Thursday, February 10, 2011

Farm Fire Safety: A Rainy Day Story

            This is an account of events that happened a long time ago, and years of storytelling and drinking have dulled my recall. Some of the conversation may not be word for word, but I am going off of typical scenarios and dialogue that happened in my house growing up. This was an ordinary day in my life, when an extraordinary question was posed.
            I remember sitting at my desk in the second grade. I was somewhere toward the back that time of year, near the window and back toward the reading corner where we could occasionally hear stories. I was a good student, so I typically was assigned a seat further back. Being close to the reading corner meant I could creep back there and read books when I finished my work early, or I got to work my way through the laminated reading comprehension booklets. They were color-coded to level of difficulty, kind of like martial arts belts. The students who gave a shit would brag about what color they had achieved, and make fun of the students who were still stuck on remedial green.
            So yeah, I was pretty cocky in the second grade, and I stood up straight as the volunteer fireman (all rescue squad members are volunteer in my hometown and surrounding towns) came in to talk to us about Fire Safety Week. Maybe it was the foreshadowing of the infatuation I would have on anyone who resembled a fireman for the rest of my life.
            Apparently, it was Fire Safety Week. But, Fire Safety Week was only one day at my school, because when it came between learning about Jesus and learning about fire safety, Jesus took precedence. I guess I understand, if you die in a fire, you will get to Jesus faster. I know that’s dramatic, and I really didn’t care, because a week’s worth of fire activities probably would have traumatized me. You will understand why shortly.
            So the fireman wants to talk to us about fire safety. I sit a little taller. Stop, Drop and Roll. Don’t play with matches. I got this.
            But they don’t go over any of that, they hand out coloring pages. Ok, I like to color. This should be fun, maybe even more fun than violently throwing yourself on the floor and rolling yourself into a frenzy. It’s a picture of a house. I poise my purple crayon, because it’s my favorite color. My room is purple, and I believe at the age of eight that everything in my future house someday will be purple.
            But the fireman is making this into an exercise. Boo.
            “Ok, kids. Everyone take a green crayon and color the rooms you have a smoke detector in,” said the fireman.
            I grab my green crayon and freeze. Wait, what? Smoke detector? What’s that? We don’t have one. I mentally search my house. Nope, none.
            I look around and notice other children coloring. I start to panic. Oh my god. These other kids have smoke detectors in their houses? What the hell?
            I start to slump in my desk.
            “Now, everyone take a yellow crayon and color where you have a fire extinguisher in your house.”
            Oh come on, no one is going to have this.
            Not everyone stared coloring, but a few kids did. I slump down further.
            The fireman starts to list off fire hazards that exist in my house. The curling irons my mom sometimes leaves plugged in. Old wiring. Our Christmas tree we keep on day and night. An old coil space heater that is in our bathroom wall. It’s really warm, but I don’t like it because it spits sparks at me sometimes, and one time a spark hit the towel basket underneath it.
            There is one major fire hazard the fireman didn’t mention: a dad whose cooking skills are so non-existent, he started literal fires in our kitchen. Mom had to re-paint the cupboards a few years previous. He is forbidden to touch the stove when Mom is not home. That’s how fire safety is practiced at my house.
            The fireman says a few more words, and gives us a reflective sticker to hang in our bedrooms. This sticker will alert a fireman that a child is in that room. It’s a picture of a fireman carrying a tranquil child. By tranquil, I mean most likely dead from smoke inhalation, at least that’s how I look at it since we live ten miles from town.
