I have so much to tell you girls, but I'm living in a medicine haze. I fear my spelling might suffer if I attempt to type.
While reading facebook status updates tonight, I've noticed a particular social activity. No, not the Halloween party at the Pendennis. No, not even trick-or-treating. Alas, it is the Miley Cyrus concert. Friends, this is the very reason for the existence of teenage girls. I may have offended a few of our friends when I wrote, "Why didn't y'all hire sitters for this?" But, seriously. As God is my witness, I will never watch Billy Ray's achy-breaky progeny shake anything.
Okay, six hours up. Back to the bottle.
Saturday, October 31, 2009
Sunday, October 18, 2009
Dibbs: And Deliver Us From Evil. Or Rednecks, Or Are They The Same?
Y'all know how I feel about my job. I was so excited a few weeks ago when I got to move and be by myself in an office. A little problem was presented by my departure. What to do with my empty cubby-hole? I was actually pleasantly surprised. I thought the girls would want to bring their dogs in or perhaps work on car parts. No, they'd like to bring in a little couch in case someone would like to take a little nappy-nap. Nice.
My secretary, you know, the hill-jack one. Wait, that's all of them. I digress. My secretary mentioned the need for a couch. She said the girls might like to have a chaise lounge. (Who knew she had heard the word "chaise?") She said, "Jennifer, we really want a leopard print chaise lounge. We thought if anyone had one, it would be you." For the love! I'm not above animal print. I have some zebra ballet flats, some cheetah mules, and a leopard belt. If I were to buy animal home accessories, I might get a plate, a pillow, or perhaps a little picture frame. But a whole couch! Do I look like Marla Maples?? Also, I've been wanting a chaise lounge since I was eight. A cream or baby pink raw silk one. If I somehow get one, I sure ain't takin' it in that hell-hole for my work-lesbian to put her greasy dockers on it. It's meshugeneh, verboten, feh (spit)!
My secretary, you know, the hill-jack one. Wait, that's all of them. I digress. My secretary mentioned the need for a couch. She said the girls might like to have a chaise lounge. (Who knew she had heard the word "chaise?") She said, "Jennifer, we really want a leopard print chaise lounge. We thought if anyone had one, it would be you." For the love! I'm not above animal print. I have some zebra ballet flats, some cheetah mules, and a leopard belt. If I were to buy animal home accessories, I might get a plate, a pillow, or perhaps a little picture frame. But a whole couch! Do I look like Marla Maples?? Also, I've been wanting a chaise lounge since I was eight. A cream or baby pink raw silk one. If I somehow get one, I sure ain't takin' it in that hell-hole for my work-lesbian to put her greasy dockers on it. It's meshugeneh, verboten, feh (spit)!
Friday, October 16, 2009
Julep: Shoot Me Now
Y'all, I am dying over here. I feel like Sisyphus. Between my big hearing next week and my trial coming up in a couple of weeks, as of last night I had billed 88 hours in the month of October. That's 11 billable days ... seems about right ... until you realize that for 3.5 of those days, I was (supposedly) on vacation.
The beach house was everything lovely, as it always is. And it was actually good that the weather was grey and rainy a couple of days, since I was sitting on the screen porch working on the computer while the storm raged.
On the whole the beach was a lovely trip, but did highlight the age difference between Mr. J and some of my beach friends ... who nowadays get up at 7:30 am and walk the dogs on the beach, and then go to bed around 11 even on vacation. (I do too.) But five years ago we were all about staying up drinking until all hours, sleeping past noon. And lest we forget, Mr. J is five years my junior.
Now back to work. Please keep posting, I need the mental relief.
The beach house was everything lovely, as it always is. And it was actually good that the weather was grey and rainy a couple of days, since I was sitting on the screen porch working on the computer while the storm raged.
On the whole the beach was a lovely trip, but did highlight the age difference between Mr. J and some of my beach friends ... who nowadays get up at 7:30 am and walk the dogs on the beach, and then go to bed around 11 even on vacation. (I do too.) But five years ago we were all about staying up drinking until all hours, sleeping past noon. And lest we forget, Mr. J is five years my junior.
Now back to work. Please keep posting, I need the mental relief.
Thursday, October 15, 2009
And So It Goes: Dibbs
Just to be clear, I never want to see my Work Lesbian again. As luck would have it, I'll see her tomorrow. And five days a week until I find another job. Alas...
Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Twinkle: Another Fun Evening with JLL
Did y'all get that evite from Junyaleague? For the informational event (located at the prestigious address at 11209 Electron Drive) about how to pay for cancer if it's not covered by your insurance? Sounds like a rockin' night in J-town (I think it's a J-town zip code, in keeping with their diversity initiative). Those Junyaleaguers really know how to throw a party.
