Comments: Off

It appears some of you have noticed that when you click on the “comments: none” link here at Archives of Our Lives, you are unable to add a comment like you usually can.

This is not an accident.  I did it purposely to ruin your lives.

Okay, okay…not really.  I mean, I did do it purposely, but I did not intend to ruin your lives in the process or to cause any annoyance on your part.

A lovely reader named Amanda (you might recognise her from her intense, detailed, über-long and delightful comments) pointed out her distress over the comment problem via email, and for some reason (must be her long comments bringing out my inner chatterbox) I wrote a novel-length email in response, going into details of my life I’m sure she couldn’t have possibly cared about, but she emailed me first so ha! she was stuck with me.

She asked me what was wrong with my comments, and said she couldn’t believe I would turn them off purposely, because she knew how much I love comments.

I explained it better to Amanda than I could in any different words, so I’m going to copy and paste my emailed explanation here, for all y’all to read:

It’s like this:

You’re exactly right.  I DO love comments. DEARLY.  But I think I might have gotten to the point where I like them TOO much.  That is, I depend on them so much to help me feel validated, that when I don’t get them—or as many as I expect certain posts “deserve,” if you will—it really takes a toll on me.  That sounds so lame and pathetic, but it’s true. I feel like, “What the heck?  I spent two hours photoshopping pictures, and three hours writing that post, and I got nine comments?” Sometimes, when I know a post is not very good, it doesn’t affect me.  But on the posts where I hit “publish” thinking, “This is some of my best work,” and I only get five comments, when I have, in the past, gotten 20 or 30 comments on a post like that, it’s just…disheartening, I guess.

Lately, every time I open my laptop, my poor little heart has been broken to see the lack of comments, and finally I realised how ridiculous that perspective is.  I can’t live my life being depressed all the time. I do still write for my readers, true.  And that will never change.  I do thrive on the feedback I get—positive AND negative—and I always will.  But I just got tired of playing the number game with myself, when it so often leaves me feeling depressed.

So now, every time I open my laptop, I don’t have a number in my head as to how many comments I “should” have since the last time I checked.  Now, the number is simply zero, and any emails I get above the number zero are just a bonus…

…I know that emailing is not quite as quick and convenient as leaving a comment, but please feel free to drop me a line any and every time you feel so inclined.  I didn’t close comments because I don’t like hearing from readers—I closed them because I couldn’t stand the rejection of NOT hearing from them anymore.

Does that make sense?

Poor Kyle thinks it’s the dumbest idea I’ve had in a long time.  And who knows, maybe it won’t last…  It’s just an experiment.

So there you have it.  I have turned off comments for the time being (and as soon as I can compel Poor Kyle to make the link disappear altogether, or at the very least say “comments closed,” you’ll be the first to know).  Until then, I’m sorry for the confusion.  I don’t know how long it will last.  I hope none of you feel bad, or think I don’t care what you have to say.  If anything, it’s completely the opposite: I care so much that my poor little heart can’t take the rejection of NOT hearing what you’re saying.

Like I said to Amanda, please feel free to email me any time you’re so inclined.  My address is posted in the sidebar, but for your convenience, I’ll write it again here:

camille[at]archiveslives[dot]com

And that is that.

Posted in blogger finger, change, Cutting Back, failures, I hate change | 1 Comment

Jackie Chan Can’t Hold a Candle to This…

You may or may not remember—and I don’t expect you would, but just in case—that I’m very well-versed in the art of self-defense.

self defenseImage from here.

Any time I’m walking alone through a dark, deserted parking lot, I keep my keys wedged between my fingers like Wolverine’s claws, so that I’ll have a weapon ready on the off-chance that someone will try to abduct me.  I once nearly killed a man with those selfsame keys when I heard his fast footsteps coming up behind me in the dark.  Turns out he was just running because it was cold and he wanted to get to his car fast, but still.  I did nearly kill him.  You can read about it right here.

How, you ask, did I come to be so aware of my surroundings, knowing what to listen and watch for at every time of day or night with my cat-like reflexes and eagle eyes?  How am I so astute?  So keen?

Simple: I’ve taken self-defense classes.

selfDefenseTrainingNot like, judo or tai-kwondo, though that would be especially cool and I fully intend to enroll in such classes and be strong like this girl someday {image from here}…

…but just entry-level self-defense classes.  I’ve sat through four in the past few years, the first of which was offered during my senior year of high school when I went through a sort of “finishing school” program.  I had always been curious about techniques for defending oneself when necessary, mostly due to a perfect storm of paranoia embedded within me as the result of 1) growing up in a very big city which experienced the height of its gang-related violence in the ’90s, right when I was at my most impressionable age, and 2) a very dear aunt who used to force me and my sister to watch Unsolved Mysteries just so she could say, “Now, girls, you know there are crazy people like that IN THIS VERY CITY, right?  People who will take you when you’re out playing in the front yard?  Never, never, never talk to strangers.” And then, at the climax of the scariest unsolved mystery, she would take it upon herself—some sort of unwritten auntly duty, no doubt—to SCREAAAAAAAAAAAM! a blood-curdling shriek, the terrifying likes of which a real-life stab victim herself could not possibly replicate, and send my sister and I scattering—cowering, trembling—under the safety of a blanket or our parents, whichever was closest.

