Today was the day of the immediate family viewing, but that wasn’t until 1pm. In the meantime, I had missions.
I made breakfast, giving the kitchen bare minimum of a going over in the process and removing the mouse poop from counters and such. I made the bed in the front room for Lisa and Carl, and then I headed out.
I had shoes to buy today. Apparently during my marvelous adult competency when I was getting ready to go I forgot to pack my dress shoes for the funeral. I had seen a couple of shoe places near town, one of which ended up having a surprising selection of exactly what I wanted for a very fair price. The clerk who checked me out was very kind.
I also made an unusual foray through Wal-Mart, where I seldom ever shop. Although they’ve already put them away at home, the ones here still had sweatpants out, and I replaced my long worn and patched single pair today. It just seemed like the time for some reason.
I went to Granny’s house and had a sandwich with Mom before we went to the funeral home.
Viewing Granny’s body today was oddly not upsetting to me. It’s hard to explain. She looked good enough; she just looked empty. It was so obvious to me that she wasn’t in there anymore. Plus it was odd because of what was going on. My Great Aunt Kathleen (Granny’s sister) was there, and was determined that all would be done properly. Granny looked odd because her mouth was too wide. “That happens to them,” Kathleen said, with the air of a veteran of many funerals. “You can just have them patch the corners of the mouth a little, and they look better.” After she related this several times to several people, her request was dutifully reported to the mortuary, and a man with a pot of clay and some makeup to make the change was dutifully dispatched.
Well she did look better, but they only fixed the side that faced out. If you looked from the feet up, her mouth looked strangely lop-sided. I don’t know if it was still denial on my part, or that this made it patently obvious how useless what they were doing was, or if I’m just messed up; but it would have been funny if this had been on TV or something. As it was, it was just rather surreal. I wasn’t laughing or anything, but it was just so obvious to me that my Granny was no part of any of this.
Granny hadn’t been to church in years, so she had no minister. Kathleen brought hers. He was a nice-looking man (again, weirdness – how could I be thinking about this now?). He talked to us about scripture we wanted read, and asked for anecdotes about Granny, which we supplied. Before long the family stories got started and I think he got more than he bargained for. And then it was done, and we left. Mom cried a little while we were there. She said Granny looked so much better than when she was in the hospital, and she did. That’s supposed to be part of the grieving process I have read. It helps some people to see the person clean and dressed and seen to, and I can understand that. But I was strangely rather numb through the whole thing.
When we got back to the house the family started coming in. The other grandkids were arriving with their kids and people were coming through to visit the family. There weren’t that many visitors. Granny and Poppy had outlived most of their friends and family. But there was one key visitor.
I’m not sure what obscure relation Stephanie is to me, but she is a bit off. She doesn’t seem to have the same kinds of filters other people have. And her marriage has been rather troubled of late. Her apparently long-suffering husband had been looking after her for years when he had a stroke. The stroke has apparently changed him, and their relationship became much more volatile. During an especially volatile argument at their house last week, he apparently threatened to kill her. She locked him out of the house. He proceeded to get the gun out of the car (we’re in the mountains here) and shot her through the door. He hit her in the leg, but family shootings are rare, he was still in jail, and this was pretty fresh. There had been almost as much talk about Stephanie as there had been about Granny. We’d had the second-hand blow-by-blow from her step-mother the day before.
Stephanie showed up in person today, and gave us the first-hand. In excruciating detail. For about an hour and a half. And so much more. She was a very sweet woman, but I don’t think she breathed in more than twice the whole time she was here. Eventually, every man in the house beat a retreat for the porch – including me. My cousin Chris, who is with the sheriff’s office, said “I think he was aiming for her mouth. I can shoot better than that.” Which pretty much capped it all.
Lisa and co. arrived later. We stayed and visited with the family, but not too late. We had a baby who had to get to bed sometime, and decisions to make about who slept where. We got back to Grandma’s house and Lisa’s family started their way to bed. Frankly, I was mostly worn out anyway, and they finished the job. I went on to bed.
Thursday, March 24, 2011
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
A post in which I make a visit
This morning, of course, there were things to do.
The house looked a little worse in the light. I knew Lisa would have a fit if she saw it the way it was, so I swept out some of the dead bugs in the floor, made my bed, and tried to make it look a bit more presentable. Then I cleaned out the bathroom a bit and got ready for the day. By the time I had done all that it was seriously time for some breakfast.
I stopped at a little diner called the Coffee House, where kind young women brought me Waffle-House-esque food. I ran to the grocery store to pick up a few groceries for the house so there was something there to eat. I figured Lisa would have enough on her hands. Travelling with my three-year-old niece is a bit like moving Hannibal’s army across the Alps.
That done, the next thing was to go see Grandma. She and Granny were in the same nursing home. Since Grandma gets around pretty well in her chair and is usually on top of everything, she knew all that had happened, knew the family would be coming in, and would be waiting for me. I hate to make her wait, but she’s up and ready to roll (literally) at about 6am, and I just can’t keep up with that.
I found her at Bingo and joined her. We chatted a bit as she played a couple of rounds. The woman on the other side of me wanted help with her card though, and began to get a bit insistent. Grandma wasn’t too fond of that. She likes for my focus to be on her. So eventually she decided she had already won twice, and that we should just go back to her room, which we did. Grandma is very hard of hearing, but doesn’t always ask for her hearing aid. She was very proud of how well she was doing without it today, but in the interest of a better visit I called the nurse and got it for her.
I hardly ever bring Grandma anything. She fusses that cut flowers are wasteful, and that she can’t keep them because the nurses kill them with cold water. My dad and uncle keep her well-stocked with anything she needs, and anything they can think of that she might want, and of course she needs less now in the way of stuff than she used to. She catches me up on the latest tribulations with her roommate, who is apparently wearing her socks. She’s pretty unhappy about that, but overall, she is content enough.
At 90 now, she’s still impatient with being in a wheelchair, and on every visit tells me again that her biggest prayer is to get up and walk again. It’s good that she is still herself, and that she knows me and we can visit, but there are only so many things I can tell her about my life. Many parts of it would upset her, and they’re things she doesn’t need to know. But we still know each other, and we still can feel the bond between us. It is at once comforting and disturbing. She’s so trapped in an increasingly painful and non-functioning body. I tell her the things I can, and the things I can get her to hear, in a fairly short amount of time. She doesn’t want me to go, I can tell, and she tries to think up other things to talk to me about. I like it best when she tells me stories about her life and things she did when she was younger, but she doesn’t do that today. Today she’s anchored in the day, and the goings on, and seeing my mother and her sisters coming and going when Granny passed. Eventually, I walk beside her as she heads in to lunch, talking a bit on my way out. I give her some hugs and kisses in the hall. She tells me she won’t follow me to the door because “It upsets your daddy when I do that.”
