Sometimes there’s just too much to say.
Author Archives: kb
Carlos
Waking up with cat wrapped around my arms is really lovely.
I’ve figured out that his allegiance lies with whoever is feeding him – so of course, I gave him exactly what he wanted. I think perhaps he’s figured out that I’m his adopted mother, although I’m not entirely sure. We’re working on it.
This, and that. Among other things.
(What follow is purely emotional venting – you know I’m big on feelings and on that whole experience, so forgive me for detailing it all so intensely. If you’re not familiar with this particular family dynamic, there’s no point in attempting to further your knowledge with this post – so look elsewhere for your daily entertainment. You certainly won’t find it here, at least not today.)
It’s about to get a little heavy, though. Don’t say you weren’t warned.
I’m not big on Christmas.
I used to like it, I think, but as the years have passed, I’ve become more and more of a Scrooge about the whole ordeal.
Because it really is an ordeal to me.
I love Christmas lights, Christmas trees, the flutter you feel when you’ve found the exact right gift for someone you love. I love driving in the dark on those bitterly cold nights looking at lights. I love seeing our Christmas tree weighted down under the ornaments; I love remembering how much they all mean to me.
There’s the sparkling ice cream cone to commemorate my years of Dairy Queen servitude, the pink car I got when I was 16, the mugs tilted on their sides showing a family of mice baking cookies (my personal favorite ornament), Mike’s fishing stuff, the Broncos ones, the crystal ones, the doves, the homemade ones, the glass ones…everything. Some are dated, some aren’t, some get more love than others, but each year my Mom wraps them all individually and puts them back in the boxes they came from and then we haul them down the stairs where they’ll wait patiently for the next year.
I don’t like remembering. I don’t like Christmas.
It brings back really bad memories.
I automatically tense up when the holidays approach – I feel them coming as the weight gradually settles around my shoulders and I prepare to grit my teeth and get on with it. I know I’m old enough to have grown out of these stupid little moods, but there are times when I can’t quite manage to keep it all together. I try, really, but somehow, something always slips through my defenses and nags at me until it has all come undone.
This year was no exception. It was all going well enough. For the second year in a row, I was watching Danny’s dog Emma, who comes with a free house to stay in for a few days. I was taking advantage of a quiet bathtub and an adorable dog and an empty house.
We’d made plans to go to one Grandma’s house on Christmas Eve (as usual) and then more plans to see the other side of the family the next day.
I felt that something was off, so when I finished Christmas Eve dinner and checked the text messages, I immediately knew something was wrong.
“Merry Christmas!! hey we now have plans tomorrow, but would love to cu guys soon. What’s tom’s #?”
6:13 pm.
My heart sank. I’d even spoken with Mom about this exact scenario. I’d seen it coming, but foolishly believed it wouldn’t happen.
How foolish I was. You can’t trust anyone, of course. There’s no point in convincing yourself it’s possible.
I spent the rest of the night holding in tears. Mom saw this, the eventual breakdown was sliding toward us, and ushered me home to go look after the dog. She saw the pain shooting through me, the hurt feelings. I rarely get my feelings hurt. I try to be tough enough, but every now and then….Christmas, and I was off-guard.
I love the family elements of Christmas – and I was beginning to think that pulling off family time wasn’t going to be so difficult. It never is with Mom’s family. I’ve come to realize over the years that they are the most family I have, really. They’re never to busy to see us, they go out of their way to do things together, they help each other.
Like this:
Uncle Mike, my mom’s brother-in-law, took a few days off to drive me to college my freshman year. Even though all the boys claimed they were just in it for the Cubs tickets (which I’m sure wasn’t a huge lie), they were sweet enough to make the drive and then leave me. They still tease me about how much of a mess I was when they left. I can see Uncle Mike now, imitating my voice, crying, as they left. “Don’t leave me, I’ll go to DU, I swear! Take me with you!” I’m eternally grateful for their help, and I sincerely hope they weren’t too scarred by my hysteria.
