Sunday, January 25, 2015

foiled again

Due to the whole 'living in San Francisco' thing I have going on right now, I have a Clipper Card that allows me to pay my fare on any public transportation out here. I also have a keycard that unlocks my apartment door. Since I use both on a regular basis, I keep them both in my wallet. But they are so close together that they often interfere with each other.
A few times a week, I can't open the door to my apartment until I pull the keycard all the way out of my wallet.
Nick suggested that I put a slip of tin foil in between them to prevent one from overpowering the other.
So I did. But then is just made both cards stop working. My door reacted like I had tried to use a banana to activate it and did nothing.
I told Nick and he gave it a try. He swiped my wallet in front of the sensor over and over again to no avail.
So the next time you see someone with tinfoil in their hat, trying to keep aliens or the government from stealing their brain waves, pause and remember that they do have a point.





much love,
hedgie




Wednesday, January 14, 2015

brief vignettes

I have been keeping an online journal for about three years. It was never anything super interesting, just what I ate that day and what I did. I kept it to make myself write everyday, but I ironically did very little writing because it was all just short, dry lists about my day. I was considering giving it up when I came across this quote:

“Keep a diary, but don't just list all the things you did during the day. Pick one incident and write it up as a brief vignette. Give it color, include quotes and dialogue, shape it like a story with a beginning, middle and end—as if it were a short story or an episode in a novel. It's great practice. Do this while figuring out what you want to write a book about. The book may even emerge from within this running diary.” 

It is now a part of my daily routine. As the new year begins, I want to start with a look back with a small collection of the brief vignettes I wrote over the course of 2014:



1) Every time Addie gets riled up, she grabs my wrist in her mouth and gently bites down on it. Those moments always fill me with sudden fear and endearment when I think of how easily she could bite through my bone if she wanted. But she chooses not to.

2) I was woken up by a weak whimper. I opened my eyes and saw Addie's nose a few inches from my face. At seeing me awake, she excitedly lifted her head and her ears went back. She whined louder.
I tried to close my eyes, but she just jabbed me with her paw to make sure I would stay awake.

3) Nick looked down at his phone to give Waunt directions as we neared our destination. "Exit on Alamo," he said.
Dylan adjusted his glasses in the back seat. "Remember that."

4) The man that no one recognized as a parent walked by again this afternoon during check out. He stared at Christina's clipboard.
"You guys giving out free spaying and neutering this week?"
Christina looked toward the veterinary hospital as if the building would confirm or deny it. "I'm not sure, but you can go walk down to our hospital right there and I'm sure they would know."
"But it says on your sign," the guy said. He pointed at her clipboard that read "Furry Friends is nut free this week" because one of the kids in her group had a severe peanut allergy.

5) I pulled out the tablet with the video of the rat tricks already downloaded onto it. While I was swiping the screen to unlock it, one of my kids told me he wanted to eat me. "Excuse me?" I asked.
"I want to eat you." He opened his mouth wide, his lips pulled back to expose his teeth.
"Why?"
He pointed at my pants, plum-colored jeans. "You look like a salad," he said.

6) Nick stood on the corner, covered in grape jam with a sign offering free hugs. The streets were mostly filled with confused tourists, who weren't sure if they should take a picture of that crazy guy they saw in San Francisco to show off to their friends back home or to walk quickly past him without making eye contact.
The only person who did unabashedly stare at him was the guy in the Elmo suit on the opposite corner. After Elmo had been staring for a few straight minutes, Nick yelled to ask if he wanted a hug.
Elmo just yelled, "Don't touch me with that shit!".

7) Trenton would not leave the guinea pig poop alone. I caught him picking it up and collecting it in the palm of his hand three times already and the guinea pigs hadn't been out for ten minutes yet. The other kids scrunched their noses and told on him every time they saw him looking at the little pellets for too long.
I sat on the couch behind them and continued to ramble off my guinea pig facts. "Guinea pigs self groom a lot. In fact, they secret a milky substance from their eyes and put that in their fur to help them stay clean."
Trenton's mouth fell open. His hands were full of poop again. "That's disgusting," he said.

8) I woke up in the middle of the night and sat upright in bed. I couldn't figure out what woke me because everything was dark silence and Nick and Addie were both still. Then I felt it. The room swayed. It took a moment for me to realize it was an earthquake and not a truck going by. I turned to my side and shook Nick's shoulder.
"Wake up," I said. "It's an earthquake. We are in a San Francisco earthquake."
Nick's eyes opened for a few seconds until the earthquake passed. Then he closed them and immediately fell back asleep. Addie was also unimpressed. She glanced around for a few seconds before cuddling closer to my shins.

9) I have acclimated to the San Francisco weather just enough that I am still cold here, but everywhere else is too hot. I have adapted enough to be miserable everywhere.

10) Lexi stood near the edge of the water. When the wave came, she fought every urge to run away. The cold water seeped around her toes, a sea foam anklet formed around each foot. She screeched happily and jumped back, only to run back forward into it. "It feels like soda!" she yelled.

