Monthly Archives: October 2009

WordPress Says So

Ever so slowly, I am unearthing the treasures of WordPress.

Maybe you’re a Blogspot user and you often find yourself wondering “Why can’t I [fill in the blank]?” in the midst of your blogging endeavors. You probably can [fill in the blank] in WordPress. It’s a little bit like baking your own bread: it takes a little more skill than buying a loaf at the store but the results are well worth the effort.

[ASIDE: WordPress has not paid me a dime for this endorsement. Damn them.]

One of my favorite recently-explored features is Stats. I’m just nosy that way.

For example, 132 people have viewed my blog since I kicked it off. (No, that does not include my own visits to the blog — WordPress says so.)

Search phrases that have led to my blog include: “south beach diet phase 1 recipes” and “sugar free pudding on south beach.”

I have been “protected” from 1 spam comment.

And then there is my favorite stat: referrals. This nifty feature shows me how people get to my blog. Predictably, most of my referrals come from my old blog, with Facebook coming in a close second.

But then I noticed three people who had reached my blog from a site I’d never heard of before. So I clicked on it.

Had a long-lost friend added me to their Blogroll?

Well, not exactly…

CamoMen

As it turns out, WordPress also has a feature called “Possibly related posts: (automatically generated)” and that feature, through the mystic cosmology of the blogosphere, felt that a particular post of mine was a second cousin to the above post and linked it at the bottom.

It seems that “Marquesate” is also an aspiring writer and also complains about not posting, and in the opinion of WordPress, that’s enough. It’s a match. We’re virtual soul mates.

I’m sure we’ll get along just fine. Although for as much as we might otherwise have in common, I can’t really relate to his recent divorce from “a lying, cheating b—–d who proved himself to be a ‘typical’ squaddie.”

Truth be told, I didn’t even know what a “squaddie” was — I had to look it up to make sure it was publishable on a PG-rated blog.

The crux of the matter is this: I had grandiose plans to expand my repertoire of gay military fiction with the epic saga of a young squaddie who overcomes initial fears to become a hero on the battlefield — well, probably not a squaddie because I’m not British and as they say: “Write what you know” — but any attempt I make now might be misconstrued as plagiarism. WordPress would testify against me.

Will I ever catch a break?

Never mind. Best of luck to you, Marquesate. I’ll graciously decamp to my usual children’s fiction and rom-com screenplays and try not to resent that you called dibs on the fertile soil of martial homoeroti¢a.

I owe you at least that much. We’re practically family.

WordPress says so.

The Ax

Yes, it came yesterday — as we knew it eventually would. Now we can stop dreading the possibility and start dealing with the reality.

And what better way to begin a job search than with a little unemployment humor.

All kidding aside, we trod this road before. Twice, in fact. My husband is — thankfully — a worst-case-scenario financial planner. Layoffs, schmayoffs. He plans for Chernobyl. We have an emergency fund. We can pay our bills. He’s done everything humanly possible to make sure we stay afloat until he can find another job.

“But, but, but —” says that nagging little voice, “What if he can’t find another job?”

Could happen. It’s a tough market out there.

When the first layoff came in 2001, it was totally out the blue. He’d had the job less than a year. We’d moved here — against my preference —just so he could take that job, for pity’s sake. We’d just bought a new car. We were three days from closing on our first house. P-A-N-I-C.

And God worked it out.

The second layoff was a little easier because we saw it coming. Uncomfortable, but still familiar territory. And if I learned a darn thing either time, it was: God is faithful.

Granted, when those layoffs came I was still employed and we had no children. In this third layoff, our circumstances have changed. God hasn’t.

I should probably be freaking out. But I just can’t work myself into it.  Whatever the outcome,  “I am still confident of this: I will see the goodness of the LORD in the land of the living.”

This might be a temporary phase. Maybe I can only stay philosophical until I’m faced with… showering in the neighbor’s sprinklers, for example. Fair enough and time will tell.

For now, I have laundry to do.

UPDATE: He’s back in the saddle again. And it only took 3 months…

Surely It Musn’t Be Love

Picking up where a left off as if over a month had not gone by since my last post…

[ASIDE: Yes, the self-flagellation about my non-blogging will continue until either a) I get my act together, or b) ... I get my act together... Whichever comes first.]

