Anticipation vs. Reality

My mother and I bond over a few things: Shopping, milk chocolate, Patrick Dempsey, and the occasional bowl of oatmeal. When I was young, she spent her weekends sewing me dresses. I could find her at the kitchen table, a foot steady on the pedal I was too afraid to touch, with pieces of a dress neatly pinned to the tissue pattern stacked in the order she would need them. A stocky tomato was placed to the left of the machine, and as she would guide the dress under the darting needles, her fingers would deftly pull them out and puncture the wiry flesh of the cushion. I would push them in as far as they would go, so the primary colored pinheads dotted the surface like pimples.

On Sundays, my father would be in the living room yelling at the television screen. I remember his rough “YEAHHHHHHHHH!” as the Packers scored, and my mother spitting, “Aww shit…” when she made a mistake and had to tear up a row of stitches.

Since the things she created were usually for me, I often felt as if I should help her in some way. Sometimes I was able to pick out the pattern. I’d sit on a thick stool  and lean over the slanted steel cabinets that cased the patterns at Walmart while I flipped through the heavy books. I was a dork: I lived in a fantasy world of dolls and historical fiction. I envied my cousin, who had an American Girl doll until I got one of my own. I had the books and would daydream about Samantha’s Victorian upbringing, where even her swimming suit was a superfluously frilly dress. I wanted to wear a wool cape and warm my hands in a white fur muff. I wished the desks at my school were like the swirly wrought iron one in Samantha’s collection. I wanted to wear stockings and buckle shoes . The more frills and buttons the better. And so at those pattern books at Walmart, I would pick the dresses with the pleats and collars. I picked out a long coat with a nautical neckline, so I could dress like the girls I imagined in my books.

I thought that if I wore those clothes, then I would be transported to those times. It wasn’t that I had a life that needed escaping. I don’t remember my parents fighting. I remember my father working during the days and my mother cashiering at the grocery store at night. When my brother and I would fall asleep on the couch, my father would pry us awake, telling us we needed to go get mom.

While I flipped through the books, imagining all the dresses I would have made for me, she would walk the aisles to find fabrics to dresses she had already decided to make for me. Like most mothers, I assume, she had her own idea of how to dress me, and that’s probably for the best. Though I always liked the dresses she made for me, they were never exactly how I had imagined them.

I think I see the dresses much how I view reality today. I have hopes for how things will turn out, but while I daydream about things, I’m aware of the stink that reminds me things will probably not turn exactly how I’m imagining. Reality rarely lives up to daydreams. The dresses were the first lesson of that.

So what’s better? The anticipation of a daydream or the contented reality that plays out? I’m glad to have grown out of my daydreaming tendencies, but however enjoyable my reality may be, sometimes I wish I could just stay in my head, constantly looking forward to the potential of a situation. This sounds a lot like disappointment, which is the exact opposite of what I want to convey. Today, for instance, I woke up to a rainy morning and had the urge to sit on my couch reading Lorrie Moore stories all day. From my bed, it seemed perfect: brew a pot of coffee and spend the day dehydrated and lost in second-person prose. What I ended up doing was having a single cup of coffee and finishing High Fidelity, punctuated by dozing every fifteen minutes or so.

Was it a good morning? YES. Do I still want to read Lorrie Moore? YES. Will I get to that? YES. But the marathon reading session in my bed probably won’t be as picturesque as I’m imagining because my spun-sugar candle isn’t as fragrant as I had hoped, and my coffee will get cold, or I’ll have to go to the bathroom, or I’ll need to heat up dinner, or I’ll get distracted by Netflix.

Maybe I have an answer to this: Anticipation is often better than reality, but it doesn’t help any to complain about it, so maybe the best thing to do is to daydream about simpler times when the thing you most hoped for was to wear a gaudy dress like the one in your doll catalogs.

You should also make it a point to thank your mom for not making those gaudy dresses because those pictures would be humiliating.

Three cheers for first love/infatuation

I was going to ditch my plan from the last post, but I decided that I should actually stick with it since I publicly announced the decision. I’m limiting myself to 30 minutes, because I really want to get in bed and read. I’m reading Nick Hornby’s High Fidelity at the moment. I haven’t seen the movie in a while, but from what I remember, it follows the book pretty well. It’s a really great description and analysis of a heartbreak, complete with all the messy emotions (love, lust, anger, jealousy, desperation, apathy, etc…). I sort of wish I had read that instead of the Sloane Crosley essay.

Anyway.

