I’m a Hamster

I love my bed.  All 6080 square inches of its king-sized glory.  I love my 100% cotton sheets (preferably 400 thread count or higher).  I love that my pomeranian can safely sleep by my feet without fear that I’ll accidentally boot him off the bed.  I love my seven pillows: four standard, one queen, one king, and a body pillow.  Don’t judge me.  Did I mention that it’s a Sleep Number bed?  My charming spouse, Ace, put the thing together the day of our wedding.  He’s a 90-100.   I’m a 75.

You can imagine that travel makes me a tiny bit nervous.  We just returned from three nights in Lanesboro, MN.  Being hamsters of habit, we rented the same room that we’ve burrowed in before.  This particular room boasts a queen-sized bed, a microwave, a fridge, and a toaster.  The Big E “slept” on the creaky metal fold-out cot last year, the kind your grandma stuffed into a corner of the attic for the mice to nest in.  When The Big E heard we were returning to the same room, he staged a mini protest, vehement enough to make his Oberlin mama proud.  NO, I WILL NOT SLEEP ON THAT COT EVER AGAIN.

We dragged a twin blow-up mattress along and voted Papa Hamster off the island.  Mama and Baby Oedipus slept in the queen-size bed.  Papa crashed on the mattress in front of the  heating/cooling unit.

I only took three pillows on the trip.  You might think that’s why I slept poorly.  <cough>  I fell into a semi sleep <cough> after smothering the <cough> EXTREMELY BRIGHT LIGHT streaming through the blinds with our accessory <cough> blow-up mattress.  <cough> I never woke up enough to <cough> recognize why my sleep was <cough> disrupted.  Ace never woke enough to <cough> realize that the <cough> heater kept switching on and <cough> off.

The second night we drugged The Big E, fed him a healthy dose of Zyrtec.  Ace adjusted the blower thing to “fan” only, a constant stream of cool outside air.  And The Big E proceeded to cough just as before.  Crabby from fatigue, I propped him upright on the couch around midnight with one of those weird fuzzy-yet-rubbery blankets that really should be reserved for making tub toys.  I vowed to pour a shot of any alcohol I could get my hands on right down his gullet if the cough continued.  He quit coughing.

Ace found him asleep on the couch around two am, covers on the floor, huddled in a shivering ball like the Little Match Boy.  My charming husband tucked him back into bed with Mama Hamster.  Let me tell you, baby hamsters are all elbows and knees.

The third night we drugged E at dinnertime, adjusted the fan, and all fell promptly to sleep.  Whereupon I dreamed of LVADs.  I’m in my intern year at HCMC.  (Why does it always hafta be HCMC?)  I’ve been dutifully holding retractors for eighteen hours straight while the cardiovascular surgeons do whatever.  At the end of the surgery, they simply walk off and I’m left with the dude and his new LVAD.  Apparently the two cotton balls sitting on the sternum needed to be removed for the device to function properly and when the dude coded shortly thereafter, the resident and the fellow and the staff all blamed me.  Oh joy.

I can’t tell you how happy I was to slip into my very own hamster nest last night.  I adjusted the five pillows under my head, stuffed the queen-size feather puff behind my back, grabbed my body pillow, and draped  my foot over Ace’s warm gastrocnemius.  Ah bliss.

#FeelingGrateful

Musical Moment   

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Hope for the Future

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Okay – so maybe those dudes on the right aren’t teenagers.

I spent Saturday with one thousand teenagers at the TeenLit Con.  The day-long event hosted TEN big-name young adult and graphic novel authors including: Steve Brezenoff, Kirstin Cronn-Mills, , Gayle Forman, Jonathan Friesen, Rebecca Hahn, Patrick Jones, E Lockhart, Matt de la Pena, Pat Schmatz, and Gene Luen Yang.

Holy Cow!

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Opening Panel hosted by Megan Atwood

I’m pleased to report that my interactions with these young people were absolutely delightful!  I attended the opening talk, featuring Forman, de la Pena, Lockhart, and Yang, and then helped Addendum Books with their book booth.

The teens were:

1) humorous – they laughed at the funny stuff, uninhibited in their glee.

2) polite – the teens used “please,” “thank you,” appropriate eye contact, good grammar, and no swear words (at least none that I heard).

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The line for E Lockhart.

3) appreciative – they loved the authors, thoroughly and unabashedly.  They expressed their enthusiasm with clapping, cheering, crowding into learning sessions, buying books, and waiting in long lines for autographs and photos.

