He’s Addicted to the Game of it All.

I come from a long line of teetotalers. One hundred percent, never-touched-their-lips-to-any-sort-of-alcohol, abstainers from the drink. On both sides of the family tree.

In keeping with family tradition, I, too, choose not to drink liquor. I’ve smelled beer, though, and to me it smells like fermented leaves. [Go figure.] Like a compost pit, if you will. Why would I pay to drink my compost pit when I could go outside and eat all the weeds I want for free?


(And trust me, there are a lot. If man could get drunk on weeds alone, I’d have a first-rate brewery in my own backyard! I’d make millions–but that’s only if I knew how to make beer, which I don’t. I don’t even drink it.)

At any rate, though none of us drink alcohol, we all have a lot of different vices, each to our own. I could talk about all my vices today, but I’d rather talk about my brother-in-law’s.

Flint* is a hefty sort of fellow–he’s 6’4″ if he’s an inch, and I’d say he weighs 250-ish.

He pretty much looks exactly like this, except 27 years older. And with hair.

And mercy me, does that Flint ever love his Mountain Dew™. Keep in mind that he is married to a dainty little thing (my older sister) who cooks with whole grains and Splenda™ and hasn’t eaten a bite of sugar in four years (except for one bite of wedding cake, which she claims to have spit out after the photo was taken). She’s running a marathon in October. In other words, she’s a healthy sort of person.

**Tangent: I am typing this in my creepy basement, and a huge spider just crawled my way. I sat up, looked around for a weapon and, finding nothing substantial enough, just watched the spider. After a few seconds he turned around and crawled away towards the T.V., perhaps seeking to get a better look at Cat Deeley, who, I must say, is lovely indeed. Hes’ coming back. I threw an empty Dasani™ bottle at him. It missed. He scampered back to Cat Deeley. I will have strange nightmares about this tonight.**

So anyway, she’s healthy and he’s not and when he comes home from work to reach into the fridge for that can of Mountain Dew™, she cringes.

“Honey,” she reminds in her sweetest voice, “remember how we’re trying to eat more healthily? Remember our challenge? Whoever loses the most this week gets $100.00?”

“Oh, yeah,” he replies coolly. “About that–”

“No!” she interrupts, her voice a bit more shrill than sweet this time. “You cannot give up! You gave up last time, and you were miserable. I won all the money, and you didn’t get to buy the bio-diesel machine you wanted, and you still hadn’t lost any weight! ” She’s very passionate about health, my sister is. That woman loves health. (I, too, love health. Only, I like the kind of health that comes from a long snooze in a hammock on a beach; not the kind of health that comes from eating tofu and running 26.7 miles…ever.)

Flint smiles and hugs her and continues drinking his soda, and as I observe the scene, it makes me wonder if this what it’s like for couples who do drink alcohol. When the husband comes home and takes out a can of ice-cold Coors™ after a long day at the office, and the wife gets annoyed because he should be playing with the children instead of feeding his alcoholism, is this what it looks like? Of course I’ll have no way of knowing because if anyone in my family ever starts nursing an alcoholic condition, it will mean that the earth has come to an end, and I won’t be around to observe because I’ll be dead–what with the earth ending and all.

But there’s a twinkle in Flint’s eye when he comes home from work and reaches into the fridge. It’s the sort of twinkle that says, “This is gonna be good,” and it’s not talking about the can of soda. I secretly believe that he only does this to get on my sister’s nerves, in the same way that Daniel Wilsford used to stomp on my sand castles at recess when I was eight–they do these things to make us mad, because making up is so much fun. He probably doesn’t even like Mountain Dew™. He probably prefers Diet.

Poor, poor Flint. He has no idea.

*Names changed because I said so.*

Posted in family, the great state of AZ | 9 Comments

If My Backyard Could Talk, it Would Sue Me for Negligence

Children are like gardens, and in this analogy, I am totally unfit.

