JustRunJustLiveJustBe » Everything

Very bad children

June 25th, 2008

An IM conversation between my sister and me.

Me: Did mom tell you about her new phone?

Sister:  No, what is it?

Me:  I don’t know, but she’s very excited about it.

Sister:  Why?  Because it’s not held together with tape and a rubber band.

Me:  Ha!  Well, probably that.  But it has a camera.  Ooooooohhhh!

Sister:  What?!  What is she going to do with that?

Me:  I know.  So we can now have pictures of the sky or the floor, but right on the phone!  She’s all “and now my text messages can have pictures!”

Sister: What?  She doesn’t text!

Me: I know!  I told her that, and she said yes, she does.   SHE DOES NOT!

Sister:  Oh no, we need to take that phone away from her.

Me: Yeah, this will not end well.  

Good thing the phone has a camera

June 19th, 2008

This last week has been rough. And no, not illness or death or tragedy rough, just life rough. The truth is, some parts of life have been tough for a while now and while it didn’t do much to me at first, it’s starting to have an effect on me now.

When I get home at night, I’m exhausted. I know this is common, I know that’s what work does to a lot of us, but what’s different is me. I’m reacting differently, and I don’t like it. I put off returning emails and often I don’t answer the phone. I don’t avoid these things because I’m avoiding people, I am doing it because I’m afraid of what I’m going to be like. To make a long story short, I’m not very much fun to be around lately. And if there’s anything I can be counted on to be, it’s fun. A bad day here and there, sure, but not long stretches of them. I’m not used to this and I’m afraid the people around me aren’t, either.

I know the people that love us will love us even in the hard times. I know that this is temporary and that it will pass. I just don’t like who I am in the mean time. I’m doing everything I can to get past it, and I’m good at that part. I’m just not so good at being in the middle of it.

Earlier this evening while I was walking my dog, I told myself to think hard– really, really hard. I like plans of action, and I need one now. I stopped in the middle of the sidewalk, probably looking a little crazy, and made myself make a list of five things that I’m doing right, right now. I needed to remind myself that one situation, one disappointment does not completely define me. With all the energy I’ve been spending on what’s bad, I needed to force myself to see the good. So I stood there, made my list, and took a deep breath just as the sun was beginning to go behind the clouds.

Yeah, I know. Silver lining, right? That’s what I thought too.

Apparently I Struggle With All Forms of Travel

June 18th, 2008

So right now I’m sitting at the airport and oh, how I wish I could tell you it’s because I’ve finally had enough of it all and I left work this evening and drove straight here and bought a ticket on the next flight to Anywhere.  Sadly, and maybe moreso for everyone else than me, that is not the case.  Rather, I’m here to pick people up and because we no longer live in the land of Air Travel Make-Believe, I’m now a victim of last-minute flight changes and shortages of who knows what.  Obviously I’m very understanding and not bitter, though enough of these expensive airport drinks and, well, you never know where the night could go.

But, in other, similarly bitter but much more important life, I also wanted to address bike commuting.  Specifically, that I’ve began riding my bike to work a few days a week and how, even with all it’s challenges, I’m liking it a lot.  Except, that’s a lie.  Aside from the gas savings (let’s be honest, reason #1) and the fitness benefits (a close second), bike commuting has not made me a better person.  Instead of finding that Zen-like place where those miles to and from work create moments of peace and time for myself, it’s starting to wear on me.

Here are a few reasons why:

1)  People don’t pick up after their dogs.  About 75% of my route is on a local trail (read: paved path), and every day I see piles and piles of you-know-what that someone just left in the middle of the trail.  This bothers me everywhere, of course, but especially at dawn when the light is just beginning to illuminate all of nature’s miracles left over from the summer’s evening walks of the day before.  Needless to say, I’ve come in contact with or very close to these piles more than once which, believe me, is no way to start a ten hour day.  (For those not famililar, if you run over a substance with a spinning tire, that substance goes one way:  UP.  See where this is going?  Not pretty.)

