Here’s How I Lost my Faith in Humanity

The Time: Friday night, 11:00.

The Place: Side door entrance to the Hilton Garden Inn. Layton, UT.

Photo from here.


The People: Me, loaded up with beach bags full of towels and sunscreen. Poor Kyle, holding a box of leftover pizza from Boston’s.
Sister, carrying everything nobody else could hold. Brother-in-Law, burdened with his fat little baby boy [who happened to be sleeping soundly under the warmth of a fuzzy green blanket].

There’s no way around it–he’s a fatty. And we love him.


The four of us [plus sleeping fat baby] were exhausted from our day at the water park–lazy river or not, it still takes a lot out of a person. We were sunburned and sore from our high-energy day, and parked as close to the hotel entrance as possible–which wasn’t very close at all. Luckily, there was a side door entrance a bit nearer which, experience had taught, was also closer to the elevators. We walked as quickly as our aching bodies would allow, and soon reached the glass door at the side of the hotel.

Locked.

To go around front would have taken only a few minutes, but it seemed an impossible feat for any one of us–we must have looked a haggard lot.

Instead, I noticed through the glass walls of the building a man and woman coming our way, no doubt headed to the nearby elevators.

“Ooh, there are some people! Get their attention!” I urged my husband, who stood closest to the door.

He and Flint, my brother-in-law holding the fat baby boy, inched towards the windowed door and knocked ever so lightly, winning the attention of the fast-approaching couple.

The man inside–we’ll call him Comb Over–was in his 30s, wearing a white polo shirt with khakis and penny loafers, and looking back, I’m pretty sure his comb over was hiding a bald patch on his shiny head. Which would have been fine with me {I, myself, am losing hair at an alarming rate}, had he not glanced our way, snarled, and flung his hand behind him, vaguely indicating we ought to go around to the front. When he could have pushed the bar-locked door open with nothing but an outstretched arm. He wouldn’t have even needed to take an extra step. It could have been a walk-by opening.

He probably figured he’d get to the elevator while we trekked to the front entrance, and be in his warm cozy bed before we even got through the doors. He probably figured he’d never see us again.

Comb Over and Woman probably didn’t count on the elevators being slow on account of some corporate something-or-other congestion. He probably didn’t count on another, kinder gentleman opening the door for us just seconds later, letting us in right behind him. He probably never thought we’d get to the elevator while he was still standing there.

But we did.

And my sister and I married very large men. Who are wonderful except when angry. And our husbands were nothing if not angry with this jerk. (I, myself, have never had so strong an urge to label someone a jack@$$ in my life.) Mind you, Flint is a police officer who is two hundred and something pounds of sheer weight. And okay, he was holding a fat sleeping baby, which might have made him slightly less intimidating, but he still had the huevos to walk up to the guy and say, “Hey, buddy–thanks for opening the door for the sleeping baby.”

To which Poor Kyle piped in, “Yeah, thanks a lot!”

Comb Over Polo Shirt said curtly, “You guys could have gone around to the front just like I did.” As if he was so disillusioned with his lot in life of having to walk around, that he wanted to make every other human being suffer. Suffer like he had to suffer. Woe was him, I tell you what.

Just then, the elevator doors opened and the four of us whisked past Comb Over to claim it. Don’t worry–there was plenty of room for the four of us and Comb Over plus Woman…only they weren’t too keen on sharing with the likes of us.

I wonder if they were too insecure? Or maybe just too ashamed to face up to their actions…

Either way, if Comb Over ever comes across this blog at some point in his life–and he knows who he is–I just want to tell him this:

I hope you’ve come to terms with your baldness.

Posted in watch out or I'll blog about you | 12 Comments

{I Get Depressed Very Easily}

Did you know that I am tall? Indeed I am. I’m 6′ 1″ if I’m an inch.

It was a freak accident, if you ask me. My mother is 5′ 8″, and my dad is 6′ 0″, but my older sister didn’t come out as tall as me–she’s only 5′ 8″. And sure, there are tall cousins on both sides–two boys are well over six feet–but their parents are also all over six feet.

I don’t know how or why, but they’re my genes so I have learned to love them.

It hasn’t always been this way, though. I used to wail and wallow in despair about how tall I was–no boys would ever like me, I was sure. I was as tall as an amazon, and as graceful as a duck. And I could never find pants long enough to fit my octopus legs. In my teenage head, I was doomed for a life of misery.

