Category Archives: No-Take-Backs

Happy Birthday Biggest Sis!

HAPPY BIRTHDAY, KAREN LOUISE!!!

Birthday Girl

Birthday Girl

Animal lover.

Animal lover.

Free spiriting since 1967 ...

Free spiriting it since 1967 …

Much love from the only little sis wicked enough to publicly out your age.

 

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The Waffle House Epiphany

I’ve noticed how Waffle House is a thing here in Atlanta. Granted it’s from Atlanta, but still, its popularity surprised me when I first made the move (maybe because the one in Savannah had a serial killer vibe and a what seemed like a call girl call center in the parking lot). Clifford told me Waffle House was a high school hang out for him back in the day. A late night place to go for greasy food fast, sobering up any alcohol addled brain that wandered through its double doors. For me, IHOP was the It Spot in college and Hacienda was the place to be in high school. Regardless the exact chain, local eatery or bar, one always seems to unintentionally seek and find their own St. Elmo’s wherever they are.

Waffle House is not exactly St. Elmo’s for Clifford and me. The man just really likes breakfast and apparently waffles. That said, it has become “our place”. Which is weird and slightly sad that “our place” is Waffle House and not like Ruth’s Chris. But hey, 5 bucks a person is different than 50 bucks a person, so Waffle House as “Our Place” it is. Here’s the crux, it’s really about our time together there, to catch up on each other’s week, make fun of things we find ridiculous, and gossip about the people in our lives (sorry people in our lives) because we often have opposite widely ranging schedules. It’s not about the giant chocolate chip waffles being served (although for Clifford I think it might kinda be about the giant chocolate chip waffles being served …).

Regardless, it’s a moment where I get to slow things down, no TV, no Twitter, no emails, and just enjoy my husband’s company for 45 minutes straight. It’s where I get a chance to rediscover the little things. Like how he has one green eye and one brown. How frustrated he gets when people don’t understand the difference between cement and concrete. How his South African A’s are sounding more and more Midwestern these days. How fish is a side dish, not a main meal. His teary eyed soap box about how wrong and repulsive Americans’ love for sweet and meat is as I pour maple syrup on my bacon once again.

I also take stock of the qualities I never noticed before, after all these years, often times adding much clarity to our relationship and reaffirming the love I have for this man. Such as I did on this day a while back.

I rarely order waffles at Waffle House. Clifford will tell you that my eyes are bigger than my stomach. I sit down and contemplate a waffle every time, yet seldom actually order one. And every time, this exact conversation is had:

Me: I’m SO hungry. I think I might get a waffle this time.

Cliff: Don’t get a waffle. You don’t really want a waffle. You just think you do.

Me: Not true! I think I really want a waffle today.

Cliff: No. You’ll order the waffle and eat half of the waffle then complain the entire day about how sick you are because of it. Don’t get a waffle.

He’s right. This happens every time. And even though I’m well aware of this, sometimes a Waffle House waffle just needs to be ordered and eaten (even if partially so). I ordered a waffle on that day. This is what hit me.  The way Clifford and I each approach eating our waffles is the way we each approach living our lives.

I order a plain waffle, a clean slate that needs my personal touch to make it truly great. My plate is set before me and without hesitation I begin. I throw as much butter at it as I can, then I pour the syrup. I’m not a huge syrup lover actually, so I go a little light on that, but I do “draw” faces with it as I pour because it makes me smile. Sometimes I even laugh out loud at the funny faces I create. Clifford hates this. Then I start grabbing pieces of the center because it’s the best part! I’m actually tearing at the waffle not really cutting it. It’s aggressive. Next I mix in eating an edge because I still have to save a little bit of the best part for last. I throw in a swig of juice here or there. Halfway through, I haphazardly add more butter and more syrup before randomly, but enthusiastically, tearing off another piece of waffle to pop into my mouth. The waffle is loved, but messy. It’s a messy love. It’s chaos, but it works for me.