Which is why I will never be a parent–because evidently, when one is responsible for more beyond one’s own self, one cannot frolic about the continent for months on end, completely ignoring one’s offspring (even if one’s offspring happens to be a 20 square-foot plot of land in one’s backyard). I suppose while I was gone my husband would take an active role in the nurturing of our garden. Which was foolish, really. Aside from the initial tilling, he’s done nothing to help the garden flourish (doesn’t that sound an awful lot like pregnancy?).

I don’t know why I expected my husband to care for our baby–he never wanted kids [vegetables] in the first place. The only reason he even tilled a month ago is because he likes things that go “vroom” and I promised he’d be rewarded. He even told me when I left, “Don’t expect me to sit around here watching your garden all day watching the dirt–I have work to do. I probably won’t even get around to watering it.”

So I don’t know why I was so shocked when I got home and peeked in the backyard. Indeed, my children have taken my negligence as a personal affront, and are acting out to get more attention from me. In my absence, they’ve taken to hanging with the wrong crowd–real seedy, weedy sorts of characters. And by “weedy” I do mean weeds.


Six foot tall weeds, in particular.

Gone are my perfectly straight rows–they’ve become overrun with weeds and grass and ants, and a particularly ugle neon green sort of caterpillar. Seriously. Try–just try–to spot the tomato plant underneath all this foliage:


I spent four hours weeding this morning, and it’s only a drop in the dadgum proverbial bucket of what’s left to do. And I used to find gardening so…fulfilling.

Which is perhaps why I’m so overwhelmed. I mean, to go from this:

To this:
And back to this:

Well, that’s just depressing.
Posted in mediocrity, oh brother what next, photos, Poor Kyle | 10 Comments

{This is Just an Appetizer}

I have a lot of posts I need to write, but I don’t have the mental energy to do any of them justice right now. See, I’m getting ready to drive back to Canada, which–anxious though I am to reunite with my husband and garden–is going to be slightly less thrilling than my drive down to Arizona. It isn’t easy, this division of interests that makes up my life. When I’m there I want to be here, and when I’m here I like being here–but I miss my new little life up there.

The good news is Poor Kyle is totally willing to move down here, which would be as close to ideal as I might ever come. The bad news is he’d only move down here if he could be a police officer, which means all my fears of him dying young would be 99% more warranted.

At any rate, I’m not writing about this yet, because I need to go to sleep.

Other things I’m not writing about:
-My dear friend Chelsie getting home from Brazil
-My brother-in-law’s addictions and the effect they have on his marriage
-A boy named Grad
-PedEggs™
-The time I ate raw fish like a heathen (or sushi like a yuppie, depending who you are)
-Meeting Loralee in person for the first time

For now, I am going to ask that any new readers who’ve come along (or any seasoned readers who have recently started blogs of their own) please leave a comment on this post with your blog address, so I can update my link list–once again, I’m kicking off people who don’t update frequently enough (at least once a month) and adding readers whose blogs I’ll be stalking soon. If you would like to become a part of my link list, go ahead and let me know!

And stay tuned for better things to come.

Posted in blogger finger, Canada, the great state of AZ | 15 Comments

The Saga of Steve vs. Ned–This is Mostly Speculation

A phone conversation between Poor Kyle and me a few weeks ago went something like this:

PK: So what did you do down in AZ today, while I was up here in Canada being responsible and tending your garden?
Me: Oh, Lindsey and I went to Krazy Sub for lunch.
PK: Oh, Krazy Sub? Steve’s or Ned’s?

Part of me was disappointed that he even had to ask, but the other part was thrilled that he, a native of Mayberry, Canada, even knew there was a difference.

The answer to his question was “Steve’s”–naturally. Because there are three kind of sub-lovers in Mesa, AZ: Steve’s, Ned’s, and Subway [and Subway doesn’t count]. That’s what I always say.

And I am a Steve’s.

Which is odd, really. I mean, there are far softer breads in the world (hello, Port of Subs!), and far riper tomatoes than the ones served at Steve’s. His sandwiches are tasty enough, but not the best I’ve ever had. What is it about Steve’s that makes me such a loyal customer? It’s certainly not Steve’s quality treatment of us–the paying masses–because he does, after all, charge extra for pickles and drink refills (25 cents, to be exact):

There’s no such thing as a free lunch, especially when you’re eating at Steve’s.

