• You are currently browsing the archives for the Frothing At The Bit category.

  • and a chill filled the room

    April 4th, 2008 she Posted in Frothing At The Bit 6 Comments »

    1.75 days. That’s how long the temporary truce lasted. I’m not even sure you could call it that. More of an unwritten rule that if no one presses the red button all will remain sweetness and light. Minus the agonizing stomach problems. The sleeplessness. The jitters and constant dodging and hiding. Mom calls it our (my sister and me) “avoidance problem”. I have most often called it survival.

    It had to be 9:00am. No one was awake or downstairs before 8:30 and it was definitely an “after breakfast” argument. Mom picked and picked and picked until somewhere around 9:00am I finally exploded. Actually, as far as explosions go it was a relatively minor one. I repeatedly told her to drop the subject and let it go. I did my best to avoid speaking words that I knew would just tear us all to bits a little more. I’m not proud to say that my good intentions and patience didn’t last very long. Hell, I don’t even thing I lasted more that 10 minutes. 20+ years of anger sits too close to the surface to remain bottled for long. If nothing else, I can honestly say “she asked for it”. She said she wanted to know. Then again, we all know that when people say they want something they often rarely want or expect the truth.

    People went to their separate corners. Rooms in this case. There seems no where left to run and finally, I am so damn tired of walking on eggshells and making myself miserable trying to appease or please someone else.

    We had an appointment to look at cremation grave sites for 10am. Then appointments to visit the funeral home and pick out an urn. Fake smiles were pasted on. Roseanne sat in the background; pretending to be invisible even after the cemetary manager mentioned remembering her from school. I’ve been carrying around a piece of my father – in more ways than one – most of the day today.

    In the car I think I finally gained a tiny bit of power back. Perhaps that’s what I’ve been missing all this time. The realization that I wasn’t put on this earth to please my mother. That, no matter how much guilt is heaped on, I can say no, walk out the door and never return. After the loud crying jag in the house a nicely composed mum insisted that I am not responsible for anyone’s happiness but my own (my gut, finely tuned to Catholic guilt, calls bullshit). That I don’t need to do anything to meet anyone’s expectations. Sure, she doesn’t see how telling me that I’m fat, ugly, stupid, lazy, or that (for the last 12 years, more times that I can count, and in front of him) my husband will leave me one day because of all of these things – I’m a rotten wife. Funny how people can’t seem to understand that the psychological damage we do to others will tear them apart for years to come. Bruises heal. Pain fades. But children learn what they live.

    Lunch was a small respite in a painfilled day. We toddled off to a restaurant to meet with Ann and Gillian. Ann’s the wife of my father’s best friend. There were chunks of my childhood – vague since I was so young – when she helped raise me. She was my kindergarden teacher and is one of the most amazing women I know. Diagnosed with cancer shortly after my father died, she’s had her spleen removed (and other parts too I think) and has the most bouyant attitude. She sees joy in days I lost to pain too long ago to count. Gillian is my mom’s best friend. She’s a lovely lady.

    I would kill for a cigarette. Someone should remind me why I’m trying to quit. I’m having a hard time remembering at the moment.

    No good can come from any trip where there is no peacekeeper sitting between the opposing forces. The role inherited by my husband. Passed down from my father. I can’t even begin to try and explain how desperately I miss my dad. I know I disappointed him. I know there were times I hurt him deeply. No matter how bad things got between mum and I, I always knew my dad loved me. I was never stupid or an afterthought. I was never inconvenient. And he never made me feel like garbage.

    I want to come home.

    I can’t.

    There are still so many decisions to be made and meetings to attend. I don’t know why we bother. When asked for our opinions are dismissed. The queen is in her element. Gathering attention and playing martyr.

    So I will hold on to two bright lights on this trip. This evening – at least this once in our short lives – my sister and I will go out somewhere together and talk. Perhaps we will try and reach for that bond that has never existed; the mythical one between sisters. In a few days I’ll see my childhood best friend for a few hours. Maybe I’ll learn to smile again.

    AddThis Social Bookmark Button

    no vote? no complaining!