I spend the rest of the day in a daze. Visions run through my head: my canopy bed in flames, my Barbie’s faces melting. I ride the bus home thinking I am going to be the hero of my family. I will talk my parents into getting smoke detectors and extinguishers. I will even go the extra mile and suggest a fire escape ladder on the balcony outside my second-story window.
My mom was still stay-at-home then, and yells at us to take our school clothes off as soon as we get through the door.
“I hate it when you say that,” my sister says as she rolls her eyes.
My mom and sister start to bicker, but I interrupt. This is more important, dammit.
“Mom?….Mom?….Mom….Mom!”
“What?” She looks away from Oprah, who was still fat then.
“Why don’t we have smoke detectors?” I ask.
“What? Well, if the house burns down, we can move to town.Why?” my mom asks impatiently. She is not a fan of farm life and has not hidden it well.
I tell her everything the fireman said. She smirks.
“Why don’t you ask your father about that when he gets in?”
I remember it being late when my dad got in from the field. I looked up the timing of Fire Safety Week and it was in October, so I can safely assume my dad was harvesting. My memory confirms this. Dad comes in well after dark, smelling like diesel exhaust. It’s a smell I still associate with home. He’s covered in dirt and corn-dust in his hair. He shuffles to the table and sits down. Mom hands me the plate she’s been keeping warm for him and I walk it over to my dad. He smiles, never too tired for his youngest daughter.
“Hi Sugar, how are you?” he asks.
“Ok,” I say.
“What did you learn in school today?”
It’s a question he asks me daily, and I normally respond, “nothing,” and pretend to be interested in whatever baseball game he was watching, like a good daughter. But tonight, I had other plans.
“We had a fireman come to school today,” I start.
“Oh yeah, what did he say,” Dad asks with his mouth full.
“Dad, why don’t we have smoke detectors?”
My dad closes his eyes, raises his eyebrows, opens his mouth and starts to subtly shake his head. He does this when he thinking.
“Well…well…we don’t need them,” he says.
“Yes we do!”
“I got along just fine without them.”
“But our house is really old! And you’ve started fires when you’re cooking.”
Dad shoots a look at my mother. She's trying to cover her grin because she thinks this is hilarious.
“There is nothing wrong with my cooking. Your mom just doesn’t like it.” He smirks at the absurdity of this.
But I’m serious.
“We need to have one in every room, and we need to have one fire extinguisher on each floor. We probably should have a ladder outside my room for a fire escape upstairs. And I have to put my sticker in my window!”
“Sticker? What sticker?” he asks.
I run and get my reflective sticker. Dad holds it up, and says, “Well, we better put that up right now, shouldn’t we?”
I’m enthused. He’s seeing things my way. We go up to my room and Dad puts the sticker on my window.
“There. You’re safe. See, we don’t need smoke detectors. We’ve got this.”
“What? No, WE STILL NEED THEM!!!” I start to argue with my dad. I repeat my argument.
“Ok, sugar, ok. We’ll get them,” my dad gives up and goes downstairs to finish dinner. It’s the same resignation I’d seen on his face when I berated him for not wearing his seatbelt and he would slip it on when we were one mile from home.
To this day, there are no smoke detectors in my parent’s house. It’s not that my parents didn’t care about our safety, but my dad didn’t grow up with them so he didn’t see the need. He was probably more concerned about getting the crop out so he could feed the family for the year. If I had asked for these things at a time other than harvest or planting season, I probably would have gotten it. I learned this later when I asked for a dog. My dad does not like dogs, and I got two. That’s why you ask in early September.
I was talking about this to Josh recently in our living room. I told him I’m pretty sure that sticker is still on my window.
“Just think,” Josh said, “how many pedophiles have been helped with that sticker.”
I look at him in horror. He just raises his eyebrows in seriousness.
“What? Am I wrong? Just think about it.”
Yes dear, very wrong indeed.

