30 Days of Truth: Something You Love About Yourself

Oh dear.  This is way harder than writing about something I hate about myself.  What do I love about myself?  Hmmm…

Oh here’s a good one!  Those of you who work with me and are exposed on a daily basis to my annoyingly stressful self might be surprised to know that I have very low blood pressure.  I know!  It’s something I love about myself because it means I’m healthy. 

I always knew my blood pressure was normal because whenever I go to the doctor and they take my blood pressure I get positive nod and a “very good!” from the person who takes it.  Then a few years ago I went to donate blood in the company blood drive and they turned me down because my blood pressure was too low!  It was crazy!  At first I was concerned.  I’m a serious about sharing my blood because every pint counts.  But when I got over that I starting worrying about my own health.  I mean, if your blood pressure is too low it means you’re dead, right?  But after careful research in my medical library (ie: Google) I could find nothing negative about having low blood pressure.  In fact, the time it was too low to donate blood was when I was training for a half-marathon.  How’s that for a good example of the benefits of exercise?  

If only I could remember how great exercise is for keeping one’s blood pressure low when I’m ditching my lunchtime workout at the gym in lieu of a bag of Cheetos and a teen vampire novel.  I really hate that about myself! 

D’oh!  It’s so easy to get off topic! 

Grandma Teetsel’s Pumpkin Pie

I’ve been making pumpkin pies for Thanksgiving for the past 14 years.  It was something my Grandmother use to do but passed on to me when she hit her mid-80s and moved to an assisted living facility where she could no longer cook.  For the first few years I was deathly afraid of making pie crusts and would spend at least an hour on the phone on Thanksgiving Eve getting a pep talk from Grandma.

Grandma has since passed on and while I miss the pep talks I still heed her number one piece of advice which was “just relax and do it.”   In light of this here are the two key ingredients in my pie crust recipe:

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It’s not what you’re thinking.  OK, the drinking wine part is true.  But I don’t call slapping a store bought crust into a pan “baking a pie.”  As I feel compelled to tell the checkout clerks in Safeway each year when I’m purchasing said crust, I really do make my own pie crusts!  I just keep the store brought crust on the counter where I can see it.  It reminds me that I’ll still have something to fall back on just in case I screw up the homemade crust.  Knowing I have that back up crust I can sip my wine while I “just relax and do it.”

Otherwise my pie crust recipe is nothing special.  I just use whatever they recipe they put on the Crisco package.  Except I only use half the amount of Crisco and substitute the rest with butter.  That was Grandma’s trick.  It not only gives the crust a nice butter flavor but I think it also makes it easier to handle.  A pure Crisco pie crust is too delicate I think.

As for the pumpkin part, after years of following what I thought was Grandma’s sacred recipe scrawled on a sheet of yellow notebook paper I was shocked to discover that it was the same one Libby puts on the label of their canned pumpkin.  The only difference is that Grandma uses two cups of half and half instead of evaporated milk, which I must say makes it.  Grandma also always told me to throw in a couple tablespoons of molasses “to give the custard a nice brown color.”

The most important element of Grandma’s pumpkin pies is the care that goes into making them.  I know that sounds sappy but it’s true.  The thing that made my grandmother’s pumpkin pies most special for me growing up is that every year she made three miniature pies, one each for me and my brothers.  So even though I may have years when I screw up the crust and need to use my back up or I forget to throw in a couple of tablespoons of molasses, I never forgo making a miniature pie for each kid at Thanksgiving dinner.

pumpkin pies

My 2012 Prediction

In spite of all the cool electronic equipment Jerry gives me, for which I am incredibly grateful and in fact am using this very moment, I must admit that I am still old school and often find comfort in pen and paper.  Blue ballpoint gel ink pen and college ruled 100 page spiral notebooks are my materials of choice for my “morning pages.”  (And while I have been keeping journals since I was 10 years old, Julia Cameron still gets a lot of the credit for my continued interest.) 

The thing I like about using pen and paper is the sense of accomplishment I get when I fill a notebook or empty a pen.  (I used to think this was weird until I discovered that many of my friends feel the same way.)  I’ve been pondering this concept a lot lately and realized the other day that what would be really cool would be to write in the last page of a filled up spiral notebook while at time empty a ballpoint pen.  I considered how this would feel like the ultimate in accomplishments until I realized it would be something that could only happen by chance and luck is not something you can take credit for. 