2) If you have road rage in a car, do not take to riding a bike in or around any kind of traffic.  It is nothing like those little video tapes we watched in the fourth grade where cars politely stop at intersections and crosswalks and make sure there is no one coming.  Far from it.   Those videos lied.  For one, no drivers know bicyclists’ (wow, did I just date myself with that word?) hand signals any more.  They think you are waving.  Which, apparently, is an invitation to take you out at the calf with their bumper.  Even in a city with more cyclists (there, that better?) per capita than most, people do not know these things.

3)  You will eat bugs.  If you don’t like to eat bugs, this may also be a bad way to start/end the day.  (Unless you have somehow managed to ride mile after mile with your mouth closed.  Which, if that is the case, teach me.  Apparently I’m a mouth breather.)

4)  Having to “gear up” and hop on your bike at the end of the day is less glamorous than it sounds.  When you’re ready to leave work and you’re not in the best mood, it is far better to go bombing out of the parking garage with your windows rolled down and Aerosmith blasting from your car stereo than it is to pedal through ten blocks of city traffic just to get to the trail only to drop your chain.  I’m sorry, it just is.

And this was all last week.  Did it stop me from riding in a few days this week?  No.  I guess because once in a while, when I’m slogging up that last hill before home after a ten hour day and a three hour meeting –that should have been titled I’m Your New Leader, and I’m a Tool– I’ll pass another commuter.  We’ll nod to each other, and though I don’t know what they’re thinking, it makes me feel better.  Because at least someone knows.

If my house were a different color today

June 9th, 2008

I thought this Monday would be easier than last. I blamed last Monday’s angst on returning from a trip, trying to get my head back in the game. It’s not, though. My head in the game, I mean. And I’m not very good at hiding it.

So I’m going to distract myself, and maybe everyone else, by talking about something as inconsequential and unrevealing as this question that’s been rolling around in my head lately: Why do I live in a neutral color house?

Yes, the answer to this is that important.

Sometimes I think I should have turquoise shutters.

 

 

Or maybe orange.

 

Or maybe the entire house should be orange.

 

Or maybe all of the above.

At least if I came home to an orange house with turquoise shutters every day yes, nothing else could be going right, but I’d still be able to tell myself “you have an orange house with turquoise shutters.” That, well that would be something.

And that’s about as deep as I can go today. Or as deep as I’m willing to let myself.

_____________

**Have I told you a new site design is coming?  Because it is. Woo hoo!**

All Because I Can’t Waste Good Weather

May 20th, 2008

Why is it so easy to cry in the car? Hiding behind sunglasses, closed windows and traffic noise makes it that way. And sharing space with others for just fleeting moments helps. Should anyone look over and see a tear rolling down your cheek, you’re making a left turn two seconds later and they’re gone. You’re gone. It’s down time, I guess. Time to think about all that’s been on your mind but you’ve been to busy to bring to the forefront until then. That’s when it hits you.

Over the weekend I was on my way home and catching up with my mom on the phone. I have a cousin graduating high school this week which led to a conversation about the ten years it’s been since I graduated high school. And, subsequently, the reunion to come. I hadn’t received anything about it, I told her. Who knows if they were even having one. It hadn’t occurred to me to do anything about it. As I pulled into the driveway, I stopped to check the mail and, well, what do you know. Right there on top was an envelope addressed to me from Reunions Unlimited. Dear Universe, you got me again. Thanks.

So I open the envelope, see the cost of attending the reunion (blah) and the names of the reunion coordinators with their maiden names in parentheses (yeah), and I let out a deep sigh because I know the heavy feeling in my chest is not from this envelope.

Earlier that day, after having already gone for a run, I decided I needed to get out on my bike. I am determined not to waste this weather, and that is all there is to it. I rode to a local trail area and just set out to ride. About ten minutes in, though nothing had gone wrong, I realized I was in the worst possible mood. I was frustrated and angry with life, with so many things that have come about lately, none seemingly bad enough to complain about but when compiled, it is all enough to suffocate me. And I wasn’t riding well, either. I didn’t feel good.