When I get back to Granny’s they aren’t back from the funeral home yet. They were making the arrangements today. I lean the seat back in the car and doze for a bit, glad enough to have a moment to myself, but before long they’re back. Lunch is on the agenda, and we head out to another little local watering hole to eat. I’m glad not to go to a chain. As we walk in, we can see a display of locally home-made cakes and pies. The coconut cake was really good.
We went back to the house for planning, and because people would be coming in. Granny’s sister-in-law brought in one of her famous homemade strawberry cakes (which I adore, and she knows it), and visited. But I was feeling bad. My Epstein-Barr was acting up and I felt worse and worse. Eventually I had to excuse myself. I went upstairs, found an as-yet unoccupied bedroom and lay down for a while.
When I woke I felt better, but felt guilty for abandoning Mom to an afternoon of receiving. I was supposed to be here to support her, but thus far all I’ve done is eat meals with her. I apologized, and rand to Grandma’s house for a quick refresher and a change of shirts before supper.
Supper tonight was more intimate. Mom is doing better. There is no way to prepare for your mother dying, but she had a little distance from it at this point, and was getting used to it. Aunt Donna had run home for the night, so it was just my mother’s older sister and her husband tonight. We went to Applebee’s and had a nice meal and talked more about more current things. Afterwards it was back to Grandma’s by myself, but it was OK. I switched some light bulbs out and go the fixture in the bedroom working (I forgot to buy light bulbs), and try to read for a while. Tomorrow there is stuff to do. Again.
The house looked a little worse in the light. I knew Lisa would have a fit if she saw it the way it was, so I swept out some of the dead bugs in the floor, made my bed, and tried to make it look a bit more presentable. Then I cleaned out the bathroom a bit and got ready for the day. By the time I had done all that it was seriously time for some breakfast.
I stopped at a little diner called the Coffee House, where kind young women brought me Waffle-House-esque food. I ran to the grocery store to pick up a few groceries for the house so there was something there to eat. I figured Lisa would have enough on her hands. Travelling with my three-year-old niece is a bit like moving Hannibal’s army across the Alps.
That done, the next thing was to go see Grandma. She and Granny were in the same nursing home. Since Grandma gets around pretty well in her chair and is usually on top of everything, she knew all that had happened, knew the family would be coming in, and would be waiting for me. I hate to make her wait, but she’s up and ready to roll (literally) at about 6am, and I just can’t keep up with that.
I found her at Bingo and joined her. We chatted a bit as she played a couple of rounds. The woman on the other side of me wanted help with her card though, and began to get a bit insistent. Grandma wasn’t too fond of that. She likes for my focus to be on her. So eventually she decided she had already won twice, and that we should just go back to her room, which we did. Grandma is very hard of hearing, but doesn’t always ask for her hearing aid. She was very proud of how well she was doing without it today, but in the interest of a better visit I called the nurse and got it for her.
I hardly ever bring Grandma anything. She fusses that cut flowers are wasteful, and that she can’t keep them because the nurses kill them with cold water. My dad and uncle keep her well-stocked with anything she needs, and anything they can think of that she might want, and of course she needs less now in the way of stuff than she used to. She catches me up on the latest tribulations with her roommate, who is apparently wearing her socks. She’s pretty unhappy about that, but overall, she is content enough.
At 90 now, she’s still impatient with being in a wheelchair, and on every visit tells me again that her biggest prayer is to get up and walk again. It’s good that she is still herself, and that she knows me and we can visit, but there are only so many things I can tell her about my life. Many parts of it would upset her, and they’re things she doesn’t need to know. But we still know each other, and we still can feel the bond between us. It is at once comforting and disturbing. She’s so trapped in an increasingly painful and non-functioning body. I tell her the things I can, and the things I can get her to hear, in a fairly short amount of time. She doesn’t want me to go, I can tell, and she tries to think up other things to talk to me about. I like it best when she tells me stories about her life and things she did when she was younger, but she doesn’t do that today. Today she’s anchored in the day, and the goings on, and seeing my mother and her sisters coming and going when Granny passed. Eventually, I walk beside her as she heads in to lunch, talking a bit on my way out. I give her some hugs and kisses in the hall. She tells me she won’t follow me to the door because “It upsets your daddy when I do that.”
When I get back to Granny’s they aren’t back from the funeral home yet. They were making the arrangements today. I lean the seat back in the car and doze for a bit, glad enough to have a moment to myself, but before long they’re back. Lunch is on the agenda, and we head out to another little local watering hole to eat. I’m glad not to go to a chain. As we walk in, we can see a display of locally home-made cakes and pies. The coconut cake was really good.
We went back to the house for planning, and because people would be coming in. Granny’s sister-in-law brought in one of her famous homemade strawberry cakes (which I adore, and she knows it), and visited. But I was feeling bad. My Epstein-Barr was acting up and I felt worse and worse. Eventually I had to excuse myself. I went upstairs, found an as-yet unoccupied bedroom and lay down for a while.
When I woke I felt better, but felt guilty for abandoning Mom to an afternoon of receiving. I was supposed to be here to support her, but thus far all I’ve done is eat meals with her. I apologized, and rand to Grandma’s house for a quick refresher and a change of shirts before supper.
Supper tonight was more intimate. Mom is doing better. There is no way to prepare for your mother dying, but she had a little distance from it at this point, and was getting used to it. Aunt Donna had run home for the night, so it was just my mother’s older sister and her husband tonight. We went to Applebee’s and had a nice meal and talked more about more current things. Afterwards it was back to Grandma’s by myself, but it was OK. I switched some light bulbs out and go the fixture in the bedroom working (I forgot to buy light bulbs), and try to read for a while. Tomorrow there is stuff to do. Again.
Tuesday, March 22, 2011
A post in which I head for home
However I tried not to think about it, obviously life went on. Or stopped rather. Granny died about 11:30 this morning. I had known this was happening. When Lisa called me, she told me that Mom told her not to come up yet. Lisa was waiting for Mom to tell her when to come, and for plans to be made, etc. I thought about that, but then just thought if not now when? I decided to leave. I just compartmentalized and went on. I knew I had to get the weekly reports put together before I left, and I did.
I went through the motions of getting out of town mechanically, kind of watching myself from a distance and marveling at the competence of this stranger, whoever the hell he was, and a wondering a bit about how he could be so callous when someone had just died. Sometimes I'm surprised to find myself an adult. But that’s what you do. You cope, and you go on. The world doesn’t stop turning. I didn’t even call Mom. I just headed that way. I ran in to a huge traffic jam at the state border, and ended up sitting there, barely creeping, for over an hour and a half. Eventually I did text Mom so she wouldn’t worry. She just sent back “OK”. She knew I would be on the way. I called Lisa too, so she wouldn’t think I was sneaking off up there without telling her. She has the kids and stuff so I’m a bit more mobile. She was fine. Rod is sick, so Mom was up there by herself, and she said she was glad I was going on.
