A Half-Assed Post About Half-Assed Posts (So Meta)

Based on the quality of my writing, it may surprise you to learn that I invest considerable effort into each and every post. It can take me days just to come up with a story or memory that I deem worthy of sharing, and then the actual writing process takes about six hundred hours as I analyze and re-work every single sentence to ensure that I’m conveying the desired tone  (and that there are a sufficient quantity of parenthetical anecdotes, of course). Convincing you all that I’m so clever and witty is no easy feat!

(The above paragraph went through no fewer than six revisions. I probably shouldn’t be admitting this.)

What I’m getting at here is that this shit takes a lot of time, so when I’m busy or distracted, the blog falls to the wayside. My sister is getting married on Saturday, which means that I have been running around all week trying to coordinate our travel plans and making important decisions like “can the baby wear sneakers to a wedding?” and “oh yeah, what shoes am I wearing? Can I wear sneakers?” instead of delivering solid gold blog posts to my legion of adoring fans (i.e. the five of you reading this). I don’t want to leave you all hanging, though (how would you survive?), so I thought I’d take this opportunity to share some of my Blog Posts That Never Were. These are ideas I jotted down over the past year thinking I would someday flesh them out into blog posts, then ignored because they were uninteresting, confusing, or just not suitable for a blog post. But rather than let them go to waste, I’ve scraped them off the cutting room floor and compiled them here for your enjoyment:


The first one on the list is from November of last year and it just says “Santa.” I have no idea where I thought I would go with that.


Next up is “drawings of things I can’t get pictures of,” which was going to be a Wordless Wednesday post, but with (terrible) drawings of funny things Bubba does that I am never able to photograph instead of actual pictures. I actually still like this idea, but it sounds like an awful lot of work so it will probably never happen.


Then there’s “my son thinks everything is a bus,” which is an accurate statement but not even remotely interesting. Similarly, I’ve also got “Bubba likes to pick up trash” and “why won’t Bubba sit in the damn stroller anymore?” I’m so sorry you missed out on reading full-fledged blog posts on those non-stories.

trash: it’s fun to pick up.


At some point, I jotted down “skipping school,” which sounds somewhat promising if only I could remember what aspect of school-skipping I thought might be blog-worthy. I guess I just wanted to let you all know that I ditched class a lot in high school? Well, now you know.


Here’s my favorite one on the list: “getting called out by Ms. Ricewasser.” This is actually a funny little story, but there just isn’t enough to it to warrant a full post. Here, I’ll tell you the tale right now: one time when I was 19 and well out of high school, I returned to my old school to pick up my little sisters. The vice principal (the aforementioned Ricewasser, AKA “Rice”) mistook me for a student and yelled at me to cover up the one inch of skin that was exposed between my pants and my shirt. The twins laughed riotously and I, of course, was super embarrassed even though I had no reason to be.


(Incidentally, I could probably copy and paste that last sentence and use it to summarize 95% of my life stories.)


Finally, we’ve got this gem: “first car Nissan 240sx ‘smoker’s edition’ indestructible.” To be honest, that sounds pretty damn cool. Maybe I’ll still write this one.


In an ironic twist, it took me just as long to write this stupid post as it would have taken me to write an actual story. How did I not see that coming?

My Car Got Impounded While I Was On My Honeymoon And It Changed My Life

Shifts in attitude usually come gradually, like slowly maturing out of a bratty teenage phase or finding yourself becoming more tolerant of things you used to loathe as you get older (for example, I no longer want to strangle anyone who tries to get me to eat sushi, I just want to smack them lightly). Every once in a while, though, something happens that makes you completely rethink how you operate and prompts you to make an immediate change. Something like, for example, coming home from your honeymoon (after being stuck at the airport for 12 hours) at 5am and finding that your car has disappeared.

Oh, that’s never happened to you?

Just me? How strange. Seems like something that would happen all the time.

Allow me to backtrack for a moment before regaling you with the details of my own personal rendition of Dude, Where’s My Car? Before my car’s disappearing act, I did not handle stressful situations well. Even seemingly small stressors could send me into a tailspin, and I’d been that way my entire life. As a child, something as simple as forgetting a book at school could reduce me to tears. Just thinking about how much homework or studying I had to do would nearly paralyze me with panic*, and an argument with a friend or even the most gentle reprimand from a teacher could easily lead me to spiral into a month-long depression. Even when I knew logically that I was reacting inappropriately and that I should really calm down and reevaluate the situation, my brain simply would not cooperate. I think someone missed an opportunity when I was a toddler to inform me that sobbing and/or shutting down are simply not the optimum ways to deal with problems.

As embarrassing as it is to admit, this cringe-worthy behavior continued well into adulthood. Now, I’m not saying I would stomp around like a madman every time I had a stressful day at work, but I was definitely still prone to crying when I felt overwhelmed and even occasionally ventured towards breakdown territory over completely ridiculous things like shopping for clothes (I hate spending money on myself and really hate trying things on in those disgusting claustrophobic changing rooms; I am sadly not exaggerating when I say that I have left the mall in tears — without buying anything! — more than once). Even after making so many other positive changes in my life when I was about 25, I sort of just accepted that my inability to handle stress was an inherent personality flaw that I (and, sadly for them, everyone around me!) would just have to live with. I hated it, but I considered it as much a permanent part of me as my frizzy hair or freakishly thick toenails: it didn’t seem to be something that was within my power to change.

