‘Memories’ Category

  1. What have they done to my house?!

    April 10, 2007 :: 7:45 am

    My parents sold the house I grew up in and moved several years ago. My mom was heartbroken — this was the house she’d raised her children in. I was sad to see my parents leave, of course, but I’d said goodbye to the house long before that. Seeing it turned over to another family wasn’t an overly emotional event for me at the time.

    However… it has been brought to my attention that this house is once again on the market, and through the magic of the Internets (a.k.a. a series of tubes), I found the realty company’s photos.

    Now, I fully realize it’s not my house anymore, I haven’t lived there since 1990 (well, and that brief period in 1994 after college). And I fully realize that all homeowners do things to houses to suit their own tastes, to make them uniquely theirs.

    But this is just making me sad. Look what they’ve done! The Disturbingly Ornate Antique Jampacked Christmas Fairy threw up all over the house!! And aren’t you supposed to, you know, put away most of your decor and things, and go kind of minimalist, if you’re trying to sell your house? I guess these people never heard that little tidbit of advice.


    Oh yes… this one was MY room. Now it’s junky floral — and it is a pretty damn small room for all the crap that’s apparently in it. Under that yellow paint are layers of pink (the original, when I was very small), light blue, black with Jackson Pollock white drops (when my parents went out of town for a week; boy did I get in trouble for that), and also paintings that both I and my youngest brother painted directly on the walls.


    My parents’ bedroom. Boy, that bed almost doesn’t fit, does it? And what’s with the “JUS CUZ” on the wall? That’s just weird.


    The living room. I’m not sure if they could fit any more furniture in here. And what’s going on in that back corner? Are those bows?


    I’m not certain, but I think that this used to be my dad’s study.


    And I think this was our lovely covered patio room – big windows, tile floor, very light outdoorsy feel. Ha!


    Standing in the kitchen, looking at the breakfast area.


    And standing in the breakfast area, looking into the kitchen. Are those easter eggs hanging from the ceiling? Or is it fruit? And they obviously don’t do any actual cooking — there’s an Oriental rug in the kitchen! That makes me really sad — this is the kitchen where my mom taught me everything I know about cooking. This was a kitchen filled with love and knowledge and a lot of spilled flour. Now it’s just decorative.


  2. Every Tape Tells A Story

    March 8, 2007 :: 7:09 pm


    When I was in middle and high school, during the dark ages of the 1980s, it was a common occurrence to see a long string of cassette tape fluttering on the side of the road, trailing away from a broken and discarded mix tape.

    Mix tapes, for teenagers in love, were not given lightly. A tape full of songs with pointed and poignant lyrics was a gift to be analyzed for hours; what did the selection of THOSE particular songs mean? Why were they in THAT order? And creating a mix tape for your objet d’amour was an hours-long exercise in subtleties.

    So to spot one of these fragile magnetic love-poem-collages in a ruined state, littering the roadside, tossed out of a car window in a fit of pique, always made me a little sad: this was concrete evidence of love gone wrong.


  3. 11-Eleven! at the 500 Cafe

    March 6, 2007 :: 11:05 pm

    Doc is in the middle of a huge project, converting our VHS tapes to DVD. This is 11-Eleven (consisting of Doc, Dave, and a Mac 512K) at the 500 Cafe in Dallas. The show was this wonderful mix of music and performance art, complete with smoke, hairspray, and Baby Bleeds-A-Lot.


  4. Written on Sugar

    February 19, 2007 :: 3:46 pm

    I just read a story on cnn.com about the Croatian government’s reaction to discovering sugar packets in some cafes with Adolf Hitler’s face and Holocaust jokes printed on them. This is completely appalling, especially considering Croatia’s past ties to Naziism. Sometimes words fail me, and all I can think of is: PEOPLE SUCK.

    But it did remind me of something I’d completely forgotten about: when I was in high school, my friends and I would write things on sugar packets when we were out at restaurants, and then replace them in the container on the table. I don’t remember anything specifically that we wrote, but it would be things that we thought were funny, or clever, or cryptic. Jokes, weird phrases, or good fortunes. We wanted the next person to find that sugar packet to be either pleased, or confused, or both.