June 17, 2011

  • Ryan getting picked up from Badger Boys Camp by his “cousin” Taylor
  • Silliness of first love
  • Ferris Bueller’s Day off
  • Responsibility vs. Immaturity

Last summer, my younger brother, Ryan, was chosen from what I assume to be a large group of young men to go to the Badger Boys Camp. I wasn’t really sure what the camp was all about – something about leadership and politics. He met with students from Harvard and all over the country to learn about leadership, politics, and (I’m assuming) conservative policies. He met Scott Walker, who, had he been old enough to vote, would not have voted for. I was happy for him. He’s a smart kid who sparked debates in his civics class and bonded with a history teacher with a deadpan sense of humor and low tolerance for the bureaucracy of public schools but suffers through anyway. He had been saying he was interested in going into political science and journalism, so this was a great opportunity for him to network and get some unique experience.

Around this time, Ryan was head over heels for a girl named Taylor. He was caught up in that swirl of first love. If it hits before you’re 18, you’re basically fucked. With no significant responsibilities or obligations, you’re able to devote all of your time, energy, and furious hormones to your boyfriend or girlfriend. At that age, it’s hard to tell if it’s love or just infatuation. The first time I fell in love (or so I thought. I learned years later that I hadn’t been in love, just deep, deep, melodramatic infatuation that was the fruit of two melancholy souls connecting over a Sufjan Stevens song), I remember being so overwhelmed and obsessed with the relationship. Everything he did or said was amazing. I commemorated our firsts without anyone knowing:  I bought fuschia geraniums and planted them in clay pots, savoring the feeling of dirt under my nails while I remembered the romantic  and clumsy fumblings and soft murmurs from the night before.

Obviously I wasn’t there for any of Ryan’s special moments with his girlfriend, but when he called home asking for me or my mom to call the headquarters to get out of camp early to see her, I laughed. I remembered those feelings – the ones that made me choose the more foolish of the choices (lying about a slumber party to sleep over and then getting caught, spending twenty minutes kissing goodbye to end up being a half hour late for curfew). He was supposed to be at a camp that celebrated leadership and responsibility and his presence there made a statement: that he was a smart, level-headed young republican.

Somehow between the three of us, we wove a lie that involved his “cousin” Taylor picking him up. The directors of the camp were pretty strict about the boys leaving early, requesting ID from the driver. After talking to the director,  my mom laughed a little, saying she was pretty sure they thought Taylor was a guy.

“Well, that will be a surprise when they see her,” she said.

“Yeah, then just imagine how they’ll greet each other,” I said, imagining something similar to the scene in Ferris Bueller’s day off when Ferris picks up Sloane from school and the principal is shocked by the incestual kiss.

“Kissing cousins,” my mom laughed.

I knew that what he was doing was stupid. It was an immature decision. A truly responsible young man would have stayed for the whole week, talking with everyone there and making connections that would benefit in the future. Leaving camp early with a little blonde girl he kissed upon arrival probably wouldn’t give the best impression. But I went along with it to prolong that simpleness for him. Eventually his life would be full of bills and due dates and budgets and at some moment he would inevitably feel the crush of heartbreak. At that moment, all he had to worry about was making his girlfriend happy, and I was a little envious.

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Okay. So that took 20 minutes to write and 20 minutes to edit while also contributing a 200-comment thread/chatroom on Facebook with three of my friends.

About that little notebook I write in…

For the last year or so, I’ve been carrying around a small notebook with me. I like it to be small enough to tuck in my purse no matter what the size, though that point is pretty irrelevant, since I tend to carry what my mother and father call “luggage”. What? I need to. I need my wallet that’s stuffed with my last 50 receipts, 5 different kinds of chapstick, three colors of lipstick (which I rarely wear), my cell phone, my Kindle (I know, there’s a Kindle app, but I hate reading on backlit screens), and possibly a book. Anyway, this notebook. I got the idea from reading a David Sedaris essay where he talks about the notebook he carries around.

Side note/shameless self-promotion: I met David Sedaris. And he wrote about me.

Since I most enjoy writing about my life and experiences, it makes sense that I would make notes throughout the day, then I would make these notes into essays (or stories, since when I say essay, people expect a list of works cited to accompany it) later on.  I generally jot little notes about what I did that day, other times it will be a phrase or song lyric that I wish I had come up with. Mostly though, they’re just illegible notes that only I’ll be able to decipher. This has served for inspiration for a few pieces, but not many. Mostly because I don’t reference the thing very often. I write plenty in it, but I don’t reference it very often, I just write about whatever issue is bothering me or about that memory that won’t get out of my head.

But I went through some of them, and they would actually make for some decent work if I just utilized the notes more often.