4) resourceful – they figured out their book budgets and weighed their options, trying to determine how to amass funds for their beloved PAPER books.

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E Lockhart.

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Gayle Forman. Can you say AWESOME HAIR?

 

 

 

 

 

 

5) unconstrained by gender stereotypes – boys showed up.  That’s right folks.  Boys DO read.  And they bought books by Forman and Lockhart, books generally marketed to a female audience.  Girls bought graphic novels.  Both genders purchased books with an opposite gender protagonist.  WAY TO GO TEENAGERS!  Don’t let the publishing industry determine what you should read.

6) honest – they paid for their books.

7) articulate – they stated their needs clearly.  How much is this?  What about the tax?  Do you have this in paperback?

8) pleasant – the youth were uniformly fun to be around.  They smiled, laughed, and interacted with me (a stranger) in a manner that would make their parents proud.

At the end of the day, I was totally exhausted, but filled with optimism.  A future full of these teens as they grow and mature is a fine future indeed!

Musical Moment

 

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May the Fifth Be With You

A long long time ago (Sunday), in a galaxy far away (St. Paul), I wrote a piece in preparation for my Monday blog.  I read it over and realized, yikes, this thing is depressing in the way that only dead babies can be depressing.  The May air fluttered with the subtle fragrance of crabapple blossoms and the disconnect was way to striking for me to ignore.  I ditched the post.

A long time ago (Monday), in a galaxy far away (St. Paul), I thought gee, I’ll just whip up a perfect domestic moment and share it – with love.  In retrospect, this is absolutely ridiculous; I am not a domestic goddess.  My agency sister, Charlie Holmberg, recently posted a picture of s’mores rice crispies and I’m like, perfect, it’s Star Wars Day and we’ll just whip up some RICE CRISPIE GALAXIES.  And now that I look at the original photos I realize the complete futility of this entire exercise.  (Gently bashing head against stone counter.)

I don’t like regular marshmallows.  I feel like I’m popping little petroleum pellets.  So I figured I’d upgrade the recipe and use natural marshmallows IMG_8625from my foo foo healthy-food co-op.  I melted the butter and added the marshmallows and waited.  And stirred.  And sampled.  And added vanilla.  Sample some more.  And waited.  And stirred.  And snacked.  And they turned into a warm blob, a warm DENSE unspreadable blob.IMG_8631

 

 

 

 

Tasty, though.

Bring on the petroleum, hello Philip Morris!IMG_8632

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Marshmallow Spinnbarkeit

More butter.  I dumped in ten ounces of perfect uniform pillows and stirred.  They melted exactly according to plan in a wonderful melange of marshmallow spinnbarkeit.  (Don’t click that link if you’re easily grossed out.)

I scraped the sticky rice crispy mess onto parchment paper and mashed it into an amoeba. Come on, Anne, you can make a rectangle.  I mashed some more and managed to eke out a paramecium.  The melted Ghirardelli bittersweet chocolate chips were super tasty.  Easy to spread, too.IMG_8638

By this time, my pancreas was lying on its back begging for mercy.

Graham cracker crumbs and the blob of natural marshmallow (in a line like the chocolate in a croissant) and I was ready to roll.  I used the parchment to shove the mess into a roll then sliced it to make my little galaxies.IMG_8640

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Rice Crispie Galaxies – sorta

 

 

 

 

 

 

Of course, I had to sample the finished product.  Crunchy crispy sugar slathered with sugar and sprinkled with sugar crumbs with a sugary nougat in the middle.  The Big E loves them.

I felt sick for the duration of the evening, even after eating an entire plate of vegetables.  The dishes proved insufferable, crusted with cement-like barnacles of melted marshmallow.

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Cinnabon Princess Leia hair + possessed eyes

So.  There you have it.  A moment of domestic bliss.  Happy late Star Wars Day.  And May the Fifth Be With You.IMG_8647

Musical Moment

 

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Dear Disney: You Could Sing A Rainbow

Disney is currently gorging on live-action remakes of animated films.  In the works: Alice in Wonderland, Tomorrowland, Pete’s Dragon, and Dumbo.  Perhaps the most hotly anticipated remake, though, is Beauty and the Beast.