Clifford orders a chocolate chip waffle. His plate is set before him and he immediately sets it aside. He will eat and drink everything else – the eggs, the bacon the smothered and covered hashbrowns, his two cups of coffee, anything and everything else placed before him is consumed but his waffle. Once he’s ready for it, he slides everything away and places his waffle neatly front and center. It is time for the waffle to have as much attention as the rest of his meal. Clifford smoothly and evenly spreads a touch of butter across the entire thing. He then carefully pours the syrup over his waffle in a clockwise motion creating a spiral from the crisp outer edges to the softer center. He does this twice. Then he picks up his knife and fork and begins methodically dissecting his waffle into precisely four equal parts. He then rotates his plate, picking one fourth and systematically dissects it into fourths as well. Finally he puts one perfectly cut (with a SUPER dull butter knife mind you) piece of waffle into his mouth. After one larger fourth has been eaten, he rotates his plate, moving onto the next and proceeds to dissect it into smaller fourths the same way he did with the first and so on and so on until his plate is clean. He never adds extra butter or syrup having anticipated just the right amount needed for his enjoyment, factoring in the waffle element absorption rate and level of sweetness to satisfaction ratio. It’s meticulous, but it works for him.

Watching him do this the other day, looking back and forth between our two plates, is when I had my epiphany. We are the way we eat. There’s no wrong, an approach is an approach, but the way Clifford and I eat is why we work so well together. We balance one another. When you’re someone who dives in head first, you need someone who carefully takes the steps instead to make sure you haven’t cracked your head on the bottom of the pool.

At least on that day, I couldn’t think of a clearer illustration.

Me

Me

Cliff

Cliff

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Happy Birthday Mom!

Happy Birthday to the best mom in the world! Younger than the Civil War and older than the Internet… You deserve the world!

The Birthday Girl

The Birthday Girl – such a pretty little lady. 

Love you, Mom!

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Arrow Versus Gold Rush

If you do not watch Arrow or Gold Rush, this may not be the post for you. You’ve been warned…

Those who know me well know I am a HUGE Arrow fan. I binged the first two seasons just prior to the season 3 opener and I was SO hooked. It was the type of show I’d been missing from my television lineup.  I was never a comic book girl, but I’ve thoroughly enjoyed every Michael Keaton and Christian Bale iteration of Batman that’s been produced. I still think Gene Hackman’s Lex Luthor is probably THE BEST comic book villain portrayed in a theatrical release EVER.  And I always look forward to whatever DC or Marvel creation is being brought to the big screen next. So though I wasn’t necessarily familiar with the story of The Green Arrow, the show had me intrigued and my appreciation has just continued to grow to epic proportions ever since.

Clifford can’t stand it. Every time I have Arrow, The Flash, Legends of Tomorrow or Supergirl on (yeah, Greg Berlanti pretty much owns my eyeballs Monday through Thursday), Clifford rolls his eyes and starts to moan. No matter how amazing the episode, how action packed, how captivating the storyline, he scoffs and pokes fun and does this irritatingly asinine commentary for the duration of the show. The man likes Batman, Spiderman and any one of the The Avengers films or their characters’ stand-alones he’s seen, so I don’t get it. Of course he didn’t like Affleck’s Daredevil, but then who did? It’s not like he doesn’t like those types of stories or that sort of action. Here is Clifford’s argument summed up in four words – it’s all the same.

He wanted to offer an argument, so I offered mine in return.

He thinks that every episode that airs is the same old same old and he can’t watch. Too boring and too terrible. Here’s the rub – Clifford’s favorite show (next to Modern Marvels) is Gold Rush. IF EVER THERE WAS A SHOW ABOUT THE SAME OLD SAME OLD IT IS THAT ONE RIGHT THERE. Don’t get me wrong, I can watch and enjoy Parker’s struggles and Tony Beets’s gruff attitude as much as the next guy. I am more than happy to watch Todd Hoffman’s inevitably stupid next move, but if we want to compare apples to apples (as in same old same old) let’s look at the facts here.