When I got there, they were at the house waiting for my Aunt Donna, the youngest, to arrive. I rarely see my aunts and their husbands, so we visited and caught up a bit. I was the only one of the grandchildren there. We went on to Ruby Tuesday’s for supper. We visited and talked at Granny’s house until late, my mother and her sisters teasing each other the way sisters do.
When it was time for bed I went on to Grandma’s house. I had called Dad earlier today and he had my Uncle Chris open the house for us. No one has lived there since Grandma went to the nursing home. The house didn’t do much to lift my spirits, having sat empty long enough to start to get scruffy. There has apparently been a serious mouse problem because there’s poop in everything. As far as it is out in the country it’s almost impossible to keep the mice down.
On the one hand, it’s a comforting place to be. My grandparents lived there from the time I was born. I helped my grandfather build the fireplace in the den, carrying the bricks into the house for him one by one, the brown knit work gloves huge on my child’s hands. I stayed here with them one summer, just before I started to become a man, my grandmother making ham and eggs for my breakfast. I stuffed myself on her home-grown green beans (my favorite) until I got a stomach ache, and taped paper airplanes to the ceiling of the bedroom at the front of the house. I went to sleep with the windows open, the attic fan pulling the soft night air into the house to the protest of screaming cicadas. When I was a teen-ager I drove up to visit. A trip to Grandma's was the first I ever made on my own. I was so proud to get there with (almost) no directions. The summer of my junior year, I painted the eaves, windows, and doors for her. She insisted on paying me $100. I know every nook and cranny.
It makes me sad to see it as it is now; kind of grungy and neglected, like a once-cherished teddy bear it is about time to discard. It smells musty. All three of the light bulbs in the bedroom fixture were burnt out. But there were clean sheets there my uncle left for me. I plugged in a lamp, made my grandmother’s small bed, and turned in. I put my feet down between the end of the mattress and the footboard and went to sleep in the perfectly quiet early spring night.
I went through the motions of getting out of town mechanically, kind of watching myself from a distance and marveling at the competence of this stranger, whoever the hell he was, and a wondering a bit about how he could be so callous when someone had just died. Sometimes I'm surprised to find myself an adult. But that’s what you do. You cope, and you go on. The world doesn’t stop turning. I didn’t even call Mom. I just headed that way. I ran in to a huge traffic jam at the state border, and ended up sitting there, barely creeping, for over an hour and a half. Eventually I did text Mom so she wouldn’t worry. She just sent back “OK”. She knew I would be on the way. I called Lisa too, so she wouldn’t think I was sneaking off up there without telling her. She has the kids and stuff so I’m a bit more mobile. She was fine. Rod is sick, so Mom was up there by herself, and she said she was glad I was going on.
When I got there, they were at the house waiting for my Aunt Donna, the youngest, to arrive. I rarely see my aunts and their husbands, so we visited and caught up a bit. I was the only one of the grandchildren there. We went on to Ruby Tuesday’s for supper. We visited and talked at Granny’s house until late, my mother and her sisters teasing each other the way sisters do.
When it was time for bed I went on to Grandma’s house. I had called Dad earlier today and he had my Uncle Chris open the house for us. No one has lived there since Grandma went to the nursing home. The house didn’t do much to lift my spirits, having sat empty long enough to start to get scruffy. There has apparently been a serious mouse problem because there’s poop in everything. As far as it is out in the country it’s almost impossible to keep the mice down.
On the one hand, it’s a comforting place to be. My grandparents lived there from the time I was born. I helped my grandfather build the fireplace in the den, carrying the bricks into the house for him one by one, the brown knit work gloves huge on my child’s hands. I stayed here with them one summer, just before I started to become a man, my grandmother making ham and eggs for my breakfast. I stuffed myself on her home-grown green beans (my favorite) until I got a stomach ache, and taped paper airplanes to the ceiling of the bedroom at the front of the house. I went to sleep with the windows open, the attic fan pulling the soft night air into the house to the protest of screaming cicadas. When I was a teen-ager I drove up to visit. A trip to Grandma's was the first I ever made on my own. I was so proud to get there with (almost) no directions. The summer of my junior year, I painted the eaves, windows, and doors for her. She insisted on paying me $100. I know every nook and cranny.
It makes me sad to see it as it is now; kind of grungy and neglected, like a once-cherished teddy bear it is about time to discard. It smells musty. All three of the light bulbs in the bedroom fixture were burnt out. But there were clean sheets there my uncle left for me. I plugged in a lamp, made my grandmother’s small bed, and turned in. I put my feet down between the end of the mattress and the footboard and went to sleep in the perfectly quiet early spring night.
Monday, March 21, 2011
A post in which I get bad news
It was a reasonably nice day at work today. As good as Mondays ever are, at any rate. I stopped on the grocery store on the way home to pick up a few things. While I was there, Mom called.
They called the family in on Granny Brown, and she was on the way up home. Granny has been in hospice for over a month now, but things are apparently turning to the worst. Mom just wanted me to know what was going on. For some reason, I went home and frantically made lunches anyway. I guess it’s a denial thing. Southern people are really good at that.
So I made a huge mess, cleaned it all up, and went to bed. I also called Scott, who didn’t answer the phone. I left him a message.
Sunday, March 20, 2011
A post in which it is a nice Sunday*
Well as if I didn’t get enough rest yesterday, I planned to spend today as a rest day. My last couple of weekends have been action-packed. A rest day just wasn’t in the cards though. Russ set up a brunch for this morning for us with Scott, since he was staying over last night. That was great. I got the critter-call about 9:30am (which is breakfast in my book, thank you very much), but it turned out that it was a good thing Russ called early. When I got to the house I went to wake up Scott, one thing led to another, and the virtue I had built up last night was wiped away in the blink of an eye.
We did go out to breakfast, and had a good appetite. Breakfast was good, but surprisingly expensive. We went to the Marriott off of Pelham. I had been there before with Dad, and was surprised at the small crowd. That little mystery was solved today. So points for the food, and points for it not being a mad-house (there are a surprisingly small number of breakfast places in Greenville, which always makes it a bit of a crush), but $15 a plate is a bit pricey to me for breakkies. I used to pay it gladly at Johann's (God rest his soul), but that man turned out food that would make angels weep it was so good. Then again, he had cooked for the crowned heads of Europe. Deservedly. And lucky them. It's a sad story. But I digress.