  5. Fish Don’t Float

    February 18, 2007 :: 10:45 pm

    In 1990, Rob Wilson and I spent weeks creating a sculpture to enter in the White Rock Lake Floating Sculpture Festival.

    We were so proud of it. We were allowed to leave art class to gather materials, so Rob drove us around rural east Plano, where our high school was located, until we found a stand of bamboo growing by the roadside (seriously, bamboo growing wild in Plano). We had the windows down and the cassette deck was blasting Henry Mancini’s “The Pink Panther Theme.”

    We cut down bamboo, and later cut the fish out of foam core, painted them, hot-glued scales onto them (cut from a roll of transparent pale blue 2″ plastic film that Rob brought in), tied our bamboo together into a cage-like structure on top of a raft, tied the fish inside, added colorful streamers, and tossed it into the pond outside the art building for a test run. One corner of it was a little bit underwater, but other than that, we had ourselves a floating sculpture!

    A week or so later, we hauled it down to White Rock Lake and quite ceremoniously, in front of a large crowd, heaved our Fish Out Of Water into the lake…. where it promptly sank to the bottom.

    We were so embarrassed that we simply left. We didn’t stick around to see the other sculptures or to wait for the judging (where we would quite certainly have received the “Least Floaty Floating Sculpture” award). However, in our defense, we were competing against a pool of much older and more experienced established artists. We were just a couple of 17 year olds with some bamboo and hot glue.

    We have a little video of the making of the Fish Sculpture… if I can find a way to get it off of DVD and onto YouTube, I’ll post it.

    On an unrelated note, doesn’t the school look like a prison??


  6. Cinnamon Bugs

    February 17, 2007 :: 1:47 am

    Just a few minutes ago I put my computer to sleep for the night and went downstairs to turn out the lights. As I unplugged the cinnamon air freshener infuser from the wall, the scent caught me in just the right way and I began to laugh at the memory that came to mind.

    1990: Kathryn and I were seventeen year old freshmen living in our very first dorm room, both very softhearted eco-friendly types (actually, we still are!). Dorms being what they are (lots of people and food in a tightly cramped space), and this one somewhat older and unremodeled to boot, we had the occasional unwanted creepy crawly visitor in our room.

    Now, I’m not sure if it was because we couldn’t afford a can of bug spray, or if we didn’t want the toxic chemicals in our room, or if we just thought we were being clever, but our solution to this problem was to keep an old Clairol hairspray spritz bottle filled with a mixture of water and a whole lot of cinnamon oil. Any time we saw something crawling around the floor or on the wall, we would douse the living shit out of the poor creature with this cinnamon oil mixture.

    I do not for the life of me remember if it actually did any good or not. Probably what we were doing was just slowly drowning a lot of bugs.

    But our room sure smelled good!


  7. The Green Bean Queen

    February 11, 2007 :: 3:59 pm

    I am a painter, and I think that my paintings are original, interesting, and very unique. But I can’t say that my art is quite this funny anymore. Judging from the handwriting, I must have been 9 or 10 years old when I did this.


  8. Yukky Little Brothers

    February 10, 2007 :: 11:52 pm

    My mom sent up a bankers box full of papers of mine she’s saved since I was very young. Drawings, stories, report cards, school programs, and more. I’ve just begun to scratch the surface of what’s inside.

    I found a book I made in December 1983, made of sheets of colored construction paper (do they even make this stuff anymore? Thick soft-surfaced felty paper, in dull colors or the ubiquitous beige called “manila”) and held together by yarn and holiday ribbon through hole punches. It’s called “This is Me and my Family!!” In it I wrote stories about a perfect day with my family, what would happen if I had to leave my home, a blue ribbon, a mystery story about me going missing, and…

    Yukky Little Brothers

    Here is a list of good and bad things concerning little brothers (To your advantage or disadvantage)

    Good Things.

    1. You don’t get hand-me downs.
    2. You get to boss them around.
    3. You get to babysit. [this was a GOOD thing? -ed.]
    4. You go to bed later than they do.

    Bad Things.