Every time, she screamed; and every time—every dadgummed time—we fell for it.  It was very unsettling.

So you see, I’m more than a little cautious of being raped.  Self-preservation is in my blood.

Which is why I sit through any and every defense class that comes along my way.

Most of the classes I’ve attended have been geared toward women, which is not anti-feminist; it’s nice.  I’m not too proud to know that my strength—my own flesh and blood—does not measure up to that of the average man’s, or even the slightly sub-average man’s.  I’m pretty weak, is all I’m saying.  My arm strength is laughable, and with my rheumatoid arthritis and self-diagnosed carpal tunnel, I’m an easy target for abductors.  I just know it.  So I try to be prepared.

I know all sorts of great ways to get out of a choke-hold, to dodge a frontal attack or one from the rear.  I know—or at least, I’ve been taught—that the first thing to do when I’m being attacked is to use a firm voice and say, “STOP.  NO.  DON’T COME ANY CLOSER.”  Because, really, what carjacker expects to be told that no, he may NOT steal my truck, but maybe he can check with the submissive girl parked next to me instead?  Not many, I reckon.

The classes have varied slightly from one instructor to another, but the one lesson that was always consistent, and the one I remembered most vividly, was this:

If, by chance, you have failed to claw out the perpetrator’s eyeballs with your keychain claws, and you missed your chance to kick him in the hoo-haws, and even your strong, strong voice could not keep him at bay, and at last YOU FIND YOURSELF KICKING AND SCREAMING IN HIS POWERFUL GRASP, the sure-fire way to gain an advantage is this:  COMPLETELY RELAX.

Not like, yoga-deep-breathing-find-your-happy-place relax, but completely relax your muscles.  Go limp—perfectly limp.  Become dead weight in the rapist’s arms, and even if you’re a little beeotch that only weighs 99 pounds (die, by the way), that will be 99 pounds of solid MASS that the rapist is not expecting.

The dead-weight sounded so brilliant to me—so logical—and even though I never had the burning desire to be abducted, I always wished I could try it out on someone who REALLY wasn’t expecting it, just to see if it worked like I hoped it would.

Yesterday, I had that chance.

It was late evening in our dining room here in Mayberry, after a long day of work for Poor Kyle and school for me.  We were both tired, almost too tired to eat—but not quite, and so I was compelled to put something together for dinner.  Salad, we decided, because somebody in this house has recently been diagnosed with the irresponsible condition of high cholesterol, and I’m not naming any names, but it’s Poor Kyle.  Bring on the Cheerios™.

Anyway, since I was forcing salad upon his sorry self, Poor Kyle asked me to try out a new recipe for a knockoff of Olive Garden’s salad dressing, and reasoned it was the least I could do since I was trying to kill him with THE GREEN!  ALL THAT GREEN!  But I was so tired, and plus, I said, it wouldn’t be worth my time, since we didn’t have any whole pepperoncinis, and without them it couldn’t possibly taste like a true Olive Garden salad.

But then—and stay with me, because here is where this blog-awful story gets good—Poor Kyle did that thing where he pretends to be a chauvinistic, domineering husband, saying that HE WEARS THE PANTS and if HE DEMANDED SALAD DRESSING, HE HAD BETTER GET SALAD DRESSING, WOMAN!  And of course he was joking, I could tell by the enormous grin on his face, and I wasn’t offended because I knew the only time he would ever directly address me as “woman” would be if he secretly had an agenda for divorce, like maybe he’s having an affair and wants to run away with some other broad but he wants me to be the one to divorce him so he won’t have to pay the alimony…that’s when he would call me “woman.”

So of course I pretended to be all mad, like, NOW YOU’LL NEVER GET YOUR SALAD DRESSING, NOT TODAY AND NOT EVER, IF I HAVE ANYTHING TO DO WITH IT, AND YOU CAN SAY GOODBYE TO THE ASTROGLIDE, TOO—

Kyle and Camille Happily Married[We really are happily married, I promise…]

And that’s when he grabbed me, trying to force me into the kitchen (it really wasn’t as violent as it sounds, by the way, but of course you’ll never believe me), and remember what I said about my strength, and how I have none? Well, yeah, I was kicking and fighting and not gaining any advantage whatsoever, when suddenly it hit me (in a flash of girl-power brilliance like I had never to that day experienced): DEAD WEIGHT.

Finally, the trick I’d waited so many years to try, and it only took marriage to get me here!  So that’s what I did.