So Scott went on home (he gave me his phone # - yay), and I tried not to ruminate too much on the fact that he just lost his job last week. After 10 years at the same place though, and he’s only 42. Besides, hello, he hasn’t asked for me to marry him or anything. At that point I got a call from my old friend Michael. I had at long last decided to give him the Ethan-Allen wingbacks which have graced my living room lo these many years. They have been good chairs, and still look good, but a) I have a man chair now and their crowdin' me; b) I’ve been a bit in conflict over having two large pieces of leather furniture for a while now; plus c) I promised him the chairs in exchange for his letting me use an air conditioner he had for my apartment on Earle St. I was very poor at the time, and could never have bought my own, so this was a great boon. It’s also been so long ago that when I called him, he quipped “What, did you die?” So I guess it was, indeed, about time.
I ran home, straightened up the house a tiny bit, and prepared to receive visitors. I was hoping that Michael would sit down and visit for a bit. It’s been a while since I saw him and I wanted to catch up a little. Fortunately he arrived with both the time, and a very young man with him. We talked, visited, re-lived the good ole days, and basically bored the stuffing out of that guy until it was time we both got moving. They loaded the chairs, along with a few other things that needed new homes, and went on. I would so much rather give things away to friends than just dump them out at the Salvation Army. I’m a bit sentimental about my things, as I guess most people are.
By the time our visit/gab session/furniture moving was done, it was time to meet Russ and Billy for dinner. Tonight, unfortunately, the choice was Sakura. I’ve eaten there before, and was pretty much underwhelmed. For some reason all the sushi places close on Sunday, perhaps because of the strong Southern tradition of Sunday dinners being for family. That’s my theory anyway. Rarely does granny want to belly up to the sushi bar. But I digress. Again. As I say, Russ and Billy (and a couple of other people) had tried to steer me back in there, but I had been mostly silently (a shock, I know) but strenuously steering the other way. But Russ and Billy had a bee in their bonnets, and so I decided just to get this out of the way. Which Billy was a bit nonplussed about when I announced that at the table. I knew they wouldn’t be dissuaded, however advisedly. The food was actually worse than the last time I was there. I had an oyster roll that had actual chips of oyster shell in it. I just picked around them. I had a tuna roll in which the tuna had been through some nastification process to make it like a slimy spread. Yeah. As Sophia Petrillo says “When you’re as right as I am, you don’t have to say it.” I just soldiered on. By the end of the meal, they saw my point. So that’s done. I went back to the house and visited for a while, but it’s a school night, and I had to woogle off home to bed.
Saturday, March 19, 2011
A post in which it is the bear dinner
I was pretty laaaaazy today. I had intended to get up, re-claim that last room from the wiring, do laundry, and general act like a super-hero, but it didn’t happen. I mostly slept. I’ve been feeling pretty run down for the last week or so. I’m afraid the Epstein-Barr is acting up again.
The bear dinner was Saturday night, and I was looking forward to it. Brian was coming, and I like him. Also there was the possibility that Scott might be coming down from Asheville – and possibly I got the impression that he might be coming down to see me.
We went to The Olympian, which has been a great restaurant here for years. I used to eat there a lot more than I do now, partly because their chicken Yianni is one of the best things I have eaten in my life. It was a great temptation when I first went veg. The sauce is the best part, and only has a little chicken broth in it, but I hate going in and making a big production out of ordering something special, so I very rarely eat it any more. No one got it tonight, despite my enthusiastic endorsement. Dammit.
Scott did come to the dinner. He was nice. And he wasn’t with the guy he had been with at the dinner the week before. Turns out he and that guy are just buds. I hope. Well that’s what he said anyway. You never really know at first, ya know?
We went back to the house for drinks and hanging out after supper. It was just the four of us, so it was pretty cozy. Russ wanted to use his new deck so badly, and it is so pretty, but it was so cold we didn’t end up spending much time out there. Of course we have the whole summer long before us, and hopefully many more.
I was a very good boy, kissed Scott, and went home rather to Russ’s surprise. He just seemed to assume that I would be staying over, and of course I wanted to. But it’s so hard at first for me now. I’m a lot less confident in some ways than I used to be.
The bear dinner was Saturday night, and I was looking forward to it. Brian was coming, and I like him. Also there was the possibility that Scott might be coming down from Asheville – and possibly I got the impression that he might be coming down to see me.
We went to The Olympian, which has been a great restaurant here for years. I used to eat there a lot more than I do now, partly because their chicken Yianni is one of the best things I have eaten in my life. It was a great temptation when I first went veg. The sauce is the best part, and only has a little chicken broth in it, but I hate going in and making a big production out of ordering something special, so I very rarely eat it any more. No one got it tonight, despite my enthusiastic endorsement. Dammit.
Scott did come to the dinner. He was nice. And he wasn’t with the guy he had been with at the dinner the week before. Turns out he and that guy are just buds. I hope. Well that’s what he said anyway. You never really know at first, ya know?
We went back to the house for drinks and hanging out after supper. It was just the four of us, so it was pretty cozy. Russ wanted to use his new deck so badly, and it is so pretty, but it was so cold we didn’t end up spending much time out there. Of course we have the whole summer long before us, and hopefully many more.
I was a very good boy, kissed Scott, and went home rather to Russ’s surprise. He just seemed to assume that I would be staying over, and of course I wanted to. But it’s so hard at first for me now. I’m a lot less confident in some ways than I used to be.
Friday, March 18, 2011
A post in which I see Terry and Stacy
I had looked forward to seeing Terry and Stacy since Terry called me about it. I scampered home after work and ran over the living room and straightened up a bit. Then it was off to the restaurant to meet them.
I got there early, and since I was to meet them at 7:18:30 I went next door to Purple Haze. I went in to kill time more than anything else. I don’t think that I look like a narc or anything, but every time I go in there the staff is so rude that I don’t want to buy anything from them. Today was no exception. The funny part was that Stacy and Terry had gone in there to kill time too and we ran into each other.
We ate at Pita House. I had forgotten how good the food was – they make the best hummus I’ve ever eaten. It’s better than mine, even when I cook my own chick peas. Their falafel must be tasted to be believed - it is scrumptious. But Pita House has now been discovered. It was packed out with noisy white suburban people. It used to be only cool people that went in there, but no more. I hate the bustle of waiting in line and ordering at the counter before you could sit down almost as much as I love the food. Of course since this was a social occasion I wasn’t going to leave. I sucked it up.
After ordering, we snagged one of the last tables and Terry and I started talking. Stacy occasionally weighed in as well, but since he isn’t really a talker it’s hard to get a word in edgewise when the three of us are together. It was good to see Stacy again – it had been years. When I pulled up his Facebook profile I was quite surprised, never having seen him with short hair before, but he’s apparently growing it back out, and had it at a midi length that was quite flattering.
After supper I went over to the deli portion of the place to get some candy and some olives. They have incredible olives that you dip in bulk, and for a place that carries pitted Kalamatas (which are sinfully indulgent), they’re pretty cheap. Unfortunately, the counter they put in the deli section wasn’t manned tonight (really? on Friday night??) so I had to wait through the whole line of customers to pay for my stuff at the counter. Aggravating. They really need to organize.