Animated Beauty came out in 1991 at a time when I was still babysitting.  I can’t tell you how many times I listened to that freakin’ soundtrack with E & M, the two charming children who lived next door to my parents.  Angela Lansbury’s quavery voice rings clear in my memory.  I just checked on YouTube and not only does it ring clear, it rings clear in the right key.  I do not have perfect pitch.  THAT SOUNDTRACK LAID DOWN PERMANENT GROOVES IN MY BRAIN.

AGAINST MY WILL.

So anyhow.  Emma Watson announced in January that she will be playing the role of Belle.  As much as I love EW, my first response was, “Just great – another white Disney princess.” Mind you, I was still recovering from Frozen (red hair is not equivalent to diversity) and Cinderella (with a cast about as diverse as the town of Wadena, MN).

I nervously awaited the release of the full cast list.  Would they dare to be groundbreaking?  (Mixed-race romantic lead partnership where race isn’t the theme.)  Innovative?  (A female Beast.)  Heck, even representative of the ethnic diversity of the US movie watching audience?

The answers to the above mostly-rhetorical questions are no, no, and no.  The good news is Gugu Mbatha-Raw and Audra McDonald are in the cast.

Watson could give her role to Mbatha-Raw or McDonald (ooh! A Belle in her 40s!), but women already have a hard time with pay equity and role availability.  So, to remedy this situation, I suggest re-instituting the time-honored Shakespearean tradition of single-gender casting.  And this time make it ALL WOMEN – including both trans- and cis-gendered, of course.

I’m fine with the Brit-actor theme but let’s include Naomi Harris, Ruth Negga, and Judith Shekoni.  For shape diversity, let’s add Adele and Kirstie Alley to the mix.  Ines Rau  or Laverne Cox would make a lovely Belle.  I also want Ming-Na Wen, Michelle Rodriguez, Jane Lynch, Alexis Arquette, American Ferrera, Vanessa Williams, Melissa McCarthy, Kelly Osbourne, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Alicia Keys, & Rosario Dawson.

Oh – and we’ll need a new director.  Buh bye Bill Condon.

What suggestions do you have for Disney?

Musical Moment

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Whack-a-Mole

Springtime in Minnesota.  Once the temperature hits fifty degrees, hardy Minnesotans figure it’s time to drag out the tank tops and shorts.  My Mole Radar (Madar) awakens from its wintry slumber, rubs its eyes, and says “!@#$%^  Here we go again!”

Let me tell you what it’s like to take a walk with me around one of our many Minnesota lakes.

Me: Don’t you think?

You: Yes, I’d agree that swimming proficiency is critical for all kids who grow up in Minnesota.

Me: Oh crap.  Did you see that mole?

You: I thought moles were nocturnal.

Me: No, the mole on the neck of that kid.

You: Oh.  No.  Why?  Is it weird?

Me: I don’t know.  I didn’t get a good look at it.  Let’s turn around.

You: You want to follow them?

Me: I need a better look.

You: Don’t you think the kid has a doctor who knows about the mole?

Me: Not necessarily.

You: Or maybe the parents would know if there is a mole of concern?

Me: Have you scrutinized your kids’ skin with a dermatoscope recently?

You: What’s a dermatoscope?

Me: Come on – we’re getting closer.

You: I’m going to pretend like I don’t know you.

Me: Fine.  Here – take the dogs.  Ooh.  It’s pretty dark with an irregular border.  And kinda big.  I’m going to say something.

You: La la la la.  I don’t know you.  Chester, stop chewing on my ankle.  Rafa, quit peeing on Chester’s leg.

Me to Parent: Excuse me.  Hi.  Sorry to barge in.  I’m a family doctor and I noticed the spot on your child’s neck.

Parent: Oh.  Okay.  A spot.  Let’s see here.  Frankie let me see your neck. (spits on fingers and rubs Frankie’s neck) Looks like it was just dirt.

Me: Great!  Have a good day.

You: And for this they gave you an MD?  Aren’t you embarrassed?

Me: Not particularly.  Imagine if it was a melanoma.  I’d rather risk a mildly awkward social interaction than say nothing and miss a chance to catch a problem.

You: Have you ever found a melanoma?

Me: Yes.  Once upon a time, when I practiced medicine in a clinic, a young woman came to see me for a complete physical exam.

You: How old is “young”?