I’m the only girl grandchild on that side – you can imagine how they react to me. They understand more than they let on – they all had sisters – but that doesn’t mean they don’t take every opportunity to tease me. Christmas Eve, Uncle Mike was sitting telling me that my shoes made my ankles look skinny. Implicit in that remark was that they were fat enough to need to look skinny. He paused, then said, “What are they called? Cankles?” A lightning fast surge of fury shot through me, followed by a comfortable warmth and then a smile.
It was well-played, I have to admit. All the boys were laughing to themselves while I protested mildly about cankles.
That’s the kind of family that you want around you.
Christmas Eve, my brother Mike came home with me. I was on the verge of tears and furious. We walked the dog and he let me vent at him. Then he sat with me and we watched tv for a couple of hours late into the night – long enough that a calm had come over me. I’m grateful that he did that for me – he knew exactly what I needed without even asking.
Christmas Day was fine. We saw Dad’s new apartment. He cried, but that wasn’t unexpected. We dug through his garage and found retro Broncos sweaters from the ’80s, which we immediately claimed.
I rocked one of them for the game yesterday. Not a bad look, I must say.
It was Boxing Day when the phone rang and Dad’s mom was on the other line. I could hear the guilt creeping through her voice, I know that’s why she called me. I wasn’t in the mood to play nice, so I told her exactly what I was (am) feeling.
That it’s bullshit to call and cancel on us at 7 pm on Christmas Eve, that we’re not stupid enough to think that “other plans” aren’t just the regular plan minus us.
“Maybe they’ll make it up to you,” she said softly. I snorted into the phone. “Not likely,” I told her. “They never do.”
And so it was. I stated my case, told her how this always happens just because her side of the family doesn’t want to see Dad, told her that Mike and I are independent adults who are capable of father-free actions, that we’re sick of feeling left out like that.
(If it’s not because they don’t want to see Dad, then I have no idea what it could possibly be. I’ve spent so much time trying to be the niece and granddaughter they want me to be and I’ve finally given that up. I’ve tried to show them that I’m not off doing drugs – as Dad used to tell them – and that my life is on track. Hello, does my Bachelor’s degree from a Catholic university mean nothing to them?
I can only think of once, maybe. We were little – I was fifteen. They found a lighter in their house and assumed it was mine. [It wasn’t.] I never explained that to them, but if that’s what it is, it’s been way overblown. That was 8 years ago. I babysat their kids a week ago, so it can hardly be the lighter thing, right? I’m responsible, respectful, polite. I answer the kids’ questions in a very PC way that no one should be able to find fault with. I’m a pro-babysitter, remember? It’s my job to assist in child raising, not de-rail it.)
“You always have Christmas Eve with your Mom’s family,” she said. That fact has nothing to do with it. I wasn’t invited to any Christmas Eve thing on Dad’s side, so how can that be played as a card?
She was crying, and soon, so was I.
“It’s really shitty to cry on Christmas Eve,” I told her. “It’s shitty to feel left out by your own family. Rejected like that.”
“My hands are tied,” she said. I disagree.
“Do you want to see them?” she asked.
“Why would I want to see people who have no interest in seeing me?” I asked, before I had to hang up because I was crying so much.
The divorce didn’t have to put us in the middle like that. It’s stupid that ten years later, we’re still paying for the mistakes of our parents. It didn’t have to come down to one side of the family against the other, but it’s looking like we’ve got a clear winner.
And no, Dad, this one’s not about money. It’s about family and yours obviously doesn’t think that we belong.
Again, that Christmas refrain: Bad memories and a sour taste.
The "Hamventure"
We were sitting in Starbucks, sipping coffee and catching when, out of nowhere, I shouted, “Oh my god! It’s Monday! We have to get a ham!”
I pushed back my seat, tossed my coffee cup in the trash, and barreled out the front door with a very confused Madeline trailing behind me.
We put the address into the GPS and somehow ended up at 29th and Havana, which is in the middle of the Stapleton development in Aurora.
“Turn left on Beeler,” the GPS announced.
“Is there a Beeler?” Maddie asked.
“Beeler?….Beeler?”