I blamed this on not having been on my bike in a very long time, and kept pedaling. If anything were going to work this out, it was the heat and some sweat. Or so I thought. Thirty more minutes of riding and I still wasn’t over it. That’s when I noticed my back tire. It was losing air, and I was only minutes from having to change a flat. Great.

So, I pulled over, thankful I’d at least come out prepared, and began the arduous process of changing a bike tire. Oh, how I hate it. And I hate admitting that I’m that girl that wants a boy to change her tire, but I do. Any tire, anywhere. Right at that moment I remembered April. I’m not sure why I’m bringing this up right now, but as far as my personal life goes, April sucked. Yes, just this past April. My heart was high, and then, through my own surprising logic and someone else’s lack of feelings, my heart was very, very low. It was about a month ago today that I declared to a friend, over some kind of drink, I’m sure, that I was “done” with all this and that “the only men I’d even be mildly obsessed with for the rest of the summer were the Boston Red Sox.” And let’s be honest, that has the potential of lasting all the way into October which, sadly, would be a damn fine record around here these days.

So when I was sitting there, alone in the dirt, changing my own tire (when I say tire, I mean tube. Obviously), I remembered April. That declaration I’d made in April would have been a nice thing to take back right now. Because although we didn’t get that close, and all I ever really saw was possibility, short even of potential, the man could have changed my tire. Who needs true love, as long as you don’t have to get down in the dirt by yourself. I reminded myself that it was good that I could change the tire, and how modern and independent that made me. And then I laughed at myself and thanked God no one else was around for my ridiculous internal histrionics as I began to fill the new tube.

And then I ran out of air (when I say air, I mean CO2. Obviously). Okay, great. Look for another cartridge. There was another. It was empty. Okay, hand pump. Um, adapter gone? What? I could not believe it. I had a tube probably 10-15 pounds short of the air it needed, I was on the verge of a nervous breakdown, and I was a good 45 minutes from home. Whatever.

I reattached the tire, I got back on my bike, and start pedaling toward home. There was a chance I could get to the gas station once I left the trail. That became my new goal. Exhausted, exasperated, desperate for lightning to strike me on an unbelievably clear, sunny day, I pushed along, probably feeling the drag of that low tire more than what was real. I knew I shouldn’t be on it, but I didn’t care.

That’s when I looked up and saw other riders coming toward me. As they came closer, I realized I knew them. I realized that lightning wasn’t going to be what killed me today. Rather, it was going to be the slow, painful torture of embarrassment and humiliation. Because it was Mr. April himself. The one who made me cry and didn’t know it. The one who I’d decided to get excited about, only to realize I was finally mature enough to not ignore red flags. Yeah, that one.

As we saw each other, the air became very still. I immediately stepped out of one of my pedals, taking the weight off the low back tire. We said hello, he introduced me to his friend. I forget his name. We made small talk and then I said I had to go. I had to go. I just had to go. My heart was pounding when I heard him turn around and ride up next to me. I stopped and kept my gaze fixed forward.

“Looks like your tire is low. I just wanted to let you know.”

“Thanks. I know. I’m just going to make it home.”

“Let’s take a look.”

“No, it’s fine. Really, I just ran out of air. My pump broke. It’s fine. Really.”

He reached into his bag. I said no thanks. He handed over a cartridge. I looked at his hand, hanging there waiting for mine, and my heart sank, and I was thankful for sunglasses and the sweat dripping. I reached out, took the cartridge, and said thanks. I wanted to say so much more, but I just said thanks. And then goodbye.

I watched him ride away, and once they were out of sight, I stopped, filled my tire, and rode home. I thought I’d cry, but I didn’t. I’d run out of air in more ways than one. I just pedaled home, walked through the door, took a shower, and didn’t talk to anyone about it for the rest of the day, including myself. I kept really busy. That is, until the drive home in the car yesterday, when it all came from that dark, deep place in the back of my mind where I hide things from myself and everyone else. The reunion, April, the flat tire, the air, it all came forward, into clear view. This is why it is so easy to cry in the car.