Eventually I learned that it didn’t matter if boys never liked me–they were all jerks anyway. I came to embrace my duckish-demeanor, and try to laugh it off. But finding pants long enough has still been the curse of my existence.

It is a marvel to me that some people in the world can actually walk into Targetâ„¢ and buy a pair of jeans off the rack for well under $50.00. The only place I have bought a pair of jeans since I was 16 has been the Buckle. Usually they range between $70.00 and $100.00 each [which, I know is a pittance compared to what some people spend on Sevens of the World or whatever those movie-star jeans are called. But alas. I am no movie star. And spending $50.00 a leg just to be decent in public is a lot of money for me].

So you can imagine how I feel when this sort of thing happens to me:

Posted in failures, sad things | 17 Comments

My Year in Review: Happy Birthday, Little Blog!

On Saturday, July 12th, this blog turned one year old.

I debated holding another giveaway to celebrate, but I still don’t make any money off this blog, (or as a human being in general) so I decided to limit my expenditures.

Instead, I dove into the Archives of my life, and picked out some of the most monumental (or just plain mental!) posts of the past 367 days.

For those of you who’ve been following faithfully since day one, this might get tedious. But I thought the newcomers may enjoy reading up on AOOL, how it came to be, and what-not.

And if nobody enjoys reading these archives, I suppose it will have been an exercise in humility for me. Humility–maybe that’s something I can write about for next year’s birthday?

-Coming to terms with my sense of style

-The time I threatened to quit blogging unless more people started commenting

-How I feel about the OB/GYN

-Trying to plan a wedding and having a nervous breakdown

-Trying to plan a wedding and losing my mind

-When Kyle became Poor Kyle

-Wedding time

-How I feel about the MVD

-This podunk town’s emergency room

-That mean old lady at church

So there ya have it. Read them all or don’t read any.

But if you do read one or two, feel free to leave comments, even though they’re old posts–I’ll get them right in my inbox, and I’ll cherish every one.

Thanks for a fantastic year!

Posted in blogger finger, change, Overall Good Things | 9 Comments

{I Met Loralee and All I Got Was a Low Self-Esteem}

I drove 13 hours to meet Loralee.

Okay, so I was going through Utah anyway, and I had three hours to go from there, so I needed to stop for dinner. But that doesn’t mean I was any less excited for the rendezvous.


See, there was this time in my life that I lost my faith in humanity; Loralee renewed that faith. During the first few months of my blogging obsession, I stalked many a talented bloggers, and didn’t quite understand why none of them stalked me in return. Loralee was the first professional blogger to acknowledge me, and even then it was only after I begged on my hands and knees for it. But however pathetic my reasons, I felt like a superstar the first day I read a comment from her, and every comment thereafter. I’m sure she was just trying to be nice, because she’d been in my position, but eventually I gathered the courage to email her and now we’re sort of friends.

And we’ve met, so we’re sort of better friends.

She’s really very nice. For anyone wondering whether he or she should try and meet his or her blogging hero, my advice is to go for it.

For one thing, she buys cute shoes at good prices. Very likable indeed. (The blogger, not the shoes. [Though the shoes are nice, too.])

Probably all blogging heroes are as cool as Loralee, who asked the waiter to split our cheques right from the start [I am so paranoid about whether or not that is tacky, I would have paid for me, Loralee, and her displaced southern belle friend, if it meant I could avoid an awkward situation. I bet you wish you’d never spoken up, eh Loralee?].

Also, I got the scoop on a lot of juicy drama that Loralee is too tasteful to ever actually post on her blog–it was the real inside edition, and totally worth every moment of pre-meeting anxiety.

But really, our friendship was doomed from the beginning. Loralee and I can never become truly bosom buddies. Because when our dinner at Chili’s was over, our pictures were taken and our goodbyes hugged, I unlocked the door to Tamra Camry, sank–relieved at my presence of mind through the meal–into the driver seat, and checked the visor mirror. Only about an hour too late…

Like I said–doomed. And it’ll be a cold day in Mesa before I order lettuce wraps in public again.

*Really, though. Loralee is lots of fun. Go meet her and tell her that crazy girl sent you.*
Posted in blogger finger, fiascos, friends, It's All Good, Overall Good Things | 13 Comments

{Of All the Goodly Things in Life, This Has to be the Best}

I am whole again.

