures from the last twelve months I thought about all the different kinds of years people must have had this year. I felt very self-focused about it all except that it's my year. The year I had. And sure, other people are what really effect the year you have. Sprinkled into this year are homecomings, weekend trips, friend visits, bad traffic, new recipes, farewell dinners, birthdays, tough days, that whole 'politics' thing, and one-off moments that seemed insignificant at the time but you'll remember them forever just because they felt good or made you laugh or made you feel a way you never want to feel again.

I pulled my recap photos of the happy year I had and thought about Ellen. Ellen had a very different year. Ellen's year really blew. And some people had a year worse than Ellen's year and better then my perfectly pleasant year. How many times do you think I can say 'year' in this post?

We started January 2017 with the re-opening of Buddy's favorite hangout.


Brett moved home from Buford in February, thus reinstating the lively, gut-busting adventures of "The Crew".


In March I cut my hair and I'll never do that again.


April was full of weddings and slumping with happy friends. Don't they look happy?


Sometime in there Dad packed his family into his car and took us to Sonic for hot fudge sundaes. It gave us all the giggles, followed promptly by stomachaches.


May rounded out wedding season with my Mama-sidekick and banjo lessons with Eisenhauer.



June brought summer plants and a birthday celebration...



that resulted in the Photo of the Year.


July finished a big bus venture with Ellen ....


and started a chilly one with The Leisure Club Lite.


August started some exciting scheming.


September brought me a new friend.


October was a blur of fluffy blooms.


November brought these two together forever. Nate's so so happy.


And just before the years end in December, I find my little dream home.
(I got the keys today! And so it begins. There's just so much to do!)



Monday, December 11, 2017

A Weekend in Athens


Yesterday I got back from visiting Ari and Nate for a long weekend. It was a regular weekend for most people but the boss lady over at Lux & U let me leave work on a Thursday so I could have a three day weekend. The last time I drove to North Georgia, I had tire trouble by the time I got to Orangeburg. This time I had tire trouble by the time I made it to North Charleston. I think my car really hates North Georgia. I took Mom's car instead.

I got into town Thursday night around dinner time and Ari and I ate her leftover vegetables and had a celebratory glass of wine while we looked at wedding things on Pinterest. It was so girly and embarrassing that we broke out into giggles many times. Ari laughed with glee when she "pinned" her first wedding dress. And then she was embarrassed again. We sipped our wine and looked at gowns and flowers and invitations and then Ari decided it was too much to think about so we went to bed.
The next morning we made the most delicious buttermilk biscuits that we ate with a side of bacon and then we had quiet time. Ari had to get a little work done, so I sat with her cat, Mabel Simmons, and read and googled and thought about life. It was cold and raining outside and when Ari finished her work, we decided we didn't want to leave the house today. Within 10 minutes of that thought we were en route to the grocery store for pizza and baking ingredients and a quick visit to a chocolate shop that serves "drinking chocolate" in little espresso cups. It's thick, liquid chocolate. Almost like drinking hot fudge. After that we came home and hunkered down for the night. We did more wedding planning, watched a scary movie, and right around dinnertime, Nate arrived with his dog Chester, and we talked more wedding plans and ate pizza and went to bed.



Saturday was the big best day. It was snowing when I woke up with Miss Mabel curled in a ball under my arm. We used our leftover buttermilk to make pancakes and we listened to Christmas music and watched the snow. I thought it was awfully magical... until Ari made me exercise with her but once I got past that, we baked a cake, played a few rounds of Cribbage, and then we loaded up and headed to the farm.

The farm belongs to a couple that works at UGA that Nate became friends with while he was in grad school. He would watch and tend to the farm whenever the couple went out of town. They have horses, goats, cows, and chickens and lots of land and woods and exciting plants. This is where Nate proposed to Ari and the couple had us over for an engagement toast. I don't need to ramble on about how great this place is so instead I'll tell you that we went for a freezing cold walk through the woods to find a Christmas tree that we cut down and brought back home to decorate. We found a big Charlie Brown Tree and had to decorate it with what we could find because most of the Christmas decorations were victims of a house fire a little while back. Long story.

We had a potluck dinner, told stories, wrestled with dogs, and had a toast to Ari and Nate.





Thursday, November 30, 2017

A Little Dream

I have another tasty morsel of excitement and I'm only slightly hesitant to tell you about it because it's
only 90% a done deal. Sometimes (if you believe in jinxing things) (I'm on the fence about it) you can destroy your own hopes and dreams by sharing them with people before they are true.
It seems like I'll be buying a new home next month but it's not just any home. It's a little place that I've loved for many years. A sweet little southern cottage, nestled into some mossy oak trees.