My friends, I can tell you with 100% assurance or your money back [heh—good thing you don’t pay me for this], that IT WILL WORK.

My dead weight—and trust me, there’s plenty of it—acted like an anvil in Poor Kyle’s arms.  Down we tumbled, almost in slow motion, with Poor Kyle grasping frantically at each surface we passed—wall—stool—table’s leg—floor—and the startled look in his eyes?  The look of sheer and utter surprise at his inability to stand on his own two feet?

It was priceless.

And then it was painful, because I was on the laminate floor with a wooden stool crashed into my skull, and my 200+ pound husband smashed on top of me with all of HIS dead weight.

But don’t worry, I’m fine, and so’s Poor Kyle, and once we overcame the shock of our fall, I found that I couldn’t stop grinning, so giddy was I with the knowledge that all those self-defense teachers had done me a solid.

Only, if ever I really AM attacked by a true abductor, I’ll have to be a lot quicker about getting up and booking it the heck out of there.  As it was, if Poor Kyle was a real boogeyman, he could have stood me right back up and carried on with his evil scheme.

He didn’t get his salad dressing.

Posted in health and vitality, It's All Good, Married Life, Poor Kyle | Tagged | 1 Comment

TOMS™ on my feet

Dear Friends,

I’m sorry I’ve been a bad blogger lately.  You deserve better.  School is no excuse.  I will try to step it up around here, okay?  Please don’t leave me.

Love,

cpsf

That said…

…you see this box?

TOMS BoxIt’s a simple box.  No big deal, really—it only holds the greatest thing ever to happen to footwear since the jelly shoe.

That’s right, my friends—my TOMS™ came in the mail today.  And since I can’t so much as pass gas without telling the world about it, naturally I documented every step of the grand opening.  I sliced open the box and found this:

TOMS 2

Another box.  A shoe box, specifically, printed with a touching photo of the founder, Blake Mycoskie, helping a poor child with her new pair of TOMS™.  Lucky girl.

TOMS shoebox

“For every pair you purchase, TOMS will give a pair of shoes to a person in need.  One for One.”  They print that sentence on every surface ink could possibly stick on.  It’s almost like it’s their mantra.  Or something.

I opened the second box, and SQUEALED with delight when I saw how they had packaged the shoes themselves:

TOMS Shoebag

A LINEN BAG!  WITH PRINTED WORDS ON IT!  AND A LOGO!  I am nothing if not a sucker for packaging.  {Oh, and by the way…you just KNOW that box is 100% biodegradable.  TOMS™ would accept nothing less.}  Plus, the one thing that really bothered me about the documentary of the first shoe-drop was how all their shoes they gave away were packaged in clear plastic bags—you’re not doing the poor people any good by giving them shoes if they’re just going to suffocate in a landfill of plastic bags afterward, TOMS™.

Anyway, I got off my soapbox and continued my joyous package-opening.  Before I could open the bag, though, I was temporarily distracted by the party favours that came with the shoes [I get distracted easily, in case you couldn’t—oh look, a leaf!]:

First, there was a passalong card proclaiming the TOMS™ mantra…

TOMS Passalong Card

TOMS Decal

…and next, I pulled out a STICKER DECAL!  I immediately had grand visions of all the amazing places I could stick this trendy decal—my white MacBook™, my flute case, my backpack—I could even buy a fancy new square Scion™ and stick it on the back window, right next to my Mac™ apple decal I got three years ago with my iPod™!  But then I snapped back to reality and remembered that I don’t really like square Scions™, and even if I did, I don’t have money to buy one, and even if I did, Poor Kyle would divorce me if I ever stuck a decal on any area of a brand new vehicle because he thinks that’s incredibly tacky, and even if he DIDN’T, I don’t like that kind of commitment anyway—stickers are just too permanent for me {and to think, I used to want a tattoo!}.

What was I talking about?  Oh yeah, the decal.  It was sweet.  I slapped it onto one of my three class binders and continued on with my gleeful excavation:

TOMS Goody Bag

The bag is sweet.  I need to think of something cool to use it for.  Maybe wrapping a Christmas present?  But that would be problematic for two reasons: First, whoever got the gift would be disappointed because whatever I could put in the bag would never be as cool as its original contents, and second, then I wouldn’t have the bag anymore.  I’ll just keep it.  Oh, the greed…

***Edited to add: It was about this time during my TOMS™ experience that I thought, “Doesn’t their logo look like some country’s flag?  I’m SURE it’s a flag!”  I was pretty certain it was the flag of Greece, but upon doing some Google™ research, I realised the TOMS™ logo looks nothing like the Greek flag.  So then, I Googled™ “blue and white flags” and sure enough, look what popped up:

784px-Flag_of_Argentina.svgThe ARGENTINE flag.  Of course.  Because TOMS™ shoes are modeled after a typical Argentine style of shoe.  I’m brilliant for figuring it out, but not as brilliant as the TOMS™ people who thought of it in the first place, but even they aren’t as brilliant as the Argentinians, who were clearly ahead of their time when they designed this simple, modern, and oh-so-trendy flag.  Kudos, Argentina.***

Anyway…

TOMS shoe protector bag

Another picture of the bag.  What?  What’s that, you say?  You’re sick of seeing the bag?  Get on with it already?  But…THE BAG!  It’s amazing!

