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Archive for the 'depression' Category

Sep 16 2008

Beauty School Drop-Out

I’m due in three weeks and looking for a place to live. Kat and Lily have been great but I cramp their style and they cramp mine. We live differently: I leave appliances on the counter top; they want to pretend appliances don’t exist and insist they be kept in cupboards. Everything I put in the washing machine, I transfer to the dryer including bras and sweaters. They air-dry everything, why I have no idea.I found a note that read:

“Molly- you were given one brownie, you always do this and it needs to stop. It’s disrespectful! -Lily.”

Guilty.

It’s true I came home from my doctor’s appointment and decided to celebrate my clean drug test with a pot brownie Lily had given me. I was being good and decided to save it for this very moment; I licked the top like I was giving a blowjob. I tore the wrapper off while thrusting my tongue when the brownie fell from my fingertips and into the mouths of two beasts that stood at my feet. No! Bad Dog! My Brownie! So I helped myself to another and gobbled it down as the pugs gobbled mine. I’m not saying what I did was right, and I have raided the brownie stash in desperate times (I can’t wait till they’re pregnant) but I didn’t mean to disrespect anyone. I felt humiliated, fat, embarrassed and the biggest asshole on Troy St. The self-absorbed side of me got pissed and thought, for one minute put yourself in my shoes. I’m alone with nothing and expecting a baby, I know that’s not your problem but if you could give me a fucking break for two minutes, I’d appreciate it. I spoke to my therapist about my situation. She tried to reassure me that people have weird reactions to pregnant woman sometimes and may not know why, something about the hormones in the air. Kat has brought her massage practice into the home, which doesn’t coincide with a crying baby. My therapist suggested I move out. I was planning to move out by fall due to the public transportation hell with a baby. I’ve seen enough women struggle with their strollers on a crowded standing room only bus where young able bodied men have forgotten their manners and have no problem watching a pregnant woman hold on for dear life as the bus slams on the breaks then gases, then breaks again. Maybe if the bus driver hung up his cell phone and drove with his hands at ten and two o’clock I wouldn’t need to be apologizing to the old lady I just fell on top of. I was running late for a doctor’s appointment one afternoon when our bus driver abandoned ship. His relief driver didn’t show up, so rather than wait or continue the route he just grabbed his lunch pail and put on his jacket and left the bus running filled with people who had places to go. I’ve lost my temper a few times shouting, “Move!” to those who think their bags deserve a seat but people don’t. I got so mad once, when I got off at my stop I mooned the other passengers.

I had come up with a plan of moving to Santa Cruz for the summer to stay with my sister Beth. I would help watch her three kids and she could put me through baby boot camp. I would consider it my new writing project where I learned the ropes of surviving when you have nothing. For example Beth bathes her kids at night then dresses them in their clothes for the next day so she would have one less thing to think about in the mornings. I called my niece to wish her a happy birthday, I could hear the phone drop and she ran off screaming to her mom, “it’s my birthday?! You said my birthday was on the first!”

Beth picked up the phone and said, “Thanks a lot! I was postponing her birthday until next payday! Click!

My sister has had an interesting life: pregnant at 13, at 15 she began writing to men in prison, she fell in love with Jose, and he was released a year later. Jose’s citizenship was revoked and he returned to Mexico on a bus. Beth smuggled him back in, he lived with my family and they had two more kids. Beth developed a meth addiction and has been struggling to get clean. Mom, my sister Scarlett and her husband Alex took a trip to Santa Cruz for a visit. Beth’s apartment was disgusting. The floor sticky and covered in garbage, the counters have become an ant farm fed by the rotting food left out. Alex stepped outback to smoke a cigarette, before he could light up he returned back into the house and whispered to Scarlett, “We have to get a Motel room, you gotta see the backyard.”

