June, 2008

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Secrets, Lies, and Earrings.

Saturday, June 21st, 2008

It’s strange, the secrets we keep and for how long. So funny when we forget something was even a secret in the first place.

Yesterday I was thinking about when I had gotten the back of an earring stuck in my ear. I was 9 or 10 years old and we had gone to Disneyland in the middle of February. My mom warned me to make sure my earrings stayed on real tight on the rides or they might fall out. This scared me, and I kept checking my earrings, making sure they were screwed on as tight as possible. Well, at some point after our trip, I realized that the back of my earring had gotten half way sunk into my ear. I managed to take the post out and tried to pick and pull at the back of my earring, but it remained inside my ear.

I went to my mom and asked her, hypothetically, what would happen if part of my earring were to get stuck into my ear. My mom was REALLY big on talking about hypothetical problems, and how they could lead to our deaths. No, really, it shocked people who came over how often my mom would talk about our deaths. She once told me that if I didn’t clean my room, there would be a fire and then I wouldn’t be able to find my way out with all the mess. My dog and I would be trapped up in my attic bedroom and two firemen would have to go come looking for me, who would then get lost in the mess, and they too would perish, so if I didn’t get my ass upstairs and clean up that mess two firemen, my dog, and myself would all die in the fire that was sure to happen if I didn’t clean my room.

So, me asking her about what would happen if part of my earring were to get stuck in my ear really excited her. She told me all about how we would have to go to the hospital and they would slide my ear open, possibly put me under for surgery, and they would have to remove the piece of earring and how I would have to have stitches, and how it would really hurt. As a child, I was always extremely terrified of the possibility of having to have stitches. She also said that if I didn’t go and get the piece removed, the metal would give me an infection in my blood stream and travel to another cut somewhere on my body, go through my heart, and kill me.  She then asked me why I had asked.

Terrified, I told her I was just curious.

I concluded that obviously this situation was much more complicated than I had anticipated, and it would be easier to try and figure it out myself, or die trying. This sounded much better than going to a hospital and possibly dieing there.

So, every night, sometimes for hours, I picked at the earring in my ear, but it only seemed to be getting sunk farther in there. I always wore my hair down and was careful to keep my ear hidden.

A full year later, on a night in February, I was laying in bed playing with my ear and suddenly part of the earring-back came out—through the front of my ear! It hurt, it was disgusting, but it was gone! The feeling of relief was like nothing else, it was finally over! I wanted to go shouting my victory to everyone, but alas, it was a secret.

Five years later my younger sister Violet was going to the doctor with my mom-because she had gotten an earring post stuck in her ear! I desperately wanted to tell her all about what had happened to me, but was still afraid of getting in trouble, so I didn’t tell anyone.  Violet had the earring removed at the clinic and it had been no big deal. No one died, Violet barely even cried, and the day ended with an ice cream sundae.

Last night I had randomly been thinking about the earring experience I had, and remembered  that I had never told Violet about it. I called her today to fill her in. It felt so strange to tell her about something so many years later, and it got me thinking about all the things that she had been present for and probably didn’t know about. With the way we grew up, we kept a lot of things to ourselves because fear was a large ruling factor in our lives.

I wonder how many of my memories are drastically different from her perspective because she had information  I didn’t, and vice versa?

drunk dizzy kitty

Thursday, June 19th, 2008

Chloe can be a sweet, cuddly little muffin-or an annoying evil cat. It’s sort of a flip of the coin every other minute. One of her less attractive features is getting into the garbage bag, which is why we normally keep the garbage in the closet. One night recently I had forgotten to put the trash bag back into the closet and while typing away on my computer I hear the familiar rustling of the trash bag.

“Chloe! CHLOE!” but still, the rustling continued. I stomped my way into the kitchen trying to make my unhappiness very clear, and then I burst into laughter. The trash bag we had been using was a paper bag from the grocery store, with handles. When Chloe had leaned her head over the top, she had slid her head through the handle and now her head was stuck. To get herself out she had begun running backwards in circles-by the time I had gained enough control over myself to lean down and try to help her she had pulled herself free and taken off running because she thought she was still in trouble for getting into the trash.

But her escape didn’t go quite as easily as planned. After running around backwards in circles for so long Chloe was dizzy, she was drunk dizzy. She was my drunk dizzy kitty-I bet I could sing about this in a rap song!

As a drunk dizzy kitty, Chloe was trying to run cross legged. She eventually lost control of her front legs and tried to push herself forward with the force of her back legs in a zig zag pattern across the living room-her head down and sliding across the floor.

I ran over and picked her up and pet her and told her it was going to be ok and she just laid there, the little dizzy drunk kitty that she was.

Those Veggies Will Mess You Up

Saturday, June 14th, 2008

A week ago, I decided to be a super sweet wife, and I cut up Robert’s jalapenos for him. I’m a very picky eater, and hate most of the things Robert loves to eat, including jalapenos, and I don’t like cutting them up either. After cutting up the strange vegetables, I sat down on the sofa, listening to our roommate (Michelle) talk about her day. I mentioned that the side of my nose felt like it was burning and felt self conscious rubbing it while she was talking. I can’t even remember what she was going on about when I suddenly jumped up with my hands covering my eyes-screaming.

“OH MY GOD! YOU GUYS, I THINK MY EYEBALLS ARE BLEEDING! OH MY GOD!”

I stumbled into the kitchen where Robert calmly said “Uh-oh”. The thoughts raced through my mind as the worst pain I’ve ever felt sears through me. I concluded that somehow glass had gotten into both of my eyeballs when Robert continued. “I think you rubbed jalapeno stuff in your eyes.” My mind tried to wrap around what I was saying-he offered no advice for how to fix this at all.

“SO, WHAT? AM I GOING TO DIE?”

Every time I have told this story people look at me sideways and go “Faith, even worst case scenario, you’d just go blind.” That’s easy for you to say now, while you are sitting there without the WORST PAIN EVER taking hold of all the happiness in the world! I was going to die, world wide catastrophe was coming-I felt like everyone should be running for the hills!

Robert, still standing in the kitchen calmly as I’m panicked and waiting for the end to come, tells me wash my hands thoroughly with soap and rinse my eyes out with water. I yell for him to hand me the soap and lead me to the sink but I suppose he just stood still, as no help came. I stumbled to the sink, washed my hands, rinsed out my eyeballs, and with water still dripping down my face I peak out and see my husband and Michelle standing there staring at me. Robert was still acting like everything was completely normal, and Michelle looked frightened and sort of hid in the dining room. I tried to pick the conversation back up with her, but she scurried off into her bedroom-I think she thinks I’m a little too dramatic for her, but my god, it hurt!

In the end, I did not die, the world did not end, the pain went away, Robert ate his jalapenos still believing they were one of the best vegetables ever.

Moral of the story-never, ever, ever chop vegetables for Robert.

P.S-I mass texted this to my sisters after it happened, and Violet only read the beginning as she hates long text messages. Later, she told me “I got that text message and was wondering if your eyes were bleeding why the fuck you were texting me, I mean really, GO TO THE HOSPITAL! God!”