What's especially fun about it is that I was one week away from buying a different house. A 3-bedroom brick, fixer upper in a good location. I liked the house but it took a while for me to come around and accept it. BUT THEN! Just in time! We caught word that my little dream cottage was headed for the MLS.
"We've got to go look at it, Dad!"
And Dad understood. Mom also loves this little house. So we went to look and I prepared myself to hate it. "You've already got a wonderful home lined up. This little place will be dark and old and really small. You probably won't like it." I tried to not like it. Mom tried to not like it. Dad said nothing. We looked in that little house, gazed at the mossy oaks, noted the detached garage studio space, and then drove home and sat quietly in the living room.
Time passed in silence.
"You don't have to decide today." Dad said.
There was more silence.
"I've decided." I said.
"What are you going to do?"
I smiled a guilty smile. Dad rolled his eyes and I've been mentally decorating it since.

I'm very excited to get back inside and take photos. It needs a little bit of love and a new roof but Dad thinks I can move in sometime in January. Here's a rough Goggle map photo of the little dream I'll live in.



I'm stupefied that this is really happening. I get to have a porch! And a garden! And Pip gets a yard! And... it's even closer to Mom and Dad's house than my current home. Wouldn't want to get more than three miles away from those people. I might melt.



Wednesday, November 29, 2017

Ari & Nate

I had news before when I told you that Nate got a job in Charleston and that Ari was coming home in May but now I really really have news because Nate asked Ari if she would marry him and she said "Of course!" and now I feel all giddy inside.


Lots of things come to one's mind when their soulmate gets engaged. I'm trying to play it cool and not harass Ari with wedding questions even though I have at least 3 dozen things to ask about. Nate proposed on Thanksgiving and I waited with a giddy kind of anxiety all day to get the phone call from Ari : the phone call that would set into motion all the things we discussed as little girls. With that thought there, I'd like the record to show that Ari and I were not the types of teenage girls that had their weddings all planned out. In fact, a couple years ago I asked Ari what she had in mind for her Someday Wedding and she thought it was too embarrassing to think about. Short of knowing I wanted to get married in my parents backyard, I also refused to make wedding plans. I'm no girl. (I have recently, inadvertently planned lots of my Someday Wedding - but that is due to working in and seeing weddings every weekend - makes it easy to imagine what your day will absolutely not look like). So anyways I'm going to Athens next week to make Ari think about her wedding day and harass her with all of my questions!

I also feel as though I should tell you why Nate is the best fella ever because you've never met him and I never talk about him in my blog space out of a respect for his privacy - or something like that. Nate The Great has been a twinkle in my eye since Ari got an office tour from him on her first day of work at grad school. All I knew was that he was handsome and sweet and I fell for him shortly after hearing that he split his breakfast muffin with her early one morning at the office. 
"Ari! He likes you!" I declared and I was on Nate's team ever since, because I know why he liked Ari. How could one not like Ari? And thus, many moons have passed and I've never heard a single complaint from Ari except once when I made her admit that Nate couldn't possibly be perfect and even then she just said that when he gets mad, he needs time to cool off. That was the best she could come up with. 
Nate is smart and sweet and very polite. He has pretty eyes, a chocolate lab named Chester, and he loves plants a whole lot. Doesn't he sound wonderful! I'm so happy for both of them and after that, everything else in my brain is completely selfish because I'm thinking about all the wonderful times we'll have and how no matter how often I show up at their house, Nate's way too polite to ever suggest that I leave.


Tuesday, November 28, 2017

Three Posts in Three Days

You see how I've not been keeping up with my sidebar numbers game? I've been aiming for four posts each month - one each week perhaps - and this month I've really dropped the ball. I've been busy. Ironically, I thought November would be the start of seemingly endless oodles of free time since I've only got one more event this year and it's not for another five weeks. So I can't blame work things for my busyness factor even though I do log Lux hours everyday, somewhere in there. I've been busy being sociable and let me tell you, that'll really take it out of ya. For example, having a tiny dinner party involves a day of cleaning, menu planning, and general fussing and then another day to go to the grocery store, cook a meal, and feed it to people. Then you need a recovery day that involves neglecting your computer and going out for a mid-day walk to stave off your sleepiness factor. And when you get back, you have a nap.