I watch a show about a hero’s journey. I am watching the story of a rich playboy idiot child on his way to becoming a beloved superhero man. There is ever growing character development, ever evolving plots, and an ever expanding universe. I am a spoiler fiend and yet I still sit on the edge of my seat wondering how a character is going to react to the latest curve ball coming their way.  What will Oliver Queen or his team do? What villain’s throwing his hat in the ring? Who will come back from the dead? What wrench will be tossed in to shake things up? Where are they going with any of this? And why isn’t John Barrowman gracing my screen more? These are things that keep me invested. These are the things that keep the show fresh and different and compelling week to week.

Now let’s take a gander at Gold Rush. Even if you are invested in the characters, the only curve ball they’re thrown is what piece of rusted old equipment is going to break down next. That is the only question. Oh, and maybe what super moronic decision Todd Hoffman’s making after that.

Let’s talk character development first. In what, 5 or 6 seasons?  I haven’t seen an ounce of growth in Todd Hoffman at all. And even though I readily admit, Oliver Queen often takes many steps back from that latest step forward, he’s gone from a serial killer in the first season to running for mayor of the freaking city! That’s something. That’s momentum. That’s progress. Todd Hoffman made poor life and rather arrogant choices from the beginning and those choices only seem to become poorer and more arrogant as the seasons continue. Gene switched teams, but is that progress? Parker has gotten taller. I suppose that counts for character growth even if it’s the more physical variety. After six years, each of Clifford’s little gold miners seems the same. The fight scenes, which tend to spur growth in any character in some way shape form or another, are just that, grown men yelling at each other and getting pissed off and walking away – a fight, sort of like what teenage girls do in middle school. No hand to hand combat, parkouring, swordsmanship or special powers to unfold anywhere on screen (though even in a middle school girl fight, there might be at least some hair being pulled).  Nope. Just some miners’ egos getting in the way of the job leading to brief heated confrontations, and ending in public complaints on camera.

Now about plots … saying your goal is to bring in more gold than the previous season does not an ever evolving plot bunny make. In fact, it is the EXACT SAME PLOT year in and year out. There is no uniqueness to it. And the only thing keeping you on the edge of your seat is whether or not the excavator or the dredge is giving way this episode causing all the mining to come to an abrupt and utter halt. Seriously. Thanks to the dramatic score, there’s your tension. And like the Titanic sinking at the end of the film, it is never a surprise ending.

And let’s address an ever expanding universe. Todd Hoffman’s self-inflicted fiasco in South America doesn’t count.  In Alaska. Always in Alaska mining this creek or that.

I will say, like my thoughts on more Barrowman, I’ll take more of John Schnabel any day. I LOVE that man.

In breaking it down, there is no contest in my mind which is the more interesting, dramatic, action-packed, ever changing story unfolding before me. I’ve tried repeatedly to explain these points to Clifford; I try to make my argument so he’ll see these things and maybe give Arrow a chance.

Then he dropped the why I will never get through to him on this.

“Here’s what it is – I could watch a channel that did nothing but show machines working and moving all day long. No people. Just watching machines doing their thing. Hauling dirt, drilling shit, grading sites, whatever. All day long. Every day. That’s my dream TV.”

Really???

Really???

I can’t argue with that. Like I can pretty much argue with anything, but I can’t with that.

I've got nothing.

I’ve got nothing.

But Arrow still wins. Every. Time.

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Throw-Back-Monday: I Was The Co-Conspirator

I’m not really a law breaker. I don’t count speeding. Anyone that knows me well knows that I take those little white roadside boards with numbers scrawled in black Highway Gothic as mere guidelines or gentle suggestions provided by our government, not as actual rules or laws to live by. That said, over the years, I’ve done a lot of stupid things and probably broken more rules then I care to admit, but there was a time I was a rule follower who would never have dreamt of breaking the law (other than bending those suggested guidelines, of course). That was until Jason Michael Brown and I went to see Titanic. In fact, that’s probably where my future rebellion began – thanks, Jason, for that.