Me: I don’t know.  Thirty-one?  Anyhow.  She planned to leave the country for a few years due to work-related circumstances.   I always included a thorough skin exam with every physical and I noticed a funny looking mole on her left shoulder blade.  It didn’t have the classic look of a melanoma but since she was leaving the country and I couldn’t monitor it, I suggested removal.  She agreed.  I was shocked by the pathology report but relieved that the melanoma hadn’t spread.

You: What happened?

Me: She saw the dermatologist for a wider excision, made a plan, and left the country.

You: So now you jump on everyone with dirt on their neck?

Me: That’s the first time I’ve jumped on dirt.  The rest have been weird moles.

You: Do the people take your advice?

Me: I don’t know.  I can imagine what they might say to their doctor: “Yeah, this crazy lady with a massive pomeranian and an ill-behaved labrador retriever told me to get my moles checked.”

You: Can we get ice cream now?

———————————————–

Folks, please realize as you don your eensy teensy polka-dotted whatevers, that physicians in the five state area are going on High Alert.  Show us a little mercy.

1) If you have moles, please get them checked by your health care provider.  Even if the moles have “been there forever.”

2) Wear sunscreen.  Apply at least every hour when you’re outside.  At our house, we use Vanicream sunscreen on our bodies.  I put Andalou Naturals Oil Control on my face.

3) If a doctor stops you on the street and says “Have you had that mole checked?,” smile, thank her for noticing, and schedule an appointment.  She might’ve saved your life.

Musical Moment

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AWP 2015 Recap – Association of Writers/Writing Programs

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The registration area. We had to weave back and forth in that cobalt labyrinth before being allowed to print our entrance badges.

I just spent three days in the good company of 11,999 other writerly people at the Convention Center in Minneapolis.  Our fair Twin Cities kindly provided rain, sleet, snow, and sunshine over the course of the convention.  At least Minnesota lives up to her reputation.

This is the largest writing con I’ve ever attended as well as the largest convention I’ve attended, period.  Yowsa.  Suddenly my little medical conferences of several hundred seem quaint.

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Oh for a wide-angle lens.

I was struck by the similarities of the AWP and typical medical conferences.  In particular, the Book Fair, the massively overwhelming cattle call of lit magazines, writing programs, booksellers, and publishers, reminded me acutely of the drug rep booths.  Pharmaceutical reps are notoriously well-dressed, well-coifed, and well-heeled.  They hawk their wares, luring hapless medical students to their booths with promises of chocolate and free copies of The Sanford Guide to Antimicrobial Therapy.

Here’s my tried-n-true booth technique.  Walk down the middle of the aisle, scanning the booths on either side.  If anyone catches your eye, smile and say “hi” but continue your forward momentum.  A body in motion will remain in motion…  At medical conferences, I never stop at drug rep booths.  I might make a brief stop at the MN Department of Health for immunization guidelines or lead abatement resources.

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The Book Fair.

I recognized the candy lures at the Book Fair immediately and only succumbed to one – a Lindt dark chocolate truffle.  Who could blame me?  I encountered exactly one overly aggressive bookseller.  I eventually placated him by saying that I’d love to take his business card so my husband could peruse the website.  So while similar in physical appearance (books, brochures, business cards, candy) to booths at a medical conference, the Book Fair booths were generally populated with pleasant, normally-dressed people.  I particularly enjoyed the folks at Cornerstone Press and Red Hen Press.

As with a medical conference, the AWP sessions I attended offered a lot of “talking about” and not a lot of hands-on applicability.  Medicine talks are moving more toward “case-based” learning, where concepts are taught in the context of actual patients.  Writing lends itself easily to “case-based” learning, progressive education – here’s a concept, now write something or discuss an example with the person sitting next to you.

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Intro Psych all over again…

Many sessions attracted 200-500 audience members.  That’s crazy huge.  I still think it’s possible to engage an audience actively and not wait for Q&A at the end.  I discovered I could easily feel alone in a room of 400 and had to actively force myself to meet people.  Many medical conferences incorporate “networking breaks” into the day.  At the Convention Center, the fifteen minutes between AWP sessions prevented networking, lunching, and  gastrointestinal/genitourinary tract evacuation.  You need the entire fifteen minutes to get from the lower level to the second floor, room 200 A&B!

Some of the smaller sessions I attended were great.  The notable talks: the importance of diversity in literature, “Narrative Medicine,” and the portrayal of teenage sexuality.

Of course the ultimate question is Will I Attend Another AWP Conference?  Maybe.  If it’s in the Twin Cities.  I’d be more likely to repeat attend if:

1) I get lunch with my registration fee.  I don’t need the 8000 page book of session descriptions or the cloth bag.  Give me food.