The lawn was covered in pots of Spanish rice molding, pans with flies feasting on fish bones. Scarlett went inside and jokingly said to Beth, “doing some dishes outback? What are you waiting for it to rain?” We were use to giving each other a hard time. Beth exploded screaming at mom and my sister; she locked herself in her bedroom where you could hear the flicking of the lighter go off every few minutes. She was obviously using again. You could tell by looking at her, she had lost so much weight to where her face was sinking in. The kids were left to fend for themselves, for breakfast they ate a cup of sugar with a spoon. The youngest is five-years-old and still wears diapers, probably to get some attention. His favorite phrase was, “Fuck you Grandma!”

Beth came out of her room a few hours later and said she was running to the store. She didn’t return until 3am.

Mom called me immediately and said we need a new plan. Out of the blue mom received a card and a check from my uncle. His mother in-law had just passed away leaving his family a lot of money so my uncle shared it with his siblings. It was only a few thousand dollars but it was just enough for mom to be able to help me get into a dorm on campus. I’m bummed out because I was looking forward to being at the beach spending time with my family, but I can’t put my kid in that kind of environment. I’d like to help out but I may be just enabling her. I don’t know how to help my sister.

Scarlett called and suggested I spend the summer in Kentucky. It’s generous but two summers ago I moved to Kentucky and can’t really imagine going back. The weather is miserably hot, the public transportation system is obsolete and I refuse to drive a car until this war is over. “No blood for oil, a silent protest.” The pot sucks so everyone drinks bourbon; they have drive-thru liquor stores on every corner open till 4am. A diet of bourbon can make people want to kill themselves; I wanted to kill myself. I also left because I thought I had a warrant out for my arrest.

The warrant was a result of a retail job I had gotten at the Retro Rocket. There was a “now hiring” sign in the window. A blonde woman in her fifties wearing leopard print and smoking a cigarette sat behind the counter.

“Hi I’m Molly and I’m looking for a job.”

“You ain’t from around here, is you,” she said in her scratchy voice.

“No ma’am, I from California.” The minute I set foot in Kentucky I started talking like a redneck with phrases like “how ya’ll doin?”

Miss Lucy handed me a set of keys and said, “We close at eight and don’t forget to lock the door.”

No W2 forms or application, Miss Lucy goes with her gut. It seemed perfect, I could walk from my sister house, so transportation wasn’t an issue. I love everything vintage and my new boss seemed pretty kick back. The next day Miss Lucy stopped by the shop to promote me to manager and that I might want to consider hiring someone else to help me out if I ever wanted a day off because I was on my own.

“Why is it so quiet in here? I want the music loud and the incense burning,” Miss Lucy shouted like a crazy person. I turn up the volume and she kept yelling: “Louder! Louder!” I turned the volume as loud as it would go which was a ridiculous clatter.

Miss Lucy said, “I almost forgot to show you the intercom.”

Miss Lucy thought this was a genius selling tactic, where she had and intercom and camera set up in the back of the store at a mirror. Whenever someone looks in the mirror you say: “that’s hot!”

“When do I get paid?” I asked.

“Hold up! We gotta make money to earn money. I’ll pay you six bucks an hour, under the table that equals eight an hour, just keep track.” Miss Lucy said without really answering my question. She was good at this game.

A few weeks had passed and I started bombarding her with spreadsheet of my hours worked and how much I was owed. She would respond, “Next Tuesday.”

A former employee kept calling the shop looking for Miss Lucy. She disclosed that Miss Lucy never paid her so she quit and still hasn’t seen a dime. Miss Lucy came by the shop before I could give her the messages she broke down in tears and asked if she could borrow some money. “I’m broke until next Tuesday,” I said

“Can you ask your parents?” I laughed as the red flags went off. She owed me about four hundred dollars. My gut was telling me I wouldn’t see this money. So I decided I would pay myself. I took a three hundred-dollar bike and a hundred in cash out of the register. I left Miss Lucy a note telling her I went with my gut and that I quit. She left a message on my answering machine saying, “your gut should of told you that was stealing and you better run cause the cops are coming after you!”

I took her advice and bought the next plane ticket to Portland.

I moved in with my ex-boyfriend, Lou. I met Lou at beauty school; he was one of my first clients. “So what have you been up to today?” I asked as I draped him in a plastic cape.