It had to be 1997. I’d already seen the epic fail that was Titanic once; I can’t remember who with. If it was you, I apologize for forgetting. I honestly tried to wipe the entire experience from memory, so please don’t be too offended. I’d wasted three hours of my life watching it with you, and for that you should be commended or remembered at the very least, but then I’m quite certain it was your idea we see it, so I don’t feel so bad for erasing our movie moment from my mind.

Me

Me

Which now brings me to the viewing encounter I unfortunately do recall. My cousin Jason had wanted to see Titanic. The movie had been out for a while and he hadn’t seen it yet. And before you mock him for being a dude that wanted to see Titanic (because that’s what I did), 1. His guy friends had already gone. Everyone saw it where I lived. 2. I remind you that we lived in Podunksville, USA. Population maybe 1200 with nothing to do as a teenager other than catch a flick at the theater a town or two over or tip cows after the football games on Friday nights. We saw a LOT of movies. Despite these two facts, because I hated the movie so much, I was inclined to decline but he convinced me. I probably owed him a favor of some sort. Or maybe I could suffer once more to see  Leo’s pretty face on that big silver screen. Regardless, before I fully comprehended this commitment, we were pulling into Linway Plaza.

It was winter (although in Northern Indiana that could still mean May) because Jason had on this ridiculously oversized down coat. It was practically the size of him. We’d gotten our tickets and I’d asked him if he wanted any concessions before we headed to get our seats. He said there was no need. Ok.

As we headed to our theater he stopped in the hallway just outside the door and grabbed the front of his  coat like he was about to pull a Paul Reubens or one of those dirty New York City street dudes from our favorite 1980’s films who’d open his coat sharing  totally illegal off-the-back-of-a-truck type watches and other wares for you to buy at deeply discounted prices. These were the thoughts flittering through my mind while watching wide-eyed as Jason opened the now shady looking coat that was about to swallow him whole.

I looked down at what he was trying to secretly show me and it was a super large bag of Twizzlers. Once my brain finally caught up, my heart skipped a beat. We were smuggling something into the movie theater.  Are you kidding me? We could get caught. We could go to jail. We would be hoodlums! Worst of all we could be banned from seeing movies in that theater FOREVER!!!

Me again.

Me again.

The potential for permanent banishment from my one and only escape in the sticks had me practically hyperventilating.

Me in panic mode.

Me in panic mode.

This could not be happening. My cousin and I were breaking the law. Now in hindsight, it was really more of a rule than a law, but when you’re 16, naïve and a rule follower, things like that seemed like the law and no matter which it really was, we could still get banned from my favorite establishment within a 40 mile radius. Oh, and my dad would be pissed. So there was that, too.

I slowly trailed Jason into the theater  to grab our seats, still in panic mode. I couldn’t believe he snuck Twizzlers into the theater. This was going to be our end. I could see it now, some snot-nosed teen actually choosing to do his job by catching us and reporting us which would inevitably lead to the Sheriff  coming to get us and hauling us to the Big House.  Why, God, why?!!! And all for TITANIC for crying out loud!!! Forget college and marriage and babies. We were going to have criminal records and never be allowed into the local cinema again. It may not have been my Twizzlers, but I was a co-conspirator at that point, reluctant co-conspirator perhaps, but co-conspirator nonetheless. I was anxiously racking my brain with how to get out of this one. Could I throw my cousin under the bus? Take a deal, rat him out and let him take the fall by his lonesome? I didn’t even like Twizzlers that much!   