When I got home, I dried my eyes, took the dog for a walk and then had four bowls of cereal for dinner. Eh, what can I say, sometimes it’s Tequila, sometimes it’s shredded wheat.

And it would be meaningful

May 12th, 2008

It’s probably because winter was so dark and dreary that I’m so thrilled it’s over. No, it’s probably because it was so cold. Yes, that’s it. Cold. Or maybe it’s because it made me complain all the time. But we should all forget about that, and I’ll be really immature and illogical and act like it’ll never be back. Because spring is here! Spring! Warm! Sunny! Won’t-kill-me spring!

Yes, I know it’s nearly summer (woo! hold on, I can barely type the word without crying happy tears) and some people have been basking in 70, 80, and 90+ degree glory for a while now, but NOT ME. This time 10 days ago, it snowed. I cried the bad kind of tears that day. That day I would have been thankful for any sign of spring, any sign at all.

Yes, a dandelion would have made me happy.

But I don’t worry about that now. Now, not only do we have dandelions enough so that every mother in my neighborhood could have received a fistful yesterday, we have a whole lot more!

Flowers! Buds! And trees! Color! It’s everywhere.

Everywhere!

Mind if I keep going? I didn’t think so.

But wait! There’s more!

I know, I know. This is going to get annoying… but I can’t help myself. I love it. I do not say that lightly. I love it. So much.

So much, in fact, that I would kiss the flowers and the trees and the buds. You know what, even with the neighbors watching. Yep, I would make out with ground cover.  And like it.

That is all.

Not in so many words

May 7th, 2008

I really have so much to say and, yet, not yet time enough to say it.  Or, in some cases, it is not yet time to say it.   Make sense?  Good.But I was tagged not too long ago by Jacinta on her blog, One Little Acorn.  In my mind, Jacinta is lovely and charming and very exotic.  She lives in

Melbourne and is in the Arts industry and therefore is leaps and bounds more exciting than me.  I am so glad my life, both on the internet and otherwise, is full of talented, interesting people because I feel less boring for it. I am not very good at memes, however.  So here might be the shortest possible answers ever: 

1. Why did you start your blog?

I felt like I had a lot of words and ideas running around in my head and thought it would be a good idea to get them out.  You know, to settle me a little.  Obviously it totally worked.

2. How did you come up with your blog name?
 I like to run.  A lot. I have a pretty firm grasp on that.  Less so on  JustLive and JustBe, but I can’t seem to stop trying to get there.

3. Do your friends and family know about your blog? What do they think about it? 

Yes, mostly.  Over the last three years more and more. They don’t think much of it, except maybe that I’m weird which is nothing different than than the twenty-five years before I started this site.

4. How do you write posts?

Usually in one shot, usually not more than a day ahead of time, and usually I revise and rearrange way too much, which is, arguably, not obvious anyway.

5. Have you ever had a troll or had to delete unkind comments?

Yes, but usually they take it upon themselves to email me privately.  Because these people obviously have super-strong backbones and tons of integrity.

6. Do you check your stats? Do you care how many people read your blog? If you do care, how to you increase traffic?
 

I never even put a Site Meter on my old Blogspot site.  This site’s host now lets me see all kinds of statistics and summaries and reports and sometimes I even remember to look at them.  Hello to all of you not commenting!  Love and hugs!

 7. What kind of blogs/posts interest you?

All kinds.  Especially those involving embarassing stories that make me feel like less of a nerd.  Yes, how selfish of me.

8. What do you like and dislike about blogging?

So far, so good.  Except having to moderate spam comments.  That bites. 

I can never seem to tag anyone with a meme.  Instead I tag you all to go to the beach, or  to sing at the top of your lungs in the shower.  Or maybe, if possible, both. 

 ___________

**Woah, no idea what happened to the text here.  Technology defeats me again.**