October 15, 2007
And it's SO pissing me off.
I am so very tired of people who give up, who walk away, who posture in another room rather than fight it out.
Because you know what comes next?
Ghosts.
They become ghosts.
Am I the only one who has them?
People who were gonna call me and get together, or have lunch and chat about whatever it was, but then it's years later and you wonder where they are, and what happened in their lives and if they are OK?
Is it so easy to just.... walk away?
And then, where do they go?
Posted by: Elizabeth at
06:04 AM
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October 14, 2007
Prior to hating voice mail, I had a nice sideline going in hating answering machines. But you get older, times change, and you gotta update your habits.
Basically, if you call me...I'll see your number on the Caller ID and call back. Ignoring that thwudda-thwudda noise that says you said something to the computer.
This is, on occasion, I'll admit, problematic.
"Hey, it's Elizabeth. You called?"
"Thank God you called back so fast. So what's the number?"
"The number?"
"Of the emergency vet?"
"You need an emergency vet?"
"I LEFT A MESSAGE!! Diddums has swallowed a hypodermic needle full of crack and I need the number of the vet that helped you that time when it happened to you."
"I have never....! Why? Uh, I mean...."
"I LEFT A MESSAGE! Didn't you listen? This is life or death, here! I mean, poor Diddums, I think he's dragging himself to a corner to...oh, what is that number?!"
So, sure. Once in a blue moon, it causes trouble that I avoid my voice mail.
On the job, it was not unknown for me to listen to my voice mail barely once a week, on Fridays....
"You have 17,000 new voice mails! What is your frequency, woman? You think I got nothing better to do than stuff myself full of chat from your people?"
Instant messages, email, and text messages I am fine with. Prompt, attentive, responsive. But the bugaboo of voice mail has remained my nemesis.
Recently, we decided to turn off our home line. We never use it much, and it's costing us $50 a month to, in essence, give chimney sweeps and siding companies a way to contact us about their seasonal promotions.
So I've given myself permission, even though there is still some dial tone on it, to ignore the thing altogether in preparation for it being gone.
CD gave me the fish eye this morning, the phone against his ear, after I asked him if he thought I'd missed a call I was expecting.
"Please check," I begged.
"We have 33 new voice mail messages," he said with an arch of his eyebrow.
I shrugged.
"Have you EVER checked the house line for voice mail?" he pondered.
"2004."
"Prove it."
I stuck out my tongue when he wasn't looking.
He pushed some buttons and listened a moment.
"Chimney sweep. Siding company. Chimney sweep. Credit card protection offer. Oh, Katie and some kid's mom are going somewhere and want to know if you want to go with," he relayed.
I looked interested.
"In SEPTEMBER," he added, all he-man snarky-like. "Computer talking, time sensitive offer. Hey, the counter tops are ready."
I looked in the kitchen where they are already installed. Turned back to the window, where I watched the drizzle that was delaying our annual pumpkin excursion .
He pushed more buttons. He listened some more. Counted them down for me. "20 more messages..." he sighed. "15, we're finally into October..." I scrunched my nose. "More computers, they love to leave messages...." I nodded. "5 more."
I waited.
He looked at me. "Sorry, hun," he said.
I shrugged.
"No big deal," I said.
But he knew better. He knew that this is why, deep down, I really hate voice mail. Because it never seems to be the locker of good news, of voices you really want to hear.
Ah, well.
Posted by: Elizabeth at
05:45 AM
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October 01, 2007
First of all, the Cubs are going to the playoffs. This was foretold when my beloved Red Sox won the World Series. There is only one other team with such a losing streak. One other team playing in its own old park with rabid fans and basement stats.
But that's not the only reason I spend most of my hours propped up almost entirely by faith these days...
I remember when I got my first real, full-time paycheck. I was 19, living in my first apartment, and I'd given up my 4 part-time jobs in favor of going to a temp agency and asking for something beyond minimum wage.
I drove the check to the bank and deposited it. Then I spent. I paid back a friend who'd loaned me some the month before. I did my first real grocery shop. I had the oil in my car changed. I got my hair cut.
Each and every expenditure was the right thing to do.
Except, I didn't have enough left over to pay the phone bill and it got turned off.
This is the lesson of the forest and the trees. And big pictures. And budgets. Hans Christian probably wrote a couple of fables about it. Much better than my nonfiction version, I bet.
We said we knew better. And we made one big decision: to have me be home with Bear, Homeschooling him until he could read and write at grade level - or until we decided there was a better way we could support to get him there.
And everything since that decision last April has come from it.
So, like a million other families, we face each week a million right decisions we can not afford to do. Oil changes for the car. Eye doctor appointments.
It saps your soul, you know?
Don't get me wrong, I'm not afraid of things being hard. Sure, it's humbling to be living on 30% of our former income. It's a challenge. It's word for challenge that means even more than just 'challenge'. But life should be hard; we're ready for it to be hard. I wouldn't bitch and moan about that.
OK, maybe I would, but I wouldn't mean it so much.
Like complaining about the snow as you hike up Everest. It's not like you expect ponies and rainbows, you know. It's EVEREST. You expect the snow, you're dressed for the snow, so even if you say 'Damn! It's a lot of snow!' - you don't really mean it.
I'm not complaining about not having money. I left the job that brought the money. So, there that is.
But there's hard... and then there's the edge of impossible.
That makes us question ourselves. Bends our confidence.
If what we've decided is truly right, then how come we aren't able to take care of the basics?
And that's where we lean on our faith. And each other. Or drown trying.
There's no nobility in being poor. Any honor in it must come from the reasons for the condition.
And so we hang on to that. And look for the silver lining. Or, as CD says; Brass. We'll take brass. Or any shiny rock.
We celebrate our newfound simplicity. Solidarity. And faith.
Good things, and yet some days they don't balance out the pain.
Brought to you by the letter F, the number 1, and the conviction that wavers and then finds a gust to soar on, wearing a blue baseball cap.
Posted by: Elizabeth at
12:45 PM
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