We went back to the house and settled into the living room for a visit. It was a beautiful cool spring evening, and I had the windows open. Evening lighting is most flattering for the living room, and the house looked pretty good. I was most happy to have them there.
We talked and visited for a while. I had some residual bad Juju from an old buddy that used to come by, and they cleansed that out of the house for me, which I appreciated. Stacy was standing behind me with her hands on my shoulders as part of that, and all I could think about was the new fat packets I had found in my shoulders when I had the flu. His hands were right on them… It took everything I had to push that thought out of my head and concentrate on what was going on. Funny, just when you think your body has found all the possible places to store fat, it betrays you in some new way.
My only regret about the evening was that they pooped out on me about 10:30. I was ready to yak all night. But they left. I cleaned up the glasses and stuff, watched a little telly, and reflected that an early night wouldn’t do me any harm.
I got there early, and since I was to meet them at 7:18:30 I went next door to Purple Haze. I went in to kill time more than anything else. I don’t think that I look like a narc or anything, but every time I go in there the staff is so rude that I don’t want to buy anything from them. Today was no exception. The funny part was that Stacy and Terry had gone in there to kill time too and we ran into each other.
We ate at Pita House. I had forgotten how good the food was – they make the best hummus I’ve ever eaten. It’s better than mine, even when I cook my own chick peas. Their falafel must be tasted to be believed - it is scrumptious. But Pita House has now been discovered. It was packed out with noisy white suburban people. It used to be only cool people that went in there, but no more. I hate the bustle of waiting in line and ordering at the counter before you could sit down almost as much as I love the food. Of course since this was a social occasion I wasn’t going to leave. I sucked it up.
After ordering, we snagged one of the last tables and Terry and I started talking. Stacy occasionally weighed in as well, but since he isn’t really a talker it’s hard to get a word in edgewise when the three of us are together. It was good to see Stacy again – it had been years. When I pulled up his Facebook profile I was quite surprised, never having seen him with short hair before, but he’s apparently growing it back out, and had it at a midi length that was quite flattering.
After supper I went over to the deli portion of the place to get some candy and some olives. They have incredible olives that you dip in bulk, and for a place that carries pitted Kalamatas (which are sinfully indulgent), they’re pretty cheap. Unfortunately, the counter they put in the deli section wasn’t manned tonight (really? on Friday night??) so I had to wait through the whole line of customers to pay for my stuff at the counter. Aggravating. They really need to organize.
We went back to the house and settled into the living room for a visit. It was a beautiful cool spring evening, and I had the windows open. Evening lighting is most flattering for the living room, and the house looked pretty good. I was most happy to have them there.
We talked and visited for a while. I had some residual bad Juju from an old buddy that used to come by, and they cleansed that out of the house for me, which I appreciated. Stacy was standing behind me with her hands on my shoulders as part of that, and all I could think about was the new fat packets I had found in my shoulders when I had the flu. His hands were right on them… It took everything I had to push that thought out of my head and concentrate on what was going on. Funny, just when you think your body has found all the possible places to store fat, it betrays you in some new way.
My only regret about the evening was that they pooped out on me about 10:30. I was ready to yak all night. But they left. I cleaned up the glasses and stuff, watched a little telly, and reflected that an early night wouldn’t do me any harm.
Thursday, March 17, 2011
A post in which I try to go to choir practice
I tried to go join the men's chorus today, but it just didn't seem to be meant. I rushed home after work, whipped up a quick supper, and off I went. I smelled like a big ole fried tater, but I figured that was an aphrodisiac for bears anyway. The rehearsal was on Pelham Road, where I have been working for about 15 years now, but I'd never heard of the place, so just to be careful, I had my GPS. I also called my friend D'relda, who's already been going.
There was no email today. I called to check in with D'relda on whether or not there was practice today. He informed me that a) he didn't know; and b) he has quit. One of the big attractive things about this was that I would be able to hang out with D'relda, so I was disappointed. But off I went anyway. I'm usually only truly happy when I'm singing somewhere.
The GPS took me unerringly to a vacant lot. After turning around twice and looking, I still hadn't found the place. I was frustrated. I called Russ to see what he was up to, since I was tired of looking and didn't know if there was practice tonight anyway. He was free, so I headed over there.
Of course as soon as I started over I found the place. I turned into the parking lot because there were a lot of people milling about, but they didn't look like gay choral singers to me. The weren't. I asked if there was practice going on, but the girl I asked didn't know anything about it. Thoroughly frustrated at this point, I just left.
I went to Russ and Billy's and spent the evening with them. Russ was re-stuffing cushions for the deck, so I helped do that. Then we just reclined on the fabulous new deck and visited for a bit. It was a little nipply though, and I had worn shorts because it was so pretty and I just couldn't wait any more. We watched a program about extreme cocktails with Billy, and then I went home and went to bed.
The only thing wrong with this evening was that it wasn't Friday!
There was no email today. I called to check in with D'relda on whether or not there was practice today. He informed me that a) he didn't know; and b) he has quit. One of the big attractive things about this was that I would be able to hang out with D'relda, so I was disappointed. But off I went anyway. I'm usually only truly happy when I'm singing somewhere.
The GPS took me unerringly to a vacant lot. After turning around twice and looking, I still hadn't found the place. I was frustrated. I called Russ to see what he was up to, since I was tired of looking and didn't know if there was practice tonight anyway. He was free, so I headed over there.
Of course as soon as I started over I found the place. I turned into the parking lot because there were a lot of people milling about, but they didn't look like gay choral singers to me. The weren't. I asked if there was practice going on, but the girl I asked didn't know anything about it. Thoroughly frustrated at this point, I just left.
I went to Russ and Billy's and spent the evening with them. Russ was re-stuffing cushions for the deck, so I helped do that. Then we just reclined on the fabulous new deck and visited for a bit. It was a little nipply though, and I had worn shorts because it was so pretty and I just couldn't wait any more. We watched a program about extreme cocktails with Billy, and then I went home and went to bed.
The only thing wrong with this evening was that it wasn't Friday!
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
A post in which I do a bit of correspondence
I nailed my broccoli. It was delicious. I'm so glad I was able to re-create that. I can't always.
Emailing the Kindred really cleared my thoughts about the Granny situation. I feel like I've wimped out on Mom. Lori sent me an email about it too. I got in touch with Mom today and set up to go with her the next Wilkesboro weekend. It's the right thing to do, and I feel a bit better about that situation. Granny had kind of said her goodbye to me the last time I went up, but bless her she's just hanging on in misery. I hate this for her, and I hate what it's doing to Mom and my aunts.