           

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Introducing: The "Too Bad, Fat-Ass" Weight Loss and Financial Plan

            I am going to Puerto Rico in April, and I’m not nearly as excited as I should be. Sure, I’m going to what will be a very fun wedding in a gorgeous place. I will be hanging out with some great people and I’m sure it will be a wonderful time.
            But, the average temperature in Puerto Rico in April is around 90 degrees. I love the heat, but heat means shorts and *gasp* swimsuits.
            Most women, even when they look good in a swimsuit, gripe about swimsuits. I will not do that here, but I will say that my swimsuits are starting to get more expensive as my weight goes up. It could be the basic cost of more material, which is starting to reach circus tent proportions, but I think it’s more to do with trickery design. I feel I have to pay more for a swimsuit that will mask some things. And, a larger size swimsuit that is flattering and cute is a diamond in the rough. So, quite honestly, when I find it, money is no object. For example, I found a Magicsuit swim dress that looked pretty good. Swim dresses are in style right? Right? I have to admit, I balked at the price, almost $179. Huh, it better be freaking magic.
            But, the skirted bottoms I have now are no longer fooling anyone, and they certainly are not hiding the stretch marks on my stomach or the cottage-cheese look of my thighs. But, there’s got to be a more cost effective way. So, I started surfing Target.com, one of my favorite places to be. Time to start thinking about a tankini. I couldn’t find one that would currently go with the giant swim shorts I invested in last year. So what if they’re ugly? You should be thanking me for covering up. You’re welcome, world.
            Ugh, why can’t swimsuits be like in Victorian times, when they covered your whole body? Those were the days, when everyone was ashamed. I bore easily with the tankinis and venture over to the clothing section of the site. Oh…my…god…they have such cute color block casual dresses! In about 12 different colors! I want them all! Oh, look that these jackets! These shoes are adorable!
            I start furiously clicking “Add to Cart” and before I know it, there is a LOT of money in that total column. Hmm…open new tab and open U.S. Bank. I know the answer before I even get there. Grim.
            Then, I thought to myself, why do I drain my bank account almost every pay period on stuff that just makes me look…ok? Why should I settle? When is the last time I put something on and thought, damn, I look GREAT in this? Should I be rewarding myself for getting up to a size XL? How did that even happen? Oh yeah, I bought these sweaters in a size larger “for the length” and now they don’t fit. Besides, I’m supposed to be saving money for Puerto Rico.
            So, since I love to multi-task, I have rolled two life goals into one smart plan. I have decided to call it the “Too Bad, Fat Ass” weight loss and financial plan.
            The plan is simple. If I have not lost weight from the previous week, I do not get to buy anything for myself. That’s it. That should cut out a LOT of stupid spending I seem to keep doing. And if I do lose weight, great. Then, I’ve lost weight AND I get to buy something I feel I will fit into six months from now. It's a win-win, calorie-free reward.
            Still not clear? Let me give you some scenarios.
“Can I buy this sweet tunic that hides my fat rolls and mammoth size butt?”
            Did you lose weight this week?
            “No.”
            Well then too bad, Fat Ass. You can’t have it. Maybe if you did, you wouldn’t need that tunic to cover up your nasty body.
            “Oh, well, I’ll go buy more tanning minutes. That will make me feel better about myself.”
            Is that tanning going to make you thinner?
            “No, not really.”
            Well then too bad, Fat Ass. Maybe next week.
            Just watch, someday people are going to be buying my book.
            Sure, there’s holes in the plan. Why would I buy something after I’ve lost two pounds when it might not fit when I’ve lost 20? Well hopefully I have that problem. It just comes down to motivation and responsibility, and both of them are lacking in my life right now.
            So, look for the book, Too Bad, Fat Ass: Your Guide to Stop Being a Money-Grubbing, Fat Piece of Shit. Coming to a store near you, whenever I get the motivation to write it.
            Don’t hold your breath.

