Tag Archives: life

On Hold: Give Me My Money Back, You Thieves!

2 Mar
I’m in a fight with my cable company.

I had originally planned to write about how I ended up describing what a furry is to my boss at a lunch meeting in front of the whole department, but I just saw an Xfinity commercial and I’m too enraged by my cable problems to talk about such silliness right now.

About a year ago, I called my cable company because I was notified that my rates would increase.   I told them I didn’t watch T.V. and so I didn’t need their stinking service anymore and they agreed to keep me at the same rate.

It’s funny how a phone call can change things.

The key to getting your hard-earned American George Washingtons back when grimy little service companies attempt to steal them is pure determination.   For the case in point, I spent almost my entire lunch break on the phone.   Waiting, explaining, being transferred, waiting, explaining, being transferred… It’s a maze of frustration and rage.  And if you make it through to the other side, you win money.

Last night, however, I failed the maze.

I got my bill in the mail and had a 5 dollar hike on it with absolutely no explanation.  Actually, what boggles the mind more is that the only explanation included is a paper explaining that there will be a price hike beginning next month.   Um.  What?  Okay, so my bill is raised 5 dollars a month and in another  month you’ll raise it 5 more.

If I have x apples and Jenny has y apples and Jenny takes all my apples and kicks me in the groin, who do I call to get my freaking apples back?

So I dialed the 800 number listed on my bill, followed the prompts to enter my phone number and zip code, and got connected to Mikey after 15 minutes.   I, like a good customer, always pleasantly begin my conversation asking if I may provide my account number for their reference.   Mikey said it would be easier to give him my phone number, which I did.  Twice.

That didn’t seem to help.

So he asked for my account number.  I was glad he just went ahead and did it my way.    Then he told me that he couldn’t help me because I was from a different city than his branch could service.   I kindly asked him to transfer me and he said he couldn’t.  So I kindly asked for a number to dial and he said he didn’t know.  Mikey said that if I followed the prompts, I should be okay.

Mikey apparently thought I was a moron.

But I’m not a moron, and I told Mikey so.  He suggested I hang up and try again.  I insisted that there was no point in reusing an automated system that I have already proven fails and I nicely reminded him that getting through to him cost me 15 minutes of my life I wouldn’t like to lose twice.  In fact, every time I attempt to call this company, this is what happens and I’d really like to just figure out what the problem is.   Mikey told me we were in a bit of a stale mate because he couldn’t help me and I wouldn’t hang up unless I was helped.

I call an 800 number, I expect help.  After all, I’m paying a 5 dollar increase and that should be reflected in the quality of my service.

So I asked Mikey if he had a supervisor or  manager who might be able to give me the correct number to dial.   He said yes and put me on hold.

Can I just take a moment to say that I really think Enya songs should be the only acceptable waiting music for service calls?  Because when I’m really on my last nerve and have managed to make dinner and eat it in the amount of time it takes to even ask just one question about my account, “The Sounds of Upbeat Jazz” is just not the ticket to pacifying me.  Every toot of the saxophone felt like a machine gun of rage in my ear.

I then proceeded to wait.  Mikey would intermittently check in with me to assure me that the supervisor was on her way. I felt like he was trying to make me go away – it’s a tactic I’ve seen attempted in customer service when I worked in it.   So I hung on for dear life.

But after Mikey checking in three times, 25 more minutes had passed and I hadn’t even gotten on the phone with the person who could get me on the phone with the person who could answer my question.    So I hung up and proceeded to hurl curses at the walls of my apartment and swear that I would try again tomorrow.    And so I shall.

I want my apples back.

My cable company's mascot.

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There Was a Farmer Who Had a Dog.

1 Mar

Happy Lollipop Tuesday, ya’ll.

I decided that after the last two weeks of heathenistic lollipop events, I should do something with a warm, gooey core of wholesomeness.    And that’s how I came to find myself in strange, new, but all-too-familiar hicktown playing a good old-fashioned game of Bingo.