2) the organizers devote more attention to “genre” fiction.  Romance, Sci Fi/Fantasy, Westerns, Mystery, Erotica got very little play.  I don’t buy into the idea that “literary” fiction is inherently better than “genre” fiction.  In reality, Americans gobble up more Romance than anything else.

So give me lunch and a dude in a tool belt and I’ll be happier.  Really.

Musical Moment

PS: I gleefully, unabashedly, and purposefully included an adverb or two in the above.  Deal.

 

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Potent Words: The Stories Behind Decades of Psychic Distress

Certain stories stick with me – some like the tenacious plantar wart that won’t go away despite liquid nitrogen, scalpel debridement, and acid – others like the varicella virus, lying dormant for years before emerging again as a painful red weeping rash.  This list is an ode really, a love letter to all the books and tales that have, for various reasons, left a permanent mark.

1)    Where the Red Fern Grows: Sixth grade maybe?  Seventh?  I’m sitting in the brown velour recliner in the family room.  Crying.  Why are they making be read this?  Belly ripped open, guts pouring out.  Entrails.  Hello, fall from innocence.  I remember nothing else.  Except a dog.  Maybe.

2)    “The Tell-Tale Heart”: 8th grade English, short story unit.  Death and a creepy abandoned house.  Ghostly dismembered organs haunting the perp.  I didn’t really get it, but ugh, I hated it.

3)    “The Lottery”: 8th grade English, short story unit.  The stem cells of Suzanne Collins’ Hunger Games trilogy.  A lottery each year determines who will be stoned to death.  Thank you, Shirley Jackson, for helping me understand that senseless violence is often inexplicable, nightmarish, and gee, senseless.

4)    “The Most Dangerous Game”: 8th grade English, short story unit.  (I should really write my teacher, Ms. Tyson, a thank-you note.)  Protagonist winds up marooned on an island and discovers that the “host” plans to hunt him/her like a wild animal.  Even at the tender age of thirteen, I felt abandoned by the author.  Can we get some closure here?

5)    David Copperfield: AP English, 12th grade.  Main character does stuff.  Other people do stuff.  Then stuff happens for many many many pages.  I was an obedient little student.  I read the whole @#$%^& book.

6)    Pride and Prejudice: AP English, 12th grade.  This is where I lose friends.  I can’t stand Jane Austen.  My high school experience so scarred me that I haven’t ventured back between any JA covers.  And the sub-cultural infatuation with that pompous piece-of-work known as Mr. Darcy really rips my knickers.

7)    If On A Winter’s Night a Traveler: required “Reading Fiction” course, Oberlin College.  I have no idea what this book was about, a fact reflected in my class grade.

8)    Sula: from the aforementioned “Reading Fiction” course.  I don’t think my brain was ready for Toni Morrison.  The bit that stands out in my memory is when the conflicted mother uses the last bit of butter to try to relieve her baby’s constipation.  I tried reading The Bluest Eye a couple years ago, made it about ten pages – too evocative for me at that time.  I’ll try again when I’m less sensitive.

9)    A Breath of Snow and Ashes: released in 2005, shortly after the birth of my son.  This is the sixth book in Diana Gabaldon’s Outlander series.  I love this series.  Let me rephrase that: I absolutely, positively, resolutely ADORE this series.  And I quit reading in the middle of A Breath.  The violence was too vivid for my post-partum brain.  I sent the author an email explaining my conundrum and asking if she ever considered releasing a PG version of events.  SHE WROTE BACK – unbelievable – and said (basically) times (the 1700s) were rough, suck it up.

10) The Hunger Games trilogy: It took me about a week to recover from the first book.  I felt depressed, hopeless about our society, and totally exhausted.  These are GREAT books.  And I’d happily feel awful for another week if I could discover them anew in another incarnation.

11) The Lunar Chronicles: This series is responsible for my extreme lack of sleep in the last two weeks.  Marissa Meyer turns Cinderella, Rapunzel, and Little Red Riding Hood into a mechanic, hacker, and farmer respectively, in this deliciously addicting futuristic sci-fi romp.

What are your literary scars?

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Friday Night Fish Fry

I tried giving up sweets for Lent this year.  Christina, one of my friends, accomplished this insane task a couple years ago.  She felt great.  I figured why not give it a go – not for any religious reason, but for the sake of curiosity.  I lasted exactly 24.3 hours.

