Feelings Friday

Q&A: Did you leave work on time? Yes, it’s easy to do when the boss lets you go (for a month) and leaves early the last two out of three weeks. I’m torn on this situation because I don’t know the new school principal well, so I don’t feel like I owe her anything. I started interning for my boss in September 2017 when my class didn’t require it until January 2018, and even then only 60 hours was mandatory to pass. I worked way more than that and took it upon myself to do extra at home, taking the burden away from the boss and his assistant.

I did that for a year in the hopes it would get me a job — and it did, but that only lasted six weeks before I was dismissed by the principal and have heard nothing back on the situation. My boss sent out an email this afternoon in relation to the meeting we’re supposed to have in the next two weeks. I let him know that I’m on break because I only work for two hours a week now and made changes in my life to accommodate him and the kids by not taking classes that leaves me with plenty of free time. I needed to relax before hitting the send button, so I took a hot bath, but not before trimming plants and taking out a car battery.

I debate quitting this job too or riding it out till the end of this year with all the holidays coming up I could use the extra $20. I was able to message 3 out of 47 parents last night when I got done grading seventh-grade quizzes. I let them know that the class has spent over nine hours reviewing legs and that some kids did fantastic while one kid scored a 2 out of 20 and it wasn’t for wrong answers but for lack of trying to fill in the blanks from the word bank. That’s not uneducated, that’s just lazy.

I took the ax to the tree to pound out some anger and let the dirt and death fly down my shirt and accumulate into a sweaty puddle of compost. I taped up the loppers (pruning shears — I like that word) broken handle so that I could use them to trim the baby palm growing over the sidewalk. It felt good to get that done, but I find the garage a disgusting embarrassment of disorganization and wished that I spent more time out there so that I would know where tools and equipment are when I need them and could rid them of grease and cobwebs.

I was on a snack break, cleaning out the cabinet from another ant attack, which only upsets me. I can’t clean up the dead ones without new ones coming in and eating their way through walls, caulk, and dishes to get to what they want. I applaud their strong and tireless effort but I also kill them, and not with kindness, but with a spray that stinks and that possibly got on my snack and caused me to rinse my tongue under running water to rid it of the burning sensation that lasted about 15 minutes.

So, I was sitting down and enjoying some calorie intake when Caleb called and we somehow got on the topic of me going out to the Tribute and looking at the battery, which is extremely corroded, and also from Bahrain in 2015. Caleb says they gave us one that was too small for the job, but it did well for so long, so I’m not upset about that. What got me worked up was having to mix the baking soda and water and dump it on the busted mess to loosen the bolts so I could take the battery out when my arms were already tired and this interrupted what I had planned, but it needs to be done.

I was thankful to the neighbor that saw the hood up and stopped to offer help and advice. He was the one to give me the cleaning tip and I wish he’d have stuck around to help me put it back in. I had Caleb on a video call while I went between car and garage looking for a wrench, a flat head screwdriver, and adjustable pliers. I hung up with him so I could get my hands dirty, and gross they got as I stuck the tool down into the murky water and turned a 1/8 of an inch at a time, clank, clank on either side of the tiny compartment space until battery and tray were out.

I drove to the nearest parts store or the one that had what Caleb was looking up online and had to park next to a douche that doesn’t know how to park between lines, so it was a tight fit but I got my battery out of the passenger door and then left my keys in the console on accident so someone could steal the car while I was inside; they didn’t. I got a new battery, with protection pads, and a new cable splicer that I will YouTube how to hook up without dying.

While I was doing all this I was thinking about how I would write about it later and the joy of doing something to make today different. I remember getting this battery in Bahrain and the stress of a language barrier and having to drive to a different garage and then wait on a guy to go get the right one while I sat there on my old battery in the middle of the night. I suppose I could’ve taken it to the dealership but that story is another post.

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semi termite fence

It felt great to slide into a recently cleaned tub and put my ears under the water and let all the sounds of the city melt into a blur of chaos outside my current realm. I let the soap wash away my stresses of the day, which are probably unrealistic in my Life of Riley situation but still existent in this century and society. I laid there, not thinking about my phone getting messages and missed calls in my absence, not about Sparky staring at the corner by the front door, and not about hitting send on the email.

Eventually, the water got cold and I forced myself up and drained the brown liquid that was dirty from my chores. The trashman came earlier today and left me with yard cans to fill, so I emptied the plants of their parts and put them inside one of the bins. Sometimes I don’t mind doing this as it gives me a chance to move around in the sunshine, but other times it bothers me to look at the stump of my pine tree that the management company killed and it perturbs me that Caleb has let his love of reading overwhelm his other duties.

