Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Hauswife's Hump-Day Haiku


There are two, because equal and opposite forces are required here. 

Today's theme is ...

GRAVITY

When pull comes to shove,
We accelerate our end.
John Mayer was right?!

GRAVITY II

It's so not my fault
Newton used Uranus.
Stop bringing me down!

—J.A.G.

If you want more of me on Twitter, @WarriorHauswife is where you should go.

Saturday, June 22, 2013

Overheard



INT. LIVING ROOM — EARLY EVENING

Boy, 8, maniacally plays "LEGO Indiana Jones 2" on the Xbox. Girl, 6, languishes next to him on the reclining leather sofa. They are siblings.

BOY
Do you have a boyfriend yet?

GIRL
I don't know.

There is a pause. The jingle of recently acquired LEGO coins emanates from the flat-screen TV.

GIRL (warily)
Do you have a girlfriend?

BOY (smugly)
I have two.

GIRL
Oh.
Another pause.

GIRL (wistfully)
I was in love, but he didn't know I loved him.

BOY
Oh. Sorry.

GIRL
It's OK. I don't love him anymore. But I think he still loves me ...

BOY
Look, I just got more coins!

GIRL
... and now someone else loves me because of him.

BOY
Do you love the new guy?

GIRL
No.

Long pause.
GIRL
If you tell Mom or Dad, I'll kill you.

BOY
Why the hell would I tell them anything?

If you want more of me on Twitter, @WarriorHauswife is where you should go.

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Hauswife's Hump-Day Haiku


I have many awesome qualities. I also have many lousy qualities, chief among them a lack of discipline. Much of what I do is unfinished, abandoned, eroded from my master plan and cast aside as life's detritus for a better person to salvage. 

Except I should be that better person. And so I write haiku every Wednesday (or Tuesday night — don't call me out on my lies, I'm too delicate for such indictments). Even when I don't feel like it  — like tonight. Even when I have no ideas. Like tonight. I don't even particularly like haiku. It can be hokey, though it can also be clever. Hokey haiku. HAHAHA.

I write other stuff, too, but this haiku business is non-negotiable for now. I have reasons. I hope the scales start to tip soon. This is no frivolous undertaking! They say a habit forms after 30 days. Now, does that mean 30 consecutive days, or 30 Wednesdays in a row, or ...

Today's theme is ...

DISCIPLINE

This grind, now reflex.
Willpower leveraged to ... hey,
Is that a Stella?

—J.A.G.

If you want more of me on Twitter, @WarriorHauswife is where you should go.

Sunday, June 16, 2013

The Guy You Can Count On

Dr. Spock would not approve.

The picture shown above is my dad and I, taken when I was about 6 months old and he was 19. We're in my grandparents' den (which was also our den, because we lived with them for a few years). My dad is letting me sample his beer.

In Pop's defense, this was the 1970s, when women regularly smoked their way through their entire pregnancies and rubbed Jack Daniels on a baby's gums when it was teething. What didn't kill the kids from this era made us stronger — or marred us for life. Jury's still out.

As proof that my dad was just going with traffic, here's an image taken during that same time period of my grandfather, about to present me with a sip of his Miller High Life ...


... followed by my Uncle Al actually handing over his libation to me, sitting in the EXACT SAME SEAT in my grandparents' kitchen (wait, doesn't every family have a "Ply the Baby with Booze" seat?):


I guess I shouldn't complain. I look relatively happy in all of these shots. I'm also partial to the hops now that I'm of legal drinking age, so God bless my relatives' inappropriate baby-sitting M.O.

But back to my dad. He wasn't the most patient of fathers. He wasn't the calmest of fathers. He wasn't the most fashionable of fathers:

Also:


Yes, it was the '70s. Still. Dad.

My father is what you call a Passionate Person. He reads everything he can get his hands on. He has strong opinions on politicians and sports and — well, on pretty much everything else. Every other person may be an asshole, depending on the time of day and which way the wind is blowing. His contrarian personality (and he will probably argue with me calling him contrarian) mandates that if you are driving him to the train station that you've driven to 50,000 times yourself, following the route you've already surmised is the best one based on years of commuting experience, he will question why you're taking that route and how you're driving and should you even be driving at all — how did you ever get your license?!