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

The Carb Lover's Diet

Everyone who knows me, even a little bit, knows I love to read. I read just about everything from mysteries and thrillers to novels, historical fiction, and autobiographies. I even started putting my old Newsweek and Time magazines in my bathrooms to make the “unread” pile dwindle. Sometimes, I work in a romance novel, but I mostly find the shoddy plot as an infuriating, time-consuming hurdle I have to get through to finally witness some unrealistically good sex.
            But, in a nutshell, I read just about everything, except diet and wellness books. I have never really wanted to waste precious reading something that is a gimmick, or will tell me something I don’t want to hear. Like, “you will lose weight if you stop eating crap and drinking wine.” Sounds pretty uninteresting to me. I just want to know the plan, I don’t need a $22.00 hardcover book to tell me to pass up that Snicker’s bar. (harsh reality, I have one in my desk, thundering like Poe’s Tell-tale Heart. You bookworms should get that.)
I have rolled my eyes watching my family and friends buy titles like The Flat Belly Diet, Skinny Bitch, and The 9-inch Diet. That last one sounded kind of interesting, but I was scared to click on it.
And it seems like every year there is some fad diet, like Atkins, South Beach, and Mediterranean. I’m obviously no authority on the subject, because I know these diets work for some people, but a lot of them seem kind of strange and unrealistic to me. My dad went on Atkins and survived for months on omelets, bun-less burgers, and asparagus. Our house smelled like rotten ass, but he dropped 50 pounds.
A couple of years ago, my trainer had suggested I buy the Eating Clean Diet and Cookbook. I’m sure it’s very good for you, but I didn’t know 75% of the ingredients in the book, and absolutely everything you ate had to be prepared from scratch. It was just not something that fit well into my life.
So, I have never bought a diet book on my own accord, but boredom and frustration do things to a person. A few weeks ago, I found myself sitting in a hotel room in Boston struggling through homework. Rachael Ray was on because I was hoping to catch The Price is Right, which is on after her. Somewhere between discussion posts and my Kurig black tea, I heard the words “Resistant Starch” and “burns fat.”
My mind did the math: starch=carbs=pasta. You have my attention. I physically turn my body to Rachael Ray.
            These two ladies are on TV talking to Rachael Ray about how carbs are not evil, you just need to learn how to probably use them to fuel your body. Hmm…makes sense. They then show some delicious options within their diet, had a striking testimonial from a viewer, and then they got me. I could have wine with my dinner. Rachael Ray pretended to swoon, but I actually did. This book sounds exactly like what I’m already trying to do, cook healthy carb dishes.
            It’s called The Carb Lover’s Diet and it sounds pretty practical. Basically, eat some healthy carbs with each meal and don’t be a freaking moron. It’s about moderation and portion control. This woman gave her testimonial about how she lost around thirty pounds doing it and tracked her progress in a blog. This is too weird. I watch Rachael Ray maybe once per year and usually I just flip right through, but I happen to catch this and it seems to be talking straight to me.
            I contemplate this for a few days, and figure I have nothing to lose other than some weight and maybe a few bucks. I jump on Amazon and buy it. Unfortunately, they don’t have it in Kindle version, so I have to wait a couple of weeks for it to ship.
            Immediately after hitting the “purchase” button, I start to envision this book sitting in my house. Since I normally only buy electronic books, I am not used to waiting or even having a book lying around. It occurs to me that people will see that I own this book. It will be visible on my bookshelf or coffee table. I do not want this to be a conversation piece, that’s why Awkward Family Photos and The Truth About Chuck Norris adorn my coffee tables. Did you know Chuck Norris can divide by zero?
            I get the book and skim through it after coming home late from work. Obviously, the Taco Johns I had earlier was not on this plan. But, a lot of the things I already eat are on this plan, and I think this is realistic for me. This plan requires me to stop drinking for the first seven days. I frown at this, but there is no reason why I can’t. I decide the day after my Super bowl party is the perfect day to start. While preparing for the party, I ask Josh to move my book under the TV and out of sight. He puts it on top of the T.V.
            “Josh, put it under the T.V. I don’t want people to see it,” I said.
            “Did you get bananas? Do you know how many grams of resistant starch bananas have?” he said.
            “Oh my god, did you read it?” I asked.
            “I skimmed through it. I think I got everything important. I’m trying to avoid carbs, so this will be interesting,” he said.
            I’m already embarrassed. I look at my husband, whose body has been transformed into thinness by a mere month of racquetball and kashi bars.
            Well I’m two days in and I really like it. My first week has me on 1200 calories a day, just to throw my body into shock, I guess. 1200 calories a day is definitely a shock for me, but it was a big shock to not be so hungry. I’m not hungry at all, and my energy levels are much higher.
            Hopefully this is the last diet book I will ever buy, and hopefully the last diet I’m ever on. We shall see how it goes.

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Miss Slutty Strutting America