[2nd ASIDE: And yes, I realize I pepper most of my blogging with 1,728 ellipses per post. Yes, it's bad writing. What's missing? Profanities? Am I taking a cigarette break every time? Who knows? Maybe someday I'll stop... Maybe... Maybe tomorrow...]

As just one of the many filling stations on the Road of Random that is my daily thought process, today I pondered the inevitable question (at least if I ever have a daughter; I somehow doubt my sons will care): “How did you know Daddy was The One?”

Will I be forgiven for an answer as prosaic as: “Process of elimination”?

Ouch. That sounds so harsh. And unromantic. And just wrong.

But really, I would never have been able to arrive at the reality that is my life, namely marriage to this man:

On the Carousel

… without a journey through a wilderness of some who were most assuredly not said man.

I could not say with any truth that I dated “a lot.” I had way more opportunities than I ever took advantage of, which says more about my avoiding dates than any epidemic of nearsightedness among the guys I encountered. My default position was always, always to say “No,” which I would have re-thought if I’d had even a notion of how tough it is for guys to pose that request. But I didn’t know.

Instead, I lived by the dictum “Never date anyone you wouldn’t want to marry.” So I didn’t.

Couple that with the fact that I was always asked out by the most random guys on campus. A guy at work who thought it was cute to construct a portmanteau of my name plus the word ” scab.” I was asked out by at least two different men with broken bones. Casts and all. Wasn’t that Ted Bundy’s modus operandum? Or do I look like the Florence Nightingale type? A guy in my Astronomy lab group who… well, that’s as deep into the memory files as I care to dig.

And I was rarely asked out on a date, per se. In the mid-90s, I surmise, there was a coordinated and campus-wide campaign on behalf of male students to make it a little bit easier for them to ask a girl out on a date. By not asking her on “a date.” Instead, they developed a code.

Such as: “You wanna go grab some coffee?”

To which I always replied (truthfully): “I don’t drink coffee.”

And in my naivete, I never knew this was code for “Let’s go on a date.” I just thought those guys on the Hill were raging caffeine freaks who liked to tromp down to Arsaga’s, drinking lattes amid pictures of naked women with hairy armpits while I had studying to do.

Finally, my roommate explained it for me. And suddenly the skies opened and I knew my life would never be the same…

Well, not really.

Actually, knowing The Code just gave me contempt for every guy who couldn’t man up and actually ask.

I did eventually loosen up and stop saying “no” to every date on principle. I did not date often. But occasionally I lowered my guard long enough for dinner and a movie. I even — to my eternal shame — accepted a date with one guy to make another guy jealous. Not my finest hour.

I got to know guys who were, at the very least, considered — some more seriously than others.

Some of these prospects I disqualified for admittedly petty reasons.

Such as thick wrists. No lie. I waved off a particular guy (incidentally, a notorious “wife-shopper” within my circle) because his wrists didn’t taper enough.

Yes, I am (or was) that shallow.

Others had more serious flaws. Like being rude to wait staff at restaurants. I just couldn’t picture myself as an old woman sitting at a corner booth at Luby’s on a Sunday afternoon and listening to my husband bark at the waitress to bring his prune juice, the same way he’d been doing it for 56 years of marriage. Ugh. Next!

Another guy, the son of a family friend, thought that meeting me at my parents’ house for my weekly laundry stop qualified as a date. And that he could put his head on my lap while I waited for the whites. Ahem.

The beauty part is that casual dating allows you to be that picky. Drooling problem? Ugly tattoo? Criminal record? This is me, moving on.

Which leads us to the hero of our story.

He was probably the first man to honest-to-goodness, call me up out of the blue and ask me out. Points for the home team.

He wore cowboy boots with khaki pants. He asked me to dance.

Yes, I did know after one date.

The most obvious confirmation I had in those early months of our relationship was that we could sit in silence and be comfortable. In between the talking, eighty years of marriage is a lot of silence. It had better be comfortable silence.

He’s generous and considerate. He accepts me for all my flaws. He takes out the trash. He’s a wonderful father. He’s polite to waitresses. He has wrists.

If I could spare a thought for all those other guys who crossed my path when I was dating, I would hope each one found happiness with a woman who can appreciate him.

But I’m too busy thanking God for giving me the man on the carousel.

And showing me a few Mr. Wrongs so I can appreciate how wonderful my husband really is.

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