With that knowledge of my shameful inability to handle stress in mind, let’s return to the missing car debacle:

At the time of this tale, TFW and I were living in a condo complex in San Diego. Our condo included a single car garage, which we always used for his car since it actually had value, and an uncovered parking spot nearby in which we parked my far-crappier vehicle. When we departed for our honeymoon, we took his car, leaving my car in its usual spot. Before you say anything, just shut up — I already know what you’re thinking: why didn’t we think to move my car into the empty garage? Because we’re dumb, OK? Is that what you wanted to hear? Sheesh.

Anyway, our honeymoon went swimmingly, save for the return trip when our original flight got canceled and we weren’t able to get on another one until 12 hours later (causing me to miss an extra day of work for which I did not have any remaining vacation time to accommodate, meaning I spent the following week working 10 hour days to make up for it, but I digress). We finally landed back in Los Angeles at about 2am on Friday morning, and by the time we got our bags, picked up TFW’s car, and drove the two hours back home to San Diego, it was nearly 5am and we were exhausted. As we pulled into the garage, I took a look around our surroundings in that way you do when you return home after being away for a while (“oh yeah, this is what my house looks like!”), and noticed that something seemed…off. A closer examination revealed that something was indeed amiss: the parking spot where I’d left my car was empty.

“Um, where’s my car?” I asked TFW, tragically missing an opportunity to quote Ashton Kutcher by not prefacing the question with “dude.”

We sat there in the garage for a few minutes trying to remember if we had moved it before we left or somehow forgotten that we had loaned it to someone, but no: my car was definitely it its spot when we left, and it definitely was not there now.

Discovering that your car has gone missing is certainly cause for concern, and I wouldn’t blame anyone for stressing out over such a situation…but it was 5am and I had to work in three hours (remember, no more vacation days — I had to work), and I just did not have it in me to care. I think my tiredness blocked out the part of my brain that would normally react with tears and panic, and instead I just sat there and calmly assessed the situation. The car was either stolen or had been towed for some reason, and there was nothing I could do about it in that moment. Crying wasn’t going to solve anything and would have taken far more energy than I had at my disposal, so I just went to bed and decided I’d figure it out in the morning.

My initial reaction was atypical for me, but as I mentioned, it could have been caused by my tiredness. The true test came later that day when I called the police to figure out what happened and found out that the car had been impounded five days prior due to the home owners association reporting it as an “abandoned vehicle”. The cost to get it out of impound: FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS.

Let that sink in for a moment: my car, which was parked in a spot assigned to me and was violating no rules whatsoever, was impounded and I was going to have to pay five hundred dollars to get it back.

AND I STILL DIDN’T FREAK OUT.

It was like one of those corny epiphany moments you’d see in a multi-camera sitcom, where the character literally hears angelic harp music as they make a profound discovery about themselves (usually that they are totally in love with their best friend, a “twist” we all saw coming four seasons ago). It was as if something flipped in my brain: for the first time in my life, I felt like I had a choice in how I would react to the situation. I could see things so clearly! Did the situation suck? Sure, but why should I make things worse by being miserable about it? I had just married the love of my life and spent 10 glorious days in the best place on earth (Hawaii) — why taint such a lovely time in my life with a week-long panic attack about a stupid car?

So I paid the stupid money and got my stupid car back, and then I fought with the stupid HOA board until those stupid idiots reimbursed me for their stupid decision to impound my stupid car.

(Sidenote: the reason they thought it was “abandoned” was because it was so dirty. Woops.)

This was almost four years ago, and I still think about it all the time. It truly was a turning point in my life, the point in which I realized that I do have control over my emotions and can decide how I react to stressful situations. It was one of the most liberating feelings I’ve ever experienced.

I do still get stressed out and overwhelmed sometimes, like any normal person. And yes, sometimes life gets the best of me and I cry over something like being too sick to make six million cupcakes for my grandma’s birthday party. But most of the time, I think about that stupid car and remind myself that even if I can’t control the situation, I can choose to continue to be happy while dealing with the problem.

And who wouldn’t want to choose happiness?

I give most of the credit towards my reaction to the car situation to the great state of Hawaii; had we been returning from a less relaxing and beautiful vacation, perhaps my reaction would have been different.


*my solution: I rarely did homework.

Why I Liked My Husband Even More After He Stupidly Wrecked His Car

When I met TFW nearly nine years ago, he had only been living in California for four months, and he’d only known how to drive for about four months and two days. Prior to his move, he’d spent his whole life in New York City, a magical land where people can actually utilize public transportation and have no need for drivers licenses. Unlike here in California (and I imagine it’s the same in most parts of the country) where teenagers eagerly anticipate their 16th birthdays and count down the days till they’re free to drive themselves around, a drivers license is no big thing to a teenager in NYC and thus he felt no need to seek one.

(At least that’s what he claims; I suspect he may have just been too lazy and/or scared of driving to bother until he planned his cross-country move and it became absolutely necessary.)

As you can imagine, he was a terrible driver. Truly, seriously, legitimately abysmal. To make matters worse, southern California isn’t exactly the easiest place to drive — traffic, crazy aggressive drivers, and a freeway merge every couple of miles put even the most experienced drivers to the test. Toss a 22-year-old overly-cautious nervous nellie in a used Mustang into that mix and you’ve got a recipe for disaster.

