Late Morning in the Coffee Shop

I send Joe a text message that says ‘You look so cute. Profesh Joe rocks!’ I watch from the corner of my eye to see him get it. I keep waiting and then I realize he isn’t going to get it. Of course not. He’s in a meeting. And he’s professional.

There’s a girl in the corner, purposefully facing away from everyone with her book open, legs crossed and sneaking furtive glances over her right shoulder to see who might be watching her. Teen Girl Squad strides in. They are eternally bored in their sheep fur lined boots and shoulderless sweaters and tight jeans with careful and expensive rips in them. They move as if one large life form, a mass of hormones and sadly perfect hair and lipgloss.

I notice the man sitting to the left of the door watching me again. I continue to ignore him. I watch the older couple, he with his Louie L’Amour novel and she with her newspaper, one leg up in his lap. He pats her ankle every so often and it’s comforting to witness.

The man watching me looks as if he might speak. I take a sip from my drink, set the cup on the table and take out my crochet needle and some yarn. I feel the blue and very thick yarn in my fingers, rolling it from side to side, wondering what it wants to be. A hat, I decide. They are all hats right now. Joe is nodding to the man across the table from him outside. Joe looks cute. He looks concerned and he probably really is. Programming questions make him happily involved.

The man watching me is sniffling but otherwise not bad looking. Early forties I think, but any person, male or female who is sniffling repeatedly every five seconds, has a rapidly lowering attractiveness factor and may want to rethink not bringing a hankie. Or sitting in public for long spans of time. Or looking as if they want to hit on someone. I’m annoyed and wishing I’d worn a ring on my finger today.

The youngish-mom in the seat next to me gathers her kids and assorted kid-paraphernalia. There are two children, both under five years old, and they have been climbing over her like Mount Everest wiping snot on her shoulder and saliva in her hair while she good-naturedly wrestles them back to her lap. She attempts two false starts in exiting which fail because of one action figure left behind under a chair and a red shoe wedged in a seat cushion. Her third attempt is successful and the lobby seems much less friendly with them gone.

Romeo makes a quick beeline for the recently vacated oversized chair, leans back and sets his drink on the table in between us. I see him looking at me every few seconds but ignore him. He doesn’t appear to be the sleazy type of guy – that guy is kinda fun to squelch – and I don’t want to hurt his feelings. Every time I look out the window at Joe, whose head is now directly to the right of the man next to me, the man tries to catch my eye. Finally, out of some odd magnetism that must have been pulling from his eyes to mine, I glance at him, smile, and go back to my crochet. He makes a small sound in his throat, then a tiny muffled laugh. I decide the best thing to do is to be friendly so I look up, smile again and say, ‘Sorry if I seem to be staring. My husband is right there outside (and I point) and I keep checking on him to see if his meeting is over.’ He looks where I pointed and says, ‘I see. And here I thought it was my new haircut and my son’s Axe.’ And before thinking I say, ‘Axe is truly one of the stinkiest deodorants I’ve ever smelled. Why do they wear it?’ He laughs a real laugh and says, ‘The cat died last week and I swear it was the Axe.’ I’m confused by that but since he’s checking his watch and getting up to leave, I let it go and am glad to not prolong the conversation.

Left in the lobby is an Asian couple wearing color-coordinated zip-up leisure suits with stripes down the sides. Their very tall and very glamorous daughter is wearing extreme amounts of silver and looking very overdressed for a late morning coffee. There is also a weekend-dad with the name ‘Crusty’ on the side of his coffee with his daughter who has on extremely short shorts and can pull it off because she’s young with firm legs. I like the father immensely because I assume the Crusty is an indicator of his sense of humor, a sign that he tries too hard, which every parent does from time to time. My son would find both their daughters attractive.

My coffee says ‘Nia’ on the side. My voice broke when I said my name and it hurt too much to try and correct her. Besides, Nia is kind of a great name.

A guy sneezing at one-minute intervals sits in the empty chair next to me. I say bless you the first few times and then give up. I think about joking with him that I extend to him a standing Bless You! and to consider it his every time he needs it, but I don’t. I also think about moving but the only empty chair is directly across from him and I figure I’m getting fewer germs from spray on the side of him than a full frontal attack. I think everyone in the city must be sick right now.

