We’ve Got To Find A Way To Bring Some Lovin’ Here Today

Tonight, the Science Channel re-reruns the remastered Cosmos. I’m exhausted from a long day of terrorizing the unsuspecting and caring for several of you mad charmers. If I get especially lucky, I might get to Nair my mustache. I’ve been so busy every pass by a mirror reminds me of Snidely Whiplash. Which also reminds me: what kind of insult is “Get a horse”?

This morning, my brilliant stepmommy Darla, two years younger than I am and twice as feisty, asked my opinion on Guardian columnist Polly Toynbee’s bluntly titled Narnia represents everything that is most hateful about religion. I had to think it over while my co-workers rudely asked me university-related questions. Fortunately, someone came around the cubicle wall with giant leaves of paper so orange everyone who saw it recoiled, then touched it to see if the color stung.

It’s a good thing Toynbee’s throwing this hissy on the east side of the Atlantic, where it’s less likely someone would burn a cross on her front yard for terming Jesus’ resurrection “repugnant.” If you can imagine it, people express themselves in public without fear of – like – ammo and extensive physical therapy. Still, I used to have that right, and no matter that sacrificial figures appear in the mythologies of every people on earth, I’m not sure I have that right in America now. In fact, I’m not even sure I have the simple right to vote. Are you?

Free speech, no matter how cranky or offensive, is one of our most important rights and we defend it by speaking freely until everyone becomes accustomed once again to the idea that dissent is patriotic. Plus, actual discussion is really good for our brains. Our brains like it! Ask ’em! Thus, no matter how you feel about ammo, Jesus, movies and Carl Sagan, your opinion matters.

So’s your vote.

Please sign the petition

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Diode, Cathode, Electrode, Overload, Generator, Oscillator

Sometimes I ask myself the tricky questions like, “WHAT color is my HAIR?” and “Madame, though I could swear I was with you the whole time, I must know: where have you been since Friday night?” Well, who gets to be that rude with me and get away with all their teeth? I mean, besides Siobhan and Daria, and Miss Sasha, Trout and LaLa, Anya and Corinne. Auntie InExcelsisDeo, Darla, all my cousins and anyone who’s ever been my friend? Guess that leaves me.

Tata: Have you looked at our head?
Tata: What’s wrong with our head?
Tata: In case you hadn’t noticed your hair has oxidized back to its natural colors.
Tata: What?! You are blind, lady. That’s red.
Tata: Your nails are red. Your hair is brown.
Tata: Lying bitch! That’s a subtle red, with less subtle red running through it.
Tata: Listen Helen Keller, that’s brown hair! If you don’t do something about it I’m turning you in at the hair salon for punitive coloration. With extreme prejudice.
Tata: Okay! Okay! But I get to pick the color!
Tata: No, you get to shut up and pick socks.

Izzat so? I guess that’s better than nothing because today I wore hospital-issue slipper socks. More than half my pairs have become solitaries and someone was using the laundry room every time I went down there all weekend. Tempers flare when a tenant leaves laundry in the sole washing machine. I’ve got to buy myself a washer before I stick a meat fork into the sternum of the next harridan who takes my clothes out of the machine during the spin cycle. Which reminds me: I have to shop for cutlery if I ever want to have guests over for PopTarts.

So my hair is an exciting comicbook red since I’d stocked up on boxed tints, and the Philomusica concerts are behind us. Did you miss them? The selections were fantastic fun for certifiable music nutballs like myself. You might have enjoyed many aspects of the evening. The church’s atrium was mostly glass, tile and giant potted plants. Whenever the heat came up the glass click-click-clicked, making the whole building feel twitchy. In the center of the lobby stood a holy water font – except that since I’ve never been Catholic, to me it looked like a giant marble egg cup and suddenly I wondered about pteridactyl eggs benedict. The Schubert pieces had a lovely waltzing quality that reminded me of ice skating and cocoa. The Mozart made me think, as Mozart always does, of secrets, clean sonic lines and grave danger. The choir was wonderful and if you can believe it, those crazy people left me in charge of the money after intermission. Don’t think you’ll find my pawprints inside the cashbox. I’m far too lazy for larceny.

