22 November 2011

Where To Find 100%-Organic, Locally Grown Hookers in Austin

While dragging my feet to avoid heading to the grocery store, Wikus and I had the following exchange:

Grumples: i offered to pick some hookers up at the store for him (CSP)

Grumples: he has not replied

Wikus: You should probably leave the hookers at the store then.

Grumples: guess so

Grumples: also, i'm pretty sure the HEB only sells dead hookers

Grumples: i don't think he wants those

Grumples: you have to go to Whole Foods for live ones

Wikus: Are they near the lobsters?

Wikus: Do they have lobster hookers?!

Grumples: should i call and ask? do i ask for the seafood department or the hooker dept?

Wikus: There are probably more perverts in Seafoods; I'd ask them.

20 November 2011

A Stiff Drink May Be Necessary

It’s that depressing point on a Sunday night where it’s nothing but a swift slide downhill to bedtime then work in the morning.  Most Sunday nights I spend at CSP’s, languishing on his roommate’s hideous turquoise couch (I’m not going to even bother describing it—I just need to post a photo at some point), but with the 4-day weekend coming up, it seemed prudent to send him on home alone to get his fill of football without me.  Thus when we are exposed to each other over the long holiday weekend, we won’t suffer the effects of the dreaded oversaturation illness. 

This weekend I’ve been entertaining my brain with Army Wives, Twin Peaks and Game of Thrones.  Judge as you will.  I’m also doing my damndest to finish John Irving’s latest book, which I’ve been reading for a number of months now, which, for me, is really embarrassing.  I used to read a book a week, and now I can’t even finish one in a month, or two, and quite possibly three.  Sigh.  Damn you Netflix! 

Despite its popularity, my octopus did not win any awards on Friday night, and that was a bit of a downer, but the evening wasn’t a complete waste.  CSP and I had a lovely dinner at Blue’s brother’s place, and we played a few rounds of Fluxx, which reignited my love of the game.  Today I ventured in to Great Hall of Games to get Pirate Fluxx for the game night we’re having Wednesday with Wikus and his lady friend.  Of course I expect some Settlers of Catan as well.  And if things really go my way, and everyone is sufficiently lubricated, there will be Quelf.  Hilarity will ensue.

CSP is thinking of having a Thanksgiving dinner.  This is totally outside of my normal way of thinking.  I don’t celebrate most things—just birthdays, anniversaries and Chicken Day (less than one month away!), and due to my awesome familial background, I don’t have cozy, warm memories of holiday dinners.  Though, I have had some lovely Thanksgiving dinners at friends over the past decade, they were not hosted by my partner.  That’s a level of stress that I’ve managed to avoid.  I’m sure nothing more than a dish will be expected of me, but I’m already starting to suffer a variety of host anxieties.  CSP is all calmly thinking about hosting a Thanksgiving dinner, while I’m going wherewilleveryonesitandwhenwillthegroceryshoppinghappenihateturkeyohmygodwillwegettohavesexlikenowtomakemefeelbetteraboutallthisscarystuffthatisn’treallyscarybutmybrainistellingmethatitis?


My kind aunt just sent me an email saying she’s thinking of me, especially because of the Penn State horror.  She is wondering how it is affecting me.  That woman has such prescient capabilities.  The whole thing has been terribly hard on me, and it’s really frustrating because this will bring the tragedy of child sex abuse to the national forefront, but not for long.  It is such a sad, pathetic everyday occurrence.  Nothing will change.  People will keep finding out about it, and doing nothing, saying nothing.  Because it’s easier than actually having to deal with the reality of it.  In my twenties, I discovered that another aunt actually caught my dad abusing me, and she did nothing, said nothing.  She just kept her own children and grandchildren away from him.  When I lived in Alaska (10-11 years old), my Girl Scout troop leader knew.  She didn’t call the cops, and was actually pretty damn chummy with my father.  In middle school I was questioned by the principal and a cop, but I was scared shitless to say anything, and instead of flat-out denying it, I just didn’t say anything.  I still hate myself for that cowardliness.  As far as I’m aware the school and the authorities did nothing.  And of course my mother knew.  She found out over and over and over again.  In Oklahoma, a judge knew, he was a neighbor.  He did nothing either.  I have no idea how many other people knew.  And not a single person helped me.  I had to do it all, which was waiting until I was 18 and moving from Texas to Boston, and eventually, at 24, never speaking to my parents again. 