Other days I have plans with a friend say at 2:30. That's the smack dab middle of the day. This results in feeling disinclined to start any large projects or jobs that you were hoping to finish in one sitting. So the first half of your day is spent on relatively inconsequential chores while you keep an anxious eye on the clock so that you won't be late for your social event. And anyways, by the time you fix and eat lunch, you need to leave in about an hour so why don't you just watch blooper reels on Youtube? Then you go to your social outing and some longwinded friend will be extra verbose that day and you won't get back to your car until 5:00 with a skinny yellow parking ticket tucked under your wiper blade and then you've got to walk the dog and fix supper and eat it and clean it and before you know it, a whole day just blew right past you!

In an effort to not hold off living my life because I'm not married (see Marriage post) I've been overbooking myself for fun time things and not leaving time for creative Laura things. I feel like a rookie in the game of work, social, and personal life balancing. Is this what you're supposed to learn in college? Is this why the most sociable people I know have bum-like tendencies?

Also I've been going to breakfast a lot. It's my favorite meal to eat out. 1) Because it's inexpensive 2) Because everyone in there still feels cozy and sleepy and 3) I like the clinking sounds that coffee mugs and tiny plates make in a large echo-y room. It's the Breakfast Noise. Mom likes the Breakfast Noise too.

So, I'm going to do three posts in three days to meet my four post goal before Friday. This worthless posts counts as one. And thusly, I will bombard you with Pippa pictures because she sleeps on my chest and it's the cutest thing. Also, she got a Christmas sweater and posed for school photos.







Tuesday, November 14, 2017

A Tiny Post

I keep thinking about how I really need to do a blog post and when I sit down to entertain you my mind goes blank about anything worthwhile to mention and instead it reminds me of all the different things I’ve been wanting to Google about. I’ve been Google-ing patio furniture sales, new music, flowers available in the middle of winter, and most recently, Penelope Cruz’s eyebrows.

I have finished my wedding season, organized myself for the off-season, done some grand scheming with Pops (that I’ll detail later), and just this morning received the heartwarming news that Ari and Nate are moving to Charleston. Nate is coming in January to start a new job at a great little firm downtown and Ari will come after she graduates in May. I’m arguably the most excited of the three of us. Ellen has started a new job working at the very place she and Dad go for their heinous morning workouts. I’m not sure what she’s doing there but it’s got something to do with the business management side rather than instructing the classes. She seems very happy about it. This gym really is her happy place.

I have a worry in this blog space about starting all of the paragraphs with the word “I”. Did you just go back and check? They all do. I try to not do that but it’s a difficult thing to do when you’ve devoted countless hours to writing about yourself. So for that reason, I’ll leave this little post right here.

A bit of Lu consciousness and a tiny news update.










Sunday, October 29, 2017

Autumn With The Union Clan


Baba G has begun attending exercise classes with Ellen at offensively early start times. He really hates it. He dreads going and remarks about the sheer horror of exercise class throughout the day but he still dutifully attends, has lost some weight, and even feels better but he still whines about the class. He does this bright and early and then comes home to shower and dart off into the world for the day. Typically he comes home for lunch and ventures off again for a few hours before coming home to slump awhile and then cook dinner. He and Mom have recently taken to playing Dominoes after dinner and watching reruns of Fixer Upper. Dad seems entirely blown away by Chip and Joanna Gains.

Mama continues her slow mornings of coffee, breakfast, prayers, and then a lackadaisical dressing routine. She’s doing lots of volunteer work (Bingo, piano playing, Bible studies) and also spends time ruminating about her daughters’ personal lives. She also rotates various tasks with Carolyn to make sure Grandma and G-Bob have what they need. She’s really quite busy and I have to call ahead now to make an appointment for Love Time with Big Mama.

Ellen is working two jobs, also attends early morning exercise classes, has multiple boyfriends, and still manages to keep up with all of her favorite TV shows. Ellie did finally sell her house and has moved into a smaller nice place that actually suits her more than the big house did.  She has a beautiful South American girl moving in with her next week so she’s been enjoying her last month of making messes and not wearing pants. Back before wedding season I purchased a giant commercial cooler for my flowers. It’s a happy orange Tropicana refrigerator and the only place we could store it was in Ellen’s garage. Naturally Ellen huffed and grumped and told me I had to contribute to her electricity bill even though I run the cooler just two days out of every week. So this wedding season I’ve been working over at Ellen house which has been great for a number of reasons but mostly because I get to see Ellen when she comes home between jobs, dates, and TV shows.  I think she enjoys this too even though she complains about the mess I make every half hour or so.