* * *

One of my favorite images of my dad is a New York Newsday cover shot from 1970. I had hoped my mom would be able to scan it and send to me in time for this post, which didn't happen because she isn't sure where it is. Anyway, it's burned into my memory, because I've seen it so many times: It shows my 18-year-old father (shortly before he actually became my father), black-armbanded* arm in the air, mouth wide open, hollering something about the Vietnam War to the reporters and photographers and assembly attendees and whoever else happened to be within shouting distance.

Sometimes that unbridled passion can veer into the cray-cray. He once tore all of the shelves out of the refrigerator after becoming enraged about some petty domestic miscarriage of justice. The two of us got into a huge fight one Thanksgiving because I dolloped the mashed potatoes on the wrong side of his plate — my dad yelled, I stormed out and up the stairs, and happy Thanksgiving.

When I was in high school, his van would race into the Rickel Home Center parking lot at 10 every night, blaring Led Zeppelin, to pick me up from my cashier's job, and when I'd complain he was embarrassing me, he'd just start playing air guitar and say, "If it's too loud, you're too old!" At my brother's wedding three years ago, he cornered the 3-year-old flower girl (not related to us) and screamed the lyrics of "Pour Some Sugar on Me" at her on the dance floor. Here is the photographic depiction of that incident:



There were other episodes (these are just the few that popped into my head within two seconds). We had some tough times in my teen years. Partly because I was the oldest, partly because he thought I had potential for ... something, I was afforded no slack. I was expected to do well, and to do well WELL. I once brought home an all-A report card, except for the B+ I got in gym, and all I heard about for days was the B+. He didn't lower the bar for me because I was a girl. My tears meant nothing. I was not one of those eye-batting minxes who had Daddy wrapped around her finger (or if I did, he made sure not to let me in on it). I was a failure at fatherly manipulation.

Of course, I now know it's because he always believed in me. Unwaveringly. He knew I could do anything. When I expressed doubt in my own abilities, he'd look at me not with sympathy or pity, but with a blank stare: It didn't even register with him that failing was a possibility for me, and I internalized that, developing a bizarre self-confidence that would have turned megalomaniacal if not for other external forces that filled me with the appropriate amount of humbling self-doubt. When he noticed I seemed to have a knack for sounding songs out on the piano, he couldn't afford to buy a brand-new Steinway to indulge my musical predilection, but he did salvage a beat-up baby grand with no legs from a local church and suited it up for me.

I know many of our clashes also materialized because I'm a lot like him. I've inherited his temper (my refrigerator shelves are still intact, but that day will come), his stubbornness, his seeming inability to back down when he thinks he's right. I yell more than I should. But I'm also ambitious like him. I work hard. I appreciate a good ribbing like he does, though he tends to beat it into the ground. When my parents are up in New York and my mom conjures a roast beef dinner, he'll still wink at me and tease, "Not THERE!" when I position the mashed potatoes on his plate, because he now thinks the Thanksgiving incident is ABSOLUTELY HILARIOUS.

Sometimes I still don't get my dad. I'm still trying to determine why he freaked out when I served a HoneyBaked Ham on Christmas Eve a couple of years ago. But what I do get: He's always there for me when I need him, even though he's 1,312.2 miles away. I can count on him, and I trust him probably more than anyone else on Earth. I'm pretty sure I could kill someone and end up on his doorstep and he'd take me in BEFORE asking questions (not without harsh consequences, but still). He'd know what to do. Or at least he'd make me think he did, which is just as important when it comes to talking me off the ledge.

He has forged a special relationship with my children over the expanse of the Eastern Seaboard through regular visits up North and weekly phone calls. While my mother and I share the same disdain for phone conversations (i.e., it is a functional technological necessity in which information is relayed and received in as short a period as possible — I'd rather talk in person), my dad effortlessly transitions from a full day of conference calls to gabbing with my kids for an hour about their soccer games or piano lessons. He loves his family more than anyone I know, and he makes sure this is reflected in lengthy phone conversations.