On Sunday, I opened my vegetable door and a tumbleweed rolled by. I called Paulie Gonzalez, whose travel schedule almost certainly precluded vegetables green for the first time. We have good talks in the farmers’ market on Route 1. I have to go with someone else because driving on Route 1 makes my eyes ache, body-to-body contact with strangers fills me with rancor, and being poor makes me want to run screaming from retail outlets. Last week, Lupe and I went to Kohl’s with coupons and I had to have a serious talk with myself in the sweater section.

Tata: Sherbet colors. I’d toss my cookies but the whole place looks like someone already has.
Tata: Woman! You are going to pick four sweaters you only mildly loathe, and we are buying them!
Tata: Are you out of your mind? These are acrylics!
Tata: Guess what? You’re allergic to wool. You’re allergic to cashmere and angora. You’re allergic to anything shaved off a sheep or a goat, and remember what happened when you tried to wear genuine lapin?
Tata: Carrots still make me nervous.
Tata: You have enough clothes for a week, and a lost weekend at a costume party. Pick four sweaters. If you still haven’t yakked, maybe you could find a bra. And you need pants, unless you plan on ignoring a breeze and an arresting officer.
Tata: One frightfest at a time! Do you think I could pick out an aqua sweater and follow that with a 3D view of my butt? Not without a handful of Xanax and a badly behaved hypnotist!
Tata: Rock on!

Lupe’s presence made it possible for me to buy sweaters and two bras; Paulie’s invariably delivers to my kitchen a fresh and fragrant bounty. If only I could figure out who are the Good Fairies of Socks, Washer/Dryers and cutlery, I might narrow down who might be the Good Witch, the one who whacks me on the head and makes me gift-shop. I sure hope that doesn’t turn out to be me, too.

When Conversation Kills Again

Tata: Whatcha doin’?
Siobhan: Working!
Tata: Oh God! It’s like a million voices cried out and were silent!
Siobhan: It’s OK! I’ve moved on to filing my nails!
Tata: And now they’re making dinner plans…
Siobhan: Whew! That was close! I’d hate to be the destroyer of Alderaan inadvertently.
Tata: Right. You want your genocides to be deliberate and bloody. None of this pussified, nobody-noticed slaughters of innocents. Especially not at work! How will your enemies fear you properly?
Siobhan: My boss stopped by my cube a little while ago. He hasn’t done that in a month.
Tata: Did you snap your fingers a few times trying to remember where you’d seen that face before?
Siobhan: No, no. I’ve seen him, just not at my desk.
Tata: The snapping would have given you time to organize context clues. I believe he would appreciate that kind of logical thinking in his employee.

I can’t think or act like most other people. It’s a miracle I’m employed, really. Thus, I understand why Deborah Davis did what she did. I have questions, of course, about how any story is reported, about the facts of the case as I’ve read them, particularly about why a commuter bus drives through a federal facility on the way to other people’s jobs. Even so, I wouldn’t provide my ID in that situation either. The only point in asking for it is intimidation, and I want to offer as little assistance as possible in my own subjugation.

So yes, I have to go to Motor Vehicle Services Monday evening with all my documents and demonstrate I am who I say I am. I should bring the Fabulous Ex-Husband(tm) to testify that in fact, we are good and divorced. He would find that funny. I wonder if they’d stamp his forehead like deranged notaries. I’ve had two fights with the agency this week, and I’m sick of their “Because We Said So” and “After September 11th, We Can Make You Dance” attitude. They only get away with it because we let them.

So no. Don’t produce ID. Being law-abiding doesn’t make you a pussy. And being a pussy doesn’t make you safe.

More on the Verified Voting Blogswarm

Hello, Tami, the One True busting right on in again. Tata says that she plainly hasn’t mastered things like paying attention, so I should post these blogswarm thingies, and yet, she’s paying enough attention to know that the petition support HR 550 is very important, and you should go sign it.

Need supporting arguments? Check out Blanton’s and Ashton’s, or any of these Technorati Tags:

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The Car Is Dead. Long Live the Car.