Okay, fine.  I’ll move on.

TOMS!

But only a little bit.  {I just can’t get over that amazing bag.}  The label stuck to the back of the shoe is my particular favourite.  So cute!

TOMS Label

It reminds me of the pair of Uggs™ I do not own, only TOMS™ are better for the world.

uggGreat—now I’ll never be able to buy a pair of Uggs™, because they don’t give away a pair of boots to a poor person with every pair I buy.  TOMS™ have ruined me.  Image from here.

Anyway, when I FINALLY pulled them out of the bag, THE BAG!, {and I swear it didn’t take me as long as I’m making it sound} I was overjoyed to find yet another socially-conscious decision TOMS™ had made:

Grey TOMS

TOMS Shoe Filler (that's biodegradable)

TOMS shoe filler

It’s…it’s…it’s a shoe insert that looks to be made of recycled post-consumer products!  You just KNOW that’s biodegradable.  Good job, TOMS™.  If I’m going to have my friends spend fifty dollars on my socially-conscious birthday presents, I want them to know the packaging of their gift isn’t going to be hanging around a landfill for the next century.  I mean, if you’re already giving away shoes, one for one, you might as well be green, too.  No sense in only being a half-good company.  Now, if only I could figure out a way to incorporate these into my Halloween costume…there’s got to be a way.

And then, of course, there was the lining:

TOMS liningWhat are those animals?  Elephants?  Rhinoceroses?  I’m ashamed to say I never even checked.  How socially UN-conscious of me.

Oh, and I suppose you’d like to see how they looked on my feet?

I’ll admit, I was a little worried, even before I ordered the shoes, that they would look funny from the top, due to the unusual design of the toe:

TOMS on my feet

And yeah, they do look kind of weird, but no weirder than Crocs™, and I wear those just fine.  And I found I got used to the look of them as the day went by (I wore them all day at school today, oh yes I did).  Anyway, most people just see my shoes from the side anyway.

And from the side, they look awesome.  Observe:

TOMS Side ViewI know it’s not a great picture, but it was getting late and I had to leave for school.  Don’t worry, I’m sure I’ll do another photoshoot (or ten) with these shoes before their life is through.

So, the prognosis:

-I wore them for over eight hours, climbing up and down all kinds of hellacious stairways, and they were completely comfortable the entire day.  No breaking in necessary. I don’t have a single blister anywhere on my feet.  WHAT OTHER SHOE DO YOU KNOW THAT CAN DO THAT?

-They are a pair of shoes that is doing good in the world.

-I like them.

I promised that when they arrived, if I liked them as much as I PLANNED to like them, I would take fifty of my own birthday dollars (thanks, mom and dad and parents-in-law and both my sweet grandmas and even my sister!) and buy a pair for one of my blog commenters.

Well, obviously, they’ve come, and obviously, I like them every bit as much as I expected.  So of course I will buy someone a pair.  (I am only giving away fifty of my birthday dollars, though, so if you decide you want boots or something else, you’ll have to cover the cost yourself.  Hey—I don’t make a lot of any money at all writing this blog, so this birthday money has to last me until next year.  A sad fact, but there it is.)

So…of the forty-nine comments, there was one winner…and the winner is…

COMMENT #13—D’Rae.

D’Rae, if you’re reading this, email me at camille[at]archiveslives[dot]com with your address so I can settle up with you.  If you don’t email me, I’ll email you—I really just want to see if you’re paying attention.  Also, how do you pronounce your name?  Is the apostrophe cutting something out?  Are you really Dianna Rae, but you go by D’Rae for short?  Or is D’Rae your given name?  These questions are of life-and-death importance and should be answered at your earliest convenience.

Everybody else, I’m sorry you lost.  You’re really missing out.  Me and Chelsie and D’Rae know.

Posted in giveaways, Green Living, It's All Good, Overall Good Things, photos, reviews, what I'm about | 17 Comments

Charles P. Wiggins the Third Will Think About It Tomorrow

This is a continuation of the saga of Charles P. Wiggins the Third.  If you missed the first chapter, you can read it here.

Charles P. Wiggins III  (Chapter 2)When we last left off with Charles P. Wiggins the Third, the writer [not to be confused with that other Charles P. Wiggins the Third from Beverly Hills whose passion lied in locks and keys {the two Charleses were constantly being misidentified at hospitals and with the IRS—quite a nuisance, really}], he was faced with a torturous choice to make: Eat, or be eaten.  That is to say, he could either write the morose mourning that the world desired and be paid plentifully for selling out to The Man, or he could write the cheerful desires of his lightweight heart, which wouldn’t sell a single copy because nobody wanted to be cheerful right then, and therefore, Charles P. Wiggins the Third would starve to death.