    1. You have to set examples.
    2. You’re stuck with all the chores.
    3. You have to share.
    4. You have to do everything for them: Ex – get the cereal down.
    5. They’re tattletales.
    6. They never get in trouble, “they don’t know any better.”
    7. They always watch what they want on T.V.

    The best part is the 11-page photo album at the back of the book. I don’t remember a lot of these pictures, and there sure are some cute ones, like the following of Mike when he was maybe 3 or 4.


  9. Doc

    December 6, 2006 :: 11:42 pm

    Doc and I met at least twice over a span of several years, before we became friends or started dating. I think that if we had tried dating earlier than we did, it likely would not have worked out. Both of us — but especially me — had personal issues to work out, and I had some growing up to do and hard lessons yet to learn.

    The first time was during my junior year in college. G. and I went to a concert in Dallas one weekend at a club, and I can’t remember who the headline act was but one of the opening bands was a local act called Au du Voir. After the show, we went to Denny’s, as was our tradition, along with Au du Voir, G.’s boyfriend TM, and a friend of TM’s who had long pretty brown hair and a goatee, little round glasses, a long coat, and was walking with a cane. I remember thinking he was attractive and very sweet but I was dating someone at the time so I didn’t give it a whole lot more thought.

    The second time was when I was home for the weekend from school, and G. invited me over to her mom’s house one night to watch “Barton Fink” with her and TM and TM’s friend Doc. Once I met him I remembered him as the nice guy from that night at Denny’s. I was too dense, apparently, to realize that it was sort of a set-up. I don’t remember too much about the evening other than I was extremely tired and I fell asleep on the sofa during the movie.

    In February of 1995, well after TM had achieved “asshole ex-boyfriend” status, G. and I moved into our first apartment as roommates. We had a housewarming party shortly thereafter, and G. asked me if she should invite Doc (sans TM, of course). I remembered him from our previous meetings and said sure, he seemed nice. He came to our party, dressed sharply, smelling fantastic, and he brought us a gift: three paper bags containing tiny dried rose buds, frankincense, and little orange suction dart guns. I thought he was cute, and very nice, but he was seeing someone at the time and I was still casually involved with PCN.

    We had several more parties that year and invited him to all of them. During a party over Memorial Day weekend, he was perusing the shelf of CDs in the living room, and turned around and asked us, “Whose ‘Lamb Lies Down on Broadway’ is this?!” I had been talking to someone else but immediately my focus shifted to Doc. It’s as if all other sound and people in the room faded away and he was the only person standing there. I had never met anyone before who had even heard of that record, let alone liked it. I have always felt like somewhat of a loner with my love for 70s progressive art-rock (Genesis, Yes, U.K.), and now someone who shared my obscure interest was standing in my living room! I was suddenly interested in nothing else but talking to Doc.

    We discussed music all night, even hijacking the TV in the middle of the party to watch a VHS tape of early Genesis history that I had, which he had never seen. We talked about a lot of things in addition to music, and I was finding him more and more intriguing. He was extremely intelligent, clever, funny, a great storyteller, and exactly my type, physically — long hair, eyes that crinkled up when he smiles, strong, gentle, pretty. We’d both had a little to drink, and as we were sitting on the floor in front of the TV, I found myself reaching over to brush a strand of hair out of his eyes. Automatically, without even thinking. Of course, the minute I did that I felt incredibly self-conscious: I had crossed an intimacy line and I hardly even knew him yet. I was hoping that he’d interpret it as just plain flirting, and not think that I was out of bounds.

    He already had a girlfriend (yet he never brought his girlfriends to any of our parties…) and I tried not to let myself get my hopes up too high. I was still feeling some of the trauma from my breakup with Eeyore less than a year before, and I wasn’t too interested in rushing into another serious relationship, because at that point it didn’t feel like I could survive another crash-and-burn ending. I felt fragile, and not yet trusting enough.

    From then on, we invited him to every single party we had, as well as some parties that were not parties at all. For instance, on the Fourth of July, G. and I packed a picnic dinner and drove to Fair Park. I think that it was G., her boyfriend, me, and Doc. We lounged in a grassy median in the parking lot, drank wine coolers, listened to a Boston concert wafting over the walls of Starplex, and watched the fireworks. I knew that I was more and more interested in Doc the more I saw of him, but he wasn’t seeming to get the message. Was I too subtle? Had I forgotten how to flirt? Was he just not interested in me?