(Related digression: when he picked me up for our first date, he didn’t get out of the car and come to the door, because he didn’t want to try to parallel park! That’s right, he called me on my cell phone when he was out front and I went out and met him in the street. Keepin’ it classy!)

A couple weeks after our first meeting, we were set to go on our fifth date. I watched the clock and nervously awaited his arrival (the good kind of nervous, of course), but he didn’t show up. 5 minutes went by, then 10, then 15, when he finally called. Unfortunately, he wasn’t calling to report that he was on his way, but rather that he had gotten in a car accident on his way to come get me and that while he was fine, his car most certainly was not and he was not going to be able to drive over.

For a couple of moments, I wasn’t sure what to say. Our relationship was brand new, and I had no idea how he was going to handle the situation. He sounded surprisingly unruffled in his retelling of the events, but I was still a bit concerned — my previous boyfriend was the type of maniac who had a conniption when I scuffed my own tires against a curb, and even the calmest zen-master is bound to get a tad riled by a car-totaling wreck. I expressed the requisite concern and then waited for him to make the next move.

“So…do you mind on coming to pick me up instead?”

He had just been in a serious car accident that destroyed an expensive car he had just purchased, then spent an hour or so dealing with insurance people, police, and tow trucks, and he still wanted to proceed with our date.

Of course I was happy to drive to his neck of the woods, and we had a fantastic evening. He poked fun at himself for being such an inept driver (the accident was caused by him forgetting that you have to yield when you’re turning left…seriously, how did he even pass his road test?!) and teasingly told me I’d have to be his chauffeur for the next few weeks. I was charmed and downright bowled over by his level-headedness and perspective. “It’s just a car,” he shrugged. “It could have been a lot worse!”

I had never (and still have not) met anyone like him. Anyone who knows him would agree that this story is just so him. Why get worked up over something insignificant that you can’t change, especially when you’ve got a date lined up with a hot chick (ahem)? Do you want to cry over spilled milk or get over yourself and seek out happiness?

He has since improved his driving skills significantly (thank God), but his cool, collected attitude hasn’t changed — and neither has my appreciation for that one simple personality trait of his.

I still mock him every time he has to turn left without a green arrow, though.

Riding the subway in NYC…no chance of a crash here.

The Twins!

While driving home from school one afternoon in October of 1988, my mom told my big sister and I that she had a surprise for us when we got home.

“Is it candy?!” My sister inquired excitedly.

I agree that that would have been a most excellent surprise, but her guess proved to be way off the mark: the big news was that my mom was having a baby!

Actually, she was having two babies, but we didn’t know that yet. That news came as another surprise a couple of months later, when my mom came home from the doctor with a funny-looking ultrasound photo and my other big sister asked what the hell was wrong with our baby, since it looked like the poor thing had a giant misshapen head.

Once we all got over the initial shock (my poor mom apparently laughed in the doctor’s face when he told her she was marinating not one but two fetuses), the excitement set in. I was the baby of the family, and I couldn’t believe my luck: not only would I finally get to be a big sister, but I was going to have two little sisters to play with! And even though my mom decided to let their sex be a surprise, I just knew they would be girls. Throughout my mom’s entire pregnancy, I never once envisioned a brother — I guess the fact that the first four of us were girls led me to believe that a brother wasn’t even a possibility.

And I was right! (Sorry, Dad.)

From the day they were born, I’ve been their #1 fan. As a six-year-old, I was just beside myself with amazement at their tiny size, their cute little smiles, and their twinliness (there really is something special about seeing twins together). I’ve shared this before, but it’s worth a repeat appearance today — behold the “thank you” note I made my mom for giving me my wonderful little sisters:

Just look at them — how could I not be enamored? I took my role as big sister very seriously. I was incredibly protective of them, even going so far as to force them to do “kidnapping drills” with me when they were toddlers, wherein I did some tests and timed whether it would be faster for me to pick them both up and run away from the kidnapper or to hold their hands and have them run alongside me — they were so damn cute I was convinced they were prime targets for kidnappers; I also apparently assumed that I would be with them at the time of this hypothetical kidnap attempt and thus available to aid them in their escape.

(If you’re wondering, two-year-olds run pretty slow; I determined that if a kidnapping situation were to arise, I was going to have to pick them up and make a run for it.)

When I had to go along with them to the doctor to get some routine vaccinations, I cried so hard in anticipation of their pain that my mom had to send me out to wait in the hallway. Another time, my mom had to scold them for doing something naughty and toddler-y, and again I sobbed — how dare she cause tears to come out of those adorable little twinny eyes! And when one twin completed her potty training faster than the other and was permitted to wear big-girl panties while the other twin was still in diapers, I had a serious and tear-filled discussion with my long-suffering mother about how the diapered twin was sure to develop self-esteem problems as a result of the inequality.

(Jamie, is it true? Were you permanently scarred by those three days that Hayley got to wear panties and you didn’t??? I knew it, your life totally sucks and it’s all because Mom wouldn’t listen to me about the underwear disparity! I TRIED!!!!)