It really was an impossible decision.

I mean, you can see the impossibility of it, can’t you?

Writers are constantly at odds with The Man and his worldly cohorts.  Poor Charles P. Wiggins the Third—fighting his demons without a soul on his side…

So he did the only thing he ever does when faced with a horrible decision: He procrastinated.

Charles P with MickeyHe dreamed of happier times, like the summer he went to Disneyland™ and hung out with his old pal, Mickey.  Charles P. Wiggins the Third loved everything about Disneyland—the games, the rides, the atmosphere, and especially the corn dogs.  (Because that’s what he’s holding—a corn dog.  Not a phallic symbol, you annoying English majors.  Not every piece of literature has to have perverted undertones of sex.  Sometimes a corn dog is JUST a corn dog!)

When he had ridden Splash Mountain in every available hollow log, his daydream was over.  But he still didn’t know what to do.  Disneyland™ is fun, but it doesn’t solve life’s problems.  So he sat down to read some blogs and get some inspiration:

Charles P Wiggins Reads Archives of Our LivesCharles P. Wiggins the Third always reads Archives of Our Lives™ before any other blog.  It’s his favourite.

But as it turned out, there was nothing inspiring to read on the internet—not even all the forwarded emails from his Granny served to distract him from his woes.  Sorry, Granny.

Charles P Gets a hair cut

So he decided to cut his hair.

Which he did, but he has only the one, so that didn’t take long.

Charles P plays the piano

When he was done with that chore, he put his hat back on and decided to memorise every sonata ever written by Beethoven.  And Bach.  And Mozart, too, just for good measure.  Charles P. Wiggins made beautiful music.

But he still didn’t know what to do.

Finally, after having recently been inspired after seeing Julie and Julia on the big screen, Charles decided that maybe he just needed to go to cooking school and his life would sort itself out.

Charles P learns to cookSo he did, but of course it didn’t.  He did gain some weight, though, as evidenced by the extra-bold lines of his stick-figure body.  That didn’t help him solve his problem—it just made him depressed.

Finally, Charles P. Wiggins the Third realised he could not put off his decision any longer.  He just had to choose, one way or the other.

Charles P is at a lossHe just didn’t know what to do.

***Click here for the next installment, to see if perhaps Charles P. Wiggins the Third ever makes up his mind between serving The Man, or serving his soul.***

Posted in short stories/vignette | 8 Comments

For My Father

Today is my dad’s birthday.

Camille Baby and Dad

There’s my dad and me—well, they say that’s me, but I don’t recognise me.  It could be my sister.  Sweet shoes, though, Dad.  I wish you still had those so I could swipe them.

I have 2/3 of his gift purchased, 1/3 ready to purchase, and 0/3 sent in the mail to him.  It’s gonna be a little late.  Sorry, Dad!  So for now, I’ll write him this post, since e-gifts are instantaneous…

I would be lying if I said my dad and I have always had a close relationship.  I’d be lying if I said I was an ideal daughter growing up.  I’d be telling a 100% complete falsehood if I said I was an easy person to raise.

In short, I gave him hell.  (And my mom, too—but it’s not her birthday.)

From my teenage self’s perspective, I was a whole heck of a lot better-behaved than most teenagers.  I never drank.  Never smoked.  Wouldn’t have known how to get drugs even if I wanted to try them, which I didn’t.  I didn’t sneak out—not once.  (We had a dog.  {Plus, it never occurred to any of my friends that we should sneak out, so if I’d gone, I’d have been all alone, and that’s kind of lame for sneaking out purposes.})  I got good grades—even had a full-ride scholarship once upon a time.

…Actually, come to think of it, I was a pretty dang good kid, after all!  Never mind.

Okay, I’m kidding.  I wasn’t perfect—I was dramatic, moody, possibly a bit too spoiled for my own good, you know the type: friendly and outgoing at school and among friends, but couldn’t seem to muster up a kind word for my own family.

I cringe to think of how I was then.

My only solace is that the Good Lord has seen fit to bless me with time to make up for my life from the ages of 14-19.

When I got married and moved to Canada right around my dad’s birthday two years ago, I gave him a gift of blank notecards for him to fill up with his thoughts, reports, whatever, and send to me.  In return, I wrote him back.  I can honestly say this gift has brought us closer emotionally than we’ve been since I turned twelve.  Every time I receive one of his cards in the mail, I tear it open excitedly to see what he has written.

Sometimes his words make me laugh—he has an amazingly goofy sense of humour that I never really knew existed, or else I used to know but forgot.

Dad's Letter to me

In this particular card, he writes, “I haven’t done so well writing you every month but I’m writing you this month!  I’m going to repent!”  See what I mean?  Funny.