We found it and turned and ended up having to make a long drive back to Havana and Yale. It included a desperate phone call to the Honey Baked Ham people asking them their cross streets.
As it turns out, the GPS had decided to remove the “South” direction and instead had routed us north.
It turned out to be a delicious adventure indeed, with free smoked turkey samples and a ham sandwich along the way.
Grandma was quite pleased with the outcome, although I was sure she was worried that I’d entirely neglected my duties. (I hadn’t, obviously.)
However, this whole “hamventure” leads me to believe that I’m still not entirely confident in my re-adoption of my mental Denver map. I have been getting lost in dumb places for dumb reasons. The other night, I was trying to get on 6th heading west from Santa Fe, and for some reason, completely missed 8th and ended up having to do the Kalamath loop. It was a mess. I was a mess.
Those little things really throw me.
But alas, given enough time, the city will be mine again.
The hunt has begun
I love my family.
Today, we fought about Michael Vick (who should not be allowed to play professional sports), the Eagles, and the Giants (which Manning is the hot one – Eli, obviously). We ate chicken (which I made to Mike’s dismay yet which later became moderate approval. “It wasn’t so bad,” he said. “I thought it was going to kill me.”), Mike made a Starbucks run (sweetly bringing back a latte for Mom and I), and things were generally copacetic.
We are currently in the middle of a heated (yet hilarious) non-argument about our future housing.
The situation is thus:
It all comes back to that damned cat. Seriously, single mothers have it rough.
I’m desperate for my own place.
Having lived alone, having loved that apartment in Chicago so intensely, and having tasted the sweet freedom of “my apartment,” I’m loathe to linger here longer than I must.
However, the financial situation remains dire to say the least.
Complicating the whole situation is Cat/Carlos, who remains in the capable hands of my friend Jacob, yet who cannot live there forever.
My deadline is February 1.
The other day I found a too-good-to-be-true apartment downtown and emailed the guy out of curiosity only to find out that it was indeed too-good-to-be-true. Credit check prior to viewing? Ha, I think not, internet scam man.
I’m itching. I think it’s the cat. (That was a cute little allergy pun just for Mom.)
I love that Jacob loves Cat, but he’s mine, and I want him. I’m jealous that Jacob gets to live with him and I seriously think that five months of cat-care is long enough. Jacob wants his life back and I want my cat.
Mom is pestering us with questions about how we’ll sort out things like food and blah, blah, blah, and Mike is silent. We’ve lived together for years, we’ll sort it out.
He only pipes up whenever I say I wouldn’t mind sharing a bathroom with him. He complains of girly products and clothes, I complain equally of sweaty gym socks and eau-de-man.
And thus nothing is settled and as usual, I’m the only one remotely agitated (not seriously, but a smidgeon). Mom’s smirking that very pleased smirk while she crochets and Mike might be comatose on the couch.
And thus, the family dynamic remains strong: the evil matriarch, the quiet, reserved son, and the headstrong, stubborn, resilient (and might I add stunning) daughter.
It (which Mom has termed “our fireside chats”) goes a little something like this:
“On some issues, I stand as evil mother and it doesn’t bother me a bit. I notice that no one on the couch is agreeing with you…”
The couch stirs. “I’m staying out of it.”
“See, that means he agrees with me.”
“Mike, do you agree with her?”
“No. I don’t agree with anyone.”
It’s never boring here, but I have the sneaking suspicion that none of us would have it any other way.
December Rundown – Employment Update
When I’m looking through my blog posts, I find that I rarely have large gaps of time when I don’t have much to say, but even so, I can always tell when I’m simply writing to fill space and time, as if I feel obligated to write but have nothing to say.
This is one of those times.
I’m alone, I’m broke, I live at my mom’s house, and I’m currently ten pounds above what I normally weigh. But I’m absolutely content. I’m so alright with everything that’s going on at the moment. I’m positive, optimistic, radiant with promise.
It’s strange and yet not unwelcome.
I’ve got a job, sort of. I’ll be starting after the first of the year and I’ll be doing cold calling and quality control for a software company that does law software.