In a few days, he'll be flying up to New York to whisk my kids off for a month to Camp Grandma and Grandpa in Florida. In a few days, I'll start to feel that dread of knowing I will be several states away from my young children for an extended period of time (until I join them in a couple of weeks). But that dread will dissipate when I see the three of them disappearing through airport security, my dad pulling a sparkly wheeled Cinderella carry-on behind him while my kids happily eat the Skittles he just bought them for lunch at the airport newsstand. I know they're going to be OK, because they're with him.

One of my favorite pictures from my brother's wedding is one of my dad and I taking a break from the ongoing festivities near the coat closet (an excellent hangout if you're ever at a fancy event, btw). I'm holding onto a Labatt Blue for dear life, while my father whispers something conspiratorial in my ear, which probably involves me getting him another drink without my mother noticing.


We had a fantastic time at that wedding. Our clan's not a huggy-kissy bunch; I can't remember the last time any of us said "I love you" out loud. That's just not our thing. But when we're together, we make the most of the time we have. Those words are able to remain unsaid, because they're understood.

Attending familial get-togethers (weddings, summer barbecues, even funerals) often replenishes our sense of self. It extracts something out of the nostalgia and injects us with the wherewithal to face the changes in our current lives. That could come from remembering a time from our childhoods when we felt especially happy and secure, or it could come because we remember what we wish had been different — or what we wish we had done differently.

These assemblies also give us the chance to reflect on the things that don't change. In the picture from my brother's wedding, my dad's still got his arm around me. Just like he had it around me in the picture that started this post. I can hold my own beer now. But he's still there. He's not going anywhere.

If you want more of me on Twitter, @WarriorHauswife is where you should go.

P.S. I love you, Daaaaaaad (ssssshhhhhh).

* It was an American flag armband, not a black armband. 'Murica!

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Hauswife's Hump-Day Haiku

Chaseykroyd Jon Snowden defend 'Murica against the Walter White Walkers.

Today's theme is ...

SPIES LIKE US

Move the NSA 
Back one in the alphabet.
Damn. That made it worse.

—J.A.G.

If you want more of me on Twitter, @WarriorHauswife is where you should go.

Sunday, June 9, 2013

Bye Bye Stagnation!



The Everly Brothers wouldn't necessarily be the first group to pop up in "Shuffle" mode on my iPod (in fact, they won't pop up at all, because I don't have anything by them on there), but like country music, tunes from this era are slowly infiltrating my playlist. I recently started relistening to "Bye Bye Love," a song I heard often enough as a kid on the oldies station. I had always thought it was kind of treacly and simplistic, like other music from that time period (you can't find another word other than "baby" to rhyme with "baby" — really?!), but the more I listen to it and realize the context in which this song (and others like it) were written, the more I appreciate its effortless emotional impact. 

I haven't played the guitar since shortly after college. I remember inviting a friend from work over to my apartment and we sat on my bed and played "Wild Horses" by The Rolling Stones together and I don't recall playing much again after that. I don't really know what happened — it just ceased to be a priority, and I was never that great at it anyway, so I moved on to other things. Then I moved a couple of times and my instruments got packed away/misplaced/damaged.

I eventually dug out my old acoustic guitar, but it was missing two strings and I was too lazy to restring it. It's been sitting in the corner of my bedroom gathering dust (I also throw clothes over it, so that comes in handy), and it was kind of a shitty, cheap guitar anyway, so for my birthday this year, I bought myself a nice Fender acoustic-electric that I knew would motivate me to start playing again, mainly because it's pretty and black and glossy. 

The cover I did of "Bye Bye Love" is shown above. It's rough and I'd like to do more with it, but it's a start in my six-string therapy and I hope you enjoy it. Below I've added the original Everly Brothers version and another bizarre clip called "Bye Bye Life" from All That Jazz, which creepily gives us a glimpse into Bob Fosse's mental state. Or something like that. I don't know, you kind of have to watch it for yourself.





If you want more of me on Twitter, @WarriorHauswife is where you should go.

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Hauswife's Hump-Day Haiku

Burned in my brain forever.

