I had signed up for this year’s NaNoWriMo and finally
hatched what I thought was a great idea, but some (good) life circumstances
threw me off track in November and I didn’t get more than about 500 words
written. I’m keeping the idea in mind,
though, for a future project. It’s
called “101 Ways to Disappoint Your Mother” and it’s borne, in part, of my
experience losing my mother earlier this year – and no, it’s not quite as
snarky as it sounds. It in an
exploration of (mostly) female relationships: mothers and daughters, sisters,
friends – and how they define women. The story starts with an engagement in
post-WWII Alabama, and moves on from there.
I have a great deal to flesh out before I even share a lot more about
it, so we’ll leave things at that for now.
Let’s just say that it’s in no way a man-bashing book, nor is it a pair
of rose-colored glasses strapped onto a vaguely sappy memoir.
I’m not all about that!
My birthday was on November 15th. Early this year, my step-mom shared with me
that she was convinced it would be my best birthday ever. After my mom passed away in February, and
Ross struggled to find a better job (while I was still unemployed), that seemed
hard to believe. When Ross’s grandmother
died in the summer, it seemed even harder to believe.
But things started to change. Actually – things really began to change once
we completed the Great Race in September.
It was almost as though we’d accomplished both this huge physical and spiritual event. Our bodies were aching but we were so
incredibly proud that we’d done something that we never thought we could
do. I thought a lot about running as
it’s mentioned in the Bible, too. Paul
frequently refers to the Christian life as a race. It’s all about discipline and endurance. (If you’re doing it right, anyway!) Although I didn’t train properly for the
Great Race, I had a wonderful first-time experience as a runner and want to
continue (once my doctor gives me the okay).
Once we hit that milestone, life started looking up.
Our Disney vacation soon followed, and I can hardly begin to
explain how wonderful it was! The
experience definitely deserves its own post, which I’ll work on soon. After that, my husband sent me to the Pat
Benatar concert on my birthday with one of my best friends, Jaime. We were pretty much the youngest people
there, which I can only guess was quite soothing to Jaime’s “recently thirty”
mentality. Can I just tell you why I
have so much respect for Pat Benatar?
First of all, even though her life hasn’t been ideal (she married and
divorced quite young), she’s been married to the same man for nearly 30
years. She has two adult daughters and a
healthy relationship with them both.
She’s talented. She never got into the drugs and alcohol pop star scene. She’s more than a pair of legs and a
voice. I love that she’s always had a
heavy hand in writing her own material.
Her songs are more about female empowerment than about female
superiority, which I personally think is awesome. And she still sounds incredible. Unlike a lot of pop stars today, Pat Benatar
was never really gimmicky.
She sounds great without auto-tuning.
Ross would have gone with me, but he’d already committed to
a men’s weekend (with my blessing) before starting his new job within the
company. He’s still dreaming of his
ideal job, and I hardly blame him, but we’re both pleased that he’s now working
in Career Services, helping graduates find jobs, rather than trying to remind
former and current students that they do, in fact, owe the school money…even if
they didn’t complete their schooling. My
poor hubby probably heard the phrase, “What?
I didn’t sign nothing! I never
signed anything!” a dozen times a week a t least. That can be an incredibly frustrating job,
even for a perpetually sunny guy like Ross.
So things are looking up there, too.
We’ve gotten some other pleasant news lately but we’re not
ready to share those little details just yet.
I’m thinking of getting together via the interwebs with my old roomie Megs, who is one of the funniest human being on the planet. She has three kids, I have three cats. We both believe in God, but practice our faith differently. Megan is a vegetarian. I’m an everthing-I’m-not-allergic-to-a-tarian (which means I am, in fact, open-minded in regards to vegetarian cuisine. To a degree.) We went to college at Clarion. We’re both pretty cheesed off at the school right now for the retrenchment debacle, which has decimated all three of our fields of study and basically made us look like fools for choosing such “useless” majors. (psychology, theatre and English). Together, we’re kind of like generally-not-angry superhero comediennes. Maybe we’ll start a blog: The Bec and Megs Comedy Minute. It’ll just be flashes of our status updates. Kids and cats are funny on their own. Put them together and you get comedy gold.
Right?
We’ve also brought our outdoor stray into our home, too,
which is what officially brought the above housecat total to three. Freyja goes to the vet tomorrow. We’ve kept her in her own room for the past
week, to get the other cats acclimated to her and also to protect them in the
event she’s got fleas or worms (we suspect neither, but you can’t be too
careful. This kitty has been a stray for
at least a year, according to our neighbor, and cats, you know…just pick things
up.) She is a gorgeous girl, very gentle
and sweet-natured, and she’s never once scratched or bit either of us since she
started visiting us in August. Slowly we
worked up to picking her up and cuddling with her, which isn’t her
favorite. But she tolerates it without a
lot of fuss. She has a conversational
and very insistent meow, and she is affectionate and likes the infrequent belly
rub. She learned how to sit on command (yes,
really. Loki does it, too.) She takes treats directly out of my
hand. She has the most beautiful green
eyes lined with white fur and a gray pretty
face; she looks kind of glamorous. She
used the litter box immediately, leading me to believe that maybe she’d once
been a house cat. Who would ever want to
get rid of such a wonderful little girl?
Problem is, we think she might be preggers.
Leave it to us to have pity on the unexpectedly expectant
cat in the neighborhood, right? I guess
we’ll learn tomorrow if Tubbs, the fully-equipped, ugly-faced stray male who
sometimes lurks by our house, is gonna be a daddy. If it’s not him, I’m utterly stumped, since I
haven’t seen a single un-neutered male cat in our area other than him. Not since we found little Thor shivering in
the rain two springs ago.
It’s the Christmas season, but I don’t think the acknowledgement
of the Virgin Birth extends to local felinity.
Belated update - Freyja is not only NOT pregnant, but she was also apparently spayed at a very young age, thus saving us TONS of money. WHEW!
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