Thursday, August 30, 2007

"Unless You Bite Your Fork"

Back in NYC, I had this fantastic, if not bizarre, dentist. She had crazy curly hair, a bit of a lisp, and a thick Eastern European accent. Like many dentists, she was always trying to get me to do expensive procedures on my teeth, which I often brushed off since even with the 80-20% insurance pay, I still couldn't afford most of them. At first I was turned off by her, finding her too pushy, but I grew to really like her in the end.

Since I only just got braces at 19 years old, I'm pretty fond of and grateful for my smile. Pre-19 was not a pretty sight. But unfortunately, my teeth are made of butter. I have fillings in nearly every single one, and every time I go to the dentist, SOMETHING is wrong. Not to mention they've never been all that white, even when I was a child. "Some people just have naturally yellow teeth," dentists have told me. Wonderful. This means that most of the whitening stuff out there doesn't do shit, since I'm not REMOVING any wine/coffee/cigarette stains. That's just their lovely natural hue.

So, back in NYC, after fixing one of my front teeth AGAIN (did you know you can get a filling BETWEEN your teeth?!?!), she suggested getting porcelain veneers, which were thousands per tooth. Yeah, right. Finally, with a bit of old-world haggling going back and forth, we compromised. I would get crowns done on my four front teeth, and would pay just $75 per tooth, no matter what she really charged, or really, no matter what she was charging the insurance company. In addition, they would be a bit of a lighter color as well, though not Britney Spears-white. It wasn't supposed to actually clash with the rest of my teeth, but brighten them somewhat. I agreed to do this over a period of time, and ended up totally happy with the result. She even kind of reshaped my two front teeth, which were rather worn down. She gave me those Jessica Simpson bunny teeth, though not that exaggerated, which are apparently a dentist's trick to make you look younger.

Gazing at them in her hand mirror, I asked, "How long will these last for?" Expecting some "Ten or twenty years" answer, I almost fell out of the dental chair when she said, "Oh, assuming you take good care of them, about 2-4 years. That is, if you don't bite your fork or anything." Thinking about paying for and going through all this again in just a couple years was a bit scary, since I knew I wouldn't be in NYC forever, and who knew when I'd have ANY kind of dental insurance again (I haven't since then).

Though I am not, in fact, a fork-biter, I have been conscientious about my teeth since then, and have had the occasional vision of just ONE of these things falling off, revealing the less attractive real tooth behind, like the mask falling off the Phantom of the Opera. It's been a few years now, and I've been hoping to get as much wear out of these choppers as possible.

Well, time is ticking away, or maybe it's time for me to fit back in, in Missouri, the place where I didn't originally fit in for "having all" my teeth. It all started yesterday when I went to hang up a pair of Beau's slacks. I have this weird habit where I usually stick the top of the plastic hanger in my mouth while with my two hands, I button up the first couple buttons on a shirt. I know, hygienic. Well, this time it was a metal hanger, and a heavy one that holds multiple pairs of slacks. I put it in my mouth, using my two hands to put the pants on the hanger, and then took it out of my mouth and hung it up. As I was removing it, I felt a slight grit in my mouth. I spit some in my hand and looked at it. Disgusted that there may have been some dirt on the hanger, I rubbed it off and went on with my cleaning.

Hours later, I was sitting in my car in the Safeway parking lot, talking to my mother on the phone. At one point, I drew down the mirror on the visor, checking out my face (oh my GOD I need to pluck my massive eyebrows!) and smiled at my reflection, absentmindedly checking my teeth.

Wait a minute.

There, right on my front tooth, was a chip. A ragged, sharp, chip. If I wasn't talking to my mother, I probably would have cried. The irony? JUST the other day, Beau and I were talking about our lack of health coverage, and I said, "You know, I'd almost rather break a leg or get some awful illness than have a dental issue. You can get reasonable health care sometimes, but FORGET finding affordable dental care!" And I'm sure my chipped front tooth is considered cosmetic anyway. Great! How the hell do I get this fixed?

I thought of all the chipped, missing, and snarly teeth I'd seen in Smalltown, Missouri.

Oh god, now I'm a hick!