After work tonight I didn’t feel quite like going straight home. The housework that needs doing reproaches me at the house right now, and I’m usually too wiped out at the end of the day to do any housework when I get home.
I went to Wal-Mart instead – yuck. I rarely do that, but I had a specific reason for going today. So I went and got that done, and then headed home for stage 2 of the plan.
I talked to Terry today for the first time since Christmas. He’s passed boards, rented a house, and makes every appearance of settling down for a bit, which would be nice for those of us who like to see him sometimes. I told him about the girl who came to the house looking for him while I was sick. He’s going to call her. He also has talked to Stacy, a friend from a long time ago, with whom I’ve lost touch. He wants us all to get together for supper on Friday night. I agreed. I called dana and explained that I wouldn’t see them Friday. I’m looking forward to seeing Stacy. It’s been a long time.
I missed four birthdays of people I care about during mid-February to early March. That was when the wiring thing was going on, but it wasn’t like I couldn’t have sent a card or something. I was actually feeling pretty guilt-ridden about it, so instead of continuing to whine (always a seductive option) I decided to do something about it. I picked up cards and a special ‘thank you’ gift for Helen. She made veggie meals for me the whole two weeks I stayed with Miss Kat and dana, and although she was grudging about doing it (“I’m not a damn vegetarian, I’m an omnivore. I can’t cook this shit.” she informed me one evening) I know she did it because she likes me. dana told me she hadn’t cooked that much in months before I came to stay. She’s a curmudgeonly old thing, but she has a heart of gold. She apparently just lives in fear that someone will find that out.
Anyway, I got home and caught up on correspondence. I even did a small load of laundry for good measure. The green room is the last one not yet cleaned post-wiring. I’m doing tiny bits at a time, but that’s better than nothing right? That’s what I’m telling myself.
Emailing the Kindred really cleared my thoughts about the Granny situation. I feel like I've wimped out on Mom. Lori sent me an email about it too. I got in touch with Mom today and set up to go with her the next Wilkesboro weekend. It's the right thing to do, and I feel a bit better about that situation. Granny had kind of said her goodbye to me the last time I went up, but bless her she's just hanging on in misery. I hate this for her, and I hate what it's doing to Mom and my aunts.
After work tonight I didn’t feel quite like going straight home. The housework that needs doing reproaches me at the house right now, and I’m usually too wiped out at the end of the day to do any housework when I get home.
I went to Wal-Mart instead – yuck. I rarely do that, but I had a specific reason for going today. So I went and got that done, and then headed home for stage 2 of the plan.
I talked to Terry today for the first time since Christmas. He’s passed boards, rented a house, and makes every appearance of settling down for a bit, which would be nice for those of us who like to see him sometimes. I told him about the girl who came to the house looking for him while I was sick. He’s going to call her. He also has talked to Stacy, a friend from a long time ago, with whom I’ve lost touch. He wants us all to get together for supper on Friday night. I agreed. I called dana and explained that I wouldn’t see them Friday. I’m looking forward to seeing Stacy. It’s been a long time.
I missed four birthdays of people I care about during mid-February to early March. That was when the wiring thing was going on, but it wasn’t like I couldn’t have sent a card or something. I was actually feeling pretty guilt-ridden about it, so instead of continuing to whine (always a seductive option) I decided to do something about it. I picked up cards and a special ‘thank you’ gift for Helen. She made veggie meals for me the whole two weeks I stayed with Miss Kat and dana, and although she was grudging about doing it (“I’m not a damn vegetarian, I’m an omnivore. I can’t cook this shit.” she informed me one evening) I know she did it because she likes me. dana told me she hadn’t cooked that much in months before I came to stay. She’s a curmudgeonly old thing, but she has a heart of gold. She apparently just lives in fear that someone will find that out.
Anyway, I got home and caught up on correspondence. I even did a small load of laundry for good measure. The green room is the last one not yet cleaned post-wiring. I’m doing tiny bits at a time, but that’s better than nothing right? That’s what I’m telling myself.
Tuesday, March 15, 2011
A post in which I do some catching up
Dick and Eve are still in New Orleans, unexpectedly. Although Dad hates The Big Easy, there was apparently some kind of saint celebration the Catholic Church was doing, and he wanted to go to that. I’m glad they’re getting away for a bit and that they’re both well enough to go right now.
That left me with a Tuesday evening free, which I feel I put to good use. I sent out a long-overdue update email to the Kindred. I’m supposed to send one once a month, but I haven’t done one since my induction ceremony. Bad, naughty, wicked Steve. It was good to get that done.
We’re also pregnant. Marty and Petal have finally started their pledge. They’ve known everyone in the group longer than I have, and indeed when I sent my petition I mentioned them because I thought they were members. I was quite surprised when I was told otherwise. At any rate, this is long overdue, and I’m glad they have finally reached out for official status. I remember the lovely welcome email that Lynn sent me when I joined, and wanted to make Marty and Petal feel just as welcome, so I sent them my own little welcome tonight.
Almost too late, I remembered that I hadn’t cooked my veggies to take for lunch the rest of the week. I concocted a lovely potato/broccoli soup flavored with shaved garlic, lemon, and pepper when I was sick. I was wondering if I could replicate the flavor combo, so I gave it a shot tonight.
It felt good to get some things done that long needed doing.
That left me with a Tuesday evening free, which I feel I put to good use. I sent out a long-overdue update email to the Kindred. I’m supposed to send one once a month, but I haven’t done one since my induction ceremony. Bad, naughty, wicked Steve. It was good to get that done.
We’re also pregnant. Marty and Petal have finally started their pledge. They’ve known everyone in the group longer than I have, and indeed when I sent my petition I mentioned them because I thought they were members. I was quite surprised when I was told otherwise. At any rate, this is long overdue, and I’m glad they have finally reached out for official status. I remember the lovely welcome email that Lynn sent me when I joined, and wanted to make Marty and Petal feel just as welcome, so I sent them my own little welcome tonight.
Almost too late, I remembered that I hadn’t cooked my veggies to take for lunch the rest of the week. I concocted a lovely potato/broccoli soup flavored with shaved garlic, lemon, and pepper when I was sick. I was wondering if I could replicate the flavor combo, so I gave it a shot tonight.
It felt good to get some things done that long needed doing.
A bit of a catch-up post
OK folks. I've been away for far too long.
Well here I am, finally at my computer, surrounded by broken good intentions.
The holiday parties went up through the middle of January this year. Competition for December weekends has become so fierce that some folks just gave up. That means that December (or the Holiday Season), always a gamut to run, is now a longer gamut. I love my friends, and I'm very lucky to have so many invitations; but man, does it take a toll after a while.
When things finally settled down a bit I decided to take care of something long overdue - I had my 90+year old house re-wired. dana did it for me, and did a fantastic job, but it was a bit more of an ordeal than either of us realized it would be. What we thought would take a couple of days ended up taking three weeks.