“Just spreading the word.” He responded with a smile on his face.

“Do tell,” I said which is the only reason I enrolled in beauty school. I had this vision that I would cut people’s hair, they would tell me they’re story and I would write about it.

“The word of God,” he said happily, as I was thinking, “but you look so normal.” In fact he was a gorgeous Hawaiian surfer who had just moved here from the islands to be closer to his son. He and his wife divorced and she moved back home to Portland, he followed and was now an art student at PSU. He asked if I wanted to go to an art show with him that evening. We shared a lot in common. Lou inspired me to fulfill more of my potential than cutting hair. He would always use the quote, “work smarter not harder.” You should get your carpal tunnel syndrome from writing not cutting hair. He helped me fill out the student loan packet at PSU and I can now call myself a: “beauty school drop out.”

I was curious about this whole word-spreading thing. Apparently he had just found God with some campus group that calls themselves “The Disciples.” He said it’s helped him get through his divorce and deal with his schizophrenia. For some reason I’m attracted to the crazies. I saw him every night that week. He invited me to his apartment that he shared with some of the other “brothers”. They did not approve of me.

“What happened to: flirt to convert?” Lou asked the brothers.

I’d like to think that the brothers knew right away that I wasn’t falling for their crap. So they tried to convince Lou that I was sent by the devil as a test of temptation, which I found flattering. Maybe I am the devil in disguise and I don’t even know it…cool. They pulled out all their bag of tricks: they would never leave us unsupervised. Lou and I were watching a moving when they sent in one of the hot “sisters.”

“Will you walk with me to the store,” she asked, “I’m making a big dinner tonight if you wanna come over.”

“I have company,” he said, looking at me like duh.

The brothers gathered Lou for an intervention, and explained how sad they felt and challenged him to fight the devil (me). These dudes were defiantly starting to bug, so I invited Lou to come live with me. That’s when the schizophrenic side of Lou emerged. He was extremely paranoid and would accuse me of cheating on him regularly. He said he could hear me through the heating vents having sex with our neighbor, who I’d never even seen. “I heard you!” he would shout convinced this was true. He started watching me at work from the coffee shop across the street. After a month of crazy hell, Lou checked himself into a crazy hospital then returned to his island.

from my book:  Scars of Paris   available at Borders or Barnes & Nobles

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Sep 13 2008

Surprise!

When I was bored and sober. I had this funny experiment in my mind where I answer a personal ad, and don’t tell the guy that I’m 71/2 months pregnant. What a great story it would make, even though some innocent guy gets sucked into the butt of my joke. I’m pregnant I’m not dead; have a sense of humor. I’d like to meet spontaneous people who can let their guard down. To me it’s a waste of time to email back and forth, because that’s not the real person. Like a dog sniffs the other’s assholes to see if they like one another, I need to smell pheromones.
I met my experiment in a bookstore. “Hi, I’m Molly, did I mention I’m pregnant”
“No, I don’t think you did,” he wasn’t amused by my joke. He stayed long enough for a cup of tea and some advice being a single dad of a twelve-year-old: “Don’t feel guilty about your situation. You love the kid and that’s all you can do. If they’re gonna have an issue, that’s something they have to deal with.” We went our separate ways and that was the excitement of my “Girls Gone Wild” spring break.

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Sep 11 2008

Baby Shower

Mom sent me an email and said she needed a list of people to invite to my baby shower. I replied, “oh hell no! Don’t you dare woman; I swear if you try any surprises, I will cut you off.”I hate to be the center of attention, the idea of sitting in a circle, opening gifts, and repeating over and over again “How cute.” The gesture is very kind but not worth the torture of cuteness. Baby showers are like Mardi Gras, show us your tits and we’ll throw you some beads. Show us your fat belly and we’ll throw you a onesie.

I’m the worst at hosting parties. Jack and I once hosted a party where I snuck off outside to smoke a joint, one of my co-workers hunted me down and chewed me out, “you can’t just ditch us at your own party.” I always thought parties just ran themselves but apparently there is work involved.