Then I started to think about this filling a notebook/empty a pen phenomenon in a really creepy way.  What if on December 21, 2012 writers all over the globe fill notebooks and empty pens at the same time and POOF there will suddenly be a spiral notebook/ballpoint pen rapture and we will be reduced to composing prose on computers all the time.  I suppose there are worse things that could happen on this date but I don’t think Julia Cameron would be too happy about it. 

Um, I think this NaNoWriMo thing is making me crazy. 

Mrs. B’s Boyfriends

For those of you who think that being a cat mom means I don’t have to deal with all the neighbor kids, you’re wrong!  Mrs. B has a very active social life which includes a long line of boyfriends.

Her first and our favorite was Momo, a very sweet red head. 

Momo

He was a younger man who swept Mrs. B off her feet when he was a mere six months old.  Despite the fact that it was a May/December romance Jerry and I approved.  We loved Momo and he loved us, although Momo’s attachment to us probably had a lot to do with the abundance of treats he received from the Jessopland lauder. 

Then there was the charcoal grey hunk that had a keen resemblance to many of Mrs. B’s kittens.  Like his illegitimate children he has a fear of humans, so no picture.  He was also kind of a jerk so I can understand why Mrs. B didn’t keep him around long. 

Lately Mrs. B’s recent squeeze is a cat we have named Poindexter. 

 Poindexter.bmp

Don’t let the picture fool you.  He may look cute here but Poindexter is just very photogenic.  He’s actually rather unattractive in person.  He has an oversized head that does not go well with his super skinny body.  He also does not make a very good first impression.  The first night we met him we made the mistake of inviting him in the house and he promptly peed on the dining room floor.  As you can imagine that did not go over well.  There is only one furry faced male who pees in this house and even he would not consider doing so on the dining room floor.  (Also he’s not a feline.) 

Peeing episode aside we have come to like Poindexter almost as much as Mrs. B who is quite smitten with him and always makes sure she looks her best before she goes out to see him.  Seriously!  A few months ago Mrs. B begged to be brushed and when I was done she went straight to the back door to go outside.  When I let her out I saw Poindexter sitting there ready for their date. 

I’m telling you, parenting a cat with an active dating life is tough! 

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30 Days of Truth: Something You Hate About Yourself

Oh god, where do I begin?  I suppose that little statement reveals quite a bit there making me wonder if I should go all deep and talk about my low self-esteem and how it plagues everything I do and blah, blah, blah….

But seriously do you even care about that?  Probably not and just thinking about how people don’t even care is enough to send me to the therapist’s couch.  So instead why not go easy and reveal something else I hate about myself that you probably care even less about but for me is easier to write about, at least in an interesting manner I hope. And the big reveal, something I hate about myself?

My hair. 

I know.  All of you who know me in real life are probably thinking “Is she kidding? I’d kill for her hair!” I’ll admit that I do like the fact that I have lovely thick hair.  Look at these locks:

 Karen hair

I hate them.  Yes it’s thick but do you see the lovely color?  It’s not natural.  Underneath the golden blond lurks horrid, wiry grey hair.  Yes, grey.  I am 44 years old and my hair is completely grey.  All of it.  I hate it. 

Unfortunately grey hair runs in my family.  My mom had solid grey hair by age 40 as did both grandmothers.  My mom and grandmothers simply accepted it, but I’ve been fighting it ever since I found my first grey hair at the age of 14.  Yes, 14!!!  I spent my teenage years yanking the occasional white hair and thanking god I had plenty of heavy brown hair to spare.  By the time I hit 20 I started dying it.  Luckily for my bank account my mom is a hairdresser.  I spent the 80s and 90s with a rainbow of hair colors: blond, brown, burgundy, red and every possible color combination minked in as well.  By 2000 (what do we call that, the 00s?) I settled on one color and have been blond for the past 10 years.