And my story is nothing compared to who knows how many children, and it is going to keep happening forever and ever.  And so I’ve been crying a lot these days.  I’ll send a positive email to my aunt when I can, because she has been through a lot in her own life, including completely dropping her sisters (my mom and the aunt who caught my dad all those years ago) from her life.  She made that sacrifice for me, because she is a good person, and that is the only trump card she had left in the deck of our shitty family history.  She never knew until I told her, and I believe she is the one and only person who if she had known when it was happening would have down something about it, but through no fault of her own, she found out too late.  But she has offered me unconditional love and support, and at least family-wise, I have not received much of that.

So, please, if you can in any way, donate your time and money to organizations that help abused children (sexually, physically, emotionally, you name it, just help those kids, because I am willing to bet there have been far too many people in their lives who have completely turned their backs on them).

08 November 2011

Another Bloody Project Finished

Whew.  It’s done.  I finished my mosaic with a couple of days to spare.  I approximate that 40 back-breaking hours were spent on it, and then about $150 in glass and the frame (Nauticalina convinced me to spend $50 on the perfect frame, and while she was absolutely correct, it proved to be quite difficult for several reasons, including that it is not foot friendly—I recommend not walking in to the corner of it unless you enjoy bloody and bruised toes).  Overall, it was a lot easier than last year’s spider lily, but I still really pushed myself (I do not wish to ever cut out that many octopus’ suckers ever again).

octopus

It is off to the gallery tomorrow, where someone can feel free to buy it for $550, which will pay for my San Francisco vacation at the end of the year with enough left over to buy some food.  No boots this time.  Also, I don’t expect to win two years in a row, but I can certainly fantasize.


Last week I suffered through an annoying cold while having Boston visitors in town, which prompted a lot of anxiety and guilt on my part.  I wanted to be a great host, but my energy level dictated that entertainment was mainly limited to the couch.  We did leave the house a few times, most notably on Halloween where I was asked to provide a quiet bar, which I thought was going to be hard since Austinites really like Halloween, but I guess no one was interested in going to the Violet Crown Social Club.  A foray to Taco Cabana proved there were plenty of people clogging the streets (I had a tense standoff with a car who refused to get out of the way), and Nauticalina fell in love with the driver of a rocking low-rider under the I35 underpass at 5th Street.  Alas, we were traveling in opposite directions, so only a longing look could be exchanged between the two.

There was one game of Settlers played where I won but not handily.  They were novices, too.  I blame my cold for preventing total domination and humiliation. 

Overall, I think everyone had a reasonably good time—even if I did stick them on a leaky queen-sized air mattress (borrowed from the kind CSP and his roommates).  I consider it a success based solely on the fact that I don’t believe any 3” cockroach came out to terrorize anyone (I’m thanking Clem’s Exterminating Services for that saving grace).


Ex-Cop just had me fix a digital clock for him.  It continues to amaze me that he was allowed to carry and use a firearm.  This was not a complicated, fancy digital clock with crazy controls.  It was the type where you hold down Set then move the up/down arrows to set the time.  I told him that I would be ashamed if I was him.  He laughed, and said he is ashamed.  People who are actually ashamed don’t laugh, they run in to their offices and hide the burning tears running down their cheeks.  Jackass.


Today I’ve been reading various things about the pros and cons of moving one’s financial matters to a credit union.  I’m not really going to weigh in on the political aspect of all that, but here’s the thing, I have not paid a single bank fee in all my life.  I’ve had a checking account since I was 15 (that’s 21 years of banking), and maybe it’s because I’m excessively conservative with my money, but I’ve never bounced a check or had my bank account below the free thresh-hold limit.  I do not have any benefactors (my parents never paid for a single thing for me once I left the house, and even before I did, pretty much anything that wasn’t deemed essential was all on me to buy), and I haven’t had cushy jobs keeping me rolling in the dough.  I’ve just lived very austerely for most of my life, and thus banking has always been free to me.  Frankly, it never occurred to me that people were having such a hard time with bank fees.  I only go to my bank’s ATM, I don’t make any transfers between accounts, I pay my one credit card in full each month (I’ve never paid interest on my card in my life), and gosh, I don’t know, what are people doing that is costing them so much to want to leave their banks?  Or is this one of those things where it is just bully for me for being so damn, boringly responsible with my money?  And if that is the case, then um, I don’t see how switching to a credit union is really going to save your irresponsible ass.  Now, as to the question of if banks are intrinsically evil for other reasons, I get that, I really do, but if it comes down to you incurring fees, that sounds more like a personal problem.

Ahem.  Stepping down now.