It’s an atrocity that I grew up in Central PA and never waddled my way over to a Bingo game.    And so waddle I finally did, past tiny little shanty houses and what seemed to be a nuclear power plant a la Simpsons.    At the end of that beautiful hick-laden road was a rec hall with plastic tables, an enthusiastic and under-funded theater club, and a whole lot of old ladies.

The true joy of my Bingo adventure was that it wasn’t for money.  It was for Vera Bradley bags.

Personally, I’ve never gotten the allure of Vera’s wacky color combinations, paisley-on-acid patterns, and quilt material.  It looks like a craft.   You know, like from a craft show.    Except there I can get one for a decent price.  If I want the Vera brand, I’ve gotta pony up way too many pennies for  my liking.    So I went into the rec hall with every intention of winning myself a bag and putting it on ebay.

But I severely underestimated the intensity of an average Bingo game.

These women were bingo semi-professionals.  Most of them already had Vera Bradley bags, well-worn and poised beside them as proof that they were there to take in some serious winnings.  Some brought their own Bingo markers, which were so enormous and metallic that at one point I mistook one for a light saber.

I think the Bingo marker was my favorite  part.  I spent most of my time thinking about how genius of an invention it was.  Dave spent the whole time in awe of how much fun it was to stamp things with.

Oh yeah – did I mention I took Dave?  The only thing better than the Bingo marker was the look on Dave’s face when the moderator said things like, “Come on, ladies!  Who wants to win this bag?!”   It was a genuine pleasure to see him juxtaposed against huddled-over old bitties, with their glasses pushed down to the very tips of their noses, their Bingo markers in the ready position, and a look of sheer determination.

I think I saw one of them curl up her lip and bare her teeth.

Tensions are high in a Bingo game.  If multiple winners cry out after a number is called, they go into a “Bingo Off” and the  moderator pulls another number. Whoever has it on their winning card is determined ruler of all.   One disputed card required 5 more numbers be drawn to determine the tie and the 85 seconds surrounding the event were amongst the most painfully gripping of my life.

A little over halfway through the game, I had to readjust  myself because I had somehow shlumped down and was hunched over my card.  My nose was only a few inches above the table and I was staring straight down, burning a hole through my card with my intensity.   I was going to intimidate the card into giving up the correct number.

It didn’t work.

In fact, nothing I tried worked and I went home a big, fat, penniless, Vera Bradley bagless Bingo loser.   I didn’t mind so much, because I had a really good time.

But then I realized that instead of just being a regular old crazy cat lady when I get older,  might be an old crazy cat lady who plays Bingo.

Shoot.

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How the Oscars Lost Their Class

28 Feb

Host Fail.

It used to be that we could always count on the Oscars to scrounge up a little class from the muck and mire of Hollywood.

Not this year.

My apologies to Anne Hathaway.  It must be incredibly difficult to be so classically beautiful but to be hankered down by your own goofiness.  Listen, I understand it’s a difficult job to host the Oscars, and I get that it’s probably the most nervewracking stage moment in someone’s life.  But stand up straight, smile pretty, and try your darndest to not let your inner 5-year-old grace the stage.   And above all, do not refer to your nudity in a picture with any degree of lightheartedness.   It’s like getting on a microphone at an incredibly classy party and saying, “hey! remember that time I was naked?! HA! I WAS NAKED!!”

And James Franco?   Why?  Why was he the choice?  I know film doesn’t require the same vocal attention as theater, but for the love of Oscar, why can’t you attempt a little pitch variation, dynamics play, or even just some basic articulation?   Make an attempt at the feigning of charisma.  Please.