I started out this morning cleaning up a few things so that I could get rid of them. I have things in excess that I don’t need but seem to hang on to things longer these days. My dad is in the middle of writing a post about how I blog too much about food and not enough about feelings. He called back while I was making dinner to check on how the conversation was weighing on me and I let him know that I was writing in my head while quickly grabbing veggies to add to my overly riced dinner.

I started this blog in 2011, but I carried some posts over from 2009 when I began to write. Back then I was doing it as a way to document what I learned while on a trip, or what I researched about it upon return so that I would have something to look back on with relish and just soak in the moment again and again. At one point I decided to blog daily and moved onto clocks and toilet paper and orange juice. It seemed mundane at the time but it opened my mind to creativity and I was able to write poetry and look at the world in a more positive light through my Canon T2i lens and my keyboard.

Food has worn out its welcome here as I have no recipes or moods to offer with it and rarely a badly lit picture to accompany the morsels that will be devoured in my mouth. I sit in thought as to what will come next. I hoped that by going back to my daily Q&A that I had kept up this year until mid-February would strike the poet in me into creating great art and though that hasn’t happened yet I know these posts will be educational and memorable as I look back on them in ten years.

Or even three and a half. I can’t believe it has been that long since my mom passed. I have written many drafts since but so many were interrupted by tears that defeated me for the day. I was unable to look at pictures of her or cake pans or the color purple, or listen to Shaggy or Eminem or David Draiman, or smell her clothes or touch the few things she left behind that I thought might bring closure. I still have the necklace the funeral home-made of her lifeless thumbprint to wear with the last thing I would hear her say, “Love you, bye.” Even now I want to cry.

The only thing that has helped me was to accept all the moments when her memory surprised me and to let the tears and anguish leak from my weakened body as I let the sadness overtake me. I was hoping to capture it and use it for good, to write about her life in such a way that others would want to read it too and recall their childhoods together or years of marriage or some other engaging thing as my mom was a lifer — meet her once and you didn’t mind knowing her forever. As a child, I felt that she gave too much, but as an older teenager, I blamed her for not giving herself enough.

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baking soda and battery acid

There’s one post about grief, not a eulogy yet, but I am sitting in one of her shirts from the 80s as I type this. In other news, while I was outside today I noticed my back gate changing colors. I sent the property manager a one-liner about the termites in his wood. He sent a guy to replace only the few that looked bad from the outside so that when the maggots get hungry after hatching they have fresh fibrous food and I won’t bother them this time since the company doesn’t care.

It feels good to share feelings and I get caught up in only passing along the positive as humans want to mask what makes us different from other species. I’m not ashamed of who I am or how old I am or where I came from (though I used to be when I was growing up on the farm). A great author is able to convey his emotion with a subtlety that I once had for the tension and complications of moving to another country. Perhaps I will be able to bring that back into my writing as I explore my mind and the expanse of its circuits that go off with every breath, bite, and heartbeat to make another connection.

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The Turning Topic

Q&A: What topic are you bored talking about? My conversation with Dad was anything but boring today, but I’ll share this… if my days begin to run together then I will turn 40 tomorrow and soon will be a grumpy old man; paraphrasing, of course.

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Sparky and Turtle

With this Wise man’s sage advice, I set out to make today different, but not too early in the morning. I was able to walk Sparky without picking up a stray but we did get to watch some team guys (the local navy seals) fall from the sky with parachutes on and possibly landing in the wildlife refuge nearby.

I noticed an estate sale sign and wanted to go find more books, but when I got home I decided to take the handaxe to the palm tree growing over the sidewalk and finish filling the yard waste bin before adding it to the curbside to be picked up tomorrow morning. I was going to read but my plans changed again when I made another fruit and veggie-skin smoothie and tried the new Meliora all-purpose home cleaner on the sink.

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morning nap

We got a glass bottle and the refill flakes from Mighty Nest months ago and Caleb mixed them before he left. I wanted to see how it would perform on our grimy sink so I sprayed and scrubbed twice and the basin is almost back to its original color. Then it was time to change for work and show up between late (for the meeting that I wasn’t invited to) and early (for the copies I was going to make) that were already made when I showed up and interrupted the meeting.

I spent that time instead walking around while talking with Caleb on the phone. He was exploring new gyms in Alabama and found a disc golf course on the Coast Guard base. Back inside and the boss said we’d meet during the break and that he was leaving early today. I took the kids up to the playground and we did more squats and lunges and then did burpees with the second class and gave them free play. The first group had students planking when they didn’t want to participate as a team.

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morning walk

My coworker Jorge came up to me after the kids cleaned up and wanted to discuss a day for the meeting next week and I let him know I’m on holiday because even though Thanksgiving isn’t next week, I don’t have a job at the other school, so I have no work-related responsibilities for the upcoming 20 days. He took that into consideration and let me know there was a meeting tomorrow. I told him to enjoy his weekend.