11) Moby flopped on his back and rolled around in a spot in the grass that I can only assume something died on. His white belly was up and his body was wriggling around with his paws up in the air like he was dancing the hula. His leash limited some of his movement and for a moment, he looked like a trout on the line, struggling to escape from the floor of a canoe. 

12) I walked Ginger and Baxter across the street towards City Hall. We passed a man tucked in the corner between the bank and Fox Plaza. He had a long strip of blue cloth wrapped limply around his head. His entire body was lassoed with a dozen computer cords, the kind that were once used to connect computers to landlines. He had a giant, rainbow swirl lollipop in each hand. 
I passed him when he was still carefully adjusting his computer cords, so I went by without him really noticing. But he had finished by the time the person behind me walked by.
The Lollipop man followed him, screaming gibberish in a hoarse voice and waving his lollipops angrily in the air.

13) Rusty is extremely strong for such a small dog. When I try to get him to go in a direction he doesn't want to go in, I can see the muscles in his furry legs seize up when he senses the slightest tug from the leash. He locks down into the earth. Sometimes I am tempted to start leaning back on the taut leash, my feet planted in one spot and the rest of my body lowering until it is parallel to the grass lawn. I am almost positive his stubbornness could support my entire weight.

14) We knocked on the door and a reserved middle-aged woman answered the door.
She was using her body to block the doorway so her dog wouldn't run out into the hallway. When she got the dog a little calmed down, she led us in and gently teased her dog that was still barking at us. "Yes, your worst nightmare has come true. They are here to steal your kibble."
I started laughing, but then stopped as I almost walked into the stripper pole that pierced through the center of her living room.

15) "If you had to hide a body, who would you call?" Dad asked. He looked around at our faces lit by the outdoor fireplace while we all sipped whiskey and took tingling puffs from our cigars.
We went around the circle and gave our answers, most of us opting for Ryan because he had a bus, he could probably sneak us out of the country if we needed to, and he always seems to know a guy.
Then it was Uncle Lars' turn. He's always so quiet and respectable that we expected him to pass or ask questions about how he ended up with a body in the first place.
I flashed back to the first time that we met him when he and Aunt Janette were dating. He was standing outside of the cabin we were all staying in for Christmas and we all looked at the windows to find him staring at the roof, his mind totally wrapped up in it. We were all confused until Aunt Janette explained that he was an architect.
Now, he leaned back in his seat, pulled us cigar out of his mouth and answered that he would call his concrete foundation guy.






much love,
hedgie

Wednesday, December 31, 2014

december developments

This month proved to be a great closing for 2014.

It started with an eye appointment that let me be an anime character for a few hours.

Addie briefly had super powers.

I made peppermint patties shaped like dog bones because that is the only cookie cutter I have.

Addie got to help us pick out our Christmas tree.

We made a Christmas corner.

I yarn-bombed the tree.

I made my hands hurt a lot.

Enjoyed California finally figuring out it is winter.

And finding ways to keep warm through it.

And silliness ensued.


It rained so much.

 We went to a "Reindog" march where all proceeds went to Rocket Dog Rescue.

And it rained more.

We made pickles.

And no one will be surprised that Nick bought this.

Finally watched Santa Claus Conquers the Martians.

And took a trip to Fort Funston with friends and a dog we were sitting.



I still can't believe I get paid to do this.



Christmas Eve tradition of The Big Lebowski and White Russians.

Almost collided with the largest tumbleweed in the world when heading to Orange County.

New Christmas game where you wear oven mitts and a hat while opening a gift. Now I know what it feels like to be a Teletubby.

I was visited by the ghost of Christmas past.

And we watched The Interview because THIS IS AMERICA.

Dylan got me a fish eye lens for my phone and now I can't not use it for everything.

Shortly before Katie broke a chair.

White Elephant.

Zombicide until 3 in the morning.

It got a bit windy.

But pretty.

We got sushi for New Year's.

And met up with friends at the rooftop.


There's glitter EVERYWHERE.

And hats.

Here's to more silliness in the future!




much love,
hedgie

Wednesday, December 24, 2014

eating like an author: emily dickinson edition

Emily Dickinson's Cocoanut Cake-

Emily Dickinson had a tendency to take notes on whatever was around her. She jotted down scraps of ideas for poems on ripped envelopes, baking chocolate wrappers, and even on the back of her own recipes.

On the other side of The Things that never can come back, are several is this recipe:



Ingredients:
1 cup cocoanut 
2 cups flour 
1 cup sugar 
1/2 cup butter 
1/2 cup milk 
2 eggs 
1/2 teaspoonful soda 
1 teaspoonful cream of tartar

Steps:
1) Discover the differences between baking soda and baking powder, then preheat the oven to 325 degrees

2) Soak coconut flakes 



3) Sift together flour and baking POWDER (or baking soda mixed with cream of tartar)


4) Cream together the sugar and butter. Be confused as to what that means, so substitute it for "mash butter and sugar together with forks"


5) Add eggs and milk, mix together


6) Add liquid ingredients to the dry ingredients and mix together


7) Fold in the shredded coconut 


8) Put in pan and bake for 50-60 minutes


9) Take pictures to show off to the internet that you can bake


10) Eat


The result: I am eating this for breakfast for the rest of my life.





much love,
hedgie