Nominees, I’m sure it’s incredibly difficult to stand let alone speak when accepting a speech.  But hold it together.  We’ll stick with you through nerves, line flubs, and even a bit of confusion.  But I don’t see much of an excuse being made for dropping the f-bomb in an acceptance speech.  Melissa Leo had the beginnings of a classic acceptance speech for the reel.  But about halfway through, it turned trashy and suddenly her elegant white, overly sparkly high-collar gown looked very, very cheap.

I’m disappointed.   I feel like the Oscars have failed me.

There were moments of loveliness, don’t get me wrong.  Kevin Spacey is almost enough to redeem the entire lot.   If anyone is paying attention, he will be the host next year.  They would be silly to overlook him.  Always charming and gentlemanly, a master of impressions, and a brilliant actor – what’s the problem?

So thank you to Nicole Kidman, Cate Blanchett, Hugh Jackman, Oprah, Reese Witherspoon and the like for your constant display of grace and class and your ability to articulate in front of a very intimidating audience.   Hopefully the next generation will start taking notes.

I mean… did you see it?! Anne Hathaway made her dress dance.

*Facepalm* 

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Adult Break

27 Feb

jasminestarblog.com

I’m tired.

Not just tired.  Old-lady-tired. 

I was up pretty late last night making wonderful and responsible decisions.  And when my head hit the pillow at about 4 in the morning, I had to come to terms with the fact that I would not be early to rise and indubitably half my Sunday would be over before I even woke to greet it.

The entire concept of a mere 2-day weekend is absurd.  I need more time.  I spend Saturday catching up on all the things I have to do but don’t have time to tend to during the week because I’m, you know, working.  And then when Saturday is over, I have to face the harsh reality that the very next day means the end of my weekend and will be entirely overshadowed by the fact that I have to work again on Monday.   And then 5 days to trudge through before my next pathetic 2-day weekend.

I demand an Adult Break.

It’s preposterous that I’m allowed 2 weeks of debauchery, exploration, and adventure in the spring and 3 months in the summer every single year of my life until I graduate from college and then it disappears when I’m ejected.  Absolutely disappears.  And short of my striking it rich, marrying into money, or finding a sack of cowboy gold on the city streets, I have no way of making my own 3-month adult adventure because while I’m off trotting around in Europe or Jamaica or even just freaking Kansas City, I’ll have to find a way to pay my rent, phone, gas, electric, water, garbage, credit cards, and student loans.

Why are we all just okay with this?

Don’t get me wrong: I’m all for hard work and all that jazz and I totally get that bills need to be paid, even though my inner hippie screams in frustration that I have to pay for things that should, in my opinion, be free to all.  That’s fine – I’ll suck it up.  But I would really like a small section of my time each year to be liberated from worry, work, and obligation.  It’s called living, and I would like some please.

So what shall we do? Organize a march on the capitol steps? Or start a movement and design marketing tactics?

I vote movement. 

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It’s Aliiiiive!

26 Feb

I’m only two months into this thing and I’m really starting to worry.

You know… about what I’m capable of.

By forcing myself out of my own self-made cocoon of hermit splendor, I’ve put myself in a position where I have to go have life experiences in order to have something to write about.   So to work up the gusto to go do things that I normally would not consider, I’ve begun to use this blog as a shield.

An all-encompassing, no-apologies shield.

I went pole-dancing because I “had to for the blog.”  Think about that. That’s powerful stuff.  When you consider that only a few short months ago, I was huddled in my living room eating pizza and ice cream with StumbleUpon as my only window to the outside world, it’s enormous that I’m armed with something to blame my new social nature on.

Today at work, someone who I don’t know accidently messaged me on Office Messenger, which is linked to all the contacts in the entire network of the company.   The random message appeared on my screen telling me that this person was going out for a couple beers later and did I want to come with him and some dude named James.  I knew it was a mistake and went to close the window so as to not embarrass the poor person any more than he already was.

But then I thought it might make good blog fodder so I told him okay.