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Crybaby

Last week were some pretty big events at the university. Our office had to staff one of them, a small one with mostly deans, faculty, and some administrators attending. A really nice guy in my office, we'll call him "Guy," was stationed at one point with me. We were basically acting as ushers at the entrance to a theater, and most of the people had already filed in. We were standing there chatting, when a small boy of about eight or nine years old started to climb the many steps up to where we were. I recognized him as some staff member's kid. She always seemed to bring him along on the free events hosted by the university. As he approached, we noticed in one of his hands teetered a rather full glass of orange juice, and in the other, he carried a cookie about the size of his head.

As he reached me, I smiled and said, "Oh, I'm sorry, you can't take that into the theater, they don't let anyone take food in. But go ahead and finish it here or downstairs if you like, then go on in." The boy stopped in mid-step and stared at us for a full 30 seconds or more. Guy and I kinda looked at each other, then shrugged it off. We continued to chat a little bit, but here and there I stole a glance at the boy, who was now looking off into the distance in an almost catatonic state. It was slightly unnerving, but I tried not to pay attention, because I figured he was embarrassed and I didn't want to make him feel more uncomfortable.

A couple minutes later, I looked over at the boy again, this time head tilted down as if in prayer over his orange juice, which along with the cookie, was still held aloft in mid-air. Suddenly, his shoulders began quivering. Then, as if from a dramatic movie scene, you could actually see teardrops begin plopping into his cup, splashing into the orange juice. Stunned, I turned and looked at Guy, who looked just as stunned.

"What's wrong?" I asked. Sniffling and snuffling loudly, the boy cried out, "You won't let me take this in!" Again, I looked at Guy, wide-eyed and perplexed. Wtf? The boy continued sobbing uncontrollably. We tried to offer words of consolation, but it was a bit ridiculous.

Being a teacher for three years, you get used to not only seeing kids cry, but actually MAKING them cry. The first time you do it can be a bit tough. You feel like the devil. But you get over it. Fast. Kids cry. Sometimes YOU make them cry, and usually, it's not anything insensitive or cruel that you did. The first time I made a kid cry, was on the very last day of classes when I caught EIGHT students had copied their homework after one (the class genius). I gave them all a zero on their homework. The class genius wept for 20 minutes. The other kids were nonplussed.

But this little boy was actually kinda pissing me off. So he couldn't bring his juice and big fat cookie into the theater. Big fucking deal. It's not like we snatched them out of his hands and threw them in the trash. If this was the biggest hardship he had to deal with in his life, then his mother REALLY had to get him out more. And if it was some kind of ploy to get us to acquiesce and let him enter the theater, then he was even more of a little brat than I thought. After a few more words of re-encouragement to go eat his cookie and have his juice or to instead rejoin his mother (he didn't), we gave up, and just ignored him. He then sat down on the stairs, folded his arms over his knees, bent his head over into his arms, and just sobbed. I eyed the orange juice, now perched on the step next him, with some apprehension.

Jesus.

Eventually, we went into the theater and left him there. I was wondering where his mother was the whole time, whom I imagined was inside waiting for him to return. Maybe I'm a cold bastard, but Guy works every weekend with kids in his church, and he had pretty much the same reaction. He just uses much nicer words. Beau has no such restrictions.

Later, when I told this story to Beau, he scowled and said, "If that was our son, and you'd raised him that way, I'd smack him so hard, YOU'D feel it."

Snorting, I said, "I wouldn't even raise a girl that way."

Then we continued on with a scathing review of other people's parenting, which is easy when you don't have kids, of course.

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Shut Your Pie Hole!

I've never been accused of being a rumor-starter. Well, until last night. I should have known better.

Like with that disastrous job at the writers' non-profit, and during all the interesting changes at my non-profit job in NYC, I kinda prided myself on having developed the ability to put various tiny clues together to figure out things before others (i.e. like when someone is about to quit/be fired, etc.). This has never really failed me, though sometimes I haven't gotten all the details right, and it's typically something I keep to myself until it all comes out publicly.

Typically.

At Shop-n-Smile there are only two supervisors I really like to work with: Joe, an older, seemingly-gruff man who is actually pretty funny and nice, and Candy, who's about 10 years older than me, and also a lot of fun to work with. They take their jobs seriously and are both very competent, but are thankfully lacking that 'Shop-n-Smile disciple' gene that seems to be embedded within the other managers, and makes me want to projectile vomit.

Besides the dozen or so employees who have recently jumped ship, and made me impulsively want to quit each time it happens, now it seems Candy might be leaving also. This makes me very sad, since I find it so difficult to just tolerate working at Shop-n-Smile as it is, and having to close each night with one of the Mr. Intense Supervisors will just make it all the more teeth-gritting.