Today, those cute little babies are 24 years old, and I’m still their #1 fan. They’re smart, funny, successful, unique (yes, even though they’re twins), and, since they look like me, totally gorgeous. From the moment my mom told me I was going to be a big sister, I knew I was in for something special — but I never could have guessed just how much I would love them.

Happy birthday to my favorite twins. Your present is that I won’t make you run kidnapping drills with me next time I see you.

The Nicest Thing My Big Sister Ever Did

I’ve got a gaggle of sisters (3 older than me and the infamous twins, who are about six years my junior), and I could fill an entire blog with laudatory stories about each of their many fine qualities. Don’t worry — I have no intention of boring you all with endless tales about these lovely ladies; I just wanted to publicly state how awesome ALL my sisters are so four of them don’t get jealous right now when they discover that I’ve dedicated today’s post to just one of them.

Shannon is the next sister “up” from me, but we’re five and a half years apart (with the obvious exception of the twins, none of us girls are closer than four years apart; my mom had no interest in dealing with back-to-back babies and planned accordingly). Despite our age difference, we were very close growing up (she is the master Barbie-player); in fact, I believe the age difference allowed us to get along with each other even better than if we had been closer in age — we were always in totally different stages of life and thus really didn’t have anything about which to fight or compete. She was always far nicer to me than any big sister is required to be, even being so generous as to occasionally permit me to hang around when her friends were over (if you don’t have any older siblings yourself, allow me to assure you that this is an honor of the highest order).

Our age difference meant that when I was in 7th grade, Shannon was a senior in high school. This was a big boon to me, since in our town, the junior high and high school are grouped together on one big campus. Having my sister at the same school gave me a little extra confidence — I knew I wasn’t alone in that giant place, and I definitely knew more about the school and the teachers than most other 7th graders! Obviously we didn’t have any classes together, and we ate lunch at different times (not that we would have eaten together even if given the option — I said she was nice, not a weirdo or a saint), but just knowing she was there made the transition a little easier.

(Getting to ride home from school every day in her sweet ’86 VW Cabriolet convertible was pretty rad, too. No waiting for mom in the pick-up line like all the other losers!)

Even with my sister there, moving from the simplicity of elementary school to the complex world of junior high wasn’t easy for me. Navigating the changing social climate was the trickiest aspect. Several elementary schools fed into the junior high, so of course friendships were bound to change with so many new people to interact with. I made a few new friends myself, but I naively assumed that my friends from elementary school, most of whom I had known since kindergarten or even preschool, would continue to be my primary “group.” Unfortunately for me, this assumption proved false, as I quickly realized that I was being left behind while these girls joined forces with a variety of new pals from the other elementary schools to create some sort of obnoxious supergroup of popular people. By the end of the first month of school, I could tell that I was firmly on the periphery of the group. No one was mean or flat-out ignored me, but with every inside joke that went over my head it became more and more clear that I was not really a part of their newly expanded circle.

Still, I counted these girls as friends, and I figured they felt the same about me. The reality of the situation didn’t sink in until one day in October, when we had a half-day of school. I didn’t have any after-school plans and hoped to find someone to hang around with for the afternoon, but I didn’t see any of my friends after class. I gave up and began making my way towards Shannon’s car in the parking lot to head home, and there they were: fifteen girls walking in a pack, clearly heading off somewhere together. I caught up with them and asked the girl I felt closest to what she was up to, and she (nicely; there was no maliciousness involved) informed me that they were all going out to lunch.

It was clear I was not invited. I wasn’t specifically being excluded — it’s not as if they pointed at me and taunted “ha ha, we’re all going somewhere without YOU!” — it was simply that I was not in their group, and thus was not involved in their plans. To be honest, that was almost worse. I couldn’t be mad at them — why would they invite someone with whom they were not close to hang out with them? — but I was humiliated and lonely and deeply ashamed. What was wrong with me that would make them see me as a complete nonentity as opposed to a friend? Had I done something wrong at some point, or was I just so inherently uncool that I never stood a chance?

Shockingly, I didn’t burst into tears (a fact I remain amazed by to this day, considering my proclivity towards over-sensitivity) — I think I was too shocked. I mumbled a goodbye and got in Shannon’s car. I relayed the upsetting turn of events to her, and without skipping a beat, she said “well, why don’t we go out to lunch? Where do you want to go?”

Now, remember that Shannon was a 17-year-old high school senior with a car, a job (and thus money), and plenty of friends; there is no doubt that she could have chosen any number of fun ways to spend her school-free afternoon that did not involve a frizzy-haired little sister. But she chose instead to drive around with me, singing along to Pearl Jam and Stone Temple Pilots and the Pulp Fiction soundtrack and eating Taco Bell. She didn’t make a big deal about what had happened with my friends, nor did she badmouth them in an attempt to make me feel better. She just hung out with me as if there was nothing else she would have rather been doing. As if there was nothing wrong with me at all, and anyone would have fun with me. As if being left out of that group of girls wasn’t cause for concern at all, because everything was fine and normal and it was just anther day and I’d find some other people to hang out with soon enough.