I had visions of me just showing up on the town at whatever place this person mentioned because he would be too embarrassed to withdraw the invitation.  I would just go with the flow, pretending to know these people and buying them drinks.  I’d learn everything I could about them like some kind of investigative reporter. 

As it turned out, the fella nipped the situation in the bud and excused himself for having messaged the wrong person and he wished me a good weekend.

But think – I altered my actions solely because of this blog.  That means it’s taking over me.   I might actually be changing into a different kind of person simply because I have to spit out 500 or so public words a day.   I’m deliberately starting trouble to see if I can shake any adventure out of it.  And I still have 10 months to go.

I could turn into a monster in that amount of time.  

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I’m a Big Ol’ Lesbian

25 Feb

Today, my blog is my confessional.

I’m not Catholic, but that’s probably best. I doubt there are any priests who read my blog anyway.  Not after the Vagina Dentata post.

The other night, Dave and I were talking about his “Special Skills”, which is a set of fun little extras at the bottom of an Acting Resume that you hope someone calls you out on in the audition room.  Specifically, we were working through his impressions  – which to date include Zapp Brannigan , Tony the Tiger, Jack Nicholson, Matthew Mcconaughey, and Roger Rabbit.  He does a fabulous Roger Rabbit.   And so of course we got talking about Jessica Rabbit, because it’s impossible to mention Roger without his ridiculously hot human counterpart.   I added to the conversation that I had just seen the sexiest digital rendering of her online the other day.

And that’s when Dave casually mentioned that part of being in love with me is accepting that I’m a bit of a lesbian for Jessica Rabbit.

At first, this claim struck a strange chord in me.    But not because I disagreed.  I totally agree.  I’ll say it loud and proud: I’m a total lesbo for Jessica Rabbit.  Who wouldn’t be?  She’s bangin’ enough to make my grandmother get down with her lady-lovin’ self.    She’s got long red hair, a stick-thin waist paired with a completely unrealistic hip and chest size, and her boobs are so enormous that they’re spilling everywhere and always running into something.

I don’t care who you are – that’s hot.

So yes, I lean a little toward the gay side when confronted by an uber fabulous cartoon sex icon.  It’s not my fault – she comes from Toon Town and her powers are not of this world.

The strange chord Dave’s comment struck in me is that this truth was something he had to accept about me.  As if it were something I wore on a t-shirt that could have been a dealbreaker had he not chosen early on to take it as his burden.

His doe-eyed, smoky-voiced, patty-cake-playing burden.

Of course now he might be able to make the t-shirt argument because I did just announce this to the world here in this moment.  But you know what? I’ve been announcing a lot of things to the world these past two months and it turns out that  a lot of you are thinking the same things.  You’re just not saying all of them because you aren’t forced into a self-made contract to post goop from your brain to a public forum every day.

So I’ve spared you all the time and effort.  You don’t have to think this up yourself – you can just chime in and support me.

Because she’s an irresistable vixen and you know it.

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JACKIE SMASH!

24 Feb

For Valentine’s Day, Dave’s mom did a wonderful thing: she sent us cards and a few gifts to brighten our day.   Unfortunately, the gift Dave received was the beginning of a new peeve for me.

One thing I love about Jeanette (Dave’s mom) is that she is genuinely thoughtful and tries to lend a hand wherever she can.  That’s why Dave’s Valentine’s Day package included a small token of her affection: a key finder.

For those of you who don’t know, this lovely little contraption is intended to be clipped to your keys and emits a high pitched beeping sound when you whistle.  The idea is that you can simply whistle and find your keys wherever they may be hiding.

There are several unforseen downfalls to this brilliance.

The first is that it ruins a long-time favorite joke of mine.  Every time Dave loses something, I tell him to call it – regardless of what it is.  It’s never funny for him, but it’s always funny for me.  Unfortunately when he says he can’t find his keys and I make my staple comeback, he can simply whistle and shoot me a quick glance of superiority.

I hate quick glances of superiority.