Then last weekend, one of the Mr. Intensity's called a "huddle" of all the employees. He was chatting and being his usual children's-show-upbeat self (which can turn into wrath is you say the wrong thing, a la Angie), and he blithely made a comment about Joe that went something like this: "Oh, well it won't matter anymore what Joe thinks after August 27." Mr. Intensity just kept right on talking, but a red flag went shooting up through the top of my head and began waving furiously. Was Joe leaving on the 27th?! I looked furtively around, but no one else seemed to catch it, or care.

I knew this was entirely possible, since in actuality, Joe is a career banker, but after moving to Missoula, was unable to get a good banking job (gee, startling), and ended up working for Shop-n-Smile. I knew if he could find a really good banking job, he'd probably nab it, and who could blame him?

Later that same day, Joe was handing me his wife's business card. She, too, is a banker. Joe is always trying to get Beau and I to move our banking services to that of his wife's bank. As I was looking at her card, Mr. Intensity was walking by. He suddenly yelled back, "Hey Joe! What are you trying to do? Poach J. away and take her to your place?" Again, red flag a'flyin! I thought to myself, "This confirms it, he's leaving to go work at a bank!"

A few days later, I was closing with Candy and she was telling me about her potential job offer at another place, which sounded great. I asked her, "Is it true that Joe is leaving too?" She paused and turned to me, mouth agape. "Is he leaving?!"

Uh oh.

Candy continued, "Really? I thought I heard something going around, but I wasn't sure. There have been signs." (This just seemed like further confirmation to me). "I'll have to call Bev and find out for sure," she said.

That was the last I'd heard of anything, until last night. I came into the store for my shift, and there was Joe, arms akimbo. "I want to talk to you," he said, curling his finger and gesturing me toward the office.

Uh oh.

Once inside his office, which has one of those giant "I can see you - you can't see me" windows, Joe unloaded. "What did you do? Rumor spreader! The whole store is talking about how I'm quitting! What did you say to people?"

After a few rapid blinks, I regained my ability to speak. "What? No! I only talked to Candy. What happened? Are you quitting?"

After informing me, that no, in fact he was NOT quitting, nor had any intention of quitting, he then began a story about how this "rumor" of his quitting had made it around the whole store, until it had finally reached the store manager who had called Joe into his office to have a serious talk, ask if he was really leaving, etc. Joe, unaware of any of this, and pretty fucking shocked, could only tell the manager the truth, he was staying put.

Joe then gave one of his gruff smiles. "It actually did help me out though."

"Oooh, did you get a raise?" I asked, full of hope. Wow, then he'd actually OWE me one for that!

"No, not that, but it helped things out a lot."

"Well, there you go! I did you a favor!" I triumphed.

Joe gave me the stink eye and said, "Nice job."

Of course at that point I apologized profusely. Idiot. You'd think I'd learn. About a month ago I had said, in passing, to Candy, "Damn, I'm gonna quit. I hate my schedule!" It was true, since my boss is continually fucking up my schedule and adding shifts after it's "finalized," which irks me to no end. But I say I'm going to quit all the time. Ask Beau - it's like the first thing out of my mouth when I come home cranky and tired each night.

Candy, taking this VERY seriously, brought it up in the managers' meeting, got my intense boss in a bunch of trouble, and then later, I had to suffer the pain-in-the-assness of having THREE different managers come up to me, including the store manager, asking me to stay and proclaiming how valued I was. Sheesh. I love Candy, but COME ON!

Okay, lesson learned. This time.

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Umbrella

I'm actually a really big fan of Rihanna's "Umbrella" song, and was blown away when I saw her rock hard performance at the MTV Music awards. Then I just heard that Mandy Moore was covering "Umbrella," which sounded a bit weird, but I thought it came off really beautifully. In case you have the time...

Saturday, August 18, 2007

Fancy Meeting You Here

As Beau was dropping me off at the university today after lunch (damn, those wings were good!), he pointed over to the sidewalk and said, "Look at that." Turning, I saw a lovely mule deer doe, just standing there, not looking frightened, but not looking all that alert or aware either. I got pretty close to her before taking this shot with my camera phone. Finally she languidly turned around, and clickety-clacketed down the sidewalk toward the Forestry building, which I thought was totally appropriate.

I walked back over to Beau. "Did you get close enough for a good shot?" he asked. "Yes!" I said, "though when I got real close she turned and left."

