Seriously???

Posted on 12:12 AM
A naked woman holding a dead pig as a piece of art? As noted in this article, artist Kira O'Reilly did just that as a display and then said: "The work left me with an undercurrent of pigginess, unexpected fantasies of mergence and interspecies metamorphoses began to flicker into my consciousness."

That's probably one of the oddest comments I will read in quite some time. No doubt attention like this is exactly why she said it.

A No Good, Very Bad Night For Honda

Posted on 8:09 PM

Cleave is right when he says that things are always just a bit nutty around me. I don’t quite understand why that is, and in fact when I hear people describe me, I often feel like I sound as though I were a compulsive liar. But I’m not. Scouts honor.

Honda hasn’t been included in some of the last few entries—so I feel I have ‘some ‘splainin to do, Lucy’. (uh, silly reference to I Love Lucy if you didn’t notice).

Awhile back, after poor Honda and I had already been in a very bad wreck, I was on my way to a dinner party. It was evening on a highway in Santa Monica, and I was being followed (by about twenty minutes) by two of my dear friends, Britt and Josh.

As I neared my exit, my engine’s waving idle grew worse. The bent hood started flapping a bit. The breaks began to feel weaker. Heat began pouring off the engine and onto my lap. Traffic was slow—one, two, three seconds, break. One, two, three seconds, break. They worked. Slightly

One, two, three seconds, break…….break….BREAK

uhh….no breaks….uh….. I’m dead.

I watched my car slowly float on the freeway and my heart lurched into my throat while my stomach landed near my ankles somewhere. I threw the car into park again because I still hadn’t figured out that whole emergency break thing. Yes, my transmission was not thankful.

Instead of throwing it into park, however, I’d thrown it into reverse.

I began to roll backwards. Prayers were flying up as if they were rockets on the fourth of July. I may even have promised to become a missionary. Again. I closed my eyes—surely I was about to become the slice of turkey in a car sandwich AGAIN. By sheer squinting and wincing and praying no no no…..I stopped. I thought I hit the car behind me, but he just looped around me and kept going.

Oh God, I thought, how am I ever going to get to the side of the road WITH NO BREAKS? Crossing five lanes of rush-hour traffic?

While changing lanes I coasted toward the car in front of me whose lights were blaring red. Then threw the car into park again.

“I hate you,” I heard my transmission hiss at me.

I made it through the next three lanes but I don't know exactly how it happened, since most of the time my eyes were closed- I was too scared to open them.

As I called for help, a large, unmarked truck drove up behind me. The sun went down. It was dark. I was on a freeway. And no one got out of the truck.

An inner groan rose up and forced itself from my lips as I waited to be killed. Nothing happened.

A man finally got out of the car, sauntered up to my window and asked “do you want help?”

Uh, no thanks. Just takin’ a breather. Just needed to sit here and beat my head against the steering wheel---don’t mind me.

He seemed confused. He shrugged, walked off and then went and sat in the truck for awhile. Odd.

I’ll skip the grisly details but Honda and I finally got off the freeway. Britt and Josh, like true heros, followed the tow truck and came and picked me up. We went to the dinner party while Britt relayed her own bad news. Josh had some too. It was looking like a no good, very bad, night. For all of us. It would soon turn out to be a worse night for someone else.

While walking up the street to the dinner party we heard the sound of a car coming from one direction. Then the noise of a motorcycle coming in the opposite direction.

Then right before our eyes:

The car drove over the motorcycle.

And the motorcyclist.

Britt and I screamed.

The man survived, fortunately.

It was definitely a no good, very bad night. But certainly more so for the motorcyclist than any one of us, that's for sure. And that, people who read this, is one of the reasons Honda is a little rough around the edges. She’s been through stuff.


Clooney, B-ball and Football

Posted on 7:33 PM


Ran into this guy playing basketball on the lot yesterday....

And football.

At the same time.

Odd.

This Is One Issue That I've Always Been Passionate About:

Posted on 10:19 PM
It's just not funny at all.

Much good work has been done on behalf of the distressing issue of international child sex-trafficking and pedophilia. This article highlights a few new tactics of predators of which I was unaware:

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/world/AP-Asia-Pedophile-Havens.html

More discussion of this problem: (and this has happened FAR too often with the U.N.)

http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/world/international-congo-democratic-prostitution.html

Big Hollywood Star My A---...Oh Whoops. My Bad.

Posted on 8:48 PM

So I'm sitting here doing work in my cubicle and a woman comes up and says "Do you know where the (mumble) deposition is being held?"

"The what deposition?" (ok, so the exact name of the deposition meant nothing since I don't know where anything is anyway--I'm a researcher)

"The deposition...the...." she seems flustered. The woman in the office next to me pops her head up and directs her where she needs to go.

Another guy comes to my desk, seemingly flustered as well. "Do you know where [insert name of Big Hollywood Star (B.H.S.) here but I can’t say for liability reasons] is?" he says.


(Shortly after I wrote this the first time my cubicle was flanked by security guards , so i decided it was probably safer to just leave out the name. You'll get the gist anyway.)

I just stare at him. I then smile awkwardly, trying to feel him out for the punchline. He can't be serious. I give him a “you’re kidding me right” look? Oh yes, BHS is right under my desk with Brad Pitt. But he's busy tying my shoe (sarcasm in case you couldn’t tell). I'm about to start laughing at what I finally determine must be a joke when he adds:


(urgently) "I'm his manager. Do you...."

Oh crap. He’s serious.


The woman next to me pops up again and says:


"He's in there," and points to the deep-voiced lawyer's office behind me.

"Seriously?" I ask her, remembering the three men who had just walked past my cubicle. "I only saw a furry-looking guy who nearly looked homeless."