I couldn’t sell him out. He was my friend and family above all else. We were in it together at that point. So I sat through another three hours of torturous music, pitiful plot points, and a depressing  but not so surprising ending,  all while swearing the fuzz was about to bust us at any minute. I think there were actual beads of sweat working their way down the back of my neck while Jason sat there thoroughly enjoying Jack’s antics and Celine’s sweet voice, sucking on his damn Twizzlers, without a care in the world.

Upon reflection, my reaction may have been more like a response one would have to seeing someone with a coat full of cocaine. It could have been a tad rash and a bit over the top given what he actually had hidden, but you can’t help how you feel or how your brain processes information, nor how you cope in crises, no matter what age you are. Especially your first time breaking the LAW (if it was a law).

It’s funny how we compartmentalize. I’d been trespassing on property and vandalizing houses with toilet paper  and other sundries since my tween years, which honest to God could have gotten me arrested and sent to jail,  yet I sat for 180 minutes in a theater wondering who my one phone call would be, certain that my life was completely over, all because of a bag of Twizzlers and Titanic. Leo’s pretty face was not enough.

Not. Enough.

Not. Enough. (okaay … maybe enough)

I will never forget the Bonnie and Clyde moment I shared with my cousin that day. It’s hilarious thinking about it now versus how I thought and felt about it then.  Growth, I guess? Or I’ve just done so many more idiotic things over the years that smuggling some Twizzlers into a movie theater isn’t even a blip on my most ridiculous moments radar. Not even close.

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52 Drinks A Year …

So, I have a drink every Friday because a year ago, around New Year’s, my two best friends and I made a pact (because that’s what best friends do). We decided we would have a drink every Friday, take a picture, and text it to one another. I usually post mine on Instagram, so anyone that follows me there probably thinks I’m a raging alcoholic since they constantly and only see pictures of me celebrating with a glass in hand, but that is not the case.

I have a drink every Friday, no matter where I am or what I’m doing, as a toast to two irreplaceable human beings in my life. We may not always get to chat on the phone or even hang out now and again because the laws of life have dictated we remain many hundreds of miles apart, yet that doesn’t negate nor dictate our closeness and fondness and trust and belief in one another – essentially, our friendship.

We started a bond too many years ago to count that is a living breathing thing. It has ups and downs and gaps and harmonies, but never absences. Having that drink and sharing it with them, wherever they are, reminds me of that.  52 drinks celebrating births, mourning loved ones, battling flu, making fun of one another, making fun with one another, playing Fantasy Football, traveling the states, sharing career frustrations, dealing with family matters, building things, moving out and moving on… 52 drinks that I’ve had with my friends and I wouldn’t trade a one of them for the world.

So far, we’ve continued our pact, toasting to one another’s day, accomplishments, or just each other. It’s an appreciation of our history, a celebration of our present and a hope for our future. Missing you guys terribly, but loving you all the same – to Chelle and Darewood — Happy Festive Friday, my dears!

My 52 moments shared with Chelle and Darewood this last year.

My 52 moments shared with Chelle and Darewood this last year.

 

 

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Throw-Back-Monday: The Speeding Ticket

It has to be written. Last week Little Sis had her first court date for a ticket she received back around Thanksgiving. Kudos for being 33 and just now receiving your first ticket. Life could be worse. That said, a ticket is a ticket and court is court. Even if you’re a tried and true vet of our judicial system, which I hope you are not, it can (or at least should) be a bit unnerving to have to face the consequences of your illegal actions.

Her court was in a small town in North Georgia, population hovering near 10,000 with a reputation for being pretty petty. She called telling me all about how backwards they were, the inappropriate attire of the attendees, the gossipy nature of her fellow offenders, you know, basically the small townness of it all. I had to laugh at that because no matter how bad and backwards she thought it was, nothing could compare to Clifford’s and my experience in Metter.

Metter is a known speed trap in Georgia. It sits about an hour outside of Savannah and when Clifford and I were in school, we had to drive through it every time we went to Atlanta to visit his folks. Of course we knew it was an infamous speed trap area. The fines were typically doubled or more and they showed no mercy so we were always careful to be hovering right at the speed limit as we breezed through the beginnings of good old Candler County (man that sounds so Dukes of Hazzard in my head).