I talked to my dad on the way home and he wondered why I wasn’t driving out to Alabama to pick up Caleb and take him to Florida to dive and then return him to work and make it back to San Diego for work by the end of November. If only Dad felt like sharing his genius ideas in a more timely fashion I could’ve enjoyed a road trip, something I haven’t done in years because we can’t drive to Hawai’i yet.

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to some a Garden cross spider, others Satan

I told Zeus, the neighbor’s dog, that I would walk him after work, so that’s what I did and we ran a bit with me in flip-flops. I should’ve waited to change out of my shoes. I walked outside with Sparky to walk him again and there were five kids in front of Zeus’s house with a pizza box and a Snickers by the yard package. I just make it past them when a guy on a motorcycle drives up onto the sidewalk threatening to beat them for stealing something. The kids drop their food mid-bite and high tail it out of the neighborhood.

I had walked a few more houses away to let Sparky do his business without fear of being run over and then returned to clean up after the kids and saw a giant spider. I was squatting in front of it when Ryan pulled up with taco ingredients from the store and told me I look suspicious. He was glad the spider was at the other end of his yard, but one of the kids wanted to see the arachnid up close. Of course, I sent a picture of it to Caleb.

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Potatoes and Politics

Q&A: Who is your hero? I don’t have one distinct person, just positive aspects of a variety of people who I agree with and try to incorporate their habits into my behavior. I also see disagreeable traits in individuals and try to do less of those things myself.

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Sparky and Peanut

I was going to write another post last night but got sleepy and interested in the results of the midterms, so I looked online for what I could find and jumped from one website to the next. I was curious about which propositions were approved and where states stand on their views of the environment, economy, and education.

Arizona banned new taxes on pet grooming and fitness activities and voted no for increasing renewable energy. California agreed to allow a permanent change to Daylight Savings but said no to regulate dialysis charges and clean water bonds. The Golden State doesn’t mind paying taxes to fund homeless services, pay for roads via gasoline usage, and give animals destined for dinner plates more space while they’re alive.

Florida wants to ban vaping indoors and restore voting rights for felons since a certain generation believes that their voice doesn’t count because they’re not educated enough to make those decisions — their words — then the state wants to get some of those votes back from people who are willing to share their opinions, as long as they didn’t murder, rape, or commit pedophilia.

I only found one proposition for Texas and it received 64.8% of the votes for increasing salaries for Houston firefighters. Montana said no to an increased tobacco tax to fund Medicaid but yes to provide more property tax to pay for higher education and leave new hard rock mining without a limit. I had a good debate writing itself in my head as I fell asleep to wake up early and motivated.

I went to the gym and though Greg, a talkative gym-goer, was there we must have bypassed politics to talk about his job opportunities and my plethora of push-ups. It wasn’t till I was almost out the door that I had an awkward conversation — it’s part of who I am. One of the trainers was pregnant and I asked discreetly if she felt any fatter, but she let me know that she miscarried a week ago. I inquired for details and then to lighten the mood before I left talked about Taylor Swift booping her cat on the nose.

With tired arms, I was off to eat potatoes and watch President Trump talk about the midterm elections. I had an assignment to watch Obama’s State of the Union when I lived in Florida, so it was long ago but still a point for comparison. I tried to watch the live footage but it was like seeing an angry child fight for his position at the podium, which given some of the outbursts from the press it could be understandable, but he has the upper hand of authority in the room.

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Peanut setting the pace of Sparky’s youth

I took a break and what was meant to be a twenty-minute walk with one dog turned into a playful lap around the block and a 2.5-hour ordeal. Sparky and I were joined by a beautiful mutt that happened to follow us home after running back to me to get a sticker out of his paw. He was curious about what Sparky had for dinner and that’s when Sparky lost interest in making a new friend, especially one with so much energy.

I walked the pup into the backyard and called the vet to scan his microchip. They told me they would hang onto him till the owner arrived if they found a number — they didn’t. I told the nurse I would Google the location of the Humane Society and ended up in San Ysidro behind an apartment complex before realizing that I would be going back to the place where I dropped Piggy off almost seven weeks ago, north of Old Town.

I tried taking him to the local dog park to burn some energy but the city is fixing a water pipe issue and there is only dirt and no other dogs for him to run around with there, so in the car we went. I got him to the shelter and they took him to a back room when he tried to jump up to intercept a cat in a box. I got a receipt saying he wasn’t mine and that I forfeited rights to them — agreed.