Movin' On...Over
Last week was so exciting. I got my own office. It's not the privilege I make it out to be. An office came open, and my boss said someone had to move. I pretended I was taking one for the team. I was thrilled. No more five people in one room; no more people talking to themselves; no more work lesbian looking over my shoulder. Nirvana. At long last I could take naps, talk on the phone, solicit auction items, surf the internet. Ladies and gentlemen (?), your tax dollars at work.
I've been in my new room now for six days. It's like hill-jack surround sound. On one side we have the receptionist. You know her from forwarded email fame. She planned our office Christmas party at the Louisville Live and asked us to pray when our co-worker's husband's neck blew up on him. Every ten seconds she says "Redneck County Schools, Can you hold?" Today she was making plans to meet her husband somewhere after work. After much deliberation, they decided on the "liberry."
On my other side, we have a secretary. I'm not sure what she does. She has plenty of time to go to the tanning bed. And to squeal. Today she was belting out this jaunty little tune: "Sometimes I funny. Sometimes I not." Sweetcheeks, let me clear it up for ya, you're not. Since I don't have any Ritalin on hand, I took her some Smarties. Tomorrow I'm taking in some Red Bull.
Please, as my friends, if you hear me answer the phone "This is her," do a grammar intervention. I'm so scared it will rub off.
I've been in my new room now for six days. It's like hill-jack surround sound. On one side we have the receptionist. You know her from forwarded email fame. She planned our office Christmas party at the Louisville Live and asked us to pray when our co-worker's husband's neck blew up on him. Every ten seconds she says "Redneck County Schools, Can you hold?" Today she was making plans to meet her husband somewhere after work. After much deliberation, they decided on the "liberry."
On my other side, we have a secretary. I'm not sure what she does. She has plenty of time to go to the tanning bed. And to squeal. Today she was belting out this jaunty little tune: "Sometimes I funny. Sometimes I not." Sweetcheeks, let me clear it up for ya, you're not. Since I don't have any Ritalin on hand, I took her some Smarties. Tomorrow I'm taking in some Red Bull.
Please, as my friends, if you hear me answer the phone "This is her," do a grammar intervention. I'm so scared it will rub off.
Monday, October 12, 2009
Twinkle: Post-Party Comparison
Two families (Mr Twinkle's and mine), two parties hosted by us (one for each side; one in August, one in October), one comparitive analysis:
Grandmotherly Help:
MIL: My MIL and her mother insisted on making a contribution, and I was glad to accept. I asked MIL to bake one specific kind of cookies and one other baked good to be determined at her discretion. She showed up with four large trays of various and sundry cookies, brownies, fruit bars, etc. She either worked very hard at baking her diverse array of treats, or else she raided her high holidays freezer stash. I'm not complaining...she's a wonderful baker, the guests were happy, and I didn't have to bake cookies myself.
My mother: When confronted with the same request from me, she picked up a phone and ordered a cookie assortment from Plehn's.
Tastes:
Mr. Twinkle's Family: exclusively hovered around MIL's trays of sweets. Ate nothing else, and I'm not sure why. I specifically chose a menu that was just universal enough, not-too-exotic but still interesting, but they ate nothing. Seriously, Lola biked over the next day and we made a meal off of all the savories his family refused to eat--including things that I made specifically for them that I thought they would like (Barefoot Contessa smoked salmon dip, to be specific...it is indisputably delicious, if you like smoked salmon, and I know for a fact that they do, and yet Lola and I ate a huge bowl of it ourselves because no one in Mr. Twinkle's family would venture beyond MIL's baked goods). I don't think it was out of meanness at all...maybe they just don't trust any cook who isn't a Jewish grandmother. But they should trust me.
My family: Tried and ate pretty much everything; told me it was good. I do not have nearly the amount of leftovers I had after the other party. (Sorry Lola).
Drinks:
Mr. Twinkle's family: stuck to my homemade lemonade. (If they'd had any other choice on beverage that hadn't been made by me, I'm sure they would have had that). I also offered red and white wine, but no one drank that except me.
My family: Some opted for the nonalcoholic apple cider, some opted for the fall cocktail I offered (cranberry kir Noel, from Splendor). Some kids had juice boxes and some men had beer. Different people drank different options, but I was definitely not the only one drinking alcoholic beverages. Not by a longshot...and people thought the cranberry kir Noel was festive.
Cloth napkins:
Mr. Twinkle's family: was shy, refusing to use the cloth napkins for the most part and, I guess they went napkinless because there weren't any other options. Of the three or so napkins that were used, they were so dirty it looked like someone had used them to clean up some sort of massive chocolate icing accident.
My family: wasn't shy. Used the cloth napkins, left a few spots consistent with normal napkin use.