            My husband just got word that instead of leaving Omaha in the spring, we will probably be here until late fall. I grew up in the Midwest and I love it, but I am ready to move on. I do not want to go through another winter here and I’m hoping Josh’s company moves us somewhere warm. I even have prepared my “What is Winter Like” speech.
            It will happen on a breezy day in December, when I will be living in paradise (or a shitty desert town, you never know) and the temperature will only reach into the 50s. The locals will be bundled up in sweatshirts and coats, whereas I will be sporting my ruffled leather jacket unzipped. They will shiver and whine, and I will turn into a true Midwesterner and tell them that they are all babies because “they don’t know what cold is.”
            They will then ask, “What is winter like in Iowa?” They will become starry-eyed and gather around, like I am going to tell them about Santa and sugarplum fairies. Like I will fill their minds with lovely childhood memories of sledding and making snowmen and snow angels.
            But no, I will be honest with them. If they want to know what a winter is like in Iowa, they need to find a dark, cold closet, such as a walk-in fridge or a meat locker. Then they must sit in there in darkness as someone turns on a dim light for a few hours a day, fiddles with the fan, turns up the temperature to the point of comfort before plunging it back into freezing. Then snow drops on you, and it’s beautiful for just a few moments, but then it doesn’t stop. It also doesn’t go away, and you are so tired of looking at it, but you have to sit in it until it becomes crusty and dirty. Keep this up for about six months, or until you blow your brains out, whichever comes first.
            But then they are still getting out of driving, so the simulation is not quite complete.
            Anyway, needless to say I hate winter and I’m going to be really happy when it’s over. I’m looking forward to not having to put on layers of clothing just to drive to the gym in the morning. I’d like to believe it will be easier to get out of bed when it’s not so dark and freezing.
            The one good thing about the dark morning is that the treadmill area is dimly lit. There are a few areas of the gym that are clearly dependent on the large windows for their light. I enjoy running in the darkness. Well, I use “enjoy” loosely.
            I was” enjoying” myself a few mornings ago in a nearly deserted gym. The New Year’s Resolution-ers have reverted back to their careless ways and it’s just me, the fitness Nazis and the old-timers again. Those New Year’s people may be gone, but they have left their mark. A lot of machines have “out of order” signed posted on them. Clearly, they are not used to the high traffic. I steer clear of these machines if possible until Handy Hank gets around to them, as I don’t want him to get around me.
            I’m on my favorite treadmill in the corner for my daily dose of disappointment when a light catches my eye. Since it is dark where I am, I can clearly see that the lights in the workout studio are on. The lights are triggered by motion, but there are no classes going on at this point. I get excited, interesting things happen in this room when people are by themselves with long mirrors. One day, I spent an extra twenty minutes on a spin bike because one very white middle-aged woman fancied herself a hip-hop dancer and was trying some MC Hammer moves. Trying and failing. I would have laughed had I not been so out of breath.
            So who’s in there today? I am shocked to see a woman enter in my frame of vision. She is about 5’6’’ with a bad perm and very high platform heels. She is wearing a top that is halfway between a sports bra and a swimsuit top. She is also wearing bikini bottoms that showed off her tan ass cheeks, bikini wax and her obvious daddy issues.
Despite the stripper heels, I’m not sure this woman was a stripper. That was the confusing part. She would strut on her heels to one end of the studio, then put her hand on her hip, shift to one side, and check out her backside. Then she would strut to the other end and tense up her body and scrutinize it further. Back and forth, back and forth. Isn't she cold? I didn't even want to take my sweatshirt off in this gym. Even the crazy fitness ladies who normally wear tennis skirts have traded up for some pants today. As she turns around and shows me her front half, I see she certainly is cold. Wow, you are bold my friend. Bold or something.
I understand there could be several explanations for this. First I thought she could be in a pageant and she was checking out her body for the swimsuit portion. I don’t want  to be unkind, because this chick was clearly in good shape, but she really didn’t have a pageant body, or a pageant look at all. She looked kind of rough, like she was maybe ready for Miss Kentucky, but we are a long ways from there. Maybe Miss Council Bluffs. And if the camera is unforgiving and adds so many pounds, this girl’s going to be up for Miss Congeniality at best.
Then I thought she might be into body building, but she wasn’t really ripped either. It looked like she might have been on something, but steriods weren't it. Also, I don’t think they make those girls wear hooker heels as they flex. Her body was really inbetween the two types.
“Was there a pole in there?” Josh asks me later. I roll my eyes and he becomes impatient. “Well was there?”
Thank god, no, because as I was starting to feel like a creeper, I turned away. I turn my head to the left and notice the two elderly men who are fixed upon her with sleazy, drooling smiles. Their panting was not because of their treadmill use, which had slowed down to an agonizingly slow pace. Gross. It's uncomfortable seeing guys who are older than your father shameless oggling a girl. Even though I'm no better, I instantly get irritated. Then I flash back to some of the sights I’m treated to with the senior swim class in the locker room and I understand their desperation.
I know my time is coming. I will never look like Miss Slutty Strutting America and I’m headed in the looks direction of the senior swim class. And my husband will be the gross peeper on the treadmill. Such is life.
Good luck to you, Miss Slutty Strut, in whatever and whoever you are doing.