Anyway, it was 1999 and we were headed up to Atlanta for something. We typically waited till classes were finished on a Thursday evening and drove during the night. Far less traffic that way. We headed out and were approaching the area we knew embraced the speed trappings of Metter. Clifford slowed down and set his cruise control right around the limit just to be safe. We were all good till we approached a semi up ahead. The semi was going the speed limit, too, maybe fluctuating a bit above and below which is how we were able to catch him. We weren’t going quite fast enough to pass him though. (reminds me of US 6 back near Nappanee. Two lane area where the trucks hover right at 54mph in a 55 and it’s just busy enough you can’t quite pass… that’s a special kind of hell when your thisclose to being home)

Being stuck behind the truck shouldn’t have been that big of a deal. We were just waiting till we were through Metter to pick up the pace, but then we watched as the semi began to swerve to and fro. I don’t know if the trucker was tired, had a few too many or what, but he was becoming more and more of a threat to our safety, particularly with us right behind him.

So Clifford did what he had to do. When the guy swerved back right, Clifford took the opportunity to speed up and pass him on the left. Of course just as he settles back in front of the truck, lowering back to his original speed, we hear the sirens and see the lights. Now don’t get me wrong, Clifford was a speed demon back in the day and there are many many instances where he probably should have been thrown in the back of a paddy wagon and not just given a ticket and a fine. This, however, was not one of those instances.

We sighed and he pulled over. True to form, what was a stereotypical backwoods Georgia cop in my Hoosier mind (I was still pretty new to the state), approached. He was a jackass through and through. Clifford tried to explain about the semi , but he maintained the jackass parameters he set for himself from the beginnings of our unexpected and unfortunate middle-of-the-night highway rendezvous.

Once he saw he wasn’t getting anywhere, Clifford accepted the ticket and we carried on our way. We eventually looked more closely at the ticket, as we were going to need to call in about a week to find out the cost of the fine when we saw Clifford had been clocked at 13 over and the jackass cop marked that there were wet roads and bad weather conditions. NOT TRUE!!! It had rained earlier in the day, sure, but by the time we were making our way through the Metter area, the moon was out, the stars were bright and the roads were dry. When we found out the fine for Clifford’s infraction was going to be a whopping $386, that’s when Clifford decided to go to the mattresses. We were going to go to court, I as his witness, and explain what happened. It was only an hour away. We could miss a class. $386 on a good day is too much money to ignore, let alone when you’re a college kid barely scraping by.

The court date had arrived. Clifford donned his best suit and I a professional blouse and skirt combo. We were going to be clean, courteous and respectfully object to the erroneous claims the cop made on the ticket.

Clifford was big talk all the way there.

“Hell no are they making me pay this.”

“I’m going to tell that judge exactly what happened.”

“They can shove their fine up their asses because this is bullshit and I’m going to tell them so.”

He went on and on like that all the way to the courthouse exit off I-16. He emerged from the exit onto what appeared to be the town’s Main Street or what led to the town’s Main Street. Little Sis was complaining about her “small town” and what went with it, but Metter back in 1999 had a population of around 4,000. This wasn’t going to be good.

I stared out the window as Clifford followed our printed MapQuest directions. It was like we’d entered the Twilight Zone. We were literally in Mayberry, but a Mayberry where Andy Griffith was more like a Little Children’s Jackie Earle Haley and Deputy Fife wasn’t just a buffoon but a racist redneck buffoon.  People were staring at us from the street because they just knew Clifford’s Saturn didn’t belong.