Other times I close the cards with tears streaming down my face; not that he writes terribly sappy sentiments, but they just mean so much to me, and I’m so grateful to have them, that I can’t really keep from crying.

Camille and Dad New York City

The relationship we share has not always been stable, but the good thing about a rocky history is that it is at least built on rocks.  And it’s true—my dad has always been there.  Here.  And maybe even when I didn’t believe he (or anyone, for that matter, because like I said: DRAMA!) was there for me, I know now that he was.  He is.  He always has been.

One of my dearest memories I have of my dad is this:

I was 20.  I had gotten engaged in September and by January had decided that before I got married, I needed an awesome “on my own” experience.  So I packed my bags and moved to Belgium to be a nanny.  The day I was scheduled to leave, I was a nervous wreck—I had never met the people, I had no idea if they were even REAL, and if they were real, I was certain they would rape me in my sleep at night.  My dad offered to drive me to the airport, and when we got there, he parked (which is unheard of in our family—we’re a drop-at-the-curb bunch if ever there was one), carried my heaviest bags, stayed with me through check-in, security, and all the way to the gate, where he waited with me until it was time to board (he works for an airline, so his badge allowed him to do that).

Up until the gate, I had kept my composure pretty well, but once I had time to actually sit and THINK about what I was doing, I had a complete meltdown.  Tears started streaming down my face—I rarely cry in front of people, least of all (at that time in my life) my parents—and I just sat there, miserably.  I wanted to just leave.  Run away.  Forget any of it had ever happened.

But you know what my dad did?  He put his arm around my shoulder—again, unusual for us, because we aren’t really the most touchy-feely of families—and just patted it until I calmed down a bit.  He said, “I know it’s scary, what you’re doing.  I’m even scared for you.  But you know?  I am SO PROUD of you.  I respect that you’re doing it.  It’s very brave.  It’s much braver than I was at your age.”

Of course when he said that, I cried even harder because it was without doubt the sweetest moment I’d ever shared with my father, but he just reached into his back pocket and handed me his crisp white handkerchief, which I promptly soiled.

Yes, my dad carries handkerchiefs on a regular basis.  He’s awesome like that.

When it was finally time to board the plane, he told me to keep the hankie, which was particularly generous, since I proceeded to weep halfway to Philadelphia.  For the next five months I used that handkerchief to wrap up the camera Poor Kyle had loaned me, to keep the crumbs off of it in my purse.  The handkerchief and the camera accompanied me everywhere I went.  I still have them, both.

Louvre

And I went on to enjoy one of the most life-altering, self-actualising, personally liberating experiences of my life.  I will always have that.  That, and the hankie.

I love my dad.

I may have stopped calling him “Daddy” when I was six or seven, maybe eight, but I never went so far as to call him “Eric.”  He’s “Dad,” and he always will be.

I’d bake him a cake, but…

…well…

Crappy Cake #1

Crappy Cake #2

…I somehow get the feeling that wouldn’t exactly be a nice gift, given my history with birthday cakes.

I love you, Dad!  Happy Birthday!

Posted in change, family, in all seriousness, introspection, self-actualisation | 18 Comments

I can’t believe I actually think you’d pay me for this crap.

university

About thirty years ago, some genius had the bright idea to build a university in a valley, with all of the English classes located at the very bottom of the crevasse, and the parking lot at the highest height of the hill.  And out of all the eligible men in all the world that I could have ended up with, I married the man who lives within driving range of THAT university.  And then I changed my major to English and it’s all been downhill from there.  No, literally.  Downhill.

So every day I park Thor and hike seven miles to the depths of despair—the English section of the university, which is conveniently built underground, so as not to let even the slightest glimmer of hopeful daylight into any of the classrooms.  The dark concrete really adds to the dungeon effect. Because we wouldn’t want the students to feel alive and optimistic—that would be a disaster.

To get to these foreboding classrooms, I am required to descend a never-ending staircase that looks something like this:

staircaseOnly a little less hopeful and a lot more doom-ful.  Image from here.

It’s not that fun, but I tell you what—going down is not half as bad as coming back up.  It’s like vomit that way.

Anyway, today as I approached the top of the staircase, I happened to be following a petite woman in a sharp-looking business suit with clicky clacky pointy shiny shoes.  She walked fast, and with lovely posture.  I’d be lying if I didn’t say I was a little jealous of her put-togetherness.  However, before reaching the first flight of stairs that lead to our utter destruction, she veered off to push the button and wait for the elevator.  At the very top of the staircase; as in, there are no levels higher than where we were, so she must have been waiting for it to take her down.

I couldn’t believe it.  Here was a woman in seemingly well health, needing to get down a set of stairs, and choosing instead to take the elevator.  What’s the point?  I felt like whipping her around by the shoulders, giving her a good hard shake, and shouting, “You’re using the elevator NOW?  But why?  DOWN IS THE EASIEST PART!”

