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Abbie Lynn Update

March 8, 2013

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Abbie Lynn is adjusting and thriving, and so am I. I’ll have to admit, it has been a bit of a rough go, mostly because of me.

You think that getting a new dog will help you get over the old dog. But as Kizz told me, the new dog makes you miss the old dog even more, because you’re doing doggy things again every day.

There were, and are, many many times that I look at Abbie Lynn and wonder if I will ever love her as much as Goldie. The only answer I can come up with is that I will love her, but love her differently, in our own way.

It’s weird. Even though she has completely taken over my life, as dogs and children do, she still doesn’t feel quite like MY dog. I question whether I’m the right person for her. She loves other dogs and people and especially children so much…and I live by myself.

I’m being patient with myself and her. I’m taking her to as many places with other people and dogs as I can. That’s all I can think to do.

In the mean time, her life is pretty awesome.

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Digging.

She sleeps on the couch or bed. She visits Grandma. She digs huge trenches in the yard, chasing the elusive gopher (she does hunt!). It’s a good thing my yard is just a grassy field, not lovingly landscaped.

She goes for walks, and to the dog park, and once a week, because of her need for huge amounts of dog-on-dog playtime, goes to all-day doggie day care.

When we get to dog day care, she slams through the door and dashes over to whichever employee is manning the gate, wagging madly. Then she pees with happiness, every single time. It’s adorable and messy.

Yesterday I watched her for a while before I took her home. She had been there 9 hours and she was still playing with other dogs and flirting with the staff. She was disappointed to have to come home. When she gets home, she is calm and glassy-eyed with tiredness, spent.

Her limpy little leg is getting better. The vet said it was just an old injury, not a bone or joint problem. Yay. Long hikes are in our future.

That’s the dog report. Stand by for more.

I Hate Classic Rock…And Your Face

March 1, 2013

So I went on a date.

I know that just two posts ago, I was saying how I WASN’T going to be dating, but I decided to switch it up. I have to keep you readers on your toes.

I met this guy and he asked me out. I didn’t know anything about him, but I thought “What the heck?” So I said yes. I guess that’s how these things work.

The good news is that he was better than Jerry. I mean, he managed not to call me a whore in the first 2 minutes, so that’s good, right? Actually, he didn’t call me a whore at all, so he deserves a gold star or something.

Spoiler alert: We won’t be going out again.

Clue number one was that he didn’t shave. I know it wasn’t a real formal date. No white tie or tails were involved. There were no waltz numbers. But still, aren’t there minimum basic standards? Shaving, for me, is one. Also, please brush your teeth (I have no idea whether he brushed his teeth or not. So I guess that tells you how the date ended. WITHOUT KISSING. Of course, he ate ahi, so you probably wouldn’t have known if he had brushed his teeth earlier. Am I overthinking this too much?)

Clue number two was the classic rock. I will only really rail against one type of music, and that is classic rock. It’s fine. It really is. I just think it shows a profound lack of creativity or love of learning or curiosity or SOMETHING to keep listening just to the same 100 songs for 40 years.

Me: So, what kind of music do you like?
Him: Classic rock.
Me: What else?
Him: Oh, mostly just classic rock. And pop, I guess.

SHUT THE DOOR. You can listen to some classic rock. But for God’s sake, throw something else in the mix if you want me to stick around. Deadmau5. Mumford & Sons. The Mountain Goats. Rihanna. Anything. Just some other damned thing to show your ears didn’t fall off in 1985.

There were other little things. Not bad things, just things. But then…after a few beers…he told me his dream. He confided his dream to me, and because I am the kind of shithead who does these kind of things – in other words, a writer – I am going to share his confidential dream with you.

Bear in mind that he is my age. And that he has ever been in a band. Never had formal musical training. Never sung anywhere, outside of karaoke.

His dream, the thing he wants to work on this year, is getting on the X Factor, The Voice, and American Idol.

I’ll let that settle for a minute.

“But I could blow them all away,” he said. Then he sang a few lines of classic rock, walking along down by the harbor.

Oh my, people.

I don’t even know what to do with that. It would be like me trying to get published in the New Yorker this year. Ah, probably even less likely, since people have actually paid me to write a thing or two. But in either case, not gonna happen.

I’m all for dreams. I’m all for going for it. But completely unrealistic dreams that you have never ever taken a step toward, but for which you have some completely folly-filled confidence you’ll magically attain.

I had to wonder if it is a consequence of our culture of positivity, that tells us anyone can do anything if they dream. I don’t believe it. I believe anyone can do anything if they work hard enough and have enough natural talent and enough luck and are in the right place at the right time.

No, my friend. You will not be on American Idol. For one, the maximum age on Idol is 28, something you passed more than 20 years ago. (“They might have a problem with my age,” he admitted.)

Step away from the nitrous oxide. And don’t ask me out again. (He did. But I declined. I told him “You Can Go Your Own Way.” But “Don’t Stop Believin'” and “Dream On.” Ok, I’m out…)

Ballet Lessons 1972
I could have been a ballerina. If I were shorter, lighter and not incredibly clumsy.