If ever a Sisyphean task existed, it would be that of continually sending me invites to play FarmVille or SongPop or Words With Friends or the newest blight of Facebook, Candy Crush Saga. Cease and desist your solicitations — I will not answer these online entreaties. 

I kid, I kid! Well, not really. It's true I do prefer more tactile game play, with real-life human interaction, to virtual gaming. (Though is clicking a trackpad really much different than pressing down on a trapped, shrieking, plastic-bubble-enshrouded R2-D2? Just sayin'.) 


My reluctance to partake is not due to intellectual snobbery. If you saw the Internet ridiculousness I partake in when I'm screwing around for mental respite, you'd be ashamed for me, and to know me. It comes down to a) I don't need yet another oh-god-where-has-my-day-gone time suck in addition to Facebook/Twitter (the same reason I haven't gone near Pinterest/Tumblr/soap operas/porn), and b) I'm a video game addict.

I'm a child of the '80s, which means I grew up suckling on the teat/joystick of the Atari 2600. This resplendent wood-grained console (just four switches to Valhalla, people!) was considered more valuable than any family heirloom in the rec-room* curio. This is what the 2600 looked like, because I'm a type of microprocessor Pitocin, intent on inducing an insane midweek flashback:


This particular console also looked suspiciously like the Cablevision box from that same time period, which means "designer" James Dolan was obviously trying his hand at more than Little Feat covers:


When it comes to my nostalgia for this particular gaming system, I think Black Francis says it best:


I know, there are a lot of disparate links and vids and pics going on here. I'm appealing to the short attention span of Today's Young Person. I give the people what they want.

Anyway, after conquering the 2600, I moved on to the Atari 5200, then to the Nintendo**, on which I solved all three original "Mario Bros." games, much to the chagrin of the college professors whose classes I blew off to achieve such lofty goals. Flash-forward to 2009, when the Wii system entered my life (I bought it for my kids for Christmas, played it once, then broke my arm a week later). The Xbox infiltrated in 2011. This new little black box has mainly been co-opted by "Minecraft," complete with comforting New Age-y music to soothe a fragile mom's soul.

I can't help but gravitate to my roots, though. Today's theme, therefore, is ...

THE ATARI 2600

Let me console you:
All that Pac-Man and Q*bert
Gave you good callous.

—J.A.G.

If you want more of me on Twitter, @WarriorHauswife is where you should go.

* We did not have a rec room. But I had friends who did. I slept over their houses a lot.

** "Adventure Island" is the hardest fucking game ever invented, for ANY game system. I defy you to tell me otherwise.

Sunday, June 2, 2013

What I Learned From Running the Spartan Race


Cheers!

Last week, I promised I would have "awesome stories to tell" after this weekend's Spartan Race. There were lots of awesome stories, but I'd rather reveal what I learned through both practical race tips and Tony Robbins-esque life tips that will CHANGE YOUR LIFE if you choose to listen to me. Actually, these are probably all platitudes of sorts, but I have to write something this week, and this is all I've got.

You will not feel most injuries as you receive said injuries.
It's an unspoken rule of adventure races that there are so many distractions and so much adrenaline that you don't feel a damn thing while you're destroying your body. You more or less turn into Frank Langella at the end of The Ninth Gate, in which a horrified Johnny Depp watches as Langella's character Boris sets himself on fire and proclaims, "It's miraculous, I feel nothing  nothing at all!" Of course, about five seconds later he's in excruciating, agonizing pain. The clip cracks me up every time I see it. I'm not sure why.



When we finished the race, my friend Clay asked me how I felt. "Great!" was my instant, delusional reply. My Frank Langella moment started when I got home and took a shower and revealed all the gashes and bruises in places I didn't even know could be gashed and bruised:


As the evening progressed, I also realized I had kind of blown out my left hamstring and that I pretty much couldn't even walk. I had a hard time turning over in bed last night, because my whole body is just one big pile of hurt from head to toe. I know I'll really only have a day or two of this to get through — but can someone please go grocery shopping for me today, because I don't think I can push the cart or lift the bags on my own.

H2-ohhhhhhhh.
One of the more useful tips I gleaned from the last race is to drink a ton of water in the days leading up to the race, not the morning of the race, because you don't want to have to go to the bathroom while you're on the course for a couple of hours (more important for girls than for boys, because you boys can just do that whole peeing-in-the-woods thing. Yep, I have serious penis envy in that regard.).

