Juliette Miranda

Ramblings from a sometimes sane writer
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Archive for December, 2008

December 31, 2008

Your soul is full of gunk

Author: Administrator

Mr. Rogers was once my hero. He may not have been the coolest children’s programming host, and I admit I eventually moved on to the Electric Company and 3-2-1 Contact, but for a time, Mr. Rogers had a quiet wisdom I found appealing.

 

I was reminded of him recently, when I came to question what exactly makes a good neighbor. I’m sure Mr. Rogers would have a gentle reply about kindness and sharing and overcoming differences. And he’d even be right, if this was the Land of Make Believe, and I wasn’t the neighbor.

 

It’s not that I go out of my way to be a rotten neighbor; I just don’t make much of an effort to be one at all. I resent the implication that living in proximity to another person somehow endears us to each other. The only thing anyone living near me is entitled to is my consideration.

 

And that, too, has its limits I’m finding, especially when it comes to the communal environment of an apartment complex. My guy and I will be moving to a townhouse at the start of the New Year, but have been sharing quarters in his apartment complex for the past few months. It’s a two-story dwelling consisting of four apartments, two dogs, the wafting stink of boiled sauerkraut, and one stumpy blonde ripe with misguided hatred.

 

Frankly, with my general avoidance tactics, I wouldn’t be aware of her specific existence at all if she hadn’t felt inclined to reach out to my guy and I. Her neighborly gesture came in the form of a letter one afternoon, taped to our mailbox.

 

“Dear neighbors,” she began. “I don’t know if you are aware how thin the walls are in this building…” Actually, we are; her futile efforts on a treadmill in the apartment above us provide a steady stream of pounding entertainment.

 

“I’m writing this letter to inform you that most days we are being disturbed by rather loud noises coming from your apartment that are quite uncomfortable. The nature and degree of the sounds is affecting our life. We haven’t been able to sleep, and you should know that we’ve had to move our children from their room so that they don’t hear what you’re doing.” Huh – neither of us have seen or heard any children in this building, but no matter. Perhaps she means her dogs.

 

“We all need to maintain a peaceful living community and hope you’ll stop the noise. Sincerely, your neighbors.”

 

It took all our self control to not merge into an alcohol-soaked sex tornado and hurl raunchy obscenities at the ceiling that night. Stumpy’s sad little letter summed up exactly why I dislike having neighbors at all: they’re nosy, inclined to assume you have an obligation to them though unlikely to reciprocate, and always there.

 

After taping her note to the fridge and calling all our friends to brag, we did make an effort to tone down our “disturbing” noises. Not that it stopped Stumpy from pounding on her floor at the slightest hint of a moan and avoiding eye contact in the hallway, of course. If that’s her idea of a peaceful living community, I can only assume she has never watched Mr. Rogers.

 

Our tight-lipped coexistence lasted until Christmas Eve day. Several weeks of accumulation had left our open field-cum-backyard with more than a foot of pristine white snow. Though snow ranks right up there with razor blades and syringes on my pain meter, I couldn’t resist suggesting my guy and I head out for a snowball fight.

 

Of course he was game, and we spent the morning hurling balls of snow at each other like kids. (Side note: never, ever taunt a boyfriend by yelling, “You throw like a girl! Is that all you’ve got?” It’s ungood. Trust me.) We even built a giant snowman, complete with eyes, arms and a smile. I half expected him to exclaim “Happy birthday!” when my back was turned.

 

We returned to the apartment satisfied and giddy. After drying off and brewing some whiskey-laced cider, my guy opened the patio blinds so we could have a view of Frosty as we wrapped Christmas presents.

 

But when I looked out into our vast backyard, I could only gasp. Standing where our happy snowman had been was only his bottom lump of snow; his torso and arms lay in a smashed heap behind him. Frosty was dead.

 

We rushed to his lifeless torso as if it actually mattered. We’d packed Frosty well, so there was no chance the wind had pushed him over. Upon investigation, it was clear his torso had been deliberately knocked over.

 

“Who would do that?” I asked. There were no kids or teenagers in the area that we knew of, and since the snow had fallen, the field was rarely traversed by anything other than prairie critters. I doubt our suburban raccoons had the upper body strength to dismantle a snowman.

 

Then we saw it: a single path of footprints leading to Frosty and returning to where they originated… Stumpy’s building entrance.

 

“No one kills a snowman in MY neighborhood and gets away with it!” I yelled.

 

I stomped back into the apartment and paced. I could just picture Stumpy pressing her greasy forehead against her window, seething in sexual frustration and jealousy as she watched my guy and I play in the snow. What kind of pathetic nutcase puts a hit on a snowman on Christmas?