As we entered the courthouse and looked around, we saw people in wife-beaters who hadn’t showered in days, one person without shoes, a teenager who was pregnant standing next to her barely pubescent boyfriend and their parents (maybe getting married?), a few people who looked like courthouse commoners, and several  nods between the cops, the security guards, the clerks, the lawyers, etc. throwing out greetings in the most Southern of drawls such as, “Morn’n Clyde.” A nod and a tip of the hat in response with, “Ellen Sue.” I would love to be making this up, but even I’m not that imaginative. I have never heard so many Billy Joes, Billy Bobs and other two-first-named individuals sharing salutations and skulking in one place.  Clifford and I looked like we walked in from Wall Street in comparison. Yeah, this was so not going to be good.

We took a seat in the courtroom as instructed, waiting to be called. Our designated time came and went as we simply watched case after case go before the judge. Pretty much everyone in the courtroom from the lawyers to the judge to the stenographer to those accused of a crime were all on a first name basis (two-named first name basis). It was unreal. Maybe the spittoon the cops were treating like a water cooler in the corner as they spat their tobacco and the day’s gossip back and forth should have been the foreshadowing we needed to just get the hell out of there but for whatever delusional reason, we remained. Clifford insisted he was going to fight the system as he was a wronged man and would receive his justice. That boy was so so naïve.

Shortly before Clifford was called, a frail 80 year old woman with coke bottle glasses and the sweetest little grandma dress weakly worked her way in front of the judge. They said she was clocked going 140 mph in a 65. Clifford and I did a double take. Surely they said 104mph, which was still totally ridiculous. Nope, 140mph. Apparently grandma fell asleep at the wheel which caused a bit of a lead foot. We were speechless. The judge was really nice, knocked a bunch of charges down or off her record completely, no jail time and a fine roughly around what Clifford’s was for 13 over. Wow.  Maybe Clifford had this after all.

Finally, after 4 hours in a fairly empty courtroom, Clifford was called before the judge. He whispered, “This is it. I’m seriously going to let them have it. And you can back me up.” I just smiled and squeezed his hand before he left our bench and headed towards the front of the room. He stood up straight and yes sir’d and mam’d the right people on his way there. I was proud of him. He was about to be my hero. If some grandma going 140mph got reduced to basically a fine the size of his, maybe Cliff could walk away with just a warning once all the facts were on the table.

Clifford listened carefully as the judge read through his report. After listening to him for hours drone on about what he was going to say and the argument he was going to make, I was ready to see him in action. I could barely hear a thing though. Damn my deafness! I was leaning in and the judge was asking Clifford something. I couldn’t hear what it was, but his tone was definitely not the one grandma received. I heard, “Yes, Sir.” Another question then, “Yes, Sir.” One more question, “Yes, Sir.” Then the judge closed the file, said something to Clifford pointing towards the exit on the right of the room and which had Clifford responding with, “Thank you, Sir.” and a nod.

What just happened? Did my boyfriend essentially just bend over in front of the judge saying the equivalent of, “Please, Sir, may I have some more?” because THAT’S what it looked like.

Clifford looked at me and nodded to the right. I saw him heading towards the exit the judge had pointed out, so I grabbed our things and left the way we’d come in. I assumed Clifford was going to meet me out front, you know, to celebrate the victory he just claimed, because that better be what had just happened.

Alas, I exited the courtroom to see Clifford down the hall paying the cashier. For all his bravado, we had taken off school, driven an hour out of our way to the most Podunk town we will likely ever visit, and all for Clifford spinelessly, yet graciously, accepting an outrageous fine of $386. Little Sis didn’t have it quite so bad.

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Risky Business

Clifford and I rang in the New Year in a different way. Continue reading

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Total-Take-Back: The Dishwasher

2015 is at an end, folks. It flew by so quickly. I did take some time to enjoy the holidays with the fam over the last week or so, but now it’s time for me to get back to business, or rather blogging. I had many failures with few successes this last year. Or rather I accepted lots and lots of character building opportunities versus not accepting any character building opportunities at all. In hindsight, just the latter would have been fine by me …

So to close out the last 365 days, I thought I’d go out with a Total-Take-Back. After all, you never want to move into a new year with regrets.