Kat and I hosted a Halloween party one year that got a little loud. A woman in a witch costume yelled, “Whoever lives here, your landlord’s at the door.”

I didn’t want to talk to her drunk dressed as a bumble bee so I hid under my bed forcing Kat to handle the situation dressed as wonder woman.

Mom wrote back,” that’s the point, people want to help you get started and you need help, get over it.”

from my book:  Scars of Paris   available at Borders or Barnes & Nobles

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Sep 10 2008

Foster Kids

I had to write a paper for my sociology class on whether or not I would like to have children. The choice to have children is one of the most important you’ll ever have to make. In the second grade my teacher, Mr.Gladwell went around the classroom asking each students what they wanted to be when they grew up. When it was my turn I answered, “I want to be a mom.” That’s the only thing I knew for sure by the age of eight, before the reality of what having children entailed. The next year my parents divorced, my whole world changed. We moved from an average house to a small apartment. I became a latchkey kid when mom found a job. It was downhill from there. We struggled financially and emotionally, so at that point I vowed not to have children until I was secure financially and emotionally with a partner unlike my father. When I was nineteen I met my knight in shining armor. He saved my life and I saved his as we had both hit our rock bottom due to drugs. We worked together as camp counselors for disabled kids. I loved watching him interact with the children I knew he would be a great dad. He was so loving and kind; nothing like my father. We married on my twenty -first birthday and agreed we would wait a while before having children so that we could build our careers and our relationship. Because I was raised in a low-income family, I wanted my child to have more privileges and opportunities. I don’t think children should have to worry about where the next meal was coming from or the humiliation of friends and family taking us in. The Us Department of Agriculture estimates a child will cost $220,000-$440,000 by the time they turn eighteen.Jack and I enjoyed our childless life, we were young so we could still “party” or travel. After going out to dinner with some friends and their three years old son, his behaviors included throwing toys across the room, screaming only because it was quiet, or crying because the little brat wasn’t getting his way. We would go home to our quiet house, have sex and sleep in the next morning, our friends with kids, were not. It didn’t seem worth it, you give your life to these kids and they crap all over you. We could take that $220,000 and buy a vacation home and a boat.

After five years of marriage, we bought a house and tossed around the idea of having a kid, because ours would be different. Before we could even begin our attempts of conception, the world around us would undergo a great tragedy. I woke up on the morning of September 11th to learn that the U.S had been attacked by terrorist. I became fearful of the future; I no longer had any desire to have children. I felt the world was too fucked up for my kids but at the same time I was compelled to do something to counteract this negative and create some sort of positive. We felt grateful for everything we had including our lives; so with a big empty house it only made sense for us to become foster parents. We met with a social worker and told her we wanted the toughest kids in need, we wanted the kids nobody else would take. A month later we got Sally, a 16 year old girl with severe autism. She could not speak and wore adult diapers, when they brought her into our home the first day; I went up to introduce myself. She turned and picked up my favorite vintage lamp and through it across the room then turned to me and grabbed my hair and wouldn’t let go. My husband and the social worker pulled her off me then the social worker made a quick escape. That night Sally didn’t go to sleep, she destroyed her bedroom, tearing everything off the walls; emptying out her dresser drawers then smeared her feces all over herself and everything else. I feared I had made a big mistake but it didn’t stop there, the next day we brought Sally to her favorite restaurant: McDonalds. Unfortunately she was not happy with her happy meal she threw her tray of food at a small child. I turned to apologize to the family covered in French fries and orange soda when she grabbed my food and tossed in the other direction at another innocent child who began to cry. Those families probably still talk about the time when we were eating in Mc Donald’s and had food thrown at them. It became clear that Sally couldn’t handle being in public, so I became a prisoner in my own home. The social worker called and said she desperately needed to place another teenager who could help me out with Sally. Her name was Tessa and appeared to be a sweet and loving 17-year-old with a horrifying past. We weren’t trying to be her parents, we just wanted to be role models and coach her on making good choices. On New Year’s Eve she wanted to hang out with her friends, we gave her a cell phone and a curfew. She ran away and never came back. When the police arrested her for stealing a car, she told them the reason she ran was because we were abusing her. It hurt us and we felt defeated in our attempts in trying to do the right thing. The social worker convinced us not to give up and placed a 17-year-old boy born with fetal alcohol syndrome named Matthew. Shortly after being placed Matthew was arrested for selling his prescription drugs to an undercover officer. He went to jail and we never saw him again. We gave it one more shot with an Autistic 14-year-old boy named Gaby. He too had a lot of needs and aggressive behaviors. After two years of being a foster parent I was reading my horoscope which said: Sagittarius- You need to stop taking care of other people and start taking care of you. It was true I had no energy left to give to my husband or myself. I was emotionally drained and became severely depressed. I fantasized about running away and never looking back. The social worker tried to talk me out of it; she said the kids had no other place to go and that I was stuck with them. We put our house on the market and told the social worker that when the house sold the kids needed new homes. During this time my husband was a huge help but he became greatly involved in his work and whiskey. Our marriage fell apart and shortly after the house sold we divorced. I needed a fresh start and a new life. As the horoscope recommended, I needed to take care of myself. This for me meant pursuing my dreams of college and travel, so I enrolled at PSU and bought a plane ticket for a summer of backpacking through Europe. I overcame my fears and learned to love myself. It’s funny how life turns out sometimes but I’ve come to terms with my decision to keep this child and become a single mother. One-third of all pregnancy’s are to unwed mothers.