Two of those weeks I stayed with Miss Kat and dana - who were wonderfully hospitable. They treated me better than family - they treated me like family with money. The last week I spend at Russ and Billy's house, and they too were wonderfully welcoming and did their best to make me feel at home. I just wasn't. I'm very home and hearth oriented. I'm apparently the guy that breaks first if you go to prison - you know those movies.
Around the end of this, my Granny Brown was put into hospice. My Granny has been much on my mind of late. I was fortunate to be raised around wonderful, formidable women, of whom Granny Brown was one. To watch this strong, out-spoken spitfire with the light leaving her eyes is awful. She's dying by inches. My mother is going up every third week to stay the weekend with her. Sometimes she knows Mama and sometimes she doesn't. I've been up there with her, and it's actually pretty bad. Bad enough that I haven't been back since January. I feel like I'm not giving my mom the support she needs. I'm usually pretty strong about doing what needs to be done, but I have wimped out here.
Additionally, pretty much half the people I know were apparently born during February or early March. I've missed so many birthdays I'm not even sure who all to send cards to at this point.
When I got back into the house I got the flu. I haven't been that sick since I was a little child. Thank God for dana, who went to the grocery store for me. After three weeks away, there just wasn't anything here to eat. She wouldn't let me pay for the food, which I feel bad about since she risked pestilence and all. So I was sick for five days.
So I'm back in the house now, and it is wonderful. I love the fact that people I love have done so much in my house. My dad built the kitchen. Friends and loved ones have painted. Now when I come in in the evening and hit the switch (dana hot-wired some plugs for me) it feels like dana is welcoming me home. That's a good feeling. I'm getting quite sentimental in my old age.
Russ and Billy antd I went to Asheville last Saturday, which was lovely. We got to go to The Chocolate Lounge, where I got another liquid truffle, which is one of my latest reasons to keep on going. They are really, REALLY fabulous. We also had dinner out with the local bear group, which was fun, but potential husbands were not to be found.
Dating is something I look up in the dictionary these days.
So, just when I think life may slow down a bit, it fails to do so. But I guess that's the way it goes. I'm sorry if this sounds like a "poor little steve" post.
Well here I am, finally at my computer, surrounded by broken good intentions.
The holiday parties went up through the middle of January this year. Competition for December weekends has become so fierce that some folks just gave up. That means that December (or the Holiday Season), always a gamut to run, is now a longer gamut. I love my friends, and I'm very lucky to have so many invitations; but man, does it take a toll after a while.
When things finally settled down a bit I decided to take care of something long overdue - I had my 90+year old house re-wired. dana did it for me, and did a fantastic job, but it was a bit more of an ordeal than either of us realized it would be. What we thought would take a couple of days ended up taking three weeks.
Two of those weeks I stayed with Miss Kat and dana - who were wonderfully hospitable. They treated me better than family - they treated me like family with money. The last week I spend at Russ and Billy's house, and they too were wonderfully welcoming and did their best to make me feel at home. I just wasn't. I'm very home and hearth oriented. I'm apparently the guy that breaks first if you go to prison - you know those movies.
Around the end of this, my Granny Brown was put into hospice. My Granny has been much on my mind of late. I was fortunate to be raised around wonderful, formidable women, of whom Granny Brown was one. To watch this strong, out-spoken spitfire with the light leaving her eyes is awful. She's dying by inches. My mother is going up every third week to stay the weekend with her. Sometimes she knows Mama and sometimes she doesn't. I've been up there with her, and it's actually pretty bad. Bad enough that I haven't been back since January. I feel like I'm not giving my mom the support she needs. I'm usually pretty strong about doing what needs to be done, but I have wimped out here.
Additionally, pretty much half the people I know were apparently born during February or early March. I've missed so many birthdays I'm not even sure who all to send cards to at this point.
When I got back into the house I got the flu. I haven't been that sick since I was a little child. Thank God for dana, who went to the grocery store for me. After three weeks away, there just wasn't anything here to eat. She wouldn't let me pay for the food, which I feel bad about since she risked pestilence and all. So I was sick for five days.
So I'm back in the house now, and it is wonderful. I love the fact that people I love have done so much in my house. My dad built the kitchen. Friends and loved ones have painted. Now when I come in in the evening and hit the switch (dana hot-wired some plugs for me) it feels like dana is welcoming me home. That's a good feeling. I'm getting quite sentimental in my old age.
Russ and Billy antd I went to Asheville last Saturday, which was lovely. We got to go to The Chocolate Lounge, where I got another liquid truffle, which is one of my latest reasons to keep on going. They are really, REALLY fabulous. We also had dinner out with the local bear group, which was fun, but potential husbands were not to be found.
Dating is something I look up in the dictionary these days.
So, just when I think life may slow down a bit, it fails to do so. But I guess that's the way it goes. I'm sorry if this sounds like a "poor little steve" post.
Monday, March 14, 2011
A post in which I stop and think
I drug into work, sleepy this morning as usual for a Monday. I took some Ibuprofen, but they really don’t do shit for sleepy.
We found out mid-morning that the husband of one of the women who works here was killed in a car accident this morning. They have three kids, fortunately not little kids, but still. It makes you stop and think about what is really important. I can’t imagine how you recover from that. You get up, get ready, go to work, and then find out two hours later that your spouse, your life partner, the father of your children is gone. Just like that. Geez. I feel so bad for her, and I feel bad that there really isn’t a damn thing I can do to help her.
We found out mid-morning that the husband of one of the women who works here was killed in a car accident this morning. They have three kids, fortunately not little kids, but still. It makes you stop and think about what is really important. I can’t imagine how you recover from that. You get up, get ready, go to work, and then find out two hours later that your spouse, your life partner, the father of your children is gone. Just like that. Geez. I feel so bad for her, and I feel bad that there really isn’t a damn thing I can do to help her.
Sunday, March 13, 2011
A post in which I make the kitchen safe for democracy
Today I planned, first and foremost, to scrub my nasty kitchen floor. But getting motivated was a different story. I felt kinda drug out and lazy. I made some breakfast and lay down for a nap that it soon became apparent wasn’t happening. Then I realized the time had changed last night and I had lost an hour. That finally motivated me to haul my carcass off the couch.
I did get the floor scrubbed, and hooray for me. There’s still more that needs doing. The green room hasn’t yet been made safe for democracy. But I felt much better once the kitchen floor was at long last clean. It was a gorgeous spring day, and I opened the windows while I cleaned to start the house airing out.
I was just trying to decide if I had time to do more work when I had a call from Amanda. She, Jeff, and James had finished with painting chores and were getting cleaned up to head to Russ and Billy’s house. So that answered that question.