That simple act of sisterly kindness changed my entire junior high life. I got over my disappointment of being left out remarkably quickly, accepting that friendships change and there were plenty of other people to be friends with, perhaps even people with whom I had more in common than simply having attended the same elementary school. I shed not a single tear over the situation! Not one. Beginning the very next day, I made a concerted effort to deepen the new friendships I had started forming with a few girls in my classes, and eventually I had my own new little group of friends. If not for my Taco Bell date with Shannon, I’m certain I would have gone home and sobbed over the humiliation, and I likely would have spent the next month sitting alone at lunch, convinced I was too much of a loser to find any other friends.

Growing up is hard, and I consider myself immensely lucky that I had someone so cool, confident, and capable to look up to. It’s just a shame she never got around to helping me with my hair:

Your Name is Mo?!

My name is Maureen, but growing up, I was primarily known as Mo. My family took to calling me Mo when I was a baby, and it stuck. Even at school and in extracurricular activities like Girl Scouts and softball, I was never Maureen, I was just Mo. I never minded — Mo’s a super cute name, right? — and there was never any confusion surrounding my name; I’m from a small enough town where everyone just sort of knew that my name was Maureen but that they could call me Mo. I liked my real name well enough, but since I didn’t grow up in 1850’s Ireland, it wasn’t exactly the most common name, so Mo was just easier and better-suited to a small child.

In junior high, I discovered that some people apparently aren’t familiar with the fact that Mo is a perfectly legitimate nickname for Maureen (again, maybe because no one under the age of 100 is named Maureen). My best friend introduced me to her grandmother, and it just confused the poor old lady — she looked me up and down and retorted, “your name is Mo?!” (a sneer that retained its power to send my friend and I into hysterical giggles any time either of us repeated it for years after). Another time, I was waiting along with my teammates for our softball coach to tell us which positions we’d be playing for that day’s game, and he pointed at me and ordered, “Maurice! Second base!” He’d never heard anyone call me anything but Mo and made the ridiculous leap of logic to assume that it was a derivative of Maurice as opposed to, say, ANY GIRLS’ NAME IN THE WORLD.

After being scoffed at by an elderly woman and presumed to be a jaunty French lad by my softball coach, my love for my nickname began to wane. I began making sure I introduced myself as Maureen to new acquaintances, and if someone introduced me as Mo I was quick to jump in to clarify that my name was really Maureen and that Mo was just a nickname. I knew there was no stopping my family or friends from calling me Mo and I tried not to mind, but I became increasingly self-conscious about it. Anytime someone called me Mo in public, I felt a pressing need to run around and explain to everyone in the vicinity that I did indeed have a normal name (don’t worry, I didn’t actually do this; instead, I just suffered constant anxiety that everyone was judging me and thinking I was some sort of a weirdo, or, worse yet, that my name was really Maurice).

When I went off to college and later started working, I didn’t have to worry about the issue as much. Everyone was “new” to me, so I was introduced to them all as Maureen. Sometimes someone would hear someone else call me Mo and I’d just explain that it was a family nickname; a few people took a shine to it and started calling me Mo themselves, but for the most part Mo became reserved strictly for family and old friends. It was as if Mo was the childhood me, and Maureen the adult.

And it felt weird.

As much as it embarrassed me as a teenager when someone didn’t “get” my nickname, the reality remained that it was a great nickname! Say it aloud: Mo. It just sounds friendly and fun and uncomplicated and down to earth — all things I’d like to be. Sure, it also sounds like it could possibly be a nickname for Maurice, but oh well. Mo sounds like a person you want to get to know (at least to find out if her name is short for Maurice). I’d want to know someone named Mo.

I’ve made a lot of big life changes in my twenties, and my feelings about the nickname situation was one of them. I decided I no longer cared if a few idiots couldn’t figure out that Mo was a nickname for Maureen. It’s a perfectly fine nickname, and I like it! I still introduce myself as Maureen, because it does sound more professional (and I am such a professional person, obviously), but if someone hears me being referred to as Mo or picks up on it somewhere, I’m really quite happy about it.

Because Mo is the type of person who is friendly to everyone and doesn’t take things too seriously and makes delicious enchiladas, and that’s the person I want to be.

See? Mo made these enchiladas.

The Time My Former Teacher Called Me a Disappointment

Ten years ago, when I was in the midst of the first of my two major life crises (you can read up on that here if you enjoy a good trainwreck), I took a job as a waitress at a local restaurant while I tried to sort out my life and my plans for the future. I wasn’t planning on being a waitress forever (not that there’s anything wrong with that, of course), but I certainly wasn’t ashamed of my job. Considering all my other problems, my career path was at the bottom of my list of concerns. Plus, I was an awesome waitress, if I do say so myself (and I totally do).

The restaurant was in my hometown, so naturally I ran into a lot of former classmates, teachers, and neighbors. I know some people cringe at the very thought of having to encounter (and wait on!) past acquaintances after leaving town, but it didn’t bother me. Again, I had more important things to worry about than what some random girl from my high school was wearing or what my sixth grade softball coach was eating for dinner. In fact, I quite enjoyed seeing people from my past — they always seemed happy to see me, and after such a miserable couple of years it was refreshing and reassuring to be reminded that there were people in the world who knew me just as “that nice girl I went to school with” rather than “that poor pathetic chick whose life is a shambles.”