    On Halloween, K1 and I dressed up in leather and fishnets and went down to the Oak Lawn Street Party along with Doc and G. K1 was leading me around by a leash attached to a black leather collar. We were VERY popular; everyone wanted their pictures taken with us. Doc dressed in black pants and fancy tall boots, a ruffled white lace shirt, and a long black Victorian coat. His hair was down and his beard was pointed into a little V. He looked amazing. The street party was very crowded so several times I took his hand to lead him through the crowd. We sat in a couple of overstuffed bars and played thumb wars.

    Later, when we were ready to leave, K1 couldn’t walk anymore because her thigh-high stiletto boots were a size too small and her feet just couldn’t take it anymore. She and G. sat on a curb while Doc and I walked back to retrieve his car, parked several blocks away. We climbed into his car and sat there talking for a few minutes, and I suddenly leaned over and kissed him. (The way he remembers it, he leaned over and kissed me. Maybe we both did at the same time!) He then said “Here’s the thing… I’ve just broken up with someone, and I need a couple of weeks to get things kind of finished up from that.” I told him that I could wait while he got things sorted out. I was just glad that he was finally not dating someone else, so I could have a chance!

    A few weeks later, we had our first date. He took me to Kostas Cafe, a Greek restaurant. I can’t remember if it was before Thanksgiving or after, but he also came over to our apartment on Thanksgiving Day, when G. and I cooked for our families.

    That was in November of 1995. We got engaged three years later (neither of us were dying to get married or anything; we both had trust issues to deal with and that timeframe seemed like a very natural progression for us) and married in November of 1999.

    We have just celebrated our seventh wedding anniversary. Time sure does fly. I’m happier than I’ve ever been. I’m not saying it’s been an effortless ride for either of us — marriage/committed relationships do take work, after all, and every couple has their particular issues — but I feel like we both have so much love and passion for each other, and we communicate so well, that we can make it through most anything.


  10. How I Got To Be Who I Am… Maybe

    December 5, 2006 :: 1:07 pm

    Like it or not, we are largely shaped by other people. It’s kind of like modeling clay: the basic substance of what you are comes from you, but all your relationships and interactions push and pull at you, take bits away, add bits here and there, cut deep grooves, form nice curves with the thumb.

    I’ve been thinking a bit lately on how I got to be who I am, and the roles that the people I dated played at each stage in my life. In the process of getting older (and hopefully a little wiser) and coming to terms with who I am, I have learned to appreciate each of my past experiences as valuable in some way, even those that were at the time unbearably difficult or complex. As they say, “hell builds character.” Hell is quite a learning process.

    While the details may fade with time (which is probably a good thing in some ways), I don’t want to entirely forget how I got to be where I am. Both Doc and I think that if we hadn’t had the particular life experiences that we each had, both good and bad, we wouldn’t have been in the right place at the right time when we found each other. And up until I started this blog in 2002, I never successfully kept a diary, so my memories and experiences have up until now remained exclusively in my brain.

    I’ve been debating for a few days whether or not to even post these stories. Will anyone besides me even care about this stuff? Probably not. Is it important enough for me to write about? I think it’s just like any other story in my life: it happened, so it’s fair game for an essay.

    I’ve tried not to romanticize the past, since as everyone knows it’s easy to remember the good things and gloss over the bad, but instead to tell it the way it was, filtered through the crystallizing lens of time and hindsight.

    Also: I have no regrets. This is important, and it’s the best possible outcome.

    Stories to follow.


  11. england, 1996

    November 27, 2006 :: 11:54 pm

    I visited England in the fall of 1996. I just found a letter that I wrote to one of my friends about it, once I got back home. I went with my parents. We stayed in a great little bed ‘n’ breakfast in a town called Horley outside of London, and took the train into the city. I would love to go back some day.