We grilled out tonight. The food was gorgeous except for the fingerling potatoes I burned. I was in charge of grilling them, but sat down to have a smoke and forgot about them. Oh well, it happens. I don’t have a lot of grilling experience either.
It was good to see everyone and spend some time together. Corbin was there, but Morgan and Andrew were not. I wore shorts for the first time this year today. It wasn’t quite warm enough for them in the evening, but I couldn’t wait any longer.
I stayed too late at Russ and Billy's, as usual.
I did get the floor scrubbed, and hooray for me. There’s still more that needs doing. The green room hasn’t yet been made safe for democracy. But I felt much better once the kitchen floor was at long last clean. It was a gorgeous spring day, and I opened the windows while I cleaned to start the house airing out.
I was just trying to decide if I had time to do more work when I had a call from Amanda. She, Jeff, and James had finished with painting chores and were getting cleaned up to head to Russ and Billy’s house. So that answered that question.
We grilled out tonight. The food was gorgeous except for the fingerling potatoes I burned. I was in charge of grilling them, but sat down to have a smoke and forgot about them. Oh well, it happens. I don’t have a lot of grilling experience either.
It was good to see everyone and spend some time together. Corbin was there, but Morgan and Andrew were not. I wore shorts for the first time this year today. It wasn’t quite warm enough for them in the evening, but I couldn’t wait any longer.
I stayed too late at Russ and Billy's, as usual.
Saturday, March 12, 2011
A post in which I have supper in Asheville
I had a lot to do today!
I had planned more than I actually got done.
I got up, made breakfast, cleaned up, and loaded all the recycling in the car to haul it off. It had been piled in the kitchen for the last two weeks. Chance drinks a 2-liter bottle of Dr. Pepper every day! So they had built up a bit. But I was glad they recycled while they were in the house.
After finishing that I headed to Russ’s shop for my appointment. I missed last week and I was starting to resemble Lyle Lovett, so it was past time. While Russ was cutting my hair, he informed me that I was to be at their house at 1pm (!!) to go to Asheville. That was far earlier than I expected, but as we all know by now, Russ is a force of nature.
I headed out and had the oil changed in my car. It needed the tires rotated too, so I was there for over an hour. I just had to give up on the nap I wanted today. I went home, got ready, and headed to Russ and Billy’s house. Russ wasn’t home yet (despite that it was 1:30 by the time I could get there), but he was in shortly after and we left for NC.
It was a beautiful day. It’s not quite late enough in the year for the trees to be pretty, but it is always a lovely drive up the mountain.
Russ had never been to Asheville to just hang out before. We went to The Chocolate Lounge (where I had another of those incredible liquid truffles they make), and nosed around in little shops and things. I was kind of hoping I would find some hand-thrown pottery mugs that I just couldn’t live without, but it didn’t happen. There are so many artists in Asheville, and so many pretty things, but I didn’t fall in love today.
Speaking of which.
There’s a bear group in Asheville, and we drove up to horn in on their dinner night. Russ and Billy had really built up the restaurant where the dinner was as having superlative food, and I was thinking it was just possible I might meet someone new.
Well apparently I should have been more specific. I did meet some new people, but there were maybe two guys there under 50. They were together. The food, though quite competent, was frankly nothing I would write home about either. It was fun. The guys were nice, and we had a good time. I had perhaps set my expectations a little too high.
By the time we got back down the mountain, we were all three bushed. Russ and I had a cigarette, and then I went home to bed. No time spent in the company of friends is ever wasted.
I had planned more than I actually got done.
I got up, made breakfast, cleaned up, and loaded all the recycling in the car to haul it off. It had been piled in the kitchen for the last two weeks. Chance drinks a 2-liter bottle of Dr. Pepper every day! So they had built up a bit. But I was glad they recycled while they were in the house.
After finishing that I headed to Russ’s shop for my appointment. I missed last week and I was starting to resemble Lyle Lovett, so it was past time. While Russ was cutting my hair, he informed me that I was to be at their house at 1pm (!!) to go to Asheville. That was far earlier than I expected, but as we all know by now, Russ is a force of nature.
I headed out and had the oil changed in my car. It needed the tires rotated too, so I was there for over an hour. I just had to give up on the nap I wanted today. I went home, got ready, and headed to Russ and Billy’s house. Russ wasn’t home yet (despite that it was 1:30 by the time I could get there), but he was in shortly after and we left for NC.
It was a beautiful day. It’s not quite late enough in the year for the trees to be pretty, but it is always a lovely drive up the mountain.
Russ had never been to Asheville to just hang out before. We went to The Chocolate Lounge (where I had another of those incredible liquid truffles they make), and nosed around in little shops and things. I was kind of hoping I would find some hand-thrown pottery mugs that I just couldn’t live without, but it didn’t happen. There are so many artists in Asheville, and so many pretty things, but I didn’t fall in love today.
Speaking of which.
There’s a bear group in Asheville, and we drove up to horn in on their dinner night. Russ and Billy had really built up the restaurant where the dinner was as having superlative food, and I was thinking it was just possible I might meet someone new.
Well apparently I should have been more specific. I did meet some new people, but there were maybe two guys there under 50. They were together. The food, though quite competent, was frankly nothing I would write home about either. It was fun. The guys were nice, and we had a good time. I had perhaps set my expectations a little too high.
By the time we got back down the mountain, we were all three bushed. Russ and I had a cigarette, and then I went home to bed. No time spent in the company of friends is ever wasted.
Friday, March 11, 2011
A post in which I am grateful it is Friday
Work today was actually a bit quiet. It’s been such a zoo that it was kind of hard to get used to. They’re gearing the department up for the big move upstairs. Terry moved today. I’ll miss her. I’ll be sitting with another department when I move up stairs. Not particularly looking forward to that, but it will be fine.
I spent some time shopping for outlets online today. Again, brass is out, so that makes it more difficult for me. I found one that I really liked, that would go in the house, and that came in the special config I need to go beside the front door. It was $90. I found a website with fabulous art deco reproductions, but they are not cheap either. The search continues.
I went to Miss Kat and dana’s tonight! Yay! It was so good to see them in the regular way. So nice to be kind of back in the old routine. I say I hate it, but I sure do miss it when it’s gone. Of course, going to Miss Kat and dana’s house on Fridays is the fun part of the routine…
I spent some time shopping for outlets online today. Again, brass is out, so that makes it more difficult for me. I found one that I really liked, that would go in the house, and that came in the special config I need to go beside the front door. It was $90. I found a website with fabulous art deco reproductions, but they are not cheap either. The search continues.
I went to Miss Kat and dana’s tonight! Yay! It was so good to see them in the regular way. So nice to be kind of back in the old routine. I say I hate it, but I sure do miss it when it’s gone. Of course, going to Miss Kat and dana’s house on Fridays is the fun part of the routine…
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