Pippa has turned out to be an even better thing than I’d thought she would be. She’s much more comfortable now that we’ve been a family for a whole month. She loves me very much and follows me around and sits in my lap and lets me play with her feet and jowls and tail and ears. She’ll let me do anything to her while other people are lucky if she allows them to pet her. She thinks I’m pretty great. Pip makes me laugh out loud several times each day because she’s very weird and cute and sometimes I think my heart will pop. She leaves her back legs on furniture while she does other things like eat, play, or just watch me, so she pulls herself off with her front legs and makes them carry her weight while she chews bones or squeaks her toys. She also becomes very concerned when anyone sneezes, coming over to stare or offer a lick until you stop, and she's very possessive of our shared driveway. I’m even more elated to tell you that Buddy now loves her too and they wrestle and romp and play for hours at a time. Mom is surprisingly delighted by Pippa and Pip feels the same way. They have a weird little bond.



I’ve had my head down as I barrel through wedding season. It has gone very smoothly and I have never felt so calm in the workplace. Lux and U had it’s one year anniversary and has gotten some really wonderful reviews. I also got my first letter of upset from a bride, which made me feel icky for a whole day. It was actually a very nice letter with only one complaint and though I have my own thoughts on the matter, I was pretty tickled that it took a whole year to even mildly annoy someone. I count that as a win as I knew I had to hit a snag at some point. This past weekend I did the flowers for and attended the wedding of Amy and Lou and it was really special. (That first photo shows some of Amy's centerpieces.)
 Lou and I thought about meeting for the first time in French class and then we fast-forwarded fourteen years to me pinning on his boutonnière. There’s lots love and respect wrapped up in there and Amy and Lou’s wedding was one full of mutual admiration for everyone who came to celebrate. I’ve got one wedding left to wrap up the Fall season and then I just have a few Lux things sprinkled in until Spring. I’m not sure what I’ll do with the down time but I know what I wish I would do (write, exercise, volunteer) so that’s something to start with but most of all I'm excited for uninterrupted mornings in my favorite corner. I sit here most mornings to read, pray, drink my morning tea, and think big thoughts. And I look forward to it a lot - which is how one knows they are aging. I go to bed excited about breakfast.



Monday, October 23, 2017

A Helpful Weenie

When I was a little girl, I would walk around the backyard and collect all the acorns I could find and then put them into a few big piles at the base of the oak trees. I wanted to make sure the squirrels would have enough food for the winter and I figured I could carry more acorns at once so it made more sense for me to gather them up for the squirrels so they didn’t have to work so hard at something that I thought should be handed to them. Life is hard enough, imagine having to forage enough food for month-long spans of cold, dark time and doing it all with hands the size of sugar-cubes. I was sad and worried for the squirrels and I wanted to help. I thought about what a great day it would be for a squirrel that suited up for a long excursion of foraging only to find a pile of gold at the end of his driveway.

I did this many autumns over before it occurred to me that maybe the squirrels didn’t want my greasy human fingers rubbing their food. What if they were the kinds of animals that abandon their young if they can smell that a human touched them? What if I was literally spoiling all the food they have for winter? This was one of the moments that made me consider my place in the world. What if sticking my nose in realms beyond mine was actually causing harm instead of the good I so desperately wanted to give? Suppose my help isn’t wanted? This was all before ten years old. As a sixteen-year-old I was very interested in mission trips. I thought about my super great home life and then felt terribly guilty for it and sad that so many other people didn’t get to have that. I thought that I’d even switch places with them so they could feel warm and loved because surely I could handle poverty in exchange for someone else’s happiness. I researched lots of mission companies and volunteer organizations around the world and I read articles from ex-missionaries, aid workers, and founders of selflessness. One of the articles I read was written by an African man from a small town where many college students came each year to build houses and work on farms. While he understood the intentions of their help, he felt undermined by their pity and worse, he and other local men would have to go back behind the students to properly build the structures and till the fields. These kids knew nothing about farming or building and caused more work for the town in a roundabout way. That may only be one man’s opinion. Maybe another townsman appreciates the college kids getting the ball rolling even if they have to finish the job, but that guy’s article stayed with me. What if those college kids were just rubbing their grubby paws all over Africa’s acorns?