One day, I came out from the kitchen and was delighted to see my beloved second grade teacher being sat at a table in my section. This woman was a true gem: the type of teacher who calls her class a “family” and never loses her patience with oversensitive crybaby little girls (ahem). She was a favorite of everyone who was taught by her, myself included, and I always felt that I had been a favorite of hers, too — she was so very kind to me when I was her student, and whenever I saw her in the years that followed she always expressed genuine interest in how I was doing. Even though I hadn’t seen her in about five years, I was certain she’d remember me when I told her my name.

As it turned out, I didn’t even have to refresh her memory — she recognized me instantly. She smiled broadly when she saw my face, but it faded as she gave me a once-over. I watched her expression change from one of friendly recognition to one of…disgust? I started to panic. Had my shirt come unbuttoned? Did I have something in my teeth, or hanging out of my nose? Was I emitting an offensive odor?

I addressed her tentatively, bewildered by her very apparent unpleasant reaction. “Um, hi!” I stammered. “It’s me, Mo.”

Her response was more an attack than a greeting. “What are you doing here?!” She sounded truly appalled, and my confusion mounted. “You’re supposed to be DOING something with yourself!”

Her disappointment was palpable. I almost vomited. My heart literally ached. I knew that my life was off track, but to hear it from someone else — someone who had once complimented my super-fast multiplication skills and given me stickers to cheer me up when I cried at recess — was crushing.

I don’t recall what I said in response (I probably apologized or something, knowing me!), but I remember escaping to the bathroom as soon as I could break away. I looked at myself in the mirror and saw what she saw: a sad-looking girl with haphazardly-dyed red hair and entirely too much eyeliner. The scars on my arms suddenly looked alarmingly visible — they might as well have been outlined with highlighter to emphasize their presence. (As a sidenote, can you believe the jerkface owners of the restaurant wouldn’t let me wear a long sleeve shirt under my uniform t-shirt?! I tried and they said it wasn’t part of the uniform.)

I looked like I had given up on life.

I was a far cry from the little girl who posed outside this woman’s classroom in 1991:

(Although I do look a teensy bit sad there…I had probably missed a word on a spelling test or something; have I mentioned that I was the biggest stress-case crybaby on the planet as a child?)

To say that this incident shook me up would be an understatement. I wasn’t angry with her, although I probably should have been (I was 19 years old and doing the very best that I could; at least I had a freakin’ job! What a judgmental old bag!). I was just embarrassed and deeply ashamed. People had expected me to be “something,” and I had failed to deliver. I wondered who else had been harboring similar thoughts about me but just hadn’t had the effrontery to tell me. I felt like I owed the entire world an apology for not being…more.

Even now, nearly a decade later and with miles of emotional distance between myself and my past struggles, thinking about that conversation makes my heart skip a beat. I have come a long, long way, but there are still moments in which I mourn all the wasted time (I could have gone to medical school or penned a book or built a damn house!) or worry that I haven’t utilized my intellect or talents (I swear I have some; did you know that I am an above-average cake decorator?!) to their fullest potential. And if we’re being honest, those feelings are completely valid: I did waste a lot of time sitting around crying when I could have been doing something productive, and I don’t really do anything that requires any particular talent or skill.

But so what?

I have a wonderful life — better than I ever would have imagined possible. Sometimes I’m so overwhelmed with happiness and gratitude that my heart feels like it might burst under the strain of joy. I am not a doctor or a lawyer or a second-grade teacher, but I am happy and healthy I have a husband who thinks I’m funny and a son who smiles non-stop and gets really excited when airplanes fly overhead:

So I consider myself an unqualified success.

And I hope I see my former teacher again someday, so she can see what I see.

Worst Boyfriend Ever

I was itching to write something today, but I was coming up empty when I tried to think of a topic. In hopes of finding some inspiration, I texted my little sister:

Me: I need your creativity! I can’t think of anything to blog about. Can you think of any funny old stories or memories I could write about??

Within ten seconds her reply arrived:

Jamie: Worst boyfriend ever

I knew exactly what she was referring to — no further explanation needed. Of course, there was no mystery about to whom she was referring (there can only be one Worst Boyfriend Ever, after all), but I also immediately knew which cringe-worthy anecdote she thought was perfect blog material (and there are a lot to choose from!): The Birthday Breakup.

I dated my WBE about ten years ago, at a time in my life when happiness was scarce and self-esteem was scarcer. As a result, my screening process for potential boyfriends was…flimsy. You like the same music as me and find me attractive? Great, let’s go out! What’s that, now? You have no job and no intention of getting one, you’re irresponsible, wildly immature, disrespectful, and insanely jealous? No problem, let’s not let that stop this love connection!

As you can imagine, this led to some relationships that were perhaps a shade shy of healthy.

Now, to be fair, WBE wasn’t abusive or a drug addict or anything — just sort of a jerk. There were a lot of problems right from the get-go, but one of the most troubling red flags was that he didn’t like me hanging out with the twins (my little sisters, for the uninitiated). He complained that I “acted like a teenager” around them (I was 20!) and was prone to rolling his eyes and getting snappy whenever he was in our midst. He once barked at us for having a little too much fun singing along to an AFI song in the car (apparently we weren’t giving Davey Havok’s soulful screeching the respect it deserved); another time, the twins and I all purchased some cheap matching rings at a thrift store and he was appalled by our immaturity (irony!). He wasn’t outwardly rude to the girls (most of the time), but it was clear that he was not a fan of our closeness.