In many ways, actually, Steve is quite the crook. He pays his high school employees a pittance, and (I know for a fact) he strictly enforces the “no extra meat, even for family” rule.

Perhaps it’s not so much that Steve’s establishment is good, but more that Steve’s establishment is better than the alternative; a lesser of two evils, per se. Perhaps the virtue of Steve’s Krazy Sub lies in its competition: Ned, arch rival and nemesis to Steve, has his own Krazy Sub shop not far from Steve’s. It is rumoured that once upon a time (30 years ago) Steve and Ned were business partners, nay–brothers. Business was good, and all was well in Mesa. But one day–perhaps amidst a business deal turned sour [no doubt Steve was trying to get more than his fair share of the profits, the crooked scoundrel]–the two split, creating new and separate shops; new and separate families; new and separate Krazy Subs. [Neither of them, unfortunately, enforced new and separate spellings of the word “Krazy.” Or new wall decor. Or shop-front lettering.]

Steve’s walls.

Ned’s walls.

Steve did, however, decide his was The Krazy Sub, while Ned, the vain man that he is, kept his name and added his face on the window:


Ned: Not that I would eat your subs anyway, but that giant head of yours on the window isn’t helping your cause. Really.

Ned moved east, targeting the customer base near Mountain View High School, while Steve stayed near home–Westwood High and area. The two schools, being lifelong rivals (along with Mesa High [who don’t really have a Krazy Sub to call their own, so we won’t talk about those guys much]), found the separate Krazy Subs to be excellent fuel for the “My-school-is-better-than-your-school” fire. Students began sneaking into each others’ Krazy Subs, leaving graffiti under the tables with black Sharpie™ markers that read things like, “Die, Ned!” and “Steve’s will rise again” and “Shea has big boodie [sic]!!” and “Jenny–will you go to prom with me?”. If I were going to graffiti on the underside of Ned’s tables, I would scrawl, “MOVING TO MOUNTAIN VIEW HAS TURNED NED VAIN!!!” in block letters–the man has his face plastered all over the place, including the door to his sub shop, and the website for said sub shop!

Image from Ned’s website.

But I digress: the point is, life in Mesa has never been the same since the Big Split of ’77.

It should be noted, though, that I am loyal to Steve’s for more than the Montague/Capulet reasons. Steve and his Krazy Subs have been a part of some very important days in my life. He got me through countless wait-outs at the Mesa Lutheran Hospital (which is now dead and gone, just like some of my relatives who spent weeks there). Those Krazy Subs taught me about finances–if I can’t afford to eat at Krazy Sub and pay for the extra pickles and large Diet Pepsi, then I can’t afford to eat anywhere. Steve’s subs cheered me up when I lost the Student Body President election in 9th grade, and they were there when I celebrated winning some other position that same year by default. I commiserated not getting asked to prom there. I ate many “last meals” there with friends I haven’t seen since.
an style=”font-style:italic;font-weight:bold;”>I have a table there. When one of my friends worked there in high school, she gave me free pickles and the phrase “I Steal From Steve” was coined there.

And all I know is, when I walked into Ned’s to take a photo for this post, and saw all the photos of those itsy-bitsy Mountain View kids on the walls, I felt like a total fraud.

There, to the left of the mermaid’s fin, hang a slew of Mountain View photos. Ugh.


I don’t belong there–I belong at Steve’s.

…I would that everybody could know their place in life with such clarity.

Posted in change, looking back, photos, what I'm about | 20 Comments

Bed For Sale–Going Cheap. Real Cheap.

I bought an amazing bedroom set on Craigslist yesterday and will post pictures soon.

But it came with an extra Queen sized mattress and box spring for which I have absolutely no need. We have two spare bedrooms at our house in Canada, and both of them already have nice-ish beds in them.


What to do with the unneeded cargo?

Re-sell it on Craigslist, of course.

I’m asking $50.00 for the set, but I’m accepting offers and will give an even better deal to anyone mentioning this post. (Because I’m business-savvy like that.)


This would be a great bed for someone who needs a cheap bed. Because it’s going cheap. Naturally. It’s clean and comes from a nonsmoking home.

