Category Archives: true life 2003

More gardening adventures, or, I've really fallen in with a bad crowd this time

[this one needs lots of relinking]

It’s spring. That means that it’s that time of year those of us who are foolish enough to insist on heirloom plants and organic gardening techniques basically go out and spend hundreds of dollars on things like poop. Husband likes to go along on these adventures just so he can deliver Beavis and Butthead-esque monologues about excrement. I put up with it because he’s the one with the station wagon.

And he gets to do the heavy lifting.

And he’s really cute.

As you can imagine, there was much of the traditional earthworm angst today. The wildflower beds (which you can also read about at that link) look amazing and the only tricky thing today was deciding whether a few mysterious plants were invasive weeds or flowers.

(Oh, and should you go read that link and wish to lecture me about worms, you should first read the follow-up worm post from last years episode of annelid-mania).

In a bit of what seems to me like extreme silliness, I dug up and trashed a large expanse of dandelions today. This is extremely silly because I buy and cook with dandelion greens a lot. (Well, that’s not that often since I rarely cook, but lately it’s been fairly often because I’m addicted to this tempeh dish and it rocks with dandelion greens). I can’t bring myself to clean and eat the ones in the yard, however, because they thrive in a spot that’s, um, very popular with the neighborhood dogs.

It’s too cold to plant basil this weekend, since this is the weekend I set aside time to put in the herb garden. Nevertheless, overall it was a good day for gardening. Not hot, minimal sun, nice damp ground. The snakes were sluggish, which was good because I was in their habitat and I don’t think they were happy about it. Or maybe they were unhappy because when I found them I picked them up and threw them over into the park. I’m not sure garden variety snakes like flying.

No sign of Walter, though, which concerns me. I haven’t seen him since the day I stepped on him (barefoot) on the front porch. I know I didn’t hurt him, but I must have upset him. I can’t say I feel bad, he doesn’t belong on the porch and he knows it. The herb garden is as close to the house as he’s supposed to get.

Yeah, I know, last year he was only allowed as close as the wrought-iron bench. We renegotiated in the Fall. He looked at me with those big black eyes and I just couldn’t say no.

I really don’t want to recap who Walter is or why gardening is stressful and although it’s part of a longer post I already linked to, I’m going to repost the pertinent bits here and save you some surfing in case you don’t want to read about the wildflowers:

Now here’s the thing you have to keep in mind: gardening stresses me out. Gardening is not relaxing to me. Not the planting part, anyway. It’s all rather violent, if you think about it. When you plant seedlings you have to pull them out of those little plastic pots, you can break their little roots. I get very distressed about that. And then there’s the digging.

You have to dig little holes to put in the plants. And there are earthworms in the ground. I get so upset if I injure an earthworm. I make little offerings to them to appease their gods, but I still feel bad about it. I don’t feel bad about fishing with worms though. Fishing with worms is different than mowing them down in a drive-by trowelling accident while you’re planting phlox. Don’t ask me why. It just is. I’m the arbitrary sort-of Buddhist.

Grubs are another story. Again with the arbitrary rules…I toss the grubs I find to the cardinals. Nasty things. The grubs, not the cardinals. From a distance I must look like Snow White out there, with my cute little flock of birds following me around and singing happily to me. It’s the grubs. Make no mistake, those birds only love me for my grubs. I always feel bad about the grubs later though, because they’re immature scarab beetles and all – but they’re destructive, and I like the way the cardinals sing to me. It soothes me a little bit as I go about my unholy rampage of worm-decapitation and mayhem.

Since I was working out back I didn’t run into Walter, which is good, because there’s a whole other set of arbitrary rules for our friends the snakes. When I encounter a snake I try hard to repatriate it into the wild (okay, the neighbor across the street’s yard) but if they startle me I can make no promises. I know they’re beneficial, but I hate them. Walter lives in my next door neighbor’s front yard. Sometimes he comes over and suns himself on the rock border around my herb garden, even though he knows he’s not supposed to. He and I have discussed this, you see. He’s very pretty, actually – a brilliant emerald green. Next time I catch him on that rock though it’s into the shoebox with a one-way ticket out of town. I didn’t encounter any snakes yesterday so I don’t know how I got off on this tangent.

Randomly, my brother-in-law explained to me that most people never realize their attics are infested with rat snakes. I wish he hadn’t done that.

But enough about serpants. It’s time to confess that I may have lost my mind, I’m now running with a very bad crowd. Yes, it’s true. I put in a rose garden. Does this mean I have to quit mocking people with rose gardens? Or does this mean I can now mock with impunity?