For me Lent is about un-abstaining.  Specifically, un-abstaining from generic white fish deep-fried in cheap oil and plunked on a plate with side dishes ranging from baked beans and mac-n-cheese, to Lebanese loobya (green beans in tomato sauce).  Christina introduced me to Friday night fish fries early in our friendship.  About three years ago, she invited several families from our sons’ school to the VFW in South Saint Paul one Friday night during Lent.  Three families made the trek.

Christina loves the VFW.  The offspring of anthropologists, she relishes the chance to step outside her own experience into the world of pinball, pulltabs, and meat raffles.  On Friday we load our sons into my Subaru and head out.  Christina’s not that good with directions; she doesn’t know North from South.  I can’t imagine a day that I don’t orient myself along the comforting axes.  N-S.  W-E.

She offers to navigate, cellphone in hand.  I decline, brandishing my scribbled post-it note, a schematic representation of the proposed route.  Unfortunately, mapquest fails (never trust computer-generated directions) and we wind up in West Saint Paul (which is technically south of Saint Paul) instead of South Saint Paul (which is mostly east of Saint Paul).  I find a road that winds down the side of the cliff and we land exactly where we need to be: on Cesar Chavez.  Cesar Chavez dumps into Concord.

“That’s not it,” Christina says in response to my turn signal.

“Yes it is.”

“Nope, that’s not it.”

I turn.

“It’s supposed to be on the left side of the street.  OH – we were on a different street.”

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Irony

The parking lot is full.  Cars spill out onto the surrounding streets like pickled herring from a jar.  I park along the internal perimeter of the lot, setting a dangerous example for the good law-abiding Minnesotans.  Last year we entered the building through a dense cloud of cigarette smoke.  This year I inhale the crisp March air and smell only deep-fried exhaust.

The crowd is thinner tonight; we can actually walk inside the building.  Two years ago, the line for tickets snaked through the bar, past the video games, and right up to the meat raffle wheel.  $12 for me.  $5 for The Big E.

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Meat raffle wheel

I know my meal is doomed.  Christina and I dragged our kids to Holy Family Maronite Church three weeks ago and I had a transformative experience.  The fish was flaky and beautifully fried.  The loobya (that green bean + tomato thing) set my tastebuds all atwitter.  The fried cabbage renewed my faith in cruciferous vegetables.

So, in comparison, I know my VFW meal will fail.  I choke down the chewy fish.  The baked beans are only fine.  Christina cons me into going back for some coleslaw, insisting that it’s “fresh and crispy.”  Yeah, it’s crispy.  Fresh, too.  But the cabbage lacks the sweet pure flavor of the Saint Paul Farmer’s Market.

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The Maronites ruined me.

Our tablemates are lovely people, an older couple up visiting their kids.  Ever in search of a novel fish fry, Christina quizzes them about their past Lenten experiences.  Saint Joseph’s in Menomonie, Wisconsin, they say.  Salmon they say.  That’s about the best fish news I’ve ever heard and I commit this church to memory.  An hour’s drive is well within Christina’s acceptable dinner radius.  We once drove an hour-and-a-half each way to A to Z Produce and Bakery (“This is a farm: assume all fences are electric.”) in Stockholm, Wisconsin, for pizza night.

The long table behind us houses a large multi-generational family.  Four boxes of cupcakes rest in the center.  We covet these cupcakes, at first covertly when we go to check on our Quaker-educated sons as they blast bucks and bunnies and squirrels and mountain goats with a plastic shotgun.  Earlier, they combed all the crevices of my car for quarters, braving the gum wrappers and banana peels.

As we gather our down coats (at the end of March) to leave, Christina looks longingly at the box on the neighboring table marked “red velvet.”  We’ve already decided to take the boys for ice cream, a sorry substitute for the home-baked cupcakian goodness we really crave.

“Do you want one?” a man asks Christina.

She freaks, but only a little.  “Oh my God!  Are you serious?  You didn’t hear me did you?  I was just saying how good they looked and here you are offering me one!”

Maybe he doesn’t realize that one woman is actually two and they are accompanied by ravenous boys.  Said boys sidle up, peering in the boxes.  Christina’s red velvet is half gone.  “You boys should have one!”  The jovial family hands over two chocolate cupcakes.