It’s $10 per hour and 40 hours per week, which is fine with me considering I’m currently making $0 per hour all hours of the week.
I’ve applied at Verizon.
I’ve applied at MSCD (UCD was going to be too much of a hassle – something about restrictions for non-degree students, etc.) to just take random math and business classes to see if that’s what I really want to do with my life.
I have a brand new (gorgeous) resume.
By the way, I adore you.
Just so you know.
Before I start: good luck to Uncle Mike, who is undergoing his first ever (and hopefully last ever) knee replacement surgery.
I hope that the healing process is swift, nearly painless, and positive for him and his family.
The last two weeks haven’t been the most productive, but they’ve certainly been interesting.
I think everything is going to be alright, but then again, there’s no other option, is there?
I went dancing on Friday night. Big deal, you’re thinking. And you’re right, except for one small thing. I danced entirely un-self-consciously. I danced and I was and I didn’t care who was looking. That was a beautiful thing for me.
What flu?
I would like to take this opportunity to thank John Watterson for the flu-like symptoms I’m currently experiencing.
He’s at home sick today after being ambushed by fever yesterday afternoon at work.
I woke up with the stuffy nose and sore throat combo that is guaranteed to sideline me for the weekend.
However, there is a lot of living I’ve still got to do, so hopefully an afternoon spent curled up with soup and television will be able to get me ready for an evening of hipster bar hopping with Emily.
Cross those fingers, world.
I still own a Wii, maybe I should be playing that instead.
It’s 6:30.
I’ve been awake since three forty.
It might be jet lag – I’ve been off since I got home – not hungry, not sleeping, always tired.
It might be everything.
I want to go to Chicago in January for a nice weekend away. I want to see everyone.
I need to stop writing little posts of nothing, I know that. But the other day, I was in the shower thinking (seriously that’s where the best thinking gets done) and I was wondering if I come across as too whiny or self-absorbed in my blogs.
Of course, self-absorption is a necessary blog-evil, but I wonder if I accurately portray my perceptions of things and my world views.
I feel the need to share things – it’s how I process. I don’t care if no one reads this, it’s therapeutic to type it out while I’m not consciously thinking about anything. Then I look down and everything is right in front of me.
But anyway, I’m restructuring my five year plan and trying to make everything fall into place. But I think the problem there is “make.” You can’t make anything fall into place. Everything falls in, you can nudge and push and rearrange, but at the end of the day, certain things are out of your hands.
Life is one of those funny things that will leave you behind if you just don’t go along with it sometimes.
So for now I’m nudging, trying to find my way in this new, permanent Denver. I’m looking forward to reading – it’s something I have really missed the last few years. I’m looking forward to a job and an apartment. I’m looking forward to settling into a routine.
I’m free floating now and I’m not entirely sure I like it but at the same time, I’m happy to be the free spirit that I am and I’m hoping to nurture that sense of independent adventure.
I want to hike and climb and go sandboarding and learn how to snowboard. I want to get back in the good graces of the Denver Public Library so that I can be allowed to sit downtown and spend an entire afternoon reading. I want to import wine from South Africa. I want to sit in dark bars and have long conversations. I want to work so that I can afford my own space and afford to leave it so I can travel the world. I want to see everything. But mostly I want to see beaches. All of them.
I’m excited. This free floating is tinged with fear but also glowing with promise. And that’s the best part. The free fall can’t last forever. It will have to end. And when it does, the solidity that emerges will be exact. Exactly what I’m looking for. (That’s the mythical happily ever after that would really be adorable. Adorable is the wrong word, but you know what I mean.)
But – to the two things I love more than anything (I told Mom that and she questioned my love for her – I reminded her that I said things and not mothers.)
Also, I saw Cat. He’s fat, furry, and absolutely happy, which makes me so happy. He’s friendly and even though I can’t tell if he remembers me, he’s letting me snuggle him and I’m alright with that.
I am back in Simon. Highways beware, I’m back. That’s beautiful freedom.