This sort of trepidatious yearning to be helpful translates to me being overly accommodating to people’s superficial desires and never actually making big helpful changes in someone’s life. Maybe that homeless guy wants to be homeless. I hear homelessness can be a profitable field to be in. So I opt out of getting to know the homeless guy. I don’t want to embarrass him by pointing out that he’s homeless. I’m sure he’s already aware of that but what if I give him the rest of my turkey club sandwich and he’s lactose intolerant or gluten free? One time I tried to give a box of cupcakes to a homeless guy and he told me he wanted “real food”.  Aren’t you hungry and poor? Wouldn’t any help be better than none? But turns out that sometimes the answer is no. On another occasion in New York City a man approached me for food so I offered him my hot dog but it turns out he’s a homeless vegetarian.  He had a pregnant wife with him and I‘ve never been pregnant but I imagine that’s a good time in life to make sure you’re getting enough protein and iron. I didn’t want to insult him by suggesting he give the hot dog to his wife so I simply carried on with a newly broken heart and my New York City hot dog. I’m envious of people that can talk to and befriend other people in bad scenarios. If how concerned I am came out, I'd surely offend them with my pity, even if it's pity from a place of love. I so badly want everyone to be happy and loved and healthy that it keeps me up at night. I wish I could be that sick person’s healthy friend who talks to them about life outside of the hospital bed they’re trapped in. Do you tell them the good things they’re missing? But if you left those things out, you’d just be a sick person’s downer friend who never had anything fun to say. How do you help some without hurting their feelings or ruining their acorns?

I write this post as I’m looking for volunteer work. I’m feeling guilty about my charmed life but that’s a silly thing to do. I’m in the perfect position to do something great for someone who needs it. I’ve been dealt some great cards. I have hands much larger and more capable than sugar cubes. I just don’t know how to use them. (And I don’t like children, germs, loud things, sticky things, medical things, or hard labor.) But I’m, like… a really nice person.

In other selfish news, the folks over in Tenby, Wales asked if I’d write a short post for the town blog.
You can read it here:  http://tenby.co.uk/traveller-tales-laura/




Monday, October 16, 2017

My Face

The other day I went to the dermatologist. I love my dermatologist. She a good-humored gal in her mid-thirties who laughs at my jokes and understands my repulsions to personal skin ailments. When I was a teenager, she stood in the background, just an assistant at the time, and I had to explain my pimple woes to a middle-aged, stone-faced, man who seemed annoyed by my presence and more disgusted than I was that the cheap zit creams weren’t working.  He was always trying to sell me expensive things so I could have skin like a Hollywood star. I thought that was too lofty for a bumpkin like myself and was perfectly content with only a bi-monthly breakout. When his lovely assistant finished med school, the grumpy doctor passed my pimples and me over to her and we’ve been happily battling zits, rashes, and flakey patches since ’09. She checks my big, belly mole (I have a big, belly mole) while I complain about my sandpaper forehead in an exhausted Jewish mother’s accent. She likes that accent. “Ya forheyad looks like sandpaypa!”

Anyways, I went to see the dermatologist because I have a reoccurring eczema patch on my left shin. It’s about the size of a quarter and pops up every five years or so. The special eczema cream that gets rid of it in under a week (the miracle of science!) comes in an enormous jug that could easily coat and lather a family of eight or nine flakey folks but it expires after two years so by the time my flakey patch shows up again, my miracle mayonnaise jar has no magical powers left… so I have to go back to the dermatologist, show her my leg and she goes, “Yep. It’s eczema.” And then writes me a new prescription for the mayo tub and I skip off into an ointment daze.