 

It was such an aggressive move that my first inclination was one of equal aggression. Instead of sugar plums, that Christmas Eve, National Lampoon-like scenarios danced through my head: Could I anonymously hire a man whore to knock on her door? Would my cat cough up a few furballs on demand? What were the legal repercussions for nailing woodland creatures to her door?

 

But just as I was about to grab my hammer, I reconsidered. It was Christmas, after all, and even with all the venom coursing through me, I refused to ruin anyone’s holiday. That bitch was lucky it wasn’t Halloween.

 

Instead, I turned to my first source for life lessons and asked the all-important question: “What would Mr. Rogers do?”

 

He’d likely say that it was okay for us to feel sad, or mad, or perhaps vicious hatred, and encourage us to talk out our differences… and suddenly, I was reminded why I stopped watching that show in the first place.

 

I wasn’t interested in talking anything out, and I had a sneaking suspicion Stumpy wasn’t the most reasonable woman on the planet. So as quiet as I could, I left Stumpy a festive holiday card taped to her front door. Inside I wrote: “We’re moving out in one week. Merry Christmas you stumpy shrew.”

 

Mr. Rogers may not have approved, but the letter made me happy. Won’t you be my neighbor, indeed.

 

(Before and after photos of poor Frosty below. Click image for larger picture.)

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December 4, 2008

Ring ting tingling too

Author: Administrator

“You’re too damn happy. You’ve lost all your street cred as a cynic.”

 

My girlfriend may have a point about my happiness. Seeing as how my last holiday was soaked in a dark combination of Absinthe and spite, my brilliant good mood of late is in sharp contrast.

 

Even my holiday spirit – which was once measured by how many times I could quote Scrooge and mean it – has shifted gears. Because, as I’ve just discovered, nothing screams “Happy Holidays” better than a random drug test.

 

They call the testing “random”, but I know better. I look at it as a special spot check from Santa, really. My resemblance to Hunter S. Thompson is likely too uncanny for the corporate world. Either that or my four-inch heels give me the illusion of being a crack whore. (Which, considering the ice coating the ground, isn’t exactly a foregone conclusion. What kind of idiot besides a crack whore wears stilettos in the winter? Me, obviously.)

 

However, despite any lack of justification – random or otherwise – it is still in perfect keeping with the traditions of the joyous season. When the giggling HR rep visited my desk claiming to be bearing a “gift”, I know I wasn’t looking for a holiday greeting card or bonus. That notification of a drug test was exactly what I wanted; lord knows when I saw it I could hardly wait to pee on something.

 

My “privacy” and “confidentiality” were assured, which made being lumped in with a group of other “random” coworkers and paraded en masse to the lobby restroom like a chain gang a surprising treat.

 

We even had 30 minutes to catch up on idle chit chat: the “nurse” from the medical facility administering the pee test had conveniently forgotten to bring consent forms and was considerate enough to take her sweet time in returning to the workshop to fetch them. Since there was surely potential for one of us to sneak a peak or prematurely exchange gifts and ruin our holiday fun, we were wisely quarantined in the lobby. I used the extra time to stand on a soapbox.

 

It was a relief to not have to think twice about the consent form when it was finally delivered. With Big Brother holding my hand warmly, I was able to sign the form under the crisp glow of job security. I even swore I could smell something roasting in the background. Whether it was chestnuts or human flesh, I couldn’t quite be sure, but no matter.

 

Once our pesky rights were signed away, we were instructed to form a queue. Our line to the restroom wound up snaking through the lobby like the line to see Santa at Macy’s. I’m sure we were all in similar spirit.

 

I was certainly more than ready to sit on that Christmas throne when my turn finally came. Santa’s Little Helper offered me a container for my holiday wish of a negative result and escorted me to the approved stall. The holidays truly are full of magic and wonder, because just as I had situated myself with my cup, the door of the stall miraculously blew open.

 

Was it the baby jesus? Or was it my Christmas spirit making a break for it? All I know is that as I staggered to shut the door, one hand gripping my cup, the other my pants, I felt a chill race through me. It was an extraordinarily special moment.

 

The elf had told me that Santa only needed a small wish deposit, but I wanted to make sure my message came through clearly. I left him more than he asked for, both in and on the cup. It was the least I could do.

 

Several red, candy cane-like lines later and I was cleared to return to work. I hate to sound like an ungrateful child, but I do wish I had more to show for the experience besides the branding as a potential drug puppy.

 

I guess I just need to accept that the holidays are celebrated in unusual ways and that not all customs match my own. In Yugoslavia for example, children are allowed to tie their parents to a chair and hold them for ransom. In Portugal, the dead are invited to sit and partake of the holiday meal. And in Whales, a person carrying a horse skull on a spike gets to chase villagers around until they’re paid to go away (that actually sounds like something I could get into).

 

Apparently in America, or at least in my own professional territory, peeing in a cup is an accepted holiday occurrence. God help me on New Year’s Eve.

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