"Yeah, I was afraid you'd spook her and she'd jump into the street and get hit by a car and get killed."

I love my husband.

Thursday, August 16, 2007

Angie Tempest - Delilah Crazy

I was lucky for awhile in that the infamous Angie (well, if you're a Shop-n-Smile worker) has been mostly working days, so has been absent from life. I am now unlucky in two other ways though: a) she is now the head of my department and frankly, is doing a crappy job of it; and b) I've seen more of her lately since a buttload of people have quit and she's been working some nights.

So many people have quit, that nearly every night I work (except for those glorious nights with Angie), I am the senior person there. Keep in mind I started this job in March, less than six months ago. Closing each night with a bunch-a-newbies is painful. They're slow, needy, and naturally, somewhat psycho. One girl, "Delilah," comes off as Severus Snape's younger, annoying sister, with oily tendrils of jet black hair hanging to her chin and a way of holding herself that makes you feel she is uncomfortable in her own skin. In all honesty, I thought she was a tranny, which fascinated me since Montana's not a trans-gender-friendly place. Now, I think not. Anyway, overall, she's a nice girl, but, of course, really peculiar. She introduced us to her fiance, a young man who instantly strikes you as an expert Magic and D&D player, and who has developed a tendency of orbiting her while she works. Never quite talking to her, but always...there.

The other night I was talking to some customers, explaining the futon deal to them (believe it or not, it's complicated), when she walked up, planted herself inches from me, and stood there for a few moments. Because I was right in the middle of my explanation, I kind of just acknowledged her with a smile and kept talking, until I was suddenly interrupted mid-sentence by her loudly chirping out, "Hi!"

I stopped mid-sentence and turned to her. I thought she must need something. "Hi," I said, "Did you have a question?"

"No," she said, "I just saw that you were here and well, I know that there's questions about furniture and stuff, and just in case you had a question..."

I paused again. I didn't even really get this. Basically I am the furniture person. "Um, no, I'm good, thanks," I said, and continued on with the customers. She kind of hovered there for another minute, and then finally strolled off.

And last night I was treated to Evil Angie's presence. Since Harry Potter 5 came out, it struck me that she is almost EXACTLY like the Dolores Umbridge character. Sickly sweet, high-pitched voice, but an underlying current of cruelty flowing. About 7pm, the manager was gathering me, Angie, and another (somewhat new) employee, Barry together. It seems there was a mess-up on the schedule and he was going to figure out who would do what. I was already somewhat annoyed since I'd been placed in Health & Beauty, an area I was unfamiliar with, but it wasn't the end of the world. As he was striding toward us, he got called to the cash registers on the loudspeaker. Walking away, he called out over his shoulder, "You guys figure it out and let me know!"

Angie immediately took charge. "Okay, let's see. where did you start and which way are you working?" she asked me.

"I'm not, really. I started in the middle and I'm jumping around." This was because I didn't want to start in school supplies (a disaster area right now due to back to school crap), nor the other end, grocery, which is a mess even on the best of days. I had decided to tackle the center first and jump around as I put back returns. This was to keep myself from being overwhelmed and stabbing myself in the neck due to both the mess and the utter boredom that my life would take on for the next four hours.

Angie did NOT like that answer. She let out a melodramatic sigh and said, "Well!" Then she turned to Barry and started talking to him. He tried to explain his "plan." It started getting ridiculous, since she was truly trying to map out a strategy, and we were somewhat resistant. Not out of any malice, but simply because, really, the "strategy" is: do your work, and if you finish, come help someone else. Shit, there's only THREE of us. It's not rocket science. We didn't need a game plan. She threw up her hands and shrieked, "Fine! Do whatever you want!" as I paused and waited for all glass in the store to shatter. Then, she stomped off in a huff that would make any silent movie actress proud.

As we watched her exit stage left, Barry shook his head and muttered, "God, I hate her. She makes me want to punch a baby."

If I had been drinking milk at that moment, it would have come out my nose. Not only was I shocked simply by the statement, violent as it was, but also that it came out of Barry's mouth. Barry's just one of the sweetest people I've ever met. About 20 years old, he's one of those people who are ALWAYS in a good mood with a big smile on their face, and it's all for real! "Hey J!" he always calls out to me as if we've been pals forever. He's good to customers and he works hard. He even stayed to close one night after finding out his grandmother was dying. "Go home! Forget fucking Shop-n-Smile!" I said. He wanted to be the good guy, I guess. I've never heard him say a bad word about anyone, ever. Even when he complains about customers he does it with a smile on his face.