This is just like the time in 6th grade (grade 6, Canadians!) when I picked and tore and bit at the wart on my thumb so much it eventually fell off, but once it was gone, I missed it. I missed the entertainment my old friend Warty brought me while the rest of the class was learning about the prime meridian [a subject on which I was already an expert].

But before long, it returned–as warts are wont to do–and I was whole again. Warty and me, just like the old days.

Now, years later, the feeling has returned. Not in regards to the wart on my thumb, though…

…but Tastespotting.com. It’s back. If Alias came back on T.V. for one last season [with Jennifer Garner and Michael Vartan both alive for the duration], I would not be as happy as I am today with the return of Tastespotting.com. If I could rewind to the time before I knew Wal-Martâ„¢ existed, my joy would not even compare to today’s. If I could believe in Santa Claus again, I would not trade that feeling for having Tastespotting.com back in my life.

It’s like losing a $20.00 bill in last year’s winter coat and mourning its loss, but then forgetting all about it until the first frost of autumn.

What once was lost…now is found.

Posted in change, cooking, like-it-link-it, looking back, Overall Good Things, what I'm about | 8 Comments

{The Dog Ate My Blog Post}

I’ve always wanted to use that excuse for something, but growing up, the only dog I ever had was Sampson, a black lab who was equally energetic and lazy. He would never eat anything besides the regular food and snacks, so even when I tried to feed him my past-due assignments, he’d turn up his opinionated nose at them.

He’s dead now; we killed him.

It was so hard saying goodbye to a dog I didn’t even really like that I swore I would never love again–love another dog, anyway. Which means, obviously, that no dog actually ate my blog posts. I’ve simply been taking my sweet time getting back into the groove of things since my trip to AZ. My family’s (+Chelsie) visit last week was splendid, although when it came time for them to leave, I almost wished they’d never come–kind of like how I wish I’d never begged my parents for a puppy so I’d never have to kill Sampson.

But dead or alive, time goes on and I’m back in Canada. For Poor Kyle, the novelty of having his wife back has worn off. I think he remembers how testy I can be–I don’t like children, I rarely make the bed, and hosting dinner parties gets me grouchy. I think he wishes I was back in Arizona where he could miss me from a distance, and all my faults would be blurred by fourteen hundred mile markers.

And me? Well, it’s not that I don’t like marriage–I just hate being wrong all the time. Before we got married, I heard from at least 50 people that “marriage requires a lot of compromising.” That was fine with me–Poor Kyle was going to have a lot of compromising to do, naturally. Because I never imagined that he could be twice as stubborn as I am, and I would, in fact, be the one to back down in the name of peace [and not becoming another statistic of divorce].

Then again, he probably feels like nobody ever warned him just how often he would have to give up and give in to keep the peace. I read a lot of blogs about marital and parental bliss, and I’m not buying it. Yes, I’m happily married. Yes, I intend to remain so [and to Poor Kyle] all the days of my existence. And yes, I will probably be wrong–and hate being wrong–for the entire duration.

There’s two sides to every story, even [especially] in marriage.

I suppose Poor Kyle should start his own blog if he wants equal representation.

p.s. Happy Birthday, big sis! Good thing you have two birthdays and I’ll be seeing you on your second one, or else I would be the All-Time-World’s-Worst-Sister. Lucky me. Lucky you.

Posted in change, It's All Good, Married Life | 9 Comments

I’m Havin’ Fun. {So Sue Me.}

I haven’t been neglecting you. On Monday morning I got a phone call from my mom.

“We’re coming,” she said. “Can you be ready for us?”

Absolutely. It only took 18 hours of spring cleaning that I never did back in the spring, but I got good and ready. They arrived on Tuesday at 5 a.m., with an extra three people I was thrilled to see–my sister, her baby, and dear dear Chelsie.

We’re full to the brim in this house, I’m out of milk, and I don’t know when I’ve been happier. {As a side note: anybody who as physically met me before and reads this blog is 100% welcome to come visit me and Poor Kyle in Canada–we’re all friends here. Any time, any day. We’re very accommodating. I cherish company.}

So please, blog, don’t feel abandoned. I mean, when it comes right down to it, would you rather spend your days thinking of clever things to post on the internet, or do this: (see below) until the wee hours of the morning?


[Starring my dad as lead singer. I’ve never heard him rock like he rocked that day.]

I will return to regularly scheduled posting when I get around to it. Sometime this week. Or next.

Posted in family, friends, Overall Good Things, short films | 15 Comments