When I was younger I used to think that all the coloring would be temporary.  “I won’t do this forever” I’d think staring at myself in the mirror looking like a cheesy 50s style space alien with a billion pieces of foil sticking out of my head.  “I’ll go natural  when I hit 40.  That’s old enough to be grey.”  But by the time I hit 40 it was too late.  I was sucked in and couldn’t bear to be anything but a blond.  It was no longer a desire but a need.  And oh, my mom retired years ago so now I have to pay to get this shit done, $140 a pop (that includes tip).  Every 4th Saturday is spent with my hairdresser Marian getting my roots touched up.  It’s a huge pain in the ass that dictates my life.  Last minute social events are major sources of anxiety as I obsess over the white strip on my scalp (like a backwards skunk) which won’t get covered for another 3 days.  And god forbid Marian gets sick on the day I’m supposed to go in.  I have been known to miss work in order to go to a rescheduled hair appointment.  Since I come back the next day with freshly touched up roots I can’t even get away with blaming my absence on dental work or menstrual cramps.  It’s humiliating. 

Going natural at this point would be painful.  First of all I’d have to break the news to Marian.  That alone would be traumatizing since at this point she knows me better than my own family and not seeing her every week, sitting in that chair telling her about the past month would be like a giant void.  Not only that but she needs me too!  She depends on that $140 each month!

In short, I’m addicted and Marian is my dealer. 

If I were brave enough to breach the subject of going natural Marian and I would have about a year to get used to things.  I’d have to go through a year long ordeal where I’d have to get gradual shades of blond streaks which I would eventually have to grow out.  Basically it would be a detox program with Marian as my therapist, which she kind of already is so it might work.  But I can’t even think about that now.  Maybe when I’m 50. 

What’s a NaNoWriMo?

Tomorrow I plan to start my latest idea: NaNoWriMo.  What is a NaNoWriMo you ask?  Let me try to tell you.  And yes, it’s as weird as it sounds.  NaNoWriMo stands for National Novel Writing Month.  It is a literary challenge started 11 years ago by a group of writers in the bay area.  Read more about it here

NaNoWriMo is designed to help writers turn off the inner critic and get their story out.  It’s a great motivator for wannabe writers like me who have always wanted to write a novel but are waiting for the perfect time to start.  The rules are simple (but also kind of kick-ass): write a novel in a month.  It can be about anything and it can even be a worthless piece of crap.  The only requirement is that it be at least 50,000 words long.  The point is to just do it which is what the nagging little voice in my head has been telling me for years. 

What month do you embark on this insane notion?  November.  What do you get if you actually complete your novel at the end of the month?  Um, I don’t know.  An email I think from the NaNoWriMo website saying “Congratulations!”  And maybe a badge kind of like this one only it says “Winner” instead of “Participant.” 

nanowrimo_participant_04_100x100

Yes, I am crazy. 

What is my novel going to be about?  Don’t you wish you knew!  So do I for that matter.  Actually I do have an idea which I have loosely plotted out.  Good taste and my own sense of humility prevent me from sharing too much but I will say this: a sex phone operator and a family of evangelical Christians will be involved. 

Here goes nothing. 

Best Gift Ever

Yesterday he rescued me and then fixed the dead battery that left me abandoned in a Pleasanton beauty parlor parking lot.  Once at home he gave me a tutorial on a fabulous new remote that does everything but refill my wine glass.  Later that night he took me to a special birthday dinner at Horatios, sparing no expense. 

Have I mentioned lately how much I appreciate my husband? 

Jerry drinking beer

Thanks for a great day honey! 

30 Days of Truth

There’s this thing floating around the blogosphere called 30 Days of Truth.  I’m not sure where it all started but I first got the idea from this gal (who I like because we have the same first name and she gives good tweet).  Basically it’s a series of writing prompts that challenge you to write the truth about yourself. 

I think I’m going to try this because it may help with the nagging thought that plagues me now that I’ve started this blog which is: what the hell do I write about?  Of course this is immediately followed by the other nagging more bitchy thought: If you don’t know what to write about why the fuck did you start this thing?  To which the original thought comes back with: Shut up bitch!

And if that little revelation did not convince you I’m already crazy, maybe reading what I have to say about the proposed 30 days of truths will: 