Winter Break

February 26, 2013

Really truly almost dark

I have been afraid to write it because it seems so gloomy and pointless.

This winter was dark in every way. Putting Goldie down at the end of September was perhaps the worst time to do it, as the seasons swung down into darkness. There were a few bright days right after that, or at least briefly diverting, with a Toyota trip that included “camping” and kayaking, and then Creative Alliance 12, which would soothe anyone, no matter how much their heart hurt.

But after that the darkness pulled down, down, down. My best friend’s mom died. Then Sandy Hook. Then my cousin killed himself the next day, on December 15. His funeral, a giant, sprawling, horribly sad affair (though a beautiful tribute) was December 22.

I’m never much on Christmas, because of the Seasonal Affective Disorder, but this year it just didn’t exist, though I stood on stage at my church’s Christmas Eve pageant with all of the other performers.

In the midst of it was me, a tiny person stuck in the little crack of time between when I awoke and when I could go to sleep again.

It’s weird what keeps us going. Thank God for the things that act like lilypads of hope for us to jump to, one after the other, small, fragile, but just enough.

For me it was Zumba. One hour at a time of jumping around and looking like a lunatic and sweating with other ladies, laughing. One hour maybe three or four times a week, five if I was lucky. My heart was broken, but my thighs got strong.

That was about it. I would go over to my mom’s house and have nothing to say. I’d sit in the corner of the couch and listen to her rattle on about what she had for lunch, wondering how soon I could politely leave.

I would see my friends for an hour or two and then fade back home, on the couch, hiding from the darkness with red wine and some popcorn, waiting until it was time to go to sleep.

It has started to change in the past few weeks. I got this dog, which is another post, because that wasn’t easy, either. I love her, but damn, it’s still hard.

But now I have a new boss, more fun work, and…sun. The sun is coming back. Next year I have to get the meds, because I can’t spend five months a year like this. No one should have to. And there’s some stuff I have to figure out. Onward.

Winter Break

February 26, 2013

Really truly almost dark

I have been afraid to write it because it seems so gloomy and pointless.

This winter was dark in every way. Putting Goldie down at the end of September was perhaps the worst time to do it, as the seasons swung down into darkness. There were a few bright days right after that, or at least briefly diverting, with a Toyota trip that included “camping” and kayaking, and then Creative Alliance 12, which would soothe anyone, no matter how much their heart hurt.

But after that the darkness pulled down, down, down. My best friend’s mom died. Then Sandy Hook. Then my cousin killed himself the next day, on December 15. His funeral, a giant, sprawling, horribly sad affair (though a beautiful tribute) was December 22.

I’m never much on Christmas, because of the Seasonal Affective Disorder, but this year it just didn’t exist, though I stood on stage at my church’s Christmas Eve pageant with all of the other performers.

In the midst of it was me, a tiny person stuck in the little crack of time between when I awoke and when I could go to sleep again.

It’s weird what keeps us going. Thank God for the things that act like lilypads of hope for us to jump to, one after the other, small, fragile, but just enough.

For me it was Zumba. One hour at a time of jumping around and looking like a lunatic and sweating with other ladies, laughing. One hour maybe three or four times a week, five if I was lucky. My heart was broken, but my thighs got strong.

That was about it. I would go over to my mom’s house and have nothing to say. I’d sit in the corner of the couch and listen to her rattle on about what she had for lunch, wondering how soon I could politely leave.

I would see my friends for an hour or two and then fade back home, on the couch, hiding from the darkness with red wine and some popcorn, waiting until it was time to go to sleep.

It has started to change in the past few weeks. I got this dog, which is another post, because that wasn’t easy, either. I love her, but damn, it’s still hard.

But now I have a new boss, more fun work, and…sun. The sun is coming back. Next year I have to get the meds, because I can’t spend five months a year like this. No one should have to. And there’s some stuff I have to figure out. Onward.

Jerry

February 15, 2013

There’s a reason I never leave the house. Or why I should never leave the house. And yet, sometimes I do.

My friend Missy invited me to a party she was having on Valentines night. Missy is a great organizer of people and things, and she had gathered a huge throng of people for a night out – drinks, food, dancing – and I, for some stupid reason, and forgetting I hate people, thought it might be fun.

Ok, yeah, it was advertised as a singles thing. But I thought that I could just go meet some nice people, not try to hook up. The last thing I want is a date. That’s a lie. The last thing I want is a colonoscopy. But I’m really not looking to date, either.

Which explains why, shortly after I arrived and got a gin and tonic in my sweaty little paw, I was chatting up a nice lady named Ann, not checking the room for age-appropriate guys.

It turns out Ann and I studied at the same college. The same subject. At the same time. Cue the music from “It’s A Small, Small World,” right?

Ann and I were triangulating our trajectories through our department, madly trying to remember instructors and classes when we were approached by an older man named, from what his stick-on name-tag said, Jerry.

“Hey there,” Jerry said, interrupting.

Being polite people of the lady-type persuasion, we all introduced ourselves. Ann said, by way of making conversation, “We just found out we both went to the same college at the same time, Cal Poly San Luis Obispo.”

