Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Nature's cacophony


It's not very often that I get to use that big ol' word, but last night, the frogs and bugs and whatevers were singing their hearts out! It's fabulous! We've gone from one long, bleak winter to neon green grass, trees all fuzzy with new buds, frogs croaking and baby birds chirping! The sound was so intense, the entire night through, that at one point, I thought my alarm had gone off and the dial was stuck on static. Nope, just the whatevers down by the creek and over at the ponds. (Where the hell I picked up the term 'whatevers,' I do not know. I may sound like Daisy May this morning, but I'm not from Dog Patch, honest.)

And now the peach-colored sun is popping up, ooooh along with some hosta!!! I may have a dirty house with loads of family expected in 2 days, but who gives? Not me . . . though I am curious about Hillary's margin of victory in Pennsylvania, hopefully small enough to keep my man a movin' on!

Sunday, April 20, 2008

Good dog gone

I came home from work Friday afternoon to find my meatball Zeke along the side of the road. Living on a farm, he would have been considered the very best of farm dogs except for one little flaw: his love for chasing milk trucks and stock trailers. And he apparently finally caught one. Fortunately he looked as if he was sleeping, just a little watery pink dripping from his nose. It was a rainy, grey day. My husband was lovely enough to rush home and get him off the shoulder of the road and into the corn crib.

So after my husband returned to work, I began the task of digging Zeke's grave next to Tuttle's, my husband's 11-year-old black lab who we had to put down in January. My back continues to ache, but not so much as my heart. I was sad with Tuttle, more because she was such a pain in my ass and knew it, that I regretted how cold I was to her. But with Zeke, he was my dawg! And he knew I loved him even when I was scolding him for weaseling his way up from the basement and onto the couch.

He was a meathead and I loved him and I'm just really sad. . .

Friday, April 11, 2008

Holy Ghost or Ghost Rider?

I must profess a significant degree of ignorance. During Pope John Paul's early years, I was a wee lass of 9 when my catechism teacher gave each member of my 3rd grade class ginormous copies of a simple pencil sketch of this guy, telling us to keep it safe. Why? Who knows, this was a dark period of silence about the abominable behavior of our priest, so nobody really talked much. Today, the church is only marginally improving on its communication front. (Why, suddenly, is the South Park ditty, "Uncle Fucker," blaring through my brain?)

Thursday, April 10, 2008

The bull and the shit

A couple nights ago I went cyber with my pain over my dad and finally started searching the net for info on esophageal cancer. I joined a chat group and found the following links:


But now I'm thinking those links are bullshit. Not that I'm a believer in rolling over and dying, not really. I'm simply looking at reality. The cancer that my dad's got is BAD. Recovery's not too promising. But that doesn't mean I'm planning funerals. I'm trying to believe in the laws of nature. . .

This winter felt like it would never fucking end, at least here in Iowa. I remember about a month ago seeing a commercial for the Masters, those luscious green fairways of Augusta taunting me in my misery of dirty snow and below zero temps. But no matter how miserable I was, I knew without a doubt, without question that spring would come. It just would, as surely as the sun will rise tomorrow morning. While this particular winter season felt longer and harder than recent ones, I knew it would pass, and it did.

And the leaves? As I listened to a friend coach me through a freakout today, I looked out at the trees and their tiny buds beginning to create that promising soft fuzz. I KNOW that the leaves themselves will come, and that they will mature throughout the spring and summer. And come fall? They'll change color, and they'll dry out, and they'll blow from their tree homes, and they'll fall to the browning grass beneath, and they'll crunch under feet, and they'll breakdown into little pieces, and they'll get soggy and melt into the Earth.

None of this is questionable. It's such a common, regular occurrence that it's practically unseen, seldom pondered, at least by me. And yet now that I'm looking at my father's mortality, I find myself searching for acceptance in such cycles. I understand on an intellectual plane that what my father's going through is simply the cycle of human life. We're born, we grow, we die. But I'm incapable of looking at this with the same faith and trust with which I know that the sun will rise tomorrow morning. I can't.

I'm scared to death of what's coming. I don't know what it is. I don't know the form it will take or the demands it will make. The one person who I would most love to talk to about this died last year. She was sick, and I couldn't handle the fear of losing her, so I simply drifted backwards to a safe distance, putting in an appearance now and then, but ultimately letting others love her through her last years, months, and days. I don't want to abandon my dad that way.

Sunday, April 6, 2008

Hardly partyin'

Damn sobriety! I'm usually ok with being sober, almost always preferring it to the alternative! But come party time it can be a little, um, rough. But I did bust a little move last night. Up in the Mpls. area for a wedding, my family and extends were all drinkin' down the free beer, the damn sons a bitches!

I'd been looking forward to this wedding for weeks, but some shit hit the fan a few hours before departure and I've been distracted ever since. So I bought a pack of smokes. Screws to you for any judgement. Cancer of the lungs beats me drinking any day!!!

And the wedding didn't suck. There was good obscenity, a group moon, and some really bad dancing! And my son in a Spiderman sweatband and my daughter in light-up hot pink cowboy boots! Sober, I'm self-conscious of my dancing, but break out the Tommy Tutone and I'm on that dance floor like Oprah on a canned ham!

Cheers, Archibald Bareasshole!

Thursday, April 3, 2008

Hope springs eternal . . .

To vulch upon words coined by
Barack "our next president" Obama
I give you . . .
"The Audacity of Hope: Rural Roots"



Tuesday, April 1, 2008

PODCASTS!

I just found a huge rock of crack in the form of PODCASTS! I can't believe what I've been missing! There's sweet PRI programs I love, excellent spiritual downloads, all sorts of stuff of which I have been completely and totally ignorant. I am so fucked! I'm never going to get anything done!

I think it was the Liberal Redneck that blogged a yonder ways back on all the shizzle that we swear we'll never buy, but then buckle to cultural pressure and then question how we ever lived without it. Yah, I was feeling that one. Take the digital camera. For years I professed my commitment to film. I would not abandon my SLR for some little diskette! I was a Fuji Film girl, through and through. But then my parents loaned me their digital, and never really asked for it back. So now I'm like, "Film? WTF!" I love that I can just shoot the shit outta anything and not be stuck with 32 crap shots out of a 36 exposure roll.

But going even further back, in the late 90's, I swore I would not allow the Internet near my home, thus negating the need for a computer. Screw Big Brother! Well, ten years later and I now have a laptop in addition to a desktop so that I can ebay in bed and blog from the kitchen! And those cute little mp3 players? The iPod was just a silly little gizmo on my self-indulgent wish list. Certainly not a need. So when my husband gifted me an 8oGig for Christmas I about shat! Especially since my desktop OS was Windows ME and iPods won't work with anything less than XP. Which was the final push to get that aforementioned laptop.

But I refuse to completely cave. I remain stalwart in my aversion to video games and swear I shall not have a Wii or PS2 or anything similar invade my home (I might miss Best Week Ever). I never bought the PalmPilot with that little stylus I'm sure people lost at lightning speed. Nor shall I get a Crackberry! And I can say with pride that I have neva 'texted'.

I'm such an oak.