Day 01 ? Something you hate about yourself.
Day 02 ? Something you love about yourself.
Day 03 ? Something you have to forgive yourself for.
Day 04 ? Something you have to forgive someone for.
Day 05 ? Something you hope to do in your life.
Day 06 ? Something you hope you never have to do.
Day 07 ? Someone who has made your life worth living for.
Day 08 ? Someone who made your life hell, or treated you like shit.
Day 09 ? Someone you didn’t want to let go, but just drifted.
Day 10 ? Someone you need to let go, or wish you didn’t know.
Day 11 ? Something people seem to compliment you the most on.
Day 12 ? Something you never get compliments on.
Day 13 ? A band or artist that has gotten you through some tough ass days. (write a letter.)
Day 14 ? A hero that has let you down. (letter)
Day 15 ? Something or someone you couldn’t live without, because you’ve tried living without it.
Day 16 ? Someone or something you definitely could live without.
Day 17 ? A book you’ve read that changed your views on something.
Day 18 ? Your views on gay marriage.
Day 19 ? What do you think of religion? Or what do you think of politics?
Day 20 ? Your views on drugs and alcohol.
Day 21 ? (scenario) Your best friend is in a car accident and you two got into a fight an hour before. What do you do?
Day 22 ? Something you wish you hadn’t done in your life.
Day 23 ? Something you wish you had done in your life.
Day 24 ? Make a playlist to someone, and explain why you chose all the songs. (Just post the titles and artists and letter)
Day 25 ? The reason you believe you’re still alive today.
Day 26 ? Have you ever thought about giving up on life? If so, when and why?
Day 27 ? What’s the best thing going for you right now?
Day 28 ? What if you were pregnant or got someone pregnant, what would you do?
Day 29 ? Something you hope to change about yourself. And why.
Day 30 ? A letter to yourself, tell yourself EVERYTHING you love about yourself

The manner in which these prompts are presented suggests that they be done one a day for 30 days but from what I’ve seen on the blogs I read many people are writing them at their own pace. This is the route I have decided to take as well because there is no way I could address all this in a mere 30 days.  First off because I don’t blog everyday.  But secondly, I find this project a little unnerving because it puts me out of my comfort zone and if I were to devote a concentrated 30 days to this I think I would end up in therapy. Either that or possibly divorce court. 

So here we go!  Well, not now but in a couple of weeks. 

Seven Years at Jessopland

Tomorrow Jerry and I will celebrate our 7 year wedding anniversary and surprise surprise Jerry will not be in Japan!  Not only that but I realized that this anniversary is a milestone because I’ve been married to Jerry longer than I’ve been at any one job.  Yes, that’s right.  Jerry has outlasted my devotion to any employer!  As I told him the other day, I think this means this thing we have together is for real. 

I think one of the secrets to a happy marriage is to appreciate the simple things you share on a daily basis that you otherwise might not notice.  (Another big one is to have separate bathrooms.)  So in addition to enjoying pure wedded bliss Jerry and I have together enjoyed the following for the past 7 years: 

  • KGO morning news with Ed and Jen
  • Feeding, brushing and vacuuming after Mrs. B
  • Coffee from Java Bobs
  • The carpool lane on 92
  • (Until this summer) free rides over the San Mateo Bridge
  • Separate bank accounts
  • History channel and HBO
  • Friday nights at Los Compadres
  • Lots of free hotel soaps
  • Google chat in the house

and best of all

  • Jerry’s sarcasm

I love you Jerry Jessop!  Thanks for a great 7 years.  I’m looking forward to 70 more, at least. 

 

You don't piss me off much

Global Soap Shortage

Remember that episode of Everybody Loves Raymond where Ray comes back from a business trip and leaves his suitcase sitting in the middle of the hallway where it remains for 3 weeks because neither he nor Debra refuses to put it away?  That’s what its like at our house all the time.  Only the suitcase (Jerry’s) sits in the middle of our bedroom floor. 

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Unlike Debra I do not refuse to remove the suitcase due to a battle of wills but rather I am frightened about what lurks inside.  Because after every business trip Jerry comes home with more hotel soap booty to add to his collection.  A collection that, due to Jerry’s insane travel schedule, has grown to proportions so big that it no longer fits under the bathroom cabinet and has recently been transferred to a box and overflowing trash bag. 

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Here’s the bar that started it all.  Pretty!  And from an exotic locale (yes, I consider The Netherlands exotic). 

curacao soap 

I will admit, he’s brought home some pretty cool things.  Look at the outlay of free toiletries you get in Japanese hotels! 

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Yes, that is a razor with shaving cream and a hair band! 

But it’s not all Anthony Bourdain.  More often than not Jerry’s travels are to not so exotic places.  Here are the slim pickin’s you get at the Laredo Doubletree: 

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Unfortunately it eventually comes to this. 

Jerry packing soap

Preparing for the eventual global soap shortage can be stressful.