Well, I guess that's just the effect our lovely Angie has on her co-workers. How to win friends and influence people!

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Surreal Day

So, I'm sitting here at my desk, getting a massive vibrating massage. Seems they're doing heavy construction on the steam pipes here at the university, or some such, and I feel like I'm going to jiggle right off my chair onto the floor. At first it felt kinda neat *wink* but now it's a bit annoying...or literally, jarring. Every time it stops for a few seconds, I feel like shaking my head like a dog who's just come out of a pool.

Add to that, my lovely and powerful female boss is singing Patsy Cline's "Crazy," in a somewhat-operatic voice. AWESOME. She's not bad, and it helps to make the day deliciously surreal.

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Men and Food - A Strange Relationship

I've said before that one satisfying thing about a man, if you're a woman, is that you can pretty much put anything in front of them, and they'll eat it. This makes cooking a bit less stressful. Yet, I am still repeatedly surprised to find Beau actually shoving things down his pie hole that he claims to despise. Despite the fact that I LOVE LOVE LOVE to eat, I'm actually kind of a picky eater, and can't imagine digesting something that didn't appetize me.

One annoying habit of mine, is that I will become fixated on a food and eat it continuously until I am so sick of it I can't eat it for a long time afterwards. No, we're not talking the "I only eat white food!" kind of thing, but if I get into, let's just say, Jelly Belly sour jellybeans, as I have for the past couple weeks, I will continue to eat them again and again. We just HAPPEN to have a Jelly Belly dispenser at Shop-n-Smile, and I have been getting small bags of the sour ones and snacking on them throughout the day (I don't want to even THINK about the calories). Beau, who is always sniffing out food like a bloodhound, immediately noticed the bag on the counter at home and began pawing it. "What's this? Jellybeans? Yuck, I hate jellybeans," he said, turning away. This is true, since after I made him an Easter basket, the only thing that didn't vaporize within 24 hours were the jellybeans, who sat lonely and untouched for quite some time in the Easter grass.

I was somewhat relieved, because if Beau finds a sweet he likes, it won't stick around for long. Many a time I have griped at him for knocking off pints of ice cream I had bought for myself (after already having bought him one as well). And just forget about having chocolate around him. Just last week he spastically wrestled a mangled mini-Mr. Goodbar from my grasp with a fervor that was frightening (he had been abstaining from chocolate for a week or two at the time).

I have had to devise very clever hiding places just so I can keep a candy bar in the house longer than 25 seconds. I once forgot that I had hidden a bag of Hershey's Kisses in the front pocket of my raincoat and found them months later. He still ate them.

Despite all this, yesterday we were hanging out in the living room and when I gave him a kiss, I was hit with the distinctive aroma of a Jellybelly. (Beau's not the only one who can act like a bloodhound). "Hey!" I said pulling away from his face, "I smell Jellybellies! I thought you hated jellybeans!"

"I do," he replied simply.

Doesn't seem much more to say.

Then this morning I woke up and saw the new box of Golden Grahams cereal was opened. This puzzled me since Beau had clearly stated that he was not a fan, AND also since we had two other boxes of cereal that he DID enjoy.

"Hey, didn't you tell me you hated Golden Grahams?"

"Yes"

"So, um, I noticed you had a bowl or two. Why?"

"I don't know."

Maybe another male can explain this to me, cause seriously, I'm stumped. It's not like we're stranded on a desert island and Beau's only hope for survival and sustenance are the many Jellybelly and Golden Graham trees surrounding him. What gives with consuming, needlessly in my opinion, food that doesn't interest you, or furthermore, food you claim to hate?

More Proof I Work With Crazy People - Part II

Sort of update: Sally is already back to work, because as she says, "I can't not work. I have to be working! It's important to me!" This sounded admirable to me, though I thought she did come back awfully fast (after not quite a week). But then as the conversation progressed, she informed me that she was working with her doctor to get disability due to her back problems, so she would only have to work 15 hours a week ever again. Well!

She is all excited and showing off photos of her new baby boy. Of course, she never said anything about adoption (whether or not that was really what was going on, that's her business), but what she DID tell me was this:

Sally: I had my tubes tied. This wasn't supposed to happen.
Me: Really!? Did you have them "tied" or were they burnt off? (I have heard of ones that were literally tied coming undone and women getting pregnant).
Sally: I don't know, all I told them was that there better not be a chance in hell I get pregnant again.
Me: Wow, so much for that.
Sally: Yeah, but they're giving me another free surgery. So, I'll make sure this time!