The second is that the key finder isn’t too particular about the pitch required to initiate beeping.   So when I’m clinking dishes in the sink, it beeps.  When I hit a particular pitch in my natural voice, it beeps.

The other day, my cats chased each other down the hallway with an unusual amount of gusto and it beeped.

Dave’ s a bit concerned about taking it out places given its highly sensitive nature.   Who knows what could set it off and how inappropriate it might be for the situation at hand.   He can’t live his life in fear like that.

It’s slowly driving me insane.  You would think the solution is easy: we could just take the batteries out or get rid of it.  But it’s actually pretty handy when you need it and Dave and I are still in the process of weighing out whether or not it’s worth the constant annoyance.   And it’s impressive how long we’ll both sit on something we know needs done… not because we expect the other to do it, but just because neither of us makes an attempt to remedy it.    This is the cause of most of our collective downfalls.

There is one thing I love about the key finder.  It’s a  fun game Dave and I play that I’ve dubbed “stop talking”.    The rules are pretty simple: if Dave or I is saying something the other finds disagreeable, we simply whistle.   It’s simultaneously hilarious and maddening.

I’m still trying to determine if this keyfinder is a blessing or a curse to us.  We sure do have a good time with it, but I don’t think it has anything to do with its ability to make keyfinding any easier.   But I’ll admit that after the 5th time it goes off in the middle of casual conversation, I have considered taking a hammer to its tiny, seemingly innocent exterior.

I feel my breaking point quickly approaching.

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Mass Murder in Aisle 3

23 Feb

Why do people shut off their brains when they’re in grocery stores?

I try to be considerate and get the half-cart.  I could get a full-sized one, but who needs all that space and luxury? I’m into efficiency and what’s good for the grocery store environment.  So I’m a good citizen and I get the half-cart.

I appear to be the only one.

I don’t spend a lot of time piddling around at the store.  I know what I need and if I take a moment to reflect, it’s because I’m either comparing price per unit (that little treasure of a calculation listed on the upper right tab of the price that no one else reads) or because there’s been some newfangled product line introduced and I’m trying to stare it down and see if it will buckle under the pressure of my wary consumer eye.

It usually does.

Everyone else seems to arrive at the store as if visiting the museum.  Slow trodding, frequent stopping, and long gazes into the shelves.  The most common obstacle for me is old ladies.  Yes, I’m going to make that awful sweeping statement, because I’m sorry but for me  it’s true.  They have absolutely no regard for people around them, and are always positioned exactly in front of the thing I need. Not a problem – I’m a go-getter.  I simply excuse myself.  But since I do so at a polite volume for the rest of the aisle, the offender is usually unable to hear me.    And I just feel so bad getting upset because they’re so wrinkly and adorable.   Getting to the grocery store was probably the only thing on their to-do list that day and I’m just some yuppie that can’t slow down and enjoy the beauty of the cereal aisle.

Actually, you know what? It’s not just the old ladies.  Let me be fair.

There was a ridiculous couple who took up the entire freezer section today.  The entire thing, I kid you not.  The man had the first (full-size) cart and one kid inside.    He was positioned just slightly left of the aisle’s y-axis.  His wife/girlfriend/baby momma was just to the right.  With another full-size cart and another kid.   Both were strolling along at a solid half mile per hour.  I excused myself but got no response.   The female was much more concerned with making sure the male knew she wanted an ample supply of chitlins for Easter.

There’s nothing like celebrating the resurrection of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ with a feast of pig intestines.

I was trying to size up my options for frozen dinners as last minute work lunches but was unable to do so because even after she noticed me, she couldn’t pull her kid away from the section.   He appeared to be stuck to the freezer door.  As she pushed the cart down the aisle and his grip tightened on the freezer door, I stopped to stare at his incredibly stretchable midsection.   He was a genuine Stretch Armstrong.   She continued forward, physical limitations set in, and with his inevitable release came a storm of screaming.