Roughly two weeks ago, Clifford discovered something about me. Something he has shared with pretty much everyone in earshot. Now, he never cares what I blog about and hates it when I blog about him, but he actually wanted me to post this one and share it with the world because he finds it hilarious. So this one is for my bearded hubs, hoping he’ll shave that monstrosity off his face in the next few months.

I had just started the dishwasher. I was attempting to clean the kitchen which seems like an endless task these days. Clifford walked in and asked me what the noise was. I didn’t hear anything, but then I’m half deaf. He looked at the dishwasher. I said, “Oh, well I started the dishwasher. Maybe that’s what you heard.”

He looked at me like I was crazy. “You don’t hear that? That ‘thud, thud, thud, thud’?”

“I hear the dishwasher. I suppose it’s ‘thudding’. So?”

SO, it’s not supposed to ‘thud’. Something’s wrong.”

Clifford reached for the dishwasher lock and slow motion kicked into gear. What was likely mere seconds felt like hours. First my head cocked in confusion, then my eyes widened in shock and fear as clarity dawned… I barely moved fast enough. I quickly stretched to slap his hand away as I screamed, “NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!! WHAT ARE YOU DOING???!!!”

Clifford paused with his hand next to the latch. Now it was he cocking his head in confusion at me. “I’m about to open the dishwasher and fix what’s making the noise. Why?”

I couldn’t speak. I didn’t have the words. I couldn’t articulate why he couldn’t open the dishwasher door. Everyone knows why you don’t open a running dishwasher. What was wrong with him? Though my mouth couldn’t move, my eyes spoke volumes.

Clifford tilted his head a little more and began to smile. He had this look in his eye, a look I hate because it means he thinks he has one on me. “Libby, what do you think will happen when I open the dishwasher?”

What was he even asking me? It was obvious. I stood up straighter and now I was looking at him like he was crazy.

“Seriously … what do you think is going to happen when I open the door?” His smile got bigger and he flicked the latch for access.

I gasped. I am not being dramatic here, I physically gasped while shaking my head and covering my mouth. Was he a total idiot?

There was a stare off between us that lasted minutes. He smirked and I stood petrified that he was really going to go through with it. He was going to open the dishwasher door mid-cycle. I didn’t know what to do.

Then he spoke with that stupid knowing look stuck on his face, “You think the dishwasher is filled to the top with water and it’s all going to come rushing out, flooding the kitchen, when I open the door, don’t you?”

Well, duh.

My face must have given away my exact thought because he started laughing and opened the door. I was able to manage a desperate pleading, “CLIFFORD!” as I tensed and anxiously braced myself for the water to consume my kitchen floor. I closed my eyes, prepared to feel the dirty dishwater gushing around me.

I felt nothing. I heard Clifford’s loud guffaw. I opened one eye. There was no water flooding my floor. No dirty dishwater gushing around my feet, splashing my face and tainting my clothes. What the …? I didn’t get it.

So yeah, maybe I did think the dishwasher fills to the top with water and yes, maybe I’ve thought that for the last 30 odd years. Clifford never made me watch that episode of Modern Marvels, ok? I guess now I can move forward into 2016 knowing the dishwasher may be opened mid-cycle and it won’t be like The Great Mississippi flood of 1927 all over again.

Happy New Year, people, wherever you are…

 

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Hoosiers

I am watching Hoosiers while I write this. Darewood made me watch this film possibly 5,000 times in our youth. We had to hide our VHS copy in the basement along with the Lion King just to avoid another viewing. I will never tell him how it’s one of my favorite movies of all time. Because you know, and it’s Hoosiers

Look, mister, there’s… two kinds of dumb, uh… guy that gets naked and runs out in the snow and barks at the moon, and, uh,  guy who does the same thing in my living room. First one don’t matter, the second one you’re kinda forced to deal with. – George

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