Posted in photos | 2 Comments

{Totally Lost in Translation}

Trying to communicate with a 2 year-old is like trying get a kamikaze insect out of your ear by slamming your fist into your skull as hard as you possibly can–both are fruitless, and cause nothing but headaches.

A few months ago I babysat for my neighbors who were in a pinch. I was there for five hours, during which I only had to tend one little two year-old kid named Stupor*. I had never met little Stupor before, but I arrived bearing my famous [by “famous” I mean “just-try-to-choke-’em-down”] chocolate/white chocolate chip cookies, and told him if he didn’t talk to me the entire day, he could have the whole tray of cookies when I left. We became fast buddies.

Unfortunately, he did talk to me. Or rather, he made some sort of strange noises that sounded like words. And, if we’re being specific, I am almost positive he was speaking French. I speak French on a toddler level, too, so one would think I could have understood him… Au contraire, au contraire.

Me: Hi, Stupor! My name is Camille.
Him: Ooh ay? Ooh ay? Ooh ay?
Me: Oh, do you mean “Òu est,” the French term for “where is…?” I had no idea you were bilingual! Tell me, who taught you French?
Him: Weeeeee! Weeeeee! Weeeeee!
Me: Did you just say, “oui?” Oh, oui!! Moi, aussi, petite Stupor! C’est fantastique, ta français!
Him: Cat. Cat. Cat.
[By the way: why do two year-olds say every phrase twice? Don’t they understand that no matter how much they try, I will not decipher what they are trying to tell me?]
Me: Hmmm…Stupor, it sounds like you’re saying, “Cat,” the English word for “Cat.” Is that what you’re saying?
Him:… (Blank stare.) …Poopies. Poopies. POOPIES!

It was so embarrassing, and we weren’t even out in public. Finally, after he vigorously brandished his John Deere tractor in my face for a solid 60 seconds, I figured out that he was trying to get me to play trucks with him. I don’t know why he didn’t say so. As a matter of fact, he didn’t say anything that even sounded like “tractor”–he was speaking French!

It finally got to the point that I just told him flat out, “I can’t understand you. Either say what you mean, or just stop talking to me.”

He didn’t pay any heed to me, of course, because I’m not a very nurturing person. And evidently, kids can only hear voices at a certain Teletubby™ sort of nurturing decibel. So unless I squeaked out my words to little Stupor, there was going to be no communication.

They say, “It’s different with your own kids,” but unless my kids pop out of me quoting the Declaration of Independence and the Canadian Magna Carta (did Canada have its own Magna Carta? So much for being a history major…), I figure there’s pretty much no hope.

Some people find toddler babble adorable. I find it maddening, and I hope I’m not the only one; otherwise I really am going straight to Hell for this.


*Names have been changed so I don’t get sued and bite the dust like Jean from Tastespotting.*

Posted in kid stuffs, what I'm about | 5 Comments

{Life Lessons and Muffin Tops}

I’ve learned a lot in my life.

I’ve learned that if I wash my jeans and then stick them in the dryer, I will regret it the next time I go to put them on. They will shrink just enough to make me miserable all day, no matter how many lunges I do to stretch them out again.

I’ve also learned that if I take my jeans out of the washer and toss them in a damp heap on the floor, I will regret it the next time I go to put them on. They will have more wrinkles than the little old ladies on the back pew at church.

But this last lesson is most important:

If I go on vacation to Arizona and eat 90% of my meals at fast-food joints, stuffing my face with food all day, eating Dippin’ Dots™ and Red Brick Oven™ pizza and Chic-fil-A™ sandwiches and Arby’s™ Beef n’ Cheddars and QT™ Taquitos and Carne Asada Burritos like nothing else matters, then, invariably…



My favourite Canada t-shirt will no longer fit. I will have a muffin top (or spare tire, [call it what you will–it’s a thing of Satan either way]) big enough to feed a third world country. And my arms will be very, very flabby.

Life lessons, people. It’s all about the life lessons.

Posted in mediocrity, photos, sad things, the great state of AZ | 17 Comments