By now, my blood had worked up to a slight simmer.

When I finally arrived to the dairy section,  I was thwarted in my attempts by a middle-aged woman who was overwhelmed by the multitude of yogurt options available to her.   She picked each one up delicately, handling its packaging as if a beautiful gift and pondering the ingredients like a Shakespearean sonnet.  And since I’d already attempted to excuse myself with both the old lady and the couple, I had basically thrown my tactics list out the window.  I tried a new game and parked my cart to observe her, as if watching an animal at the zoo.   Activia….Yoplait…Gogurt…Stonyfield…LORD HELP ME SHE’S READING THE ACTIVIA AGAIN.

Unable to maintain control over my anger, I B-lined toward the checkout line.  I don’t need yogurt.  There are little microscopic creatures inside and it’s always freaked me out anyway.

By the time I made it to the car, I had encountered nearly fifteen unique tests of my patience and use of decent language.

I can’t do this daytime shopping thing anymore.  I told myself it was normal and decided to give it a go again but I just can’t have this sort of stressor in my life.  I should have known not to willingly enter such a heavily populated closed quarter.  That’s the stuff mass murders are made out of.

So it’s back to the night shift for me.  There was a time when I longed for a friendly face behind the register instead of the zombie-like night crew.   I had visions of overflowing produce and aisles clear of stock boxes.   The idea of daytime shopping was like a world of sunshine and lollipops that had to be revisited.

But that was before 5:45 yesterday, when for a moment I entertained acts of violence toward total strangers.

You see?  This is why I stay inside.

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Vagina Dentata!

22 Feb

Ladies and Gents, Happy Lollipop Tuesday.

This Tuesday, I took a reader suggestion.  If you mosey on over to “What’s Lollipop Tuesday” under the comment from “Caitlin”, you’ll find this gem: “Read a book or watch a movie you swore you’d never read/watch”.

This will be great!, I told Dave.  It’s an excuse to kick back and watch a movie!

Unfortunately, I had to be honest with myself and seriously do the challenge.  I had to face something I swore I would never watch.  Something I would have otherwise had to have been held down by brute force with my eyelids taped open a la A Clockwork Orange.  At first I thought it might be a flick I saw at West Coast Video years ago (back when you had to go to the store to rent a movie) called Killer Condom.

But after some hard, honest thinking with myself, I couldn’t ignore that there was a movie I feared far more than Killer Condom: a cinematic wonderland of abuse, pornography, and horror called Teeth.

Teeth is the story of a high school girl named Dawn who gives speeches and organizes rallies for purity.  She wears a red ring to symbolize her commitment to chastity.

It isn’t really necessary because her unicorn shirts are a dead giveaway.

Unfortunately for her, everyone in Dawn’s school really wants to bang a pure girl in a unicorn shirt and so she finds herself faced time and time again with rape scenarios.   But by a stroke of luck, it turns out that Dawn is the proud owner of a case of “Vagina Dentata”.   With its roots in ancient Greek myth, Vagina Dentata is a rare affliction where one finds herself full of teeth on the inside.   Sharp, penis-gobbling teeth.

I’m sorry but it’s the truth, and I’m using anatomically correct terms.  I don’t know how to make this any better. 

I have to admit that when the movie started, I giggled from time to time with the awkward pauses and the poorly timed beats throughout the film.  But as soon as I realized the movie was actually going to show the effects of Dawn’s affliction – complete with chocolate syrup blood and dismembered…members… my smirk reverted into an expression of horror and disgust.

Perhaps my favorite part of the movie was a scene from Anatomy class, where the anatomy of the penis was discussed with pictures and in full detail and directly thereafter the male teacher tries to move on to the female anatomy, but cannot bring himself to say “vagina” in front of the class.  When the students turn the page to examine the female anatomy in their textbooks, they find that it is covered with a large gold sticker, which, when removed, tears the page to pieces.