Last month, while she inspected my leg I rambled about life in your late twenties.
“So, how about independence, huh? What a racket.”
“Yep. It’s eczema.” she replied. “Do you have any other concerns today?”
“Well,” I said bashfully, swinging my legs as they dangled from her vinyl examination table, “I’m worried about my forehead.”
“I think it’s looking a lot better!”
“Oh no, it’s only about a 320 grit these days. That’s great!” I told her. “It’s that I do this a lot when I think.”
And then I crunched my eyebrows together like I was reading a sign from acres away. “I’m furrowing. You can see the furrow line even when I’m not furrowing, especially if I’ve being doing a lot of thinking that day.”
“I don’t see a line.”
“I haven’t thought much today.”
“Hmm.”
“I’m just wondering if there’s something I can do now to prevent it from becoming Tom Selleck-y. Are there eyebrow exercises? Creams? Butters? A facial pickling process of sorts?”
She stepped closer and looked at my head.
“You do have a really strong brow muscle and if I’m being honest, that’s not going to get better... but Tom Selleck is a good looking guy.”
“But no! I’m so young! I can’t wrinkle and furrow at this age!”
“How old are you?”
“I’m twenty-seven.”
“Really? Well you know… you’re not too young.”
I furrowed my Selleck brow and narrowed my eyes at her.
“… for Botox.” she whispered and I gasped. “Wait wait wait!’ she said, “Hear me out!”
“I could never!” I told her. “I’m twenty seven!” I shrieked.
“Just listen!” and she explained to me the preventative elements of putting tiny dollops of Botox into creases created by muscle movement. I glared at her while she explained this. Then she would make an interesting point and I would lean in, a faint, hopeful smile creeping along my face and then I would come to, jerk myself away and rest my chin on my shoulder. “No.” I’d whisper.
“I started Botox at twenty-seven.” she admitted. I eyed her forehead. It was like flawless satin. She could be twenty-two, bee bopping at a concert on Spring Break. Looking at her forehead made me stop resisting and consider just one little squirt of Botox. Just one little squirt, right between the eyes, and wham bam. Problem solved. She continued talking about it while I thought about vanity and my life long excitement to age, and how I would always deny ever having Botox no matter who asked me.
“So you’re saying it wouldn’t be a filler, it would just stun my brow muscle.”
“Exactly”
So I couldn’t scrunch my brows together anymore?”
“Yep. Exactly.” And in that moment my little heart broke because I wouldn’t look like me anymore. I scrunch and furrow and raise and wiggle my brows all day everyday, telling stories, writing emails, even watching TV. 
Sometimes Mom watches me watch TV because I react as though I’m in the scene. I can’t tell a story with stoic eyebrows. I suddenly found it all very sad.
"This is my face!" I shouted in my head.

I stomped up out of there with my jar of mayo and went to my favorite coffee shop. Andre, the coffee guy, eyed me curiously while I waited in line.
“What are you doing?” he asked when I stepped up to the counter.
“What?”
“With your fingers…on your eyebrows.”
I realized I’d been smoothing my thumbs along my eyebrows, trying to press out wrinkles and massage my overworked muscles.
“Andre!” I shrieked, “I’m going to look like Tom Selleck!” and I told him the whole story. Andre, a sassy, no-nonsense type finds me amusing. He laughs at me while I agonize over a beverage choice, chuckles while I mutter and dig through my purse, and makes fun of my sensitivity to caffeine. He has helpfully introduced me to lots of fun coffee drinks that aren’t so potent but then he ridicules me when I order them. Andre told me my dermatologist sounds like a jerk. “You don’t need Botox. You’re twenty seven!”
“That’s just it Andre! She’s not a jerk and she a has a forehead like room temperature butter!” I took my coffee and left Andre rolling his eyes.

A couple days later I had moved on from my face woes to worrying about work things and hadn’t thought about Botox or the devastating, personality-stunning effects it would have on my disposition. But then!
My friendly drug-dealing neighbor came over and asked me to help him move some furniture. This whole ordeal was very odd but that’s a tale for another day. While we were talking he told me I had some makeup smeared under my eyes.
“I’m not wearing any makeup.” I told him.
“Oh.” he said and then there was a pause. “What about last night. Were you wearing makeup last night? I think it’s smudged.”
“I was not.” I informed him and I rubbed under my eyes because now I was getting insecure. I kept talking and the expression on his face changed. He delicately interrupted me.
“I’m sorry”, he stammered, “Has someone hit you? Is it a bruise? Is someone hitting you?”
I stepped over and looked at my face in a car’s side view mirror. I looked at my eyes and back at him and I sighed.
“That’s just my face, Jordan."



Monday, October 2, 2017

Marriage and A Pup Named Pip

You know how women in their late twenties sometimes have that marriage meltdown? It occurred to me that I’m now eligible for the meltdown. I haven’t had it yet mind you, nor do I wish to get married at this time. But I’ve been worrying about having the meltdown. I’m worried my mind will change and then I’ll want something I don’t currently want and then it will hurt my feelings. This is akin to my worry about whether or not I have any regrets. I don’t think I do but the fear of a regret is matched with the burden of acquiring one. See how I torment myself?