And now she's in her early 20's with THREE boys (yikes) and working at Shop-n-Smile. Life can't be easy.
-------------------------------------------------------------

Saturday, August 04, 2007

More Proof I Work With Crazy People

So, we've been shorthanded at Shop-n-Smile for days. This really pisses me off, since we tend to be understaffed (imho) most of the time anyway. The typical "night shift" consists of just THREE people on the entire "hardlines" floor (anything that doesn't involve clothes). So, if someone is on break, or someone has to do a "carry out" (wheeling and loading a piece of furniture out to someone's car, which happens OFTEN), then you can easily be the only person left standing. Add to that the cashiers constantly calling you up to help them out or a few annoying phone calls ("Can you tell me the prices and descriptions of ALL your coffee tables?"), and you can see how things can quickly get hectic. All this, and your MAIN job is to clean up/straighten the entire store at the same time, because the first shift people piss, bitch, moan and cry if they don't enter the store every morning to a gleaming, sparkling paradise.

Two nights ago we had four people missing (including the apparel area), which was crazy. We had two people missing last night as well, and walking with the boss, I said, "Who's missing tonight?" My boss told me it was Sally, a young woman about 22 years old who works at the Customer Service counter. She's about 5 feet to 5 feet 2 inches tall and shaped almost exactly like the apple guy from the Fruit of the Looms commercials. She works pretty hard, though she's one of those people who will just start chatting and chatting with you until the point where you can't take it anymore and you find yourself trying to slowly inch away from them and escape. Once I got ensnared by her when she launched into a story about how she was suing Wal-Mart (true). Though I thought this was another crazy co-worker story, it seemed she actually had somewhat of a case. That was months ago. Well, if she ends up with a multi-million dollar judgment, I'm sure I'll hear about it. Or maybe not, as the case turns out..

I was surprised Sally was missing, since she didn't seem the type to skip out. She works full-time as far as I know, and she's got two little kids to support. When the boss was lamenting her second night of double-duty, she began this conversation:

Boss: Yeah, it's Sally who isn't here again.
J: Oh.
Boss: She wasn't here last night. She called and said she had a bladder infection.
J: Oh, ick.
Boss: Then her mother called today. Her mother told me that Sally won't be in for a week now.
J: A week? Wow, what's wrong?
Boss: It seems that last night she had a baby.
J: *long pause while brain explodes inside skull* Wait, whu?
Boss: Yes, she really did have a baby.
J: Sally. Sally had a baby. Sally.
Boss: Yes.
J: A real baby. Did she know she was pregnant? (note: I actually knew someone once who didn't know she was pregnant until her SIXTH month. True. She said it was due to her chronic colitis condition which often swelled up her stomach anyway, as well as her frequently missed periods. Go figure).
Boss: Yes, and she didn't tell anyone. Not any of the bosses here knew.
J: Um, she's full-time. Isn't there maternity leave and stuff?
Boss: Yes. *shrug* Who knows what she is thinking.
J: Wait...still...she had a BABY?

I just went on spluttering and pausing after that. It was a monkeys-fly-out-of-my-butt moment. Sure, she was round, but there are different kinds of round! Not for a minute did I ever think she was nine months pregnant (and she must have worked right up until the day she went into labor).

Further craziness ensued when talking to apathetic teenager Katie, who is a close friend of Sally's.

Katie: Yeah, and Sally just had a baby.
J: Um yeah, what's up with that? Did you know?
Katie: No, I had no idea! I mean, I hang out with her! She never said anything! Everyone keeps saying, "I just thought she was fat."
J: This is so weird.
Katie: I mean, now that we all think about it, it makes total sense. She used to be this huge drinker, and at some point she just randomly stopped drinking.
J: Ahh.
Katie: And she used to be the sweetest person ever, and then she just turned into this total bitch. So, it all makes sense now.
J: Uh huh.

One alarming point is just last week I was sitting in my car during a break, chatting with Beau, and I THOUGHT I had a funny moment. As we were talking, I would occasionally glance at Katie across the parking lot. She was gathering shopping carts, of which there were a lot. At one point, I looked up and saw her hiding behind a bunch of cars where she began, hands down, the fastest smoking of a cigarette I have ever seen. She was taking rapid fire, fierce drags that sucked her cheeks in sharply. It was comical to watch, since she mirrored a dying man sucking on an oxygen mask for dear life. When I mentioned it to her later, she said, "Oh, Sally was in the parking lot in her car and I asked her if I could have a few drags off her cigarette." Knowing what I know now, yikes!