This tip really works. I hydrated like a madwoman the whole week, and I really wasn't thirsty the entire course. I threw back a couple of cups at the two water stations along the way only because I wanted to keep myself hydrated, not because I really felt I had to. I didn't have to lug the extra weight of water bottles or one of those fancy CamelBak contraptions that a few other runners had because I BECAME A CAMEL. 

One myth I can put to rest, though: "They" tell you not to drink coffee or other caffeinated beverages before the race, because it will just dehydrate you. Fuck that. I drank ample coffee, hot and iced, that morning to wake me up, and I did just fine. I don't understand why THAT didn't have to make me pee, but whatever.

Stop, drop, and roll.
One of the last obstacles they throw at you with the finish line clearly in sight is the mud crawl under barbed wire. The crawl at Warrior Dash, which I did in 2010, was only a few yards you could tell the race organizers had half-assed it and that it was more for show than anything else.

The Spartan barbed wire, however, was some serious shit, literally and metaphorically. You had to crawl about the length of a football field uphill in the blinding sun through some foul-smelling stuff they called mud (it was not real mud, though it was something like mud, just much, much worse), under strands of barbed wire, with tons of sharp rocks to slice up your hands and knees thrown in for good measure.

I wasn't sure if I was going to make it to the end of this one when I saw someone ahead of me doing something unusual: He was rolling up the hill. I figured I'd try it, and once I started doing it, I was able to free my mind to think more closely about the science behind it. It made perfect sense: By rolling, you distribute your body weight evenly over the rocks so they don't press into your skin as badly, and you can also get some solid momentum with each roll.

It also helped to pretend I was Andy Dufresne in The Shawshank Redemption crawling through the sewage pipe, because whatever they made their mud out of smelled pretty awful; the combination of that stank, my exhaustion, and the heat brought me pretty close to hurling a couple of times. The thought of a sack of cash and Morgan Freeman meeting up with me in Mexico at the end got me through.

Take it one rock or tree at a time (THIS IS A METAPHOR THAT CAN ALSO APPLY TO REAL LIFE).
One of the things that race organizers do to break you is to throw curveballs at you to mess with your mind. This usually comes in the form of making you hike up a rather vertical slope of mountain to what you think is the top, only to find that you then have to climb up ANOTHER long-ass slope that is pretty much 90 degrees of rocks and bramble-infested trails, with no top in sight. This isn't even considered one of the course's obstacles it's just what you have to do to get to the next obstacle. There were lots of these mind-fucks.

The first time the sadists did this, I wanted to get all drama-queeny and sit down to have a good cry. But I took a deep breath and did it baby-steps style. I didn't look at the long trip ahead of me, which was too demoralizing. I leaned against whatever tree I was leaning against for traction, then made the next tree or boulder or flat rock patch my goal, even if it was just 10 feet away. I never looked up (well, maybe occasionally my curiosity got the better of me) and just kept plugging away until I reached the summit, replaying songs in my head like a delirious Joe Simpson hearing Boney M's "Brown Girl in the Ring" over and over in Touching the Void (which is an excellent movie of human endurance and spirit that you should see if you haven't).

Which leads to ...

It's usually not the physical stuff that will get you  it's the mental stuff.
I knew there would be a cargo net climb going into this race, because there usually is. I climbed one in Warrior Dash, so it was the least of my obstacle concerns.

However, the Warrior Dash cargo net was a dual-sloped contraption on an incline, like this:


As I approached the Spartan cargo net, my heart sank. It was a net extended straight up many, many feet into the air (no incline), with a only a flimsy cable at the top to use to hoist yourself over. The net shook as people climbed it. It looked more like this:


Of my many weaknesses, the worst one (though usually not one applicable to daily life) is my insane fear of heights. I couldn't get to the top of the Chichen Itza pyramid in Mexico because of it, and had to endure lots of later ribbing from my brothers, who scrambled up past me like spiders to the top. I'll never get my chance to redeem myself when I go back this January, since they've now sensibly closed the pyramid to climbing tourists. 