Daria and Tyler gave me a car. They had a spare. I don’t know how you have a spare, except I now have two cars. One is My Mechanical Nemesis, which has been trying to die. I’ve mentioned this sleek disaster on wheels enough that people write to ask what new trick I’ve taught my pet convertible. A few months ago, the car began emitting the your-seatbelt’s-off-and-the-door’s-open bell every morning as I passed Johnson & Johnson’s interplanetary headquarters. This is the Clown Car Noise. This is the noise a car makes as Seth Green leans out the driver’s side, wails, “Whooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooaaaaaa!” and steers an English sports car with his feet. These are someone else’s sound effects. Then the muffler came a little loose. During my environmentally hostile 1.2 mile commute, I’ve been making such a racket that singing Little Pink Houses at the top of my lungs along with Jack Radio is less shiver-inducing than listening to the symphony of omens my car’s been playing. I made Paulie start the car so we could both lie down in a parking lot to laugh hard enough.

I didn’t want to say anything in the blog because I hate to jinx my further involvement with Motor Vehicle Services, which I jinxed more than a decade ago by getting divorced. An employee of Hell On Earth then told me, “No, you get to change your name once.” This did not stop me from choosing a series of names for myself and using them legally. My passport and every other bit of ID I possess has my fancypants last name. Attempts to get my driver license to match failed. Before Thanksgiving, my plan was to stay home, lock the door and talk to nobody. I enjoy talking to nobody, with the lovely exception of Larry, the little black cat bent on stealing your soul. He’s witty and urbane.

Tata: I’m not coming to your house.
Daria: You’re coming to my house!
Tata: I’m not coming to your house.
Daria: Come to Thanksgiving and get A NEW CAR!
Tata: Do you lack…pie?

As I put on my coat to leave their house, Tyler puts documents and a set of keys in my hands. He’s an Allstate agent. He says, “Don’t hit a deer until after it’s on your insurance. Also: your aunt borrowed the car and still has the papers.”

Someday, a doctor will step forward and say, “That’s when I knew, officer. I should have reached into my authoritative-looking medical bag and pulled out a prescription pad. I should have written her scrip for an All You Can Eat Valium Buffet. But I’m only human.”

The next morning, which is to say the Friday after Thanksgiving, I called NJCure because it didn’t seem strange that a business might be open for business on a business day. After six attempts to navigate the phone tree and leaving progressively more frustrated messages, I accepted the idea that my insurance company’s employees were all out increasing the Gross National Product, and I should suck it up for America and go get the paperwork. Auntie InExcelsisDeo promised to put everything in her mailbox, in case she left the house before I got there. I drove down Route 27 to South Brunswick, toward her very old home in the very old woods on Old Road. Where I turn, I found a detour sign and no recognizable detour. About a mile later on Route 27, I pulled over and called her house. The machine picked up.

Tata: Oh Auntie! Is there…maybe…something you neglected to tell me? Your street doesn’t seem to be where I left it. Did your street move and leave your house behind?

When I turned around, which is the polite way of saying when I took my life in my hands by crossing two lanes of traffic in a vehicle SUV drivers don’t stop to pick out of their grilles, I found a strange bald pre-construction spot, and Auntie’s house no longer surrounded by woods hundreds of years old. I felt sick. I collected the documents from the mailbox, rang the doorbell, got no answer and couldn’t leave fast enough.

Calls to NJCure on Saturday didn’t help either. Monday morning, I finally got a human on the phone. The human asked lots of questions I mostly couldn’t answer, like how many cylinders my new car has. I did not offer to go outside and count, but after that conversation, I could now make a beeline for Motor Vehicles, and I did.

Their system was down. I registered my car and got new plates. I could not change my address. I was given a slip of paper with a phone number on it, like MVS was selling me a used washer/dryer. Reasonably victorious, I went to the university’s parking department, where I paid $4 for a new parking sticker. While I was there, I thought I might pay for my 2006 parking “privileges” – which in New Brunswick is a viable defense in a homicide case, and if someone steals your parking space, no jury will convict you of assaulting him with a crowbar, and the jurors would know because they had to do the same thing on the way in. The nice man at the counter said that went on sale on 1 December. I said, “You charged me $4 for a new sticker I can use for 3 days before I need to buy another?” He giggled nervously.