    Yes, I did just get back from London a week ago. It rocked. I was glad to get back to the Land of Real Food, though. I was absolutely dying for fresh fruit and raw vegetables. They don’t eat much of that over there. They also don’t drink much water. I got dehydrated because it’s just not readily available. I did eat lots of Cadbury chocolate, though. I think the calories were offset by the amount of walking I did. We spent three full days in London, and I got to see the Tower of London, the Victoria and Albert museum, which, to enjoy fully, I’d probably have to spend a week inside it, Harrod’s (scary big shopping overload), Picadilly Circus, Tower Records, Soho, Big Ben, Parliament, Buckingham Palace — where I saw the queen, no kidding, leaving in her snazzy Rolls Royce — and Westminster Abbey. I totally mastered the subway system (pardon, the “underground” system. “Subway” is a passage beneath the street, “Chips” are french fries, “Crisps” are chips, “Biscuits” are cookies. Getting the lingo down is half the battle.)

    I also went down into Cornwall and stayed in Exeter, Truro, and Bath. I visited St. Ives, which is a really cool little artsy community on the SW coast, Windsor Castle, and Stonehenge. Stonehenge was really neat. I’m not exactly a spiritual person, but I can see why the folks who built the place wanted it there. It’s on the highest point on the Salisbury Plain. You can see for miles. The day I went, it was so fucking cold I thought I was going to die. Open plain, strong wind, subfreezing temperatures…yikes. There were sheep in a field right next to it, and their butts were spray painted blue. I have no idea why. It seemed like the butts of all the sheep in England were one color or another.


  12. the week’s update

    October 1, 2006 :: 10:09 pm

    I’ve been working on my other website a lot this week so I haven’t had much time to write.

    Last week kinda sucked, between feeling downright awful for several days (bad period) and some crazy shit going on at work involving deadlines and last minute changes and having to say no and things maybe not working right and the possibility of a trivia slideshow to be presented in front of 2500 rich people going down in flames (it didn’t, but it was nervewracking getting there) and talking to managers about lessening the craziness of the crazy shit and just generally being extra crabby.

    It was a bad week for a lot of people that I talked to.

    Also, I barely ran any at all last week; my leg is still not feeling any better. Now it’s doing this thing where if I put any weight on it, it feels like it’s going to buckle! Good times all around. I’m going to try to get back into it this week, maybe run some on the elliptical machine, which I like better than the treadmill and it feels better on my injury.

    I got a slew of new freelance work and billed for quite a bit from September. I feel that the projects are coming at a good pace now. Nothing like the craziness of the book project. That should be printed and might deliver this week (thus the reason I was working on my business website; my URL is printed in the credits).

    We did have a good time out on Saturday night with Kirk, Brittney, and Stan. We ate at a steakhouse and then went to the crazy bowling alley-slash-event and entertainment center. We didn’t do any actual bowling, but played some video games, then went to Steak and Shake for ice cream.

    Thursday night was a lot of fun. It was Doc’s birthday, and I took him to Kostas (Greek food) for dinner. We usually only go there once a year on our anniversary, but I decided to buck tradition. He didn’t know that Lori, Joel, and Valerie were going to be there too. We had some great food, wine, and baklava, and I was really pleased that I was able to treat everyone. It feels nice to do that for my friends on occasion. We stayed at the table until after they had closed, talking and laughing. Lori gave Doc some fun little toys and candies, and we played “Bertie Bott’s Every Flavor Beans Roulette” where we closed our eyes, took a jellybean, and hoped to god it wasn’t the Vomit flavoured one. For the record, I got Earthworm, Doc got Sardine, Valerie got Grass, and Lori got Earwax. Doc voluntarily ate a Dirt flavoured one, and Lori was game and ate Soap and Booger. Joel ate Bacon and declared himself done.

    Doc found an old Hi-8 tape of my trip to New Mexico in 1996 with Kathryn and Ginger. We have two ancient Hi-8 cameras; one of them only plays audio and the other only plays video. I don’t even remember this tape; I’m dying to see what’s on it! I caught a glimpe of my old Honda Accord in one shot. I miss that car!! It had some problems towards the end, but I miss having a manual transmission and I miss having a red car. I might send the tape to a place that will convert it to DVD for a hefty fee.