As a teenager, I didn’t want to get married until 29. I thought that was the appropriate age and I smile at this now knowing that I was a pretty cool kid – in no rush to commit or be tied down or to do laundry for two. “I have my own dern life to live!” 
I have a Lebanese uncle who became nearly hysterical to find that I was 25 with no desire to get married. “It’s too late!” he shouted at me, clearly distraught. I laughed at his naivety and carried on quitting jobs that interfered with my travel schedule. Two years later, little has changed.

But it all started with everyday items. Mom bought new towels. Fluffy, light grey bath towels with matching washcloths, and I felt a twinge of jealousy. I’ve always wanted a set of matching towels. Matching towels look intentional and orderly. I use a heap of zany beach towels and a mismatched collection from my youth. I also have a pale green towel that was present the first time Ellen learned to do laundry with bleach. My longing for matching towels started around age 22 but I’ve never given the thought true consideration. Why would I spend money on matching towels when I have plenty already? I’ll buy matching towels when I get married and have a home.
Later, Ellen bought string lights to hang on her porch. Big, round café lights like the ones I’ve loved since I was a little girl. As a 12 year old I imagined the perfect backyard patio and though the flowerpots and cushion patterns have changed with age, the one constant is having countless swags of café lights dipping down over the table and disappearing up into the trees. I’ve always wanted string lights for my backyard but why would I buy those for a patio I rarely sit on? I’ll buy string lights when I get married and have a real yard.
Two months ago I got a craving for a puppy. With that craving came the frantic feelings I have towards anything that’s unruly and damp, namely small children and select members of the elderly community but animals also fall into the category. I ignored my maternal instincts. I like my clean, quiet house. And anyways, loving puppies is too trendy. I’ll get a puppy when I’m married.

That’s when it hit me. For someone only mildly concerned with the concept, I seem to think life starts after you get married. This realization crept up on me slowly as I noted more things I wasn’t doing. Surely that can’t be. Look at all the things I do. Look at the life I’ve had so far. I didn’t need to be married to be Laura. The longer I thought about this, the more things, bizarre inconsequential things, came to mind that I’ve unknowingly put in the category of “Later, When I’m Married”. The list goes as follows:

Things to Buy                                                                    Things to Do
String Lights                                                                      Adopt a dog
Patio Furniture                                                                  Get a bicycle
A coffee maker, knife set, and casserole dishes                     Volunteer
Matching towels                                                                 Start an exercise regimen 
A dresser (I keep my clothes in a bookshelf)                         Write that book
Picture frames                                                                    Have dinner parties
A bar cart or credenza to display shiny glassware                 Finish my paintings

When I realized how many things were on my Married List I felt an amused sadness for myself. As a mild defense, many of these are purely for financial practicality. Decorative beebobs are lovely but they cost money that could be spent on airfare or concert tickets. You have to prioritize these things you know. But mostly I realized I’m living an abbreviated life, waiting around to invest in making a home I really love until I have someone to sit under the patio lights with me. Do you think my bumpkin husband is going to care if the pictures on the walls are in frames? I doubt his one good eye will even take a hard look at the photo. The frames are for me. I should buy the frames. Will Husband be appalled, patting dry his varicose veins with towels from 1990? Nope. I reckon he would dry his rump on anything within arms reach of the shower. How will being married help me write a book or finish my paintings? What if I don’t meet my husband at the Seven-11 cigarette counter until I’m 45? I can’t wait that long to exercise.

You get my point. I don’t know where this has come from though it’s a list that’s been secretly growing for over a decade. Maybe I think I’ll be more at peace – feeling loved and settled etc, and therefore more clear headed and less anxious, and somehow also possessing much more free time for artistic expression and reading magazines. Or maybe I’m just avoiding commitments. I change my mind an awful lot. I find this whole thing ridiculous but also understandable. I imagine lots of people, men in particular, have a silly thing or two that they’re holding off until they have a spouse. But I can’t allow myself to continue living like an Amish girl on the eve of her Rumspringa.

So I played a game with myself. Suppose God came to me in a very moist chocolate cake and said, “By the way Big Lu, I didn’t write ‘getting married’ into your story. You’re going to be the good-natured neighborhood hippy with a fondness for landscaping and home brewed kombucha.”
Then what Big Lu? I told Mom that God not letting me get married could be my thing. 
“No Mom, it’s perfect. Me! Someone who loves to love people and write them witty poems! That’s going to be my big trial. That’s going to be my lost limb or my house fire or my drug-riddled teenage boy! It’s the perfect crime!”
Mom laughed at me and said “That’s ridiculous.” but I think she was just trying to make herself feel better. I saw her consider it for a moment. So I pretended I’ll never get married. How would I set my life up now? What would I want my life to look like? How would I make myself happy?