I didn’t do that.  Instead, I’m writing this post.  I’m passive-aggressive like that.

Later, while waiting for the professor to come in at the start of my last class, I remembered we were supposed to be grouping up in our previously-formed group.  I knew I was part of Group Five, but I couldn’t recall any familiar faces of who’d been in my group the last class.  For some reason, something—some uncontrollable, unfortunate force within me—compelled me to ask the kid next to me if he was in Group Five.

“No,” he said, “I’m pretty sure I was in Group Four.”

“Oh, okay,” was my reply, and if I had stopped there, it would have been fine.  But no.  Of course I never stop there.  I don’t have it IN me to stop there, do I?  I had to keep talking…

“Well, I can’t remember any of the kids in my group.  Nobody looks familiar.  I guess I have no friends.”

I GUESS I HAVE NO FRIENDS? What the eff does that even have to do with anything?  I’m so lame.  I am, and you know how I know?  Because he looked at me, the “cool-kid” guy, and said, “Oh.  That’s kind of sad.”

Kind of sad, indeed.  See, what he doesn’t know is that I don’t GUESS I have no friends—I KNOW I have no friends, and it’s my own fault, because I don’t LIKE having friends.  I usually go out of my way to wear a sneer on my face and never speak to any other students, ever.  I made it sound like I was friendless and sad about it, when in reality, I’m friendless and that’s the way (uh huh, uh huh!) I LIKE IT.

University is so hard.

At least some people are enjoying their college experience; look at what the fun-loving students in Quebec are doing:

This was shot in one take, which is pretty impressive even if you aren’t easily impressed, which I am, but whatev.  Those French girls are lovely, aren’t they? I’ve always thought European women are much lovelier than myself.  I’m often inspired to cut my bangs real funky-like after I see a whole slew of French girls.  Anyway, it was interesting to me that their university seems to be built like an underground cave, just like mine—must be a Canadian thing.

In other news, I didn’t get a scholarship this semester like last semester, so there’s that.  I’ve decided I’m going to start charging you all $1.00 per post to read my blog, and if I’m prolific enough in my writing, and you all actually pay me what you owe me, it would be like I created my OWN scholarship.  Take THAT, university!  I don’t even need you!  (Camille…that’s not a scholarship—it’s called a JOB.)

Oh.  Yeah.  One of those.

Well, if you feel so inclined to donate to the Scholarship Fund of Getting Camille Through the Vilest Experience In Her Life, go ahead and do so at your earliest convenience.  And if your convenience is, say, RIGHT NOW, that would be really lovely.

***These are just some of the Random Thoughts I’ve thought this Tuesday, and I’m posting with the intention to join up the Random Tuesday Thoughts movement—my very first try!  You can read other people’s RTTs right here.***

Posted in mediocrity, my edjumacation and me, oh brother what next | Tagged | 19 Comments

Flight

As some of my more astute readers pointed out in the comment section two posts ago, I had a birthday on Friday.  I turned 23.  I didn’t announce it for two reasons:

1)  I don’t like obligatory “Happy Birthdays.”  That’s not to say I don’t appreciate being wished a happy birthday—in fact, it’s one of my very favourite pastimes.  It’s just that I don’t like making people feel obligated to say the words.  I even went so far as to change my actual birthday on Facebook so that I wouldn’t have a whole slew of “Happy Birthday, Camille!”s from people who don’t comment on my statuses any other time during the year.  You know?  Sure, be my Facebook friend and stalk me all you want in secret, but if you don’t say anything to me for 364 days, I don’t suddenly expect you to guiltily wish me a happy birthday just because you saw on my wall that 200 other people already did.  {I don’t think I have 200 friends, so that might have been a lofty example.}  I don’t like feeling obligated to say it, so I tried to relieve other people of the same social pressure.  {That said, thank you very much to those of you who did go out of your way to wish me a happy birthday.  I appreciated it.}

2)  I was trying to be a bit less of a diva than I’ve been in years past.  Begging for comments can be very fruitful in some cases, but I didn’t feel up to the birthday rejection of not getting as many as expected.  Plus, they’d all just say, “Happy Birthday!” and then where would we be?

Anyway, it was my birthday.  {I’m not telling you this now so you can wish me a belated happy birthday—HOW CAN I MAKE IT ANY MORE CLEAR THAT I’M TRYING TO BE HUMBLE?}  And even though I didn’t expect my readers to acknowledge it, I had high, high hopes for my husband, Poor Kyle.

I always have high hopes for Poor Kyle.  It can be a very bad thing.  Luckily, this year, he delivered.  Phew! His very soul was in peril.

It started off poorly for him, though, when he was out of town on the morning of my birthday.  Thankfully, he got home just in time for a celebratory dinner at my favourite Italian restaurant (Coco Pazzo, for you locals—highly recommended), and a leisurely stroll through the mall where we bought a much-coveted beach dress and a knife sharpener.  (Weird items to want for one’s birthday, I know.  But what can I say?  There’s no room in my life for dull knives.  Haven’t got time for ’em.  When I need tomatoes sliced, I need them sliced NOW.)