I stand there innocently.  The matriarch of the family spies the drool heading down my chin and encourages me to choose a treat.  She made the cupcakes.  These cupcakes are not mass-produced hockey pucks full of unpronounceable fillers.

She is an angel and her name is Jean.

“Which one do you recommend?” I ask.

“The carrot cake and red velvet are my favorites,” says Angel Jean.

I’ve never met a carrot cake I didn’t like.  I can even work around coconut if I must.  Jean’s cream cheese frosting is divine.  The cake part boasts the correct ratio of succulent shredded carrot to not-carrot.

By this time, Christina’s cupcake is long gone and she is asking family members for fish fry recommendations.  Turns out they gather the whole mob at this particular VFW every blessed year.  We all thank the family, and especially Angel Jean, profusely.

I’m sure Christina will insist on going back next year.  And I’ll gamely swallow the over-cooked fish in the name of friendship.  But maybe, just maybe, Angel Jean and her band of genetically-similar humans will be there, cupcakes in hand.

Remind me not to give up sweets for Lent.

Musical Moment

 

 

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Overheard: Behind the Scenes on the Set of INSURGENT

Okay people!  Let ‘s start out with six laps around the studio.  Remember, this movie is about RUNNING – running away from bad guys, running to bad guys, running to catch trains, running to outrun trains.  Speaking of which – Theo, I want you to keep working on that long jump.  You’ve got a train to out-jump.  Kate, you can skip the running.  Why don’t you practice standing still in those heels.  Maybe you could try a few short steps if your skirt will allow it.  Hey!  Can someone give Ansel a hand?

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CGI folks: Remember, we want to maximize motion sickness, even in the regular screenings.  And for 3-D and IMAX?  Make your goal the complete evacuation of the stomach contents of every single viewer.  Barf bags with every ticket!

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Costumes!  We need something sexier on Shai.  And less cloth.  Yeah, a vest.  A vest with a zipper!  It doesn’t need to look practical, it just has to look good.  What girl doesn’t want to run around running while she’s running off to start a revolution in tight pants and a zip-up vest?

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So Theo.  Can you do that thing – no not the head butt thing.  (Get a bandaid on that extra, please.)  That smolder thing with the eyebrow and lower lip and stuff?  Yeah.  Do that.  I hear it drives the leddies wild.

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Makeup!  Please come out here immediately and fix Naomi’s eyeshadow.  More badass rebel leader and less prom queen.  A gal can’t lead a rebellion without the proper face!

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Guys – quit bugging me about Evelyn’s age.  I realize that Naomi looks more like Theo’s sister but she’s 46 people!  She could be Theo’s mother.  Barely, I know, but she could be.  Screenwriters – how ’bout if we make Evelyn say, “I was young.”  Will that do it?  Are you happy now?

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Who’s whining about diversity in Hollywood?  We’ve got a girl in the lead, for crissakes.  Yeah, I know all the main characters look white.  But Theo’s from England so he doesn’t really count, right?  And we have Octavia Spencer, Daniel Dae Kim, Mekhi Phifer, and Zoe Kravitz.  What?  Their combined screen time is only three minutes?  Fine.  Increase it to four.

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Miles.  Give it a rest, dude.  No one cares about Peter’s motivation.  He just switches sides – good bad good bad.  All the time.  Period.  That’s the way it is.  Suck it up.

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EXTRAS!  Please report to the kitchen to help chop vegetables for the Amity scenes.

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Jai, think hot.  Hot and evil.  And evil.  Really evil.  No redeeming qualities whatsoever.  But hot.  Definitely hot.

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MAKEUP!!!  Looks like we need to fix Shai’s eyeshadow, too.  Not too subtle.  We want her looking runway-ready while she sleeps.

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Oh.  PG-13.  Right.  I guess we can’t show the bullet hitting the head when Four executes Eric.  So we’ll cut away at the last second, then show him motionless on the floor in a pile of blood.  Yeah, that’ll be great.  But we don’t want Four brooding about it because in this world, violence creates no existential angst!  Yippee!

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Kate – how’s it going in those heels?  Lookin’ good.  No ankle sprain yet?  Awesome!

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Aright.  Places for the sexy funtimes Four-Tris scene.  The rest of you, stick around.  This’ll only take about 16 seconds.  Shai, can you move your eyes back and forth, back and forth, super fast while you look at Theo?  Yeah, like that.  Now you do it, Theo.  That’s romantic, right?  And kiss for a couple seconds…  Whoa!  Too much skin.  CUT!  Let’s stick to killing, not kissing.  We don’t want to alienate our youngest fans.