There is a thin, small man just outside the door that nods to everyone walking out. He’s talking to himself but trying to include everyone around him. It’s a nice gesture but it appears to creep people out. I decide to talk to him when I leave.

It looks like the meeting is going well. Joe trimmed his facial hair so he has a slight goatee with a tiny Miami Vice shadow working the sides. He calls it the Lazy Man Shave, but it suits him.

A tall woman with long blonde hair has an uncooperative two-year-old who refuses to get up. She scoots her whining child, using her booted leg, at the rate of six inches every minute until she gets to the front and orders. Then she picks up her child in one scoop and whispers, hard, in her ear. The mom’s head is shaking in tandem with her mouth opening and closing. And for the millionth time this morning I miss the kids and wish they were here. Tony would have got an Izze, probably grapefruit, Tyler would have picked a water, or better, brought his own water from the back of the car and waited patiently for us to play out our wasteful consumeristic weekend tradition. Alex usually gets a caramel frappe and Devon a Chai latte, like me, but he gets his extra hot and with extra Chai pumps like his dad. And Joe would have looked over the pastries and then decided he didn’t really want anything after all and then shared my Chai. If he was in here. But he’s out there.

A man has a leak in his drink and little drops of caramel colored coffee hit the floor creating a snowflake pattern next to his shoe. The couple next to him call his attention to it and he laughs saying, ‘I’m glad you can see that too. I wondered if I was imagining it or just having trouble swallowing.’ They all laugh and out of that comes a conversation of ‘What do you do’s and ‘Where you went to college’s. You can make a conversation with anyone if you try.

I’ve taken out my laptop to jot a few notes. My drink is lukewarm at best and the man next to me asks me if I’m a writer. Why is it so hard to say yes? I get nervous and tell him sometimes I am.

And sometimes, I am.

Mystery Sock

There are many things I don’t understand. There are secrets to the Universe that I’m pretty sure I’ll never know. And that’s ok. But sometimes, I just can’t figure something out and it drives me crazy. Case in point – dryer socks. Because I have four kids, three of whom are boys who wear their socks outside in the grass or through a puddle of mud, we go through a fair number of socks. I’ve done laundry at the laundry mat before and I’ve discovered that it doesn’t really matter where you laundry – home or away – sometimes socks disappear. There is nothing you can do about it. *Poof* they are gone and the less time you look for the lost sock the better, because wherever they went, you will never find them. Go pour yourself a martini and let it go.

I frequently wear mismatched socks. In fact, you can buy them that way now. I’m positive this doesn’t just happen to me. But that is not the answer I’m looking for. I’m puzzled by the reverse.

Yesterday we did load upon load of clothes. Positively mountains of dirty clothes at my house. We did this laundry in the washer and dryer at our home. The same washer and dryer we’ve owned for the entire two years we’ve lived in this home. We’ve had no small children visit or stay the night in this home. Ever. Not that they weren’t invited, but they just haven’t seen fit to guilt their parents into coming over and spending enough nights to warrant doing that in-between-load-of-laundry before you head home. The Hump Day Load, if you will.

So, please tell me where this sock came from, Universe?

sock 003

Where? My daughter had a sock that size approximately 14+ years ago. In a different house. In a different country. With a different washer and dryer. And I’m oh-so-positive that none of my boys ever wore pink socks.

*Tap *tap *tap

Hello? Blogger friends that live in the greater Los Angeles area?
Come to a blogger party next Tuesday, March 6th from 7-9pm.
Requirements: you must be a blogger.
More info here.
Pretty easy, yes?
Good. See you there.

Up Dating

Joe‘s been helping me get my site updated. (He says it validates!) I’m back on the work-path. I’ve got more energy and feeling pretty good. Today I even cleaned the bathroom. And vacuumed. And I liked it.

Tonight we worked on the published photos page. What do you think? Like it?