The next day, he sacrificed a beautiful-day-for-playing-golf to take me on my birthday surprise…

We went flying.

Birthday AirplaneIn this plane.

Of course, in retrospect, I can see the trip in the sky was really more of a present for Poor Kyle than me—he got to sit in the cockpit and take over the controls—but that’s okay.  I can share my birthday joy.  {See me being NOT a diva?}

Poor Kyle has been talking about taking pilot lessons for about a year now, and finally we looked into it enough to take a little introductory flight.  It was fun.

Customer ParkingWe got to park here, because we were the customers.  Poor Kyle swore that the next time he went, he’d get to park in “PILOT PARKING.”  Okay, dear…

Airplane Headphones

Once inside the plane, we got to wear real-life airplane headphones.  They allowed us to hear the pilot (he’s on the right, above) communicating with the control tower.  “Alpha Charlie Delta, this is the pilot requesting permission for takeoff.  Plan is to circle above the city at 4500 feet.”  “Alpha Charlie Delta, this is traffic control.  You’re cleared for takeoff on Runway B.”

Poor Kyle Takeoff

Poor Kyle thought it was neat, even before we left the ground.

Camille Takeoff

I didn’t care about that so much as I cared whether I looked HAWT in my goofy earphones.  (I’m not a diva…I’m not a diva…)

CockpitThere’s the cockpit.  [Does anyone else feel uncomfortable saying the word “cockpit?”  I think being an English major has started to corrupt my formerly pure, untarnished mind, because I’m thinking of all kinds of off-coloured remarks about why they call it a “cockpit.”  Stupid filthy Renaissance literature.]

Pilot TakeoffHere’s the back of our pilot, Mr. O’neill.  I couldn’t figure out why he needed his nametag on the back of his shirt—must be a pilot thing.  Anyway, I trusted him the minute I saw him because he was sporting a pair of Ray Ban™ Aviators.  He was official.

Fire ExtinguisherBut trust or no trust, I was still relieved to see a fire extinguisher within arm’s reach.  A tiny little plane was how NieNie met her demise, after all.  One can never be too safe.  {I suppose if one wanted to be really safe, one wouldn’t climb in tin-can airplanes in the first place…  There’s a thought…}

Poor Kyle in the SkyAs we took to the skies, Poor Kyle was pensive.  “I could do that,” he thought, observing the Pilot O’Neill’s every move.

Airplane RideAnd while Canada is about to make my life miserable in a few short months, I must admit it is stunning from the sky.

Golf Course from SkyThere’s the golf course where Poor Kyle could’ve been teeing off.  He swears he made the better choice.

As the flight went on, I decided to conduct a scientific experiment.  I formed a hypothesis that Poor Kyle’s smile would get bigger with every minute we stayed in the plane.  I gathered my data…

Poor Kyle in the Sky

Poor Kyle Takeoff

Poor Kyle Dimple

Poor Kyle Flying…and saw that my hypothesis was, indeed, a valid theory.  Observe the deepening of the dimple on his right cheek, culminating with the enormous grin he flashed when the pilot finally let him take the controls.  I love my husband.

Poor Kyle's Hand on Controls

I love that I didn’t even feel scared when his hands were on the controls—his, and only his.  I trust him with my life in a thousand different capacities, and he’s never once given me cause to fret.  He’s a good man.

Then I got bored with all the science and mushiness because I hate science and mushiness, so I  looked out the window some more:

High Level Bridge from SkyThis bridge is neither the tallest nor the longest bridge in North America, but it is the tallest AND longest in North America.  See if you can work that out.  If not, don’t worry—neither could the engineer who built it.  He jumped off it the day it was unveiled, because he was certain it wouldn’t hold.  That was 100 years ago.

Fall Harvest FieldsYou can see the very abrupt line between urban sprawl and rural…sprawl.  We’re farm folk up here.

Cow?  Horse?

When it was time to land, I took a moment during our descent to reflect on the nature of cows.  It was poetic and possibly the most brilliant thought for which any human being has ever used her brain, but I have completely forgotten what it was.  I can’t remember now, because I’m too distracted by the awful smudge on our lens—we’ve really got to get that cleaned.  It’s caused me to lose my grasp on the answer to The Question of the Universe.  All because of a spec of dust.

…Then again, maybe that is the answer to The Question of the Universe: A spec of dust.  It’s so deep…  So profound…

Okay, I’m stopping now.  We had a really lovely time and I turned 23.

Camille + Poor Kyle Go FlyingGood job, Poor Kyle.

And good luck beating it next year.

Posted in Canada, It's All Good, looking back, Married Life, Overall Good Things, photos, Poor Kyle, Recreation | Tagged | 13 Comments