Arrival time:
Mr. Twinkle's family: arrived right on time; left before the ending time on the invitation.
My family: arrived fashionably late; closed the place down.
Anyway, that's it, for what it's worth. Mr. Twinkle and I had fun comparing and contrasting the different styles of both families and how they differ as guests.
Tuesday, October 6, 2009
Twinkle: It's Called *Junior* League for a Reason, People
It looks like I have another bee in my bonnet about Junior League.
Have you all seen that fall membership survey? Giving my opinion was fun at first...I was thoroughly enjoying letting the League know that I think they should make things more fun and focus less on the business side of things and more on the social side (which is why I believe the average member joins). As we've said many times, no one wants to go to work after work. (And I'm counting stay-at-home-mothering as work, too; we need a fun outlet at the end of the day as much as anyone else...plus no one wants to waste a night of childcare on something that's not fun). So I was telling them in my own, nice way, what I thought about things.
And then I got to this question: I define diversity as (check all that apply).
The ones I checked were:
Race/ethnicity and Religious Affiliation because I think we can all agree that these factors make an organization more or less diverse.
Working/Stay-at-home parent because I wish there were more acknowledgement of different people's schedules in the League. (And why can't they just say stay-at-home-mother...I know stay-at-home-parent sounds all modern and enlightened, but it seems a bit pointless when any League member who is a parent is, by default, a mother. Since we don't let men in the League and all).
The ones I did not check were as follows:
Age: because we're the JUNIOR League.
Zip Code:: because I'm a snobby b*tch.
Sexual Orientation: because I don't care or need to know who you're doing in order to be your friend and have cocktails/do good works with you. And because I really can't envision myself saying the words, "You're a lesbian? Well have I got the group for you!"
Socioeconomic strata: because there has to be a difference between our members and the people we help.
Job description (professional vs. nonprofessional): because the last thing I want to do is recruit my cleaning woman (God bless her) to be a member of the Junior League.
Level of Education: because I don't think it's going to improve the organization to recruit a bunch of GED recipients, okay? I know it's an unpopular opinion these days, but have some standards people. I'm not saying we should make a college degree mandatory (although, what's so bad about that?), but do we really have to recruit the entire '09 associates degree class from Ivy Tech, just to be diverse? Since when did having educated members become a bad thing for an organization?
And, if we are to think about this from a practical perspective, how are all these poor, uneducated, "professionally-diverse" new members going to pay their dues, buy the cookbooks, attend fundraisers, or donate to the annual giving and endowment funds?
And, if we are to think about this from a practical perspective, how are all these poor, uneducated, "professionally-diverse" new members going to pay their dues, buy the cookbooks, attend fundraisers, or donate to the annual giving and endowment funds?
Then we had to give the percentage of diversity increase that we'd like to see for the next year, based on our definition of diversity, and that's what really put me over the edge. Because of this question I'm not filling out the survey at all (that'll show 'em). I hate percentages, and there is something that feels sleazy to me about checking a percentage. I don't understand why we can't just recruit our friends/co-workers/relatives/aquaintances who are fun and want to be volunteers, regardless of what they look like or believe, without breaking it down into a mathematical equation.
A very wise woman was correct when she said they're going to succeed in driving a 90-year-old organization into the ground. Why do I care so much? Because the League brought me all of you, and I love it and want to see it thrive. I just wish it would stop having this ridiculous identity crisis, embrace its identity, and get on with the business of doing good works and training volunteers.
And would it kill them to plan some sort of cocktail hour?
Saturday, October 3, 2009
Twinkle: Fare Thee Well, Mr. Bill
I just received an e-mail from Mr. Bill at My Gym, informing me that My Gym is the latest victim of the economic downturn and will be closing its doors. Mr. Bill wasn't clear on specifics but I'm going to assume it's effective immediately.
Y'all can imagine that this comes as wonderful news to Twinklette and me. No more guilt over not finishing those ten painful sessions! No more forcing myself to go, and trying to make an intellectual connection with the other mothers only to be brutally rebuffed with talk of Dora the Explorer! No more Mr. Bill screaming "Ta-Dah!" in our faces and making Twinklette feel like a freak for not wanting to go on the dolphin swing!
I feel liberated, and I just had to share the good news.
Y'all can imagine that this comes as wonderful news to Twinklette and me. No more guilt over not finishing those ten painful sessions! No more forcing myself to go, and trying to make an intellectual connection with the other mothers only to be brutally rebuffed with talk of Dora the Explorer! No more Mr. Bill screaming "Ta-Dah!" in our faces and making Twinklette feel like a freak for not wanting to go on the dolphin swing!
I feel liberated, and I just had to share the good news.
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