In the meantime, I discovered Daria and Tyler hadn’t renewed the registration after July, so with or without the paperwork, I’d been driving around in a forest of moving violation tickets, if caught. Perhaps that’s where the woods went. It is extremely important to note that driving the new car is a pleasure compared to driving the car that was trying to die. My stomach is not in knots. I arrive at my destinations without a hint of Mellencampiness. There’s no frost on the inside of my windshield. Okay, it took me two days to figure out how to turn off the windshield wipers but since I know Daria never reads manuals I bet they were on the whole time she drove it.

I have two remaining issues:

1. It’s white. I – forgive me – am Frau Blue Car. [Lightning strike, thunder cracks, horses whinny, yeah yeah.]

Siobhan: Except for the fact that it’s white, it is a very stylish car.
Tata: Paulie says we should take it into the shop and make it all artistic by gluing stuff to it. I laughed so hard I snorted when I thought of pulling into Tyler’s driveway with my car covered with art.
Siobhan: Oh, yeah, stuff glued to a car. That’s not tacky. Well, unless it’s elbow macaroni painted gold. That’s very elegant.

While I contemplate the idea that one good rainstorm might transform my automobile into a shiny side dish or a pedophile’s dream ride, my other problem is terminology.

2. I’m a Jersey chick.

Trout: What kind of car is that? A Trans Am?
Tata: A Grand Am.
Trout: It’s a Trans Am! Admit it!
Tata: …Grand Am…

I’m telling!
Tata: Trout keeps saying Daria gave me a Trans Am. I say it’s a Grand Am, because if it were a Trans Am I would have to buy hairspray and crack my gum.
Siobhan: Can’t we call it a Trans Am? That would probably drive Paulie nuts. You can’t chew gum – you have braces.
Tata: Ergo, it must be a Grand Am. Did I just say “ergo”?

Another Glimpse of the Madman Across the Water

Johnny and his hot veterinarian wife would have been living the high life in New Mexico all this time were it not for one wriggling fly in the financial ointment: the old house, it would not sell!

I.

Accursed New Hampshire house to close tomorrow. All pieces seem to be in place. Seems too good to be true. LIke the other three times we thought we had a buyer. Crossing fingers. Gobbling tranquilizers. Praying. Actually honest to God praying. I don’t even know to whom, but I’m praying.

Don’t worry, sweetheart. God wants you to wear silk bowling shirts to work! Well…? Is that fucking house sold or what?

II.

The round table assembles at one your time, three our time. These things can be time-consuming, so who knows when we’ll get word. The wife’s dad Big A, the ex-Marine, is there on our behalf to kill some people if need be. This is going to be a long day. The Longest Day, you might say. That had Marines in it, too. I feel pretty sure that the wife’s dad could beat up my dad, a milktoast MP in Japan after the war was already over, and not even man enough to come home with a tattoo. Jesus. What time was it again?

Darling, three my time is one your time. So is it three my time or your time?

III.

It’s like the survey where they ask the young guy do you think the problem with youth today is ignorance or apathy, and he says I don’t know, and I don’t care. I never was good at math.

Don’t kid yourself, sister. We all know that ONE LESS house = MORE Armani for Johnny. That’s all the math a pretty girl like you needs.

IV.

THe[sic] house back East sold. It will be nice to see what paying one mortgage is like. As God is my witness, I didn’t know what I was going to do if this sale didn’t go through. NOw[sic] I don’t konw[sic] what I’m goign[sic] to do now that it has. But I must say, I prefer the second problem. GOd[sic] help me.

A triumph of the American pharmaceutical industry: the house sells and Our Hero lives to make crosseyed typos another day!

Monday, Siobhan told me I’d make an excellent real estate agent. I don’t need another job. No, I think what I need is a more accommodating doctor with a chemical bent.

Yes, I said bent. You heard me!

Siobhan: …remember back when I wanted to be a webmistress in 1996? When it was all new? And I told my manager that I knew how to make a web page?