The first thing that came to mind was being lonely. I’m lonely now, holed up in my house alone all day, writing emails to people who are… getting married. I’d get a companion immediately, cause I have lots of cuddles to give. And we would start an exercise regimen, possibly involving a new bicycle. Look at me livin’ my dern life!
 So let me tell you about Pippa. She’s a boxer mix and she’ll be three in February. She weights 38 lbs, her tail only wags up and down, not side to side, and I adopted her from Pet Helpers on September 24th.


Brett, Hayden, and I walked down the kennel hallway, my little heart breaking at every cage, and greeted the pups inside. Some were gregarious, some were barking, and one had a confusing mix of growling with a happy tail wag. One dog was sprawled out across a cot, one was cowering in the back corner, and another had to have his cage blocked off so he couldn’t see out. I’m not sure about that guy.
But one was a happy, handsome fella named Flint and I asked if I could meet him. They made me fill out forms and had us wait in a cinderblock room reminiscent of prison visiting hour on TV shows. We were antsy. Brett was delighted by my urge to get a dog. Hayden was less convinced. Just moments later, Flint came swinging into the room, jumping and wagging and licking and he was so excited, he immediately peed all over Brett’s shorts. The presence of Flint stressed me out but we listened to the worker talk, telling us what a fun, smart dog he is but I knew he wasn’t for me. I decided to cut the crap. I said, “Listen, I’m a quiet, lazy, nervous person. I work from my clean home and I don’t like loud noises. Who do you have?”
She laughed and said, “Let me go get Rasta.” and moments later she brought in this nervous wreck of a dog. It was the cowering dog from earlier. The worker said she’s afraid of people and hasn’t really been eating because the noise and barking in the kennel is stressing her out. But Rasta liked us. She approached us slowly and licked our faces and broke all of our hearts. I thought she was perfect. We took her outside, out of the noisy kennel, and she transformed into a normal dog, She ran and wagged her up and down tail and eyed us curiously.

I thought about her all night, hating that she had to spend another night hungry and afraid. I went back for her the next day, bought her a collar, and renamed her Pippa.
Now let me tell you about this nervous dog. We spent two full days together. She wouldn’t eat much but she let me pet her and walk her and she would turn around and look at me while we walked, wondering why I was following her. She never pulled on the leash, barked at other dogs, or took off after squirrels. She was living an abbreviated dog life. I wondered if she was waiting for marriage to be a dog. On the third day, I had to leave her at home for a few hours and I worried. Would she have a fit, chew up my furniture, go to the bathroom on the rug? I came home three hours later and she was curled up in my bed, everything in place and no piles on the carpet. And when that dog saw that I had come back, she lit up, wagged her catapult tail, and she’s been sure about me ever since. She eats hearty meals, drags me down the street, and sleeps across 75% of my bed, leaving me with a small quadrant.


Pip sleeps quietly through the night and wakes me up about 7:00am with a head nudge and forced cuddling. She seems to never need to go to the bathroom and now the both of us go out at least three times a day for walks and jogs.  She has lots of weird quirks that make me wonder what happened to her. She doesn’t like anything to pass over her head (people, hedges, car trunk doors), she hates loud noises, and she flinches when you reach out to say hello but she loves dogs and going to the Dog Park and I have a huge bruise on my hip from the time she decide to fly me like kite. She’s very strong.



Two more notes. Buddy is not excited about Pippa. He won’t let me pet her when we are at at his house. If I call her, he comes and if I reach down to touch her, he squeezes between Pip and my hands. He also doesn’t like that she makes him look very fat and slow and he became visibly frustrated when he couldn’t catch her as they ran through the backyard. Things have gotten better since their first few meetings and I know he’ll grow to appreciate her (he loves anything that plays with him) but right now he’s working on some jealousy issues. Lastly, you know who really hates Pippa? Sweet little Grace. She’s taking this news very hard. She’s ignoring me and sometimes Brett too if he’s caught loving on Pip. She nips at Pippa when she walks by and they’ve gotten into a few heated arguments. Sometimes they run and play together and then Grace suddenly remembers that she’s not supposed to like Pippa and so stops and looks around nervously, hoping no one saw her having fun. We've been laughing at Grace a lot.

Pip gets me out of the house and I give her a quiet place to rest. 
We’re a good  little nervous match.


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