So if you were hoping to hire me for shooting photos (I swear I won’t lose your disk – I figured out an alternate plan so that will never, ever happen again pinky swear) or to write and/or edit, please look also at my writing credits.

Whaa?

Here is the ad I took out in the newspaper in my dream last night:

Small.
Furry.
Bat-sized with zipper in the front.
Must be clean and not smell of mothballs.

Because, I was a bat looking for a new outfit. Really.

Why I'm Crying (updated)

I shot a wedding a few weeks back.
My computer only holds so many photos before going tits up.
I routinely load the photos by the 100 to disks and then erase them from my computer. (can you see where this is going?)
I went to Kinkos to make a banner for the bride and groom of the moment right after ‘I Do!’
The disk I used? I lost there.
I left it. Or they didn’t give it back. Or they gave me the wrong one. Or something.
I called and they have never heard of the word disk.
The 100 photos from the walk down the isle to the I Do moment? Gone.
What is the word I am looking for?
I don’t even know the word to say how I feel.
Loser is so inadequate.

UPDATE: Thanks Daily Piglet and Michelle. I tried both and neither one could find the images. I am afraid I have used the flash card way too many times since the wedding. I take a lot of photos. But I do appreciate the help. If there is some heavy-duty application that works on a pc hard drive after a defrag, that might work but I can’t find one.

My Ineptitude Is Astounding

Not once, not twice or three times, but four times in the past year, my friends, I have deleted the folder with all my daily read links in it. I love Firefox and would preach it if they asked me, but COME ON it would be nice to have a question box that asks ‘Are you really sure, YOU IDIOT, that you want to delete this entire folder you have been working on for months?’

So. Sigh. I am not going to remake the folder. Instead I’m going to do what I said I would never do because it seemed so dang hard. I made a link page on my blog. And since the links are there, there is no reason to have them on the side bar.

Because I am a delete-happy idiot, I’ve lost a good third of the sites I read. If you know that I read your site, please comment in this post so I can add your link to my page.

Brought To You By

On the left there you’ll see an ad from Alltel. I sure appreciate their support this week so I wanted to put it in a post where my thanks will be more permanent even when the ad finishes its run.

Alltel phones are not something I’m familiar with but if you do have one, the Celltop application looks pretty sweet. Click the ad on the left to visit their site.

Current Smarts: Global Warming (and the imminent demise of the human race)

Global warming discussions are everywhere. There are those that believe it doesn’t exist. There are those that believe it exists but that it isn’t due to humans. There are those that believe if we change our output of dangerous gases, we can alter the atmosphere to such a degree that we can reverse the damage. There are those who believe that probably, there is nothing we can do.

Is it wrong for me to think that it might be a tad on the egotistical side to think that us humans 1.) are the major cause and 2.) can stop or reverse it? It reminds me of when people say there must not be life in outer space because we haven’t seen it, as if we, the humans on earth, are the most important and smartest beings in the universe.

Maybe the earth is just going through the cycle it’s supposed to go through. Maybe humans are meant to be here for a finite amount of time. Maybe we as a people are careless and hurt Mother Earth and use our resources too quickly but maybe it won’t make a difference if we don’t. I don’t think the dinosaurs were concerned with what crop they would be eating in 10 years. They woke up, lived their day and did the things that were natural for them to do which included eating what they found and living where it made sense to live. And maybe that’s us: we wake up, improve our lives, explore science and new technology and output whatever that entails and keep living our lives the way that makes sense. When you put us all together, we are a living, breathing organism on the face of the earth, causing whatever damage we cause in an effort to sustain life. And when earth no longer affords life, we won’t live.

Nihilistic? Not really. I do believe we have value and contribute to whatever the greater good is. And I definitely think there are ways to slow the impact of what is happening to our earth by shopping and eating locally, reusing and recycling and the like. I definitely think we should all be living conscientiously and trying our best to be good stewards over what we have been given. But I must admit that I have little to no faith that any changes will occur to the degree and with the timing that would be necessary to stop global warming and the greenhouse effect. There was nothing we could do to hurry our turn to live here and I don’t think there is much we can do to prolong our stay.