    March 6th, 2008 she Posted in Frothing At The Bit, Save Us From Evil 1 Comment »

    It’s a few days past the big election here and we’ve recently been swamped with news stories about low voter turnout in the cities. After listening to weeks and weeks of “human interest” stories burbling on about how so many people want to see change in the political landscape we see the PC party gain seats rather than lose them. The NDP lost 50% (2) of their seats and are on the cusp of losing official party status. The Liberals lost seats as well. Rather than change, we’re in for more of the same.

    Not that I’m complaining as I’ve yet to really find any government appealing at the moment…

    However, I’m stunned by the excuses people are giving on the news for their missing votes. “I was out shooing pool“, “I had a hair appointment“, “I was watching the latest episode of XX TV show“, etc. Despite these pathetic excuses people still feel it’s their dawg-given right to complain about the election results.

    Of special interest to me are the students. Yep. You know the ones – constantly complaining about the high cost of student loans and education but who can’t be bothered to show up and vote. It amazes me how any student can consider their issues important enough to complain about everywhere (verbally, blogs, student newspapers, TV and radio interviews) but can’t take the 10-20 minutes to show up at a polling station and VOTE.

    Note: Been there, done that. Paid off the student loan after 7 years and am now paying for my degree course-by-course while working full time.

    Even better, I’m tired of hearing “I don’t know enough about the political process, parties, platforms, etc.” excuse from students. You’re attending college or university. You have access to computers and libraries – and in some cases poli. sci. courses – there’s no reason on dawg’s green earth why you can’t take a few minutes to RESEARCH parties and their platforms or read about the provincial political system!

    Political parties know they can ignore student issues because students don’t tend to vote. According to posters placed all around campus prior to the election (provided by the student union) less than 5% of eligable students voted in the last election. Lucky me. In a few decades my future will be in the hands of these students. I wonder how much lower the voter turn out will be then.

    If you want change, if you want to make an impact on the world around you, if you want issues that matter to you to be taken seriously you can stop complaining and start with the simplest of tasks. Change your own behaviour. Get out and vote. Take instruction from Gandhi and “be the change you want to see“.

    AddThis Social Bookmark Button

    we’re full

    August 14th, 2007 she Posted in Frothing At The Bit, Lighter Side 8 Comments »

    Our phone number is similar to that of a local school. Occassionally we get calls from parents who have transposed two of the numbers. Today we got a call from a woman who was trying to register her kids in grade 7. Despite the fact that the answering machine messages says “hi, you’ve reached name and name lastname, we’re not home right now. leave a message after the beep” we continually receive messages from parents to frazzled or lazy to actually listen to the message.

    Tonight, the hubby tried to call the woman back to let her know she’d called the wrong number and give her the correct number for the school. The fact that the call was at 8pm should have been a hint to the woman that it wasn’t a school calling. The conversation (which I got to listen to on speaker phone) went like this:

    Him: Hi, you called our house and left a message on our machine about registering your kids in school. You called the wrong number. You need to call ###-####.

    Her: I’m trying to register name for grade 7.

    Him: We’re not a school. You need to call the school to register. The number is ###-####.

    Her: [interupting at the end of his sentence] But I need to register my kid for school. He’s going to be in grade 7.

    Him: You didn’t call the school. You called our house. I’m trying to let you know you called the wrong number.

    Her: He needs to be in grade 7.

    Him: We’re not a school.

    Her: His name is XX. What do you need for registration?

    Him: We’re full. We’re not accepting any registrations.

    Her: [angry] What?

    Him: We’re full.

    Her: What about grade 6? I can hold him back a year.

    Him: We’re full.

    Her: I have another son I need to register in grade 9.

    Him: We don’t have a grade 9.

    Her: I thought you were grades 6-9.

    Him: No, we’re not a school. You called a house. You need to call the school. If we were a school, we’d be k-8.

    Her: But…

    Him: We’re full. [hangs up]

    So much for trying to be nice and do someone a favour. During the school year, we receive 5-10 calls a week from parents who never listen to our answering machine messages and leave messages about doctor and dentist appointments, ill children, etc. If the message sounds urgent and not too much time has passed since it was received, we do try to call the parents back to let them know they called the wrong number and give them the correct one. Never seems to resolve the problem.