I went in to use their bathroom and found a whole facility unexplored. I looked at things for Sparky and then asked the lady about donating items instead. Since I was there I looked at their one hundred cats, two large rabbits, and 40 dogs — one little chihuahua that looked like Lassie, a Rough Collie, and a larger dog with a fractured leg. I had Arms of an Angel playing in my head and was happy to leave.

I’m on my way home when I get the message that one neighbor talked to another and found the owner, Matt. He was sad about the drive like I was but excited to get his dog back with shots up to date and a new microchip, just in case this happens again. I let Matt know I’d keep his three-year-old Peanut in my backyard and save us both the time and gas, but now I know where he belongs.

My colleague finally responded to my text from yesterday and asked me to send my résumé along. I found the best version of it and edited the fluff-for-the-professor out of it before sending it to a possible employer. Then my boss emails me to spell check a document and I add line spacing too before sending it back as my dad calls to talk about anything but the political situation that has spiked his nerve. We talk about serious things and I talk about me (usually good for a laugh) and we talk about our spouses.

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Peanut is a good passenger

This conversation had me search for the President Trump press conference from earlier as perhaps being able to skip parts would make it easier to watch. This only fast-forwarded me to the parts of him declaring the importance of a giant wall, perfectly clean air, and asking for more interesting questions as he cut off speakers to call others rude and dismissed questions to make a point about him being awesome and unimpeachable (not trying to have a political debate here) while talking like a child on the playground about who got the bigger cookie.

I understand how moments like this can turn many people away from politics and government, from the local to federal to international level. The good thing is that it’s not everyone’s job, or assignment, to watch these speeches verbatim, but it is in their best interest to find leaders that align with their views of growth or decay, peace or war, protection or destruction, and to know where their taxes go so they can have an opinion, especially when it’s asked for.

I’m sure the presidential ways of the past — guns and notes on horseback — makes for an interesting read, but now we have mail-in ballots, online voting, and free apps that allow a more transparent look into the behind-the-scenes of this large country. I wouldn’t expect anyone to recall everything they learned in history or their social sciences class but it would be nice for them to remember the people who fought for the right to be educated so that they could vote — even if it meant standing in a rainy line for hours in 2018 to help ease access for those filling out ballots in the future.

 

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Hippy Dippy Pushy Lifty

Q&A: What time did you go to bed last night? I’m not even sure what day it is. I decided to quit my job at the school where my boss doesn’t seem to want me back and I’m down to working Thursdays from 1:20 to 3:30 unless I’m needed there early to make 47 copies of an anatomy manual in 20 minutes — note: can’t be done.

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When Caleb was home I would still go to bed with him, relatively, but now I am free to explore the blunders of late night writing, reading, watching and going down the rabbit hole of curiosity without a schedule to guide my day. I managed to get seven hours of shuteye between midnight and my morning workout.

I didn’t feel like putting on pants so I pulled out the yoga mat and weights while Sparky moved to the couch to get more zzz’s. I moved around for 50 minutes and then walked to the kitchen to put banana and avocado skins in the blender with leeks, spinach stems, raspberries, and nut milk. Next time I will use half a banana for less thickness.

vice-news

I washed away any minuscule droplets of sweat that might have accumulated on my body after a tiring, but not perspiration-inducing, workout so that I could walk to do my civic duties and figured I could bring my lonely blind dog, Sparky, along for his daily intake of exercise and sunshine that we both need.

“Sign on the line. Please lick here. You earned this sticker. I like your dog. Have a wonderful day.” Thank you, kind volunteer, for your assistance. I said hi to Jane and Zach, mom and son, the neighbors down the street, as I passed them with their votes in hand on their way to the polls on this beautiful flip-flop wearing weather day.

 

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As Is The Custom

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Q&A: What should remain as-is? To answer simply, nothing. Life is built on growth and change. It’s what separates the days and memories from blurring into one. I’m editing old posts and adding backdated ones and wonder if some should go unposted for their show of monotony, but for some reason, I felt the need to write them. So up they go with a picture I can find that relates to the story… or it’s just another dog or food photo.

What made today different? I dropped off to a different Goodwill (and my neighbor Claire approved of the process). Sparky wiped his nose (at least that’s what it looked like) on the sheets, so they got washed. He also chewed on a bone and loosened his gum growth, so I put sugar on that when it started to bleed. I wrote a colleague asking for a job referral that she offered since my situation is left in uncertainty.

What made today the same? I had three meals and a snack. I talked with my husband and my father. I walked Sparky twice and enjoyed the cloudy sunset, even if it is too early. I cleaned up (or rearranged things making them harder to find but nicer to look at) and watched Ryan, the neighbor, play with Sparky and his turtle. I set out to do one thing and got easily distracted by another but eventually got them both done.

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