"No, that's not him. That was just another lawyer. He was the ……[gives a physical description of him]."

Oh. Guess I should clean up my cubicle if we’re going to have such interesting visitors. I’m pretty sure when those men walked by I was feeding gumballs into my face from a crumpled plastic bag.

I practically work in a circus. Shortly after the woman next to me said that a small, curly-haired man came up to my cubicle again (I'm not the concierge!) and asked me:


"Excuse me, do you know where the ladies room is?"

I burst out laughing. I couldn’t help it. I’d never had a man ask me that before. Then:

So did he.

"I guess I should let you ask these questions," he turns and says to an even smaller woman whose face then stuck out from around the corner.

"Yes you should," I said.


Through the eyes of D....

Posted on 12:59 AM

She’s a ray of sunshine in her own, spastic, messy, turbulent way. At eight years old and a wiry 40 pounds, my little neighbor “D” never ceases to make me laugh. Or cry. Or hold my head in anxiety.

Yesterday we spent the day together, but unlike some days, it ended poorly. Her mother is a disaster. I just don’t know how D will make it to her 18th birthday. Or her 9th for that matter.

It began, like many good things, with a mess. While I tried to find places for the two of us to go hiking, D decided to color with the set of kid-type oil pastels we gave her months ago. She takes the large sticks and smears them into colors all over pages that usually say things like, “I love you,” “I’m sorry”, or “Our day at the bich”. Meaning, our day at the beach.

Shortly after I found the location she sat down next to me.

“I colored the grass all different colors.” I smiled at her pixie-like face and the drawing of the rainbow-colored grass.

“Cause when grass gets wet, it turns all sorts of colors you know.”

Of course.

Then:

I look down at her white shorts. They are now the color of the multi-colored grass. Oh crap. So I tell her to go wash them off. She does. Then promptly pulls out her bottle of apple-scented anti-bacterial gel and squirts it all over her shorts.

“Cause crayons got germs too, ya know.”

I guess I know now....


A few minutes later she found a shoe cleaner bottle with an attached scrub brush. She sat on the porch scrubbing her shoes, “This thing works really well on shoes…” she said. As I return from throwing away trash I noticed she had moved on from her shoes to her shirt. Vigorously rubbing the large plastic, now brown-with-shoe-dirt scrubber against her chest, she adds “And it’s pretty good on shirts too.” We then had to have a discussion about why shoe cleaners are not multi-purpose items.


That didn’t stop her from making the apple hand-sanitizer a multi-purpose item, however.


While I load up the car, she decides to pour the gel all over the kitchen table….her shoes…basically anything with a surface. Somehow, in a matter of seconds, the white shorts are now brown again. Everything smells like apple, and is, unfortunately, just a bit sticky.


We get to the location where we were going hiking, hoping that a 50 foot waterfall would be at the end of the trail like the website said. Instead we find a vast canyon full of large, hot, boulders. And weeds. Lots of weeds. At one point, as were scrambling through the brush (attempting a “short cut”) in between the high ridges of a dirt-walled canyon, I realized, ‘if someone wanted to store a dead body somewhere, this would be a prime location.’ Just as I’m thinking about D and I bound, gagged and slightly dead in a bush somewhere in this god-forsaken semi-wilderness I hear her say:


"Don't worry about us gettin through this, I have to put up with this stuff every day.”

What? I'm crawling on my hands and knees through what looks more like a deer-run than a "secret" trail, like D claimed. I stop to listen to her.

“Yeah, all these weeds and hikin’…I sure know my way around cause I go fishin here all the time with my dad.”

I stared at the dry-as-a-bone ground and squinted, not sure how to respond. It was then that I wished I were the therapist instead of my sister.


D’s dad has been dead for over two years. And she certainly doesn’t go hiking through dry riverbeds and dusty canyons every day to catch….is she kidding?....fish.

One of the first things I read in the paper today was “Hizbollah Declares Victory” over the potentially tenuous ceasefire brokered by the U.N. Meanwhile, Bush declared, according to Reuters, that: “Hizbollah suffered a defeat in this crisis".

Maybe D isn’t the only one who sees things just the way she wants to. I know she isn’t. I can listen to the completely erroneous things she says and think to myself, ‘you’re a compulsive liar and need to learn how to speak the truth!’ Or I can brush it off as child-like innocence gone a little cock-eyed.

What I can’t seem to dismiss is the fact that even in the silliest things she says, there is sometimes a bit of truth if it is put into the proper context. Grass does look like it turns different colors when light glances off the water and seems to change the shade. Maybe crayons do have germs. Maybe tables ought to smell like apple hand sanitizer.

She doesn’t go fishing in dry riverbeds with her dead father. But years ago, she did go fishing (in fact, that’s what they lived off of probably at the time when she was homeless) with him in areas full of spiny bushes and patches of trees.

From certain angles, Hizbollah has been victorious. From other angles, it has suffered defeat. It depends on your source.

I met a woman from Uzbekistan shortly after the massacre at Andijan. Some reports said a few people were killed. Others said many people were killed. Some people claimed that the bodies of the women and children in the village were dragged out of the city by government officials and buried in the countryside before any outside news services could cover what had happened. Others said no women and children were even injured. Very few reports sounded the same.

“So, which version of the story do you believe is the truth?” I asked her.

“All of them.” She said.

What I think she meant, and what I think I’m trying to say here in a long-winded way, is that though there are explicit truths, and inherent truths, and things that just are---there are also things that are just a bit fuzzy. They gain clarity depending on the angle from which they are viewed. They make us uncomfortable because we want the cold, hard, facts. We want clear, condemning evidence for anything before we believe it. But people like D live in that uncomfortable grey space that I can hardly stand. At times I think it is a detriment to her life. At other times, I wish I were more like her.


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