Perhaps we were annoying when we were together (and by “perhaps” I mean “we absolutely were”), but I think it’s more likely that he could see that I had a far better time with them than I ever did with him, and it made him uncomfortable.

Regardless of the reason, his attitude towards the girls really, really bothered me. I was very meek (read: pathetic) in those days and rarely stood up for myself, but I certainly wasn’t going to stand for any mistreatment of my precious twinsies. I never let him talk me out of spending time with them or including them in our activities (not that we were taking them on dates with us or anything creepy), and I always stuck up for them when WBE got sassy or rude around them. Unfortunately, it never sunk in: WBE continued to be threatened by our sisterly bonding.

By June of 2003, my relationship with WBE was hanging on by a thread, but we were still an item. I was sick of the relationship and knew it was going nowhere, but I was having trouble finding the courage to actually split up with him. I knew I didn’t want to be with him anymore, but the prospect of breaking up with him and dealing with that mess seemed scarier and more difficult than just keeping the status quo. I needed a push, and on June 28th, I got it.

That day, he came to pick me up for a date of some sort. It was the twins’ 15th birthday, so I waited for him to come to the door rather than dashing out to his car — I assumed he’d want to wish them a happy birthday before we headed out (I lived at home at the time, so WBE was accustomed to visiting with my family whenever he came by). He apparently didn’t want to come in, though (he honked his horn repeatedly instead), so I dashed outside. When I got to his car, we had a brief but life-changing conversation:

Me: Don’t you want to come in and say hi to the twins? It’s their birthday, remember?

WBE: No, why would I? What have they ever done for me?

And that was the end of that! I did not get in the car. We broke up right then and there, in the driveway in front of my house.

Five months later, I met TFW and my entire life changed. TFW was and is everything the WBE was not. I had never dated anyone like him. He had a college degree! And a real job! And he was kind and funny and sensitive and uncomplicated. It was a shock to the system, if we’re being honest. I am so, so glad I met him, and I am so, so grateful I had broken up with WBE and was single and ready to mingle when our paths crossed. Sometimes I think of what my life might be like if I had never met TFW, and I feel physically ill at the very thought.

But we are together, and life is beautiful.

And yes: he loves the twins.

the twins and I, circa the WBE era. not pictured: the annoying matching rings

Is Your Baby a Reincarnated Dog? Mine Is.

I’m not big on religion, and I’m unconvinced on the prospect of an afterlife, but I’ll tell you what I do believe in: reincarnation.

Specifically, dog-to-human reincarnation. More specifically, the ability for dearly departed afghan hound/doberman rescue mutts to be reincarnated into adorable half-Jewish babies.

What I’m saying is, I’m pretty sure Bubba embodies the spirit of the late, great, Tucker.

If you’re not familiar with Tucker, he was the first dog TFW and I had together, and to call him the greatest dog who has ever lived would be an understatement. Sure, I’m a little biased, but just behold this magnificent beast:

He was maddeningly wild (one did not walk Tucker; one simply held onto the leash and tried to avoid cars while Tucker raced through town, sniffing out squirrels and greeting anyone within a two-mile radius), and he could be a little naughty (we lost our entire deposit when we moved out of our rental house thanks to Tucker’s creative “landscaping;” in addition to the run-of-the-mill holes he dug, he also chewed down an entire palm tree — and we had only had him for four months when we moved out). But he was also fun-loving, affectionate, gentle, and loyal.

And his joy! My god, did that dog love just being alive. Every single day was the best day of his life. He didn’t walk, he pranced. He was the embodiment of happiness, lightness, and carefree exuberance. He never met a person (or dog) he didn’t like, and everyone loved him, too. You couldn’t look at this giant goofy-looking mystery pup (anywhere we went, at least one person would ask “what kind of dog is that*?!”) galumphing about without smiling!

Tucker’s death was sudden and tragic, and we were devastated. There was a hole in our hearts and in our family. We eventually adopted another dog, but it wasn’t the same at all — Tucker’s joyful spirit simply couldn’t be replicated nor replaced (Connie, if you are a secret canine genius and can read this, please relax: we love you, even if you are neurotic and have none of the joie de vivre possessed by your predecessor).

11 months after Tucker’s death, a new light came into our lives: Bubba.

And I swear to you, this baby is Tucker all over.

Like Tucker, Bubba is high-maintenance, but his cuteness and personality more than make up for it. They also share a passion for laundry baskets:

And they both like to have a cuddly friend at their side:

And like his spirit animal, Bubba loves, loves, loves his Mama.

I’ll share one more little example that convinces me that Bubba has at least a little bit of Tucker’s special spirit within him: when we would take Tucker to the dog park (his absolute favorite activity in the world, rivaled only perhaps by eating bacon), he would race around with the other pups for hours. In between all the excitement, though, he never failed to periodically “check in” with us by zipping by and giving us a quick lick before darting back off with his doggie pals again — it was like he was saying “Mom, Dad, I’m having a great time here, but don’t worry: I still like you and I haven’t forgotten about you!” Nowadays, Bubba does the exact same thing when he’s playing: he’ll be running around like a madman, singing to himself and throwing lemons into the air, then suddenly drop everything and dash over to give me a giant hug. My son does many, many things that make me happy, but I do believe this is my #1 favorite.