June 17, 2011

  • Ryan getting picked up from Badger Boys Camp by his “cousin” Taylor
  • Silliness of first love
  • Ferris Bueller’s Day off
  • Responsibility vs. Immaturity

June 21, 2011

  • This American Life – 3 podcasts – psychopath test, Jon (!!!!!)
  • Yesterday: Ran w/Bill, Subway, & drinking game out of Breakfast at Tiffany’s (cat, Fred, $, darling)
  • Defining love
  • Kenny Chesney – Hemingway’s whiskey. What gives him the right to write about Hemingway’s whiskey?
  • Love – better now? More passionate with the looming threat of departure? I feel a certain level of hunger now for him.

August 19, 2011

  • Ryan’s 1st football game
  • Team warmup and formation: producing an odd nostalgia, tear jerking. why?
  • Fans still painted up as they were 6 years ago, just with the college beer gut. The unnoticed tragedies of a small town.
  • “For your moments of inertia”

October 19, 2011

  • Put down Hallie today. Cloudy, windy day. Everyone quietly coping.
  • It feels forced and exploitative, taking pictures of her just an hour before we’re going to kill her.
  • We’re all grieving while she’s wagging her tail.
  • Isn’t it a little cruel that the last car she’ll bark at is being driven by the guy who’s going to kill her?
  • “Donna at work was crying for me” Don’t bring some stranger into this moment.

Each of these days would produce a decent essay. Sure I just have little details or fragments of thought, but that’s the beauty of writing memoir – all you need is a little fact and then the rest is what you think you remember, which is essentially fiction.

For my next four posts, I’m going to write short essays using those notes. To demonstrate to you – and myself – that there is a real reason for me to be writing little things in that notebook. Or I might not, if more exciting things present themselves.

That idea just came out of nowhere. It may or may not be a terrible idea. We’ll see.

I’m not sure if you were able to infer from my lack of posts, but life over the last week or so has been uninspiring for writing. So, I’m taking Jack London’s advice in a very passive way: You can’t wait for inspiration. You have to go after it with a club. 

I’m pretty sure he means you’re supposed to live an exciting life, but there’s only so much you can write about office work, regretful dates, online correspondence, and bartenders who shouldn’t be texting you anymore – so I’ll just go ahead and revisit my past inspiration.

OkCupid messages tend to speak for themselves

Since I’m on a kick to meet new people, I decided to make a profile on OkCupid. I don’t think I’m supposed to be telling people that I have an online dating profile, but whatever. I’m in a much better mindset than the last time I tried online dating, so it doesn’t feel so pathetic. OkCupid seems a lot less sketchy than POF. If POF is the back alley where rape happens, OkCupid is the public park where drug deals happen at night so you don’t go there after sunset. I imagine Match and the other paid services to be like trendy reservations-only wine bar.

My experience so far hasn’t been too bad. My profile doesn’t go too in depth, but I mention that I read, write, and never go anywhere without my Kindle. I also have a disclaimer that says “If you don’t spell well or use poor punctuation, we probably won’t get along very well.” I think that has significantly decreased the amount of messages I get from douchebags. However, it’s still split about 50/50 as far as creeps/non-serial killers. I don’t respond to many messages, because quite frankly, I’ve only come across a handful of promising candidates (pre-law student from Milwaukee, small business owner from Green Bay, purchaser for a manufacturing company from Neenah) I like the idea of narrowing the dating pool to men who share similar interests and values. I realize, of course, that a guy can claim anything on his profile. Before I meet any of them, I’ll talk with him for a few weeks to make sure he’s not a serial killer. It doesn’t take long for me to weed out the ones I’m not interested in, especially if under “I’m really good at” they list shotgunning beer. True story.

I’m trying to come up with an appropriate introduction to this, but it’s just not working, so I’ll just jump right into it. The following are the most ridiculous messages I’ve received in the last few days, as well as the responses I would like to send:

63% compatible: You’re kinda hot, are you friendly?

Well, you used the correct “your/you’re”, but no. I’m not friendly. Also, you look like a cast member from Jersey Shore, and I don’t GTL or use bronzer.

42% compatible: What’s up Charlie’s angle

Charlie’s angle? Do you mean Charlie’s Angel? 

0% compatible: Yummi 😉

I just threw up a little.

45% compatible: How does this sound hope on the back of my motorcycle up to door county sit on one of the cliff sides n we right poems or short stories on ur kindle 🙂

You have no idea what a Kindle is, do you?

73% compatible: Hello how are you doing I just have a question do you go for the men with looks or do you go for what they have to offer you and treat you like gold and may I add that you are extremely beautiful

I go for good looking men who treat me well. Can I ask a question? What do you have against punctuation? 

0% compatible: Hi, I like ur profile, wanna chat? Would u step barefoot on a cake?

What. The. Fuck.