I didn’t plan to buy a bunch of rose bushes, but I was at the nursery and there was this really cool-looking one and when I read the description I found that the nursery tag described the blossoms as gaudy. I found that appealing. Plus, they were called Peace Roses. How could I resist that? And once you pick out one color you realize that a lone rosebush is kind of sad and lonely and, well, let’s just say that This Way Lies Madness.

I managed to plant them without scratching myself once. I’m very proud of that and it was no easy task, these are pretty good sized bushes. Now, we’ll see if they survive. They’d better. I had to displace a lot of earthworms to dig holes big enough for those bigass rootballs.

all good things must come to an end, some more suddenly than others

We were so happy together. Our relationship brief but intense. We’d go out dancing until all hours or just lounge around drinking coffee.

We were so happy together, or so I thought. But today. Today the whole relationship ended, and it ended badly. And suddenly. I still don’t understand how it happened.

I was with a large group of fellow geeks this morning, happily watching the Matrix Reloaded. Yes, the lot of us did in fact take up a whole row. Halfway through the movie the poking started.

It was annoying, but I could ignore it. I should have seen the writing on the wall, but I managed to maintain a state of denial for a while. Then the pinching began. Persistent, annoying. I would go so far as to call it malevolent, that pinching.

In the back of my mind I knew that as soon as I got home, the relationship was over. It’s hard to drool over Carrie Ann Moss’s lovely ass when you’re aware, at least on a subconcious level, that you’re going to have an ugly little bruise on your breast by the time you leave.

This bra was a miracle of modern engineering. So sleek, so black, so perfect under spaghetti straps, yet cotton. Those of you who prefer black undergarments can understand why this is such a Happy Thing.

I’ve always harbored the fear that it was made by half-blind children in a sweatshop in Sri Lanka, or possibly by violent sex offender’s in the Washington State Prison system. I have to admit I never checked, if it had a checkered past I just didn’t want to know.

It was just such a good bra, how could it go so bad?

as long as I don't have to cut off my arm

Too much, um, socializing, with the co-workers last night. I’m about as sharp as a sack of wet rodents today.

In other non-news, I continue to be freaked out by the story of Aron Ralston, the hiker who amputated his own arm. I know, I know. Old story. But that doesn’t mean I’m not still freaked out.

I compiled and analyzed statistics all day. My life is a non-stop rollercoaster ride of thrills and chills, yes-sir-ee-bob. A colleague who is in training to be a Life Coach wouldn’t leave until I promised to do my Franklin Quest Daily Goals and Aspirations Exercise for the day. I’ve adapted it to suit my needs.

Today’s not-do list:
Antagonize people.
Accept Jesus as my savior.
Turn on office lights.
Work at desk instead of on floor.
Speak in complete sentences.
Amputate arm with dull implement.
Give up coffee.

It went well.

Husband is so cute when he's delerious from working non-stop for weeks on end

Saturday night we’re sitting on the couch listening to music, reading. I’m writing.

Suddenly, Husband blurts out, “It’s the Pizza to the stars!”

I stare at him for a moment, but no explanation is forthcoming.

“What?”

“It’s the pizza to the stars!” He repeats, adding. “Sorry, I’m practicing for a career in the advertising industry.”

We lapse back into silence. Later I read him a problematic sentence from something I’m working on.

Silence.

Then, “What? I wasn’t listening. I was figuring out how to make football leather sound appetizing on a menu.”

I repeat myself.

“Make it exotic.” He replies.

Now he’s lost me.

“Make what exotic?”

“Sauteed Australian Rules Football leather with cheddar-scallion mashed potatoes, fried onions, and truffle demi-glace. Or resting on a bed of mashed potatoes and braised red cabbage, boldly accented with a rum mango reduction…”

freak magnet

About 10 minutes into my journey, I (and everyone else on the bus) discovered that the bus had the wrong route number on it. We discovered this when the driver made an unexpected turn and started heading the wrong way. This was okay with me, since I most sincerely wanted off that particular bus. The woman behind me was crying and telling me that she needed a lock of my hair because I radiated such love and peace.

She kept trying to take a lock of my hair. This is freaky, even to me.

She said she wanted it for some sort of love and protection spell. Now, the anthropologist in me says, “I’m sure there was no harm in humoring her.” Nevertheless, as much as I claim not to believe in whatever it was she was doing – I have to admit I didn’t let her have my hair because the paranoid part of my brain kept saying, “Don’t let her have the hair. She could put a spell on you. And it might not be good.”*

I got off the bus and she stayed and all was right with the world. Until the woman on the next bus decided my diet was deficient in salmon.

By the time I fled that bus, I had a bag full of salmon recipes – from old can labels she had stashed in her powerbook carrying case.

I still don’t get the attraction. I know me, and I wouldn’t walk up to me and start talking to me if I wasn’t me. I just don’t get it.