I’m know all parents think their babies are magical joy-bringing little creatures, and I’m also aware that lots of babies share Bubba’s (and thus Tucker’s) many fine qualities. But Bubba so perfectly captures Tucker’s classic blend of enthusiasm, tenderness, and insanity, it’s uncanny — and it makes my heart happy.

*if you’re wondering how we determined that Tucker was in fact 50% doberman and 50% afghan hound, the answer is simple: we are insane and spent $60 getting his DNA tested. WE HAD TO KNOW.

How To Make Your Girlfriend Cry On Your Fourth Date

On our first date (8+ years ago!), TFW took me to see a documentary about Che Guevara. He was trying to impress me with either his worldliness or his pretentiousness.

A few days later we went miniature golfing and I tried to impress him with how fun and laid back I was (don’t laugh).

For our third date, we watched both volumes of Kill Bill at his apartment. We both just wanted to make out with each other.

The fourth time we got together, TFW tried to force me to eat pho at a hole-in-the-wall Vietnamese restaurant on San Marcos Boulevard and made me cry.

Now, to understand this ridiculous tale, you must realize two things about TFW:

  • He is Jewish and thus any wasting of food is akin to a cardinal sin in his eyes
  • He’s an idiot

And four things about me:

  • I have the palate of an obnoxious five-year-old child
  • I used to be extraordinarily, pathetically, off-the-charts sensitive (this has since improved; I only cried in sympathy of a fictional character in a book once this week!)
  • I used to have a crippling need to make everyone around me happy and hated saying no to anyone
  • I’m an idiot

Prior to this fourth date, we had only dined together twice: we had Greek food before our mini-golf adventure (even a picky eater like me can’t find fault with pita and chicken), and we made some popcorn during our movie marathon. So to be fair, TFW was not yet familiar with my dietary preferences, and he certainly hadn’t been exposed to my sheer lunacy at that point (I tried to keep it under wraps).

Anyway, on the night in question, we didn’t have any firm plans laid out ahead of time — just a vague plan to get together and grab some dinner. In my mind, since I’m a normal (humor me), non-pretentious, down-to-earth gal, I naively assumed this meant we’d wind up at Chilis or something low-key. Instead, he picked me up and we had this conversation:

TFW: “So, do you like Vietnamese food? There’s a great pho place by my office!”

Mo (horrified): “Um, well, um, I’ve never tried it…”

TFW: “GREAT YOU’LL LOVE IT LET’S GO!”

(The Che Guevara movie should have tipped me off that there would be no Chilis dates in our future.)

I spent the 10-minute drive over there trying to psych myself up. How bad could it be? I’d eaten Chinese food before and lived to tell the tale; perhaps this was similar? Of course, that was Panda Express and probably doesn’t really count as “authentic,” but…this dude seems fairly normal, so if he likes it, it’s got to be edible. Right?

When we arrived, he “helpfully” insisted on ordering for me since I had never experienced these culinary delights. I mustered the courage to meekly inform him that I wasn’t very adventurous and didn’t tolerate spicy foods too well, and he assured me everything was nice and mild. “Pho is like Top Ramen, and spring rolls are like egg rolls! You’ll see!”

LIAR.

Pho is indeed similar to Top Ramen, if you don’t know what the word “similar” means. And Vietnamese spring rolls are like Chinese egg rolls, if you like your egg rolls wrapped in a weird doughy wrapper and served COLD.

exhibit A: vomit

I was not a fan, and this is where the trouble began. Unlike a functional adult human being, I was unable to simply tell him I didn’t like it, nor was I able to just suck it up and eat it anyway (in all honesty, it wasn’t really THAT bad; I’d just never had anything like it before and it surprised my delicate palate), so I just sort of sat there awkwardly while TFW enthusiastically chowed down. And unfortunately, unlike a non-idiotic adult human being, that imbecile failed to pick up on my obvious discomfort and proceeded to encourage me to eat my dinner. “Just TRY it!” he continued to implore. “It’s soooooo good! Just eat it! You’ll LOVE it! Don’t waste it!!!!”

Seriously, folks, he was incessant.

And I. Was. MORTIFIED!

Eventually, he gave up and ate my meal for me (god forbid we waste an ounce of broth!) while I sat there blinking back tears at my own awkwardness. Fortunately, he was blissfully unaware since he was so excited about the damn pho, but it took me a solid hour or so before I was able to speak without my voice quivering in that pitiful on-the-verge-of-crying manner you’ve surely all experienced at some point (although hopefully over something more worthy of your emotions than goddamn Vietnamese food).

A couple months later, when our relationship had progressed significantly and I was fairly confident that my not liking something he enjoyed wasn’t going to send him running for the hills after all, I brought up the pho incident and admitted that I had actually cried ACTUAL TEARS about it. He was completely surprised (seriously, he hadn’t noticed!) and thought it was hilarious! “Why didn’t you just tell me to shut the hell up?!” He asked. “I wouldn’t have cared. I just thought you would like it!”

He’s a keeper.

Since then, I’m happy to report that not only have I developed a functioning backbone and can now (usually) tell people what I like and don’t like, but I’ve also taken a cue from my dear husband and become a more adventurous eater!

Sort of.

exhibit B: that burger had caramelized onions on it AND I DIDN’T EVEN PICK THEM OFF!