Let me mention here that Cal Poly is only a couple hours away and is a well-regarded state school.

“What did you study?” Jerry asked.

“Horticulture,” I said.

“So, heh heh, are you WHORES?” said Jerry. “That’s what HORticulture is about, right?”

I jerked my chin away and regarded a spot on the ground to my right, gritting my teeth.

“Ya know you really gotta get a sense of humor, Sue,” said Jerry. Ann had wisely bumped into a friend and was disappearing into the distance.

“Is that right?” I snapped.

“Yah, lighten up, have some fun,” he went on. “Or start drinking more.”

“I’m afraid of that,” I said.

“Afraid? Why afraid? A little booze won’t hurtcha.”

“I’m afraid there isn’t enough alcohol here to give me that kind of a sense of humor.”

And with that, I had to go see where the ladies room was. Goodnight, Ventura.

Memories from Gaviota

February 10, 2013

I hear Jamaica Kincaid on the radio with Michael Rosenblatt today and they were talking about writing strings of memories. Here you go.

California Hills

Sitting underneath the weeping branches of a California pepper tree, spice in the air, serrated lacy leaves hiding me from everyone, seed pods on the branches like tiny pink balloons.

The wind so hard in the afternoon, the sea a plain of broken glass and white foam, blown sand caught and gritting in my back teeth.

Riding a homemade scooter with my brothers and sisters, putt-putting around the road, afraid of burning my leg on the lawnmower engine under the plank board seat.

Making lizard leashes by making loops in the ends of weeds and then trying to catch lizards to walk on the leashes.

Dad sitting in the kitchen, his stocking feet propped on the oven door, slicing off pieces of cheese with a worn pocket knife and eating them on saltines.

Melting crayons in the sun out on the tarry bank, colors flowing into the black.

A king snake kept in a trash can briefly as a pet.

Mom yelling “Yoo Hoo,” which meant “Come in the house.”

Our big black cat, Tinkerbell staring down Buddy, the boxer dog next door.

The fathers standing around a car with the hood open, repairing and drinking beers and smoking and laughing.

Sheets of lightning at night over the sea, flashing the islands into view with terrifying, bright clarity.

Standing at school, facing home, my fingers woven in the cyclone fence, wishing to be back with my mom.

Adventures with Mom: The Eye Doctor

January 21, 2013

Mom has been getting treated by one eye specialist for macular degeneration in one eye. Today we are at a different eye specialist for another issue.

Mom: I don’t know why he keeps giving me those shots.
Dr. Qiu: They are to help your eye. You’re lucky they have them now. A few years ago, they didn’t exist and there was nothing we could do.
Mom: But my eye isn’t getting any better.
Dr. Qiu: Sometimes the best we can hope for is that it will stay the same.
Mom: Then why do I have to get the shots?
Dr. Qiu: The shots help your condition.
Mom: But it’s not getting better.
Dr. Qiu: You’re really not getting this, are you?
Suebob: The shots are keeping it from getting worse.
Mom: I guess there’s nothing they can do for me.
Dr. Qiu: Like I said, you’re lucky they have the shots now so you don’t get worse.
Mom: I don’t know why.
Dr. Qiu: I think we’ll just write the prescription for your new glasses, okay?

The Life of a Dog: Playdate

January 18, 2013

Abbie Lynn finally got to play with the neighbor dog, Sharkface, today. They plum wore each other out.

Abbie Lynn’s signature dog play-fight move is to get in front of the other dog and to tumble over head first, knocking into the other dog. Clumsy and somewhat effective.

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Run run run

Leg snack

Ears are good to bite

A good time was had by all.

Adventures in Dogwalking: Miss Congeniality

January 15, 2013

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I planned Goldie’s walks to make her happy. Goldie was a hunter, so city walks and parks were boring to her. She wanted somewhere brushy and dirty. The more gophers and bunnies the better. Our walk routes were developed around those factors.

Abbie Lynn, however, is a whole different animal. She does not hunt. Last night we saw 2 bunnies, and her expression was a mild “Oh, hm, look at that animal.” Goldie would have run through cactus (ask me how I know (and why I carried needle-nosed pliers in my pack)) to get to bunnies.

Abbie Lynn wants 2 things from a walk: to see people who might be her friend, and to see other dogs who might be her friends.

SHe will see someone 50 yards away and begin wagging. She puts herself in a smaller, wigglier “Look what a cute dog I am” posture. If the person responds, bliss. If they don’t – like last night when runners kept passing us on the trail at the park – she looks confused and dejected.

She will trot after runners, not in an aggressive “Must chase running thing” kind of way, but rather a “Hey, wait up, friend! You still have a chance to meet my cuteness” way.

She also loves every dog she meets. Friendly dogs get the full springy play bow and hop, while aggressive ones cause her to stand calm and still, waiting for them to realize she’s no threat.

I can see lots of dog parks and play dates in my future. I had imagined another good hiking partner, but I don’t think back hills trails are going to make this mutt happy. She needs her public.

Abbie Lynn’s Weekend

January 14, 2013

Abbie Collage