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Shai!  Shai!  Back away from the kale salad!  You’re supposed to hate being stuck in Amity!  Repeat after me: “I hate Amity.  I hate Amity.  I no longer make my own shampoo.  I hate Amity.”

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Get me the screenwriters.  Please please please.  We need more comic relief at inappropriate moments.

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No no.  Kill her, Evelyn.  Kill Janine.  I know it’s not that way in the book but we want the audience to have a reason to clap.  Kill her.

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And for the ending.  Everyone run!!!!!  Run for the wall!  Run over all that blown-up cement.  The wall is your salvation!  Beyond the wall, there are intact buildings and music and fields of poppies!  Think Les Miserables meets World War Z.  Run!

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Musical Moment

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Eating the Vernal Equinox: Menu For the Urban Minnesota Locavore

For your gustatory pleasure, please enjoy these step-by-step instructions to your very own vernal equinox feast.

Descend stairs to basement.  Trip over tub of miscellaneous “winter squash.”  Drag tub upstairs to kitchen.  Go back down and trip over tub of vacuum packed kale chips.  Note lack of vacuum seal on packages as well as raggedy plastic edges with tiny teeth marks.  Find dead mouse in bottom of tub.  Dump contents of tub in garbage bin with silent prayer of apology to Mother Earth.

Peruse winter squash.  Reject the three butternuts (rotten), two carnivals (petrified), four delicatas (mouse-eaten), and one spaghetti (worm-infested).  Open front door.  Shield eyes from flaming orb in the sky.  Examine Halloween pumpkin still sitting on front stoop.  Note intact sticker on remnants of pumpkin: “Product of Honduras.”

Smother shame in a surreptitious Snickers bar smuggled from SuperAmerica.  Toss pumpkin into compost bin, sticker and all.

Head back downstairs to evaluate meat situation.  Open chest freezer.  Dig under kale casserole, zucchini fritters, kale soup, zucchini bread, kale goulash, and zucchini parmesan.  Shudder.  Vow to plant more tomatoes.  Excavate the anticipated location of remaining pork tenderloin (from a grass-fed, organic, lovingly massaged, ethically-slaughtered local piggy).  Find more kale.  Curse the unexpected relatives who snarfed down the pork tenderloin over the holidays.

Wander over the neighbors’.  Politely inquire whether they’d be willing to part with one of their non-laying geriatric chickens.  Retreat back to own property, nursing a bloody nose.  Ice nasal bridge with two zucchini fritters.

Open cupboard of home-canned goods: pickled zucchini, oven-roasted sun-dried zucchini, pickled kale, fermented zucchini.  Find last remaining jar of red peppers.  Note convex appearance of lid and green hue to the liquid.  Abandon the search for vegetables.

Notice the preponderance of fat squirrels nibbling all the bark off backyard fruit-bearing shrubbery.  Curse the genus Sciuridae.  Study the protuberant bellies of the vile rodents as they methodically destroy all hope of a currant/raspberry/elderberry/blackberry crop.

Forage in front yard.  Find hidden stash of oak leaves and acorns.  Steep leaves in boiling water.  Smash acorns with hammer.  Curse soapstone countertops.  Drop acorn meat into leaf broth.  Simmer for 45 minutes.

Meanwhile (the least useful word in any recipe), borrow son’s nerf gun.  Stalk backyard squirrels.  Repeatedly miss.  Make mental note to take up archery.  Cruise neighborhood looking for fresh roadkill.  Experience reality check and lay down all weapons.  Make a charitable contribution to offset deleterious environmental effects of roadkill roadtrip.

Return to kitchen.  Strain the oak leaf broth into another pan.  Discard leaves.  Mash broth with acorn meat.  Sample.  Salt and pepper to taste.  Sample.  Feed to dog.  Google list of poisonous plants and trees.  Freak out.  Call vet.  Administer oral hydrogen peroxide.  Clean hydrogen peroxide off floor, stove, refrigerator, cupboards, shelves, self, and exterior of dog.

Wait.  Administer more hydrogen peroxide.  Repeat above cleaning steps.  Wait.  Clean dog vomit off floor, stove, refrigerator, cupboards, shelves, self, and exterior of dog.

Order takeout from the Birchwood Cafe.

Musical Moment

 

 

 

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