S: I can do it, here’s a URL for my personal web page “All Siobhan, All the Time.” Just don’t click on the word “Somewhere,” that’s a link to the naked women.
Manager: OK, I’ll check it out.
(Five minutes later, Manager, with a face the same shade as a ripe tomato comes rushing over.)
Manager: I thought you were kidding!

Tata: That NEVER gets old!
Siobhan: I know! And it’s 9 years ago, already!
Tata: Now tell me the one where we sat in cribs in a punk poetry club and almost died on the Pulaski Skyway!
Siobhan: Can’t I instead tell you the one about where you protested at a cable station and played kickball while wearing a clown nose? It’d be funny if I told you about it because I wasn’t there!
Tata: Will Medicare pay for visiting nurses and a therapeutic raconteur?

HR 550 – It Matters

Hi, there, Tami, the One True, here. I’ve been asked by Tata to put up a guest post for the increasingly popular blogswarm about HR550, the Voter Confidence and Increased Accessibility Act. She has asked me to cross-post my take on it because she is – and ) quote – “small and covered with fur”. So, without further ado, I submit my posting about Verified Voting and the Voter Confidence petition.

hr550
If we can’t feel confident that our votes are counted, and counted correctly, can we really feel that we have a voice in our own government? If we aren’t sure that our votes go to the people we intend them to go to, them who is our representative democracy really representing? The answer is “not the individual voters”.

That’s why HR 550 is important. There’s a petition out there on Rush Holt’s web site to support HR 550. What is the bill all about? Some highlights, from the site:

The Voter Confidence and Increased Accessibility Act (H.R. 550) will:

* Mandate a voter verified paper ballot for every vote cast in every federal election, nationwide; because the voter verified paper record is the only one verified by the voters themselves, rather than by the machines, it will serve as the vote of record in any case of inconsistency with electronic records;
* Protect the accessibility requirements of the Help America Vote Act for voters with disabilities;
* Require random, unannounced, hand-count audits of actual election results in every state, and in each county, for every Federal election;
* Prohibit the use of undisclosed software and wireless and concealed communications devices and internet connections in voting machines;
* Provide Federal funding to pay for implementation of voter verified paper balloting; and
* Require full implementation by 2006

Other bloggers are posting about this important issue today. I’ll update the list as I find more. Feel free to read any one of them for more information and opinion.

Blanton’s and Ashton’s
The Center of NJ Life
Scrutiny Hooligans
Did I say that out loud?
The Opinion Mill
Xpatriated Texan
Blondesense
A Mockingbird’s Medley
Skippy the Bush Kangaroo
Daily Kos (registered Daily Kos people, please recommend this diary)
Pam’s House Blend
Shakespeare’s Sister
Brilliant at Breakfast

Read up, and please, sign the petition.

If It’s All I Ever Do This Is Your Song

Tom’s and Mom’s choir has two concerts this weekend. I transcribe the flyer. Getting out and taking in some fine seasonal music does a body good. Support the arts, mofos.

Philomusica and Dennis Boyle, Music Director, present

A Winter’s Gift
Music from 2 Young Geniuses

Mozart
Regina Coeli, K.276
Vesperae solennes de confessore, K.339

Schubert
Magnificat
Mass in C major (Opus 48)

with chorus, orchestra and soloists

December 3, 8 p.m.
December 4, 4 p.m.

St. Bartholomew Church, East Brunswick, NJ
tickets and information: (888) 744-5668
info@philomusica.org

Adults $18
Seniors and students $16
Children under 13 $9

Remember the horror that was Flashdance, and Jennifer Beale’s little monologue about going to classical concerts? She says something like, “And then Daddy, who somehow never turns up in this story even though I’m supposed to be just old enough to get a second set of teeth, said, ‘If you close your eyes you can see the music.'” Horribly, this is the elegant truth for a lot of people, including me. I close my eyes and see shapes and forms and dancers and think of Martha Graham in those odd jersey tubes that made it to off the rack in the eighties. Sometimes I knit, draw pictures or shoot spitballs at irate teens because I’m so mature. When my brother, sisters, respective spouses and kids pack a pew and lightning fails to strike we have an excellent time. Once all of us did the wave. For us, choir concerts are serious business and wild fun.

Join us and see the music yourself.