    Oddly enough, I get more angry parents as a result of their mistakes than I get grateful ones. I have a feeling we should just stop trying…

    Technorati Tags: , , ,

    AddThis Social Bookmark Button

    whinge

    August 7th, 2007 she Posted in Art, Vittles & Beer, Friends & Family, Frothing At The Bit 1 Comment »

    It’s Tuesday night. I should be out stuffing my gullet full of wings and drinking trendy beer with Drew, Wendy, Paul and Alex. Instead we’re slurping back spaghetti and I’m working my tush off on my contract assignment. The boy (refugee from Winnipeg) is running up my phone bill and Drew is prepping lunches for tomorrow.

    I can’t believe how long the boy has managed to stay on the phone. He’s like a teenage girl. 3 hours and counting. He get’s cutt off in the next half hour or we won’t be able to call my mom or sister for the rest of the month. We’re on a budget here ya know…

    Oh, and it’s my sister’s birthday. Guess who’s not getting a call.

    Oddly enough, we’ve never spent more than 6 hours a month on the phone since dad died so we haven’t ever had to worry about a large – and expensive once it gets past the plan limit – phone bill in years!

    Gin: you so didn’t warn me about this stuff.

    Technorati Tags: , , , ,

    AddThis Social Bookmark Button

    starving student?

    August 6th, 2007 she Posted in Frothing At The Bit, Learning & Education 2 Comments »

    I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again – I love my new job. A continual, free-flowing, bucketful of shared ideas, theories, and excitement over the latest and greatest (what’s your SecondLife avatar wearing?) is something I never really had before and am very much enjoying. While there still may be crazy deadlines, there’s a lot less stress overall.

    The downside of the new job is the pay scale. It’s hard enough re-adjusting all your budgets and spending when you’ve accepted a significant pay cut, then I had to go and through heading back to university into the mix.

    After finishing paying off my horrific student loan and relegating the entire experience to a locked box in the recesses of my mind, I’d forgotten how expensive university was. The last time I attended (post student loan), I was fortunate enough to have a tuition reimbursement program to rely on for some of the costs. If nothing else, it helped pay for tuition and books for half of the year. The new job doesn’t have a tuition reimbursement program for support staff weenies such as myself. To make it into a faculty position here, I need to – at minimum – complete a Master’s *sigh*

    Mom’s advice was, as always, to cut back some more. Of course, she provides this advice AFTER her birthday has rolled around and her present is firmly in hand. Guess my sister will be the first to feel the cutbacks happening in this household. Her birthday’s tomorrow and she’ll get an e-card and phone call instead of something in the mail. I’ll tell her the cut backs were mom’s suggestion.

    Someone out there – well, someone at my current job – loves me though. One, who shall remain nameless, wrote a reference letter for my university application. This would be the same gentleman who let it be known around campus that I’d be willing to do development work on my own time (weekends and evenings) for a fee. A few hours later I was being solicited for estimates and project bids. Which then meant I had to register a trade name with the gov’t (done) and have to open a business bank account (on my to do list this week).

    On Friday, I won my very first contract. It’s small, but it’ll pay for a course over the winter semester and will help pay for the new roof that were having installed on the house next weekend. Drew’s sweat equity can only take us so far on the roof installation – eventually we have to pay for materials…

    Now that the first blush of excitement is off being the winning contract bid, I do have to be careful not to get carried away. After all, I want a work/life balance and I’ll need to save some time to attend classes and work on papers, projects, etc.

    In the meantime, I’m glad the hubby loves me because we may be subsisting on Ramen noodles and Kraft dinner soon. Actually, it’s not THAT bad, but it does mean that the rickety 1990 car we’re driving has to stay on the road at least another 1-2 years (if it doesn’t fall apart in the meantime).

    Gin, if you’re out there – your son arrived yesterday safe and sound and Drew hasn’t yet put him to work. Lucky boy!

    Technorati Tags: , ,

    AddThis Social Bookmark Button