I get similarly nervous descending very high, very steep sets of stairs. If you want to reduce me to a withered, weeping mess, tell me the elevator from the food court to the first floor at Roosevelt Field Mall is broken and I have to descend that terrifyingly sweeping staircase. (Incidentally, I don't like escalators, either, because I used to work for the Mass Transit trade magazine and saw some horribly mangled feet from escalator accidents.)

I've conquered this fear in little ways over the years: jumping off a cliff in Jamaica (into water, natch), rappelling in Maine, the various Warrior Dash climbing obstacles. But this one got me, even with people standing at the bottom holding the net taut for me. It wasn't the physical part that did me in. I made it to the top of the net, clinging to the rope, one leg throw away from the other side. But I wouldn't do it. I sat up there, holding tight to my perch, trying to strategize each move I'd make to ensure I wouldn't plummet to my death on the other side.

In other words, like so many other things, I was overthinking it. A girl immediately to my right tried to talk me through it as she threw herself over the top, saying with unnecessarily great cheer, "Just pretend the cops are chasing you!" I didn't want to get into it with her that I dream of the day when I'm arrested for some petty crime where I haven't really hurt anybody but that requires me to spend a week or two in jail so I can sit in my cell and read uninterrupted. Even if I wanted to get into it with her, she had disappeared over the top already.

You will see a healthy amount of humanity at seemingly frivolous events such as Spartan Race.

One of the best things about these adventure races is that, finish or not, it's a feel-good day. They've got volunteers shouting words of encouragement at you along the way. At the end of the race, there's lots of music, beer, and general merriment.


The day before the race, my 8-year-old son had field day at his school. As you can see here, he really got into the spirit of things:


But what impressed me more than his blue-dyed Mohawk was his sportsmanship. During one of the races in which the kids were paired with a partner, he took off like a bullet at the starting gun. My son's pretty fast, so he was soon in the lead. Then he realized his partner was way behind at the back of the pack. He ran back to his friend, stayed with him at the butt the whole way, and even let him cross the finish line first when they got the end. He got a shout-out by the announcer for his efforts, which made me very proud and a little weepy.

I saw the same thing at the Spartan. There were a lot of people resting at varying points along the course, in various states of disrepair, and invariably, other folks who didn't know them would stop and ask, "Are you OK, bud?" or "Take a breather and keep going, you can do it!" At the more difficult obstacles, like the 8-foot wall, you were allowed to help each other out. Which makes sense, because most people couldn't make it over this without some kind of help*:


Some of the more athletic dudes stuck around and sacrificed their running time to help others over these things. One guy in particular in my heat would always show up like some kind of Spartan guardian angel to help those who needed it. He was a buff, burly guy who wore a T-shirt that said "Assassin" on it. He was clearly able to do this race in his sleep, yet he spent most of it helping everyone else do it. He was always at the walls boosting people up so they could grab the top.

When I was struggling with the rope climb, I was about to give up when The Assassin emerged out of nowhere, told me he'd hold the rope, and kept reassuring me as I tried to go hand over hand to the next knot. I didn't even get close to the top, but I felt motivated enough to try, instead of giving up immediately like I used to do in sixth grade gym class. His support gave me the drive to at least attempt every obstacle, even the ones I knew were never going to happen. When I saw many of the girls struggling with the tire pulls and pulley weights, I knew The Assassin was probably watching from the woods or wherever the heck he was hiding, ready to pounce upon my first sign of wavering I did those challenges like a boss. There is some Ukrainian workhorse in me after all.

At the end of the race, I saw him being helped down a hill by a couple of his pals. He was limping, nursing what was probably a twisted ankle from the muddy slopes that many competitors succumb to on the way down. I waved as I passed. I wanted to tell him that he was still The Assassin to me, but he was laughing with his friends. That guy was all right.

If you want more of me on Twitter, @WarriorHauswife is where you should go.

* I made it over every single wall, and there were lots of them sometimes with help, sometimes without (#HUMBLEBRAG).

NOTE: I do not know why the fonts in this post are all messed up, and I'm too tired to fix it, so be a Spartan and deal.