Sorry, Mrs. Ceiling, I thought you was Gail

Remember that hair product commercial where young guys mistook moms for their daughters, because they had such young hair, thanks to [product]? One of them lives on in my mind. Occasionally it pops up, like some nefarious Internet trojan opening a window and I see this teenaged football quarterback tackle a mom; they roll in the grass, he gets a look at her face and goes, “Sorry, Mrs. Robinson, I thought you was Gail.” Maybe he doesn’t say “was”, maybe he says “were” but I had to write “was” to get his Oakie accent across. Gail’s mom seems flattered and gives her hair a little toss.

I tackled altogether too few moms back when I was a teen, and now it’s too late. Imagine I tackle some mom; she’s not going to buy the “sorry, I thought you were your daughter” excuse, is she. I’m just guessing; I haven’t tested this.

    You’re in a bad mood, one says.
    He’s been in a bad mood since yesterday, another one says.
    He told me he likes being in bad moods, the youngest one says.
    Thanks a lot, he says to the youngest one.

She had been in a bad mood herself, you see. And I was trying to tell her that she didn’t have to pretend to be happy. That the mood could, possibly, work itself out faster if she just lived through it. That’s what I get for trying to explain to a six-year-old that I like being melancholic.

That’s what I call it. I can’t call it depression. If you’re depressed you can’t go to work, you can’t get out of bed in the morning. Dishes pile up in the sink. The cats catch their breakfast in the goldfish bowl. What I have is at most this low-grade depression, this melancholic state that keeps me, at most, from realizing my true potential. Which is probably a blessing in disguise, because first thing I would do if I were galactic emperor is implement forced sterilization of jerks who cut you off in traffic et cetera.

So instead I choose to mope around.

Not all the time, of course. There’s a cycle. There are the peaks where I stand there looking at the veins in a leaf going, “wow.” Telling my kids, “look at those clouds! Just look at those clouds, would you.”

And look. I realize my writing is not going to win me the Miller Lite literary prize or anything, but I enjoy doing it and I think being melancholic helps me there, because blah blah outside looking in blah blah frame of mind.

And the real lows are few and far between. There was one depressing unemployed winter I slept on a friend’s condemned couch in the condemned house he rented, occasionally getting up to eat instant noodles. There was last night, and a couple other nights this week, where I just couldn’t get to sleep.

I read Gamma a story once where a papa bear goes from bed to bed to car to bed to sofa to chair all night and finally falls asleep just before his alarm goes off. I didn’t realize that his insomnia was rooted in depression. The author of that book was probably a seriously depressed person, come to think of it. You have to wonder, sometimes, don’t you, who are these people writing my child’s books? Like, “Mom’s Jelly Donut” by S. Freud or something.

I should take a walk, I thought at one point. And I remembered that my father had gone on long walks when he was the age I am now. Hours-long walks at night, in the dark. Now I understand why.

    What do you do when you can’t sleep at night like that? she asks.
    Stare at the ceiling, he says. Stare at the ceiling and try to sleep.
    If you’re trying to sleep, you have your eyes closed, another one says, splitting hairs.
    Yes honey, he says. He stares at the ceiling through his eyelids until it grows uncomfortable at the attention and shifts around, tossing its hair coquettishly. Around three he finally falls asleep. Around five his alarm goes off and he wakes in a short bed in a pink room with a Shakira poster on the wall and a panda bear night light.

Escape artist

Not only did I wake up cranky and still fail to find a way to center my design in msie5.5 (etc etc) without centering the text as well, I have just been informed that the Bug is apparently able to escape from a cheap paper envelope in transit, or at least the buttons are. If you ordered a Bug button and all you received was a torn envelope, let me know and I’ll resend. Teh rest of you, move along. Nothing to see here. (unless you ahve some css tip for centering my container div other than using a cheesy center tag).

Limerick contest

Make someone’s Valentine’s Day special: enter the third annual VD limerick contest. Even if you don’t, you really should link it on your weblog too. Then it gets onto Blogdex, you see, and someone stuck for a poem for their sweetie notices all these great limericks, and the rest is history, see?

Plus, you could win a Bug button. They’re going fast, BTW. I had a hundred made last week, and have shipped out half of them already.

They seem to be popular in the Low Countries, and Oakland/SF. The guy at the post office is starting to wonder what’s in all these envelopes making the tinny kaching-kaching sounds going all over the world.

The red wire or the blue wire?

I’ll be horsing around with the design today so don’t worry if something goes fffft. Or zzzzzt.

Fear

The light was good this morning. I left the house later than usual, so the sun was up. Also it was colder than yesterday and the sky was nearly clear, about a quarter full of cold-looking snow clouds, so rather than crappy grey drizzle (albeit the snow falling on the vineyards up the hills around Vienna was a pretty sight) we had great contrast today and good color saturation, with the color balance skewed a little towards the blue part of the scale. The woods weren’t woods, they were armies of individual naked black trees set apart by the snow on the ground and when the passenger train zoomed past it made no sound. That drew attention to the noises in the car: mostly just Anner Bylsma playing Bach on an old cello from the Smithsonian, along with an occasional grunt from the driver, the steady rumble purr of a small diesel motor; now and then interactions with other drivers such as “oi, oi, oi,” or “go for it, dude,” and a couple medium-length streams of filthy invective. Now and then a chortle, or even chuckle, over the ticker-tape of wisecracks running across the inside of my forehead.

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Annual metamorphosism.com Valentine’s Day Limerick Contest

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Announcing the First Annual metamorphosism.com Valentine’s Day Limerick Contest, which is the third contest of its kind since we also had the Feral Living Valentine’s Day Limerick Contest two years ago and last year, which I see the Internet gods have been kind enough to leave online, so far.

Rules:

  • You may enter as often as you wish

  • Leave your entries in the comments to this post
  • Deadline is Valentine’s Day, 14 February 2004
  • Winner gets a Bug button if they want one, as well as admission to the pantheon of past Valentine’s Day Limerick Contest Winners

More rules:

  • We did philosophers last year… let’s see… entries this year must include a reference to a well-known psychiatrist/psychologist, or a parasite (Latin or vernacular names okay).

  • Extra credit for Tolkein reference.

Candy hearts courtesy of Acme Heart Maker.

Bug buttons/badges

The Bug buttons are here. If you want one, send me an e-mail with your mailing address and how many you want.