But that’s not my favorite part. 

My favorite part is when Dawn takes the book home and soaks the page in water, slowly removing the gold sticker and revealing to herself what a perfectly normal vagina should look like.   There is a look on her face of wonder and amusement – as if an entire world lay before her that she didn’t know existed until exactly that moment in time.

Of course, Dawn’s world of wonder and amusement turns out to be more like a world of murder and dismemberment.  

You see, Dawn has a terrible home life.  Her half brother lies in bed smoking pot and cursing his father for marrying his stepmother, thereby making Dawn (the woman of his dreams) his sister.   He lives in hope that she will someday mosey over to his pot den and have sex with him.  

No one can resist a chick in a unicorn shirt.

As Dawn slowly comes to realize that her curse is actually a superpower and that she can slowly rid the world of disgusting, rapemongers, she seeks out scenarios where she can have sex with sex offenders in order to bite off their… offenders. And each and every time, I got to see the after effects of the dismemberment.

I’m traumatized.

I ate a thin mint girl scout cookie directly afterward, hoping that its innate wholesomeness would help restore my mind to a state of purity, but it didn’t.   I now fear that nothing can wipe these visions of lacerated male genitalia or the absolutely awful acting from my mind. 

It was supposed to be a nice, relaxing Lollipop Tuesday.  A reward, even, for my adventurous spirit in last week’s challenge – but unfortunately that was not the case. 

 I’m not sure how many thin mints it will take to cleanse me, but I’m determined to find out.  

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That Good Ol’ Central PA Charm

21 Feb

A poster from the restaurant bathroom. How "charming".

This past weekend I ventured into the rural, Amish armpit of Pennsylvania (a place so dear to my heart) in order to take my Grandmother and Great Uncle out for their birthdays, which happen to be a mere week apart.   Apparently my great grandparents preferred to get down and dirty in the month of June.  Hot, sweaty, old-people-sex June.  Mmm.

This dirty deed actually came up naturally in conversation, as my uncle regaled us with stories of his and my grandmother’s childhood.  He tried to work through how his parents could have possibly had sex given that they shared beds with their children and were never alone in the same room.

But he had a theory.

Apparently, all the kids were locked out of the living room and told that their parents needed to “count the change in the piggy banks.”  My uncle proposed that this was the only time they were alone, and now in his maturity couldn’t figure a reason that such an activity warranted privacy.  Which means it’s likely my uncle was conceived in his very own living room.   Mmm.  Old-people- living- room-sex in June.

It’s conversations like these that put the charm in my Central PA roots.   There’s just one problem with good ol’ Amish country: it’s so friggin’ hard to get my family to come see me.   I don’t know if you’re aware, but there are a number of challenges to maintaining a relationship with a central Pennsylvanian.   Namely, hunting season and Nascar.

My brother was married in October of last year.    Our family was outnumbered by his wife’s family something like 3 to 1.  The reason?  It fell on October 23rd, which happened to be the last statewide anterless deer hunting day for junior and senior license holders.  I know this to be the reason because my family is known for its painful honesty, and when I called the missing RSVPs they confirmed my hunch.

My brother soon had to face a harsh reality that his extended family would rather take their youngins to bag their first deer than celebrate his nuptials.    As his best man (yes, his best man), I spent a great deal of my time before the wedding emphasizing that this wasn’t a testament to how unimportant his wedding was, but rather how important deer hunting was.

It’s a specific and necessary distinction.

NASCAR’s a toughie too.  My uncle said that yesterday was the first time he’d been invited out for his birthday.  But he quickly noted thereafter that it was a sacrifice for him to attend given that he was missing the Daytona 500.  Specifically, the Daytona 500 on the 10th anniversary of Dale Earnhardt Sr.

Without sacrifices such as this, I would never be able to see my family.

And to think – I would have never known what “counting the change in the piggy banks” really means.

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