So, anyway, I don't know if this certifies Sally as crazy, but once again, I have a co-worker with inexplicable, bizarre behavior. The only thing I could think of was that perhaps Sally was planning on giving the baby up for adoption all along, since she's very young and supporting two children on a Shop-n-Smile salary. If so, I don't know why she would tell Shop-n-Smile WHY she would have to be out for a week (I'm sure she could make up a similar 'bladder infection' story). Otherwise, I have no clue as to why there would be a big secret.

Weirdos, I tell you, weirdos!

Friday, August 03, 2007

Prevent the Madness!

So, there's been huge forest fires around here, which started in Idaho and now are actually surrounding the Missoula area. People are a bit freaked out by it all, because there is a literal haze over everything, and a deep wood-burning smell pervades all things. You can't even make out the surrounding mountains in the distance. You just see a speckled mass of white, like Paul Bunyan had a great big sneeze of white pepper. Besides being scared of the fire (I-90 had been briefly closed and a some people living outside Missoula had to evacuate their homes), people seem truly alarmed by the smoke itself. One dean told me how he wakes up with his eyes all caked up and runny (ew), and how he can hardly breathe. There was even a warning in the daily newspaper that the young and elderly should stay indoors at all times.

Well, not me! This girl's made of tougher stuff! After three years in Bangkok, a city that THRIVES on a constant state of thick, scratchy smog, this is kid stuff. After consistently watching the churning water in my washing machine turn from clear to the color of rich chocolate milk, I fear not a little dirt. After being so dirty and sweaty you have to shower twice a day, three times in the "hot season," I laugh at a little forest fire smoke. Ha! Ha ha!

Of course, now Mother Nature will fuck me up and give me some allergy or something, just for my arrogance.

As usual in Missoula though, I feel removed from it all. Forest fires are not a phenomenon I've ever really experienced, besides the occasional shoving of Smokey the Bear in my face, with the ominous, "Only YOU can prevent forest fires!" Only me? Seriously? I mean, aren't a lot of these forest fires a simple and natural part of nature? Aren't they good for the ecosystem? I don't have a lot of education on this, but I thought they were a healthy part of the forest's cycle of rebirth, adding nutrients to the soil and allowing for new, healthy growth. Yeah, yeah, I know Smokey is referring to people who are careless with campfires, shut up.

I'm used to monsoon drown-you-in-five-minutes rain, tornadoes, blizzards, and even the cute little dust storm or flash flood now and again, but the threat of forest fires is new. So, just as when you're in a foreign country walking around a bad neighborhood, I am unaware and basically aloof from it all. I'm sure if I saw flames careening down the mountain toward my apartment building, it'd be one helluva wake-up call, but that seems so far-fetched to be almost a fairy tale (good thing we were forced to get renter's insurance before we moved in).

Driving to Shop-n-Smile each night, I often see the Smokejumpers helicopters flying by. If you don't know what these are, they consist of crazy men and women who jump out of helicopters to land amidst some distant forest region which is heartily ablaze. Here's part of the literal definition: "[their] primary job is to suppress wildfires in remote mountainous terrain." Let me repeat that, REMOTE mountainous terrain! REMOTE terrain that is ON FIRE! They parachute down, with their supplies tumbling quickly after them, and are expected to stay down there in the "roadless" areas until its deemed they can come back home. There's even a school for these crazy mo fo's here in Missoula! Oh, and they have "also been used as tree climbers in New York and Chicago for an ongoing insect eradication program." ?? Wtf?

I've never really understood the romance of the firefighter myself, beyond the basic 'heroism' part of it, which I get. I've always thought of the reality -- a lot of really heavy equipment, running into burning buildings, being fucking hot ALL the time, etc. And you know, I'm a sweat-er, a really icky one, so that intense heat thing would not be good for me. There's only so much baby powder you can utilize. I'd chafe.

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

I don't know exactly why...


...but every time I see this dancing alien in one of those sidebar advertisements on Yahoo or whatever, it really gives me the heebee jeebees! *SHIVER*

And there's a top bar one that has THREE dancing aliens. Eeyah!