It’s everything I vowed not to do, but I’ve discovered that money doesn’t make a happy family nor does a biological father; it takes a village of loving people in a positive environment. Right now that little girl in the second grade, who just wanted to be a mom, will have that opportunity and I can’t wait to hold my baby in my arms and tell him I love him with all my heart.

from my book:  Scars of Paris   available at Borders or Barnes & Nobles

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Sep 03 2008

Guilt Trip

I was in my therapist waiting room where I ran into this guy I knew from my environmental science class. “So what have you been up to?” he asked.“I got knocked up in Paris over the summer.” I replied

He shared with me his own experience where his mother went hitchhiking one summer. Later became pregnant with him from someone that picked her up. He said he always resented her for not making an effort to notify the father. He felt it was selfish which is probably why he’s sitting in the therapist waiting room. I took my tax refund money and bought a plane ticket to Paris.

I circled the Paris airport a few times before finding the exit. The border patrol asked if this trip was business or pleasure. Business…definitely business, I declared. As I stepped outside I took a deep nervous breath to an old familiar smell of cigarette smoke. I retraced my steps that lead me to the Eiffel tower that day in August. To the lawn where I met him turn right, go down four blocks, turn right, the first building on the left. The building is secured; luckily my French lover lived ground level so I knocked on his window. I could hear music playing inside, he’s actually home I thought. I continued to knock thinking he couldn’t hear me until an old bearded woman came screaming out the front door. She waved her finger at me furiously, spit on my shoe then slammed the door in my face. I just flew 6000 miles to have a fucking door slammed in my face.

I stood there in shock, who the hell was that?

The woman taped a note in the window; I couldn’t read it because it was written in French. A man came out of the building; I asked him what the note said,

“If you knock one more time, I will call the police!” I showed the man the photograph of my lover and asked if he lived here, “He did, but I think he moved.”

Still in shock, I just started to cry, frozen in my footsteps. I don’t know if I was upset because my mission failed or because the bearded woman was so mean. The woman opened the window and saw my tears; she calmly asked in French, what do you want? I handed her the note I was going to hand him. She said he does not live here anymore and that she was sorry. “I’m sorry for disturbing you,” I said and left.

I pulled myself together and found a “B&B”, if you want to call it that. It was basically a bed in the back room of a restaurant. The toilet required a wire hanger to flush, but it was cheap and I was jet lagged. I spent the rest of the weekend walking around with the photo asking anyone who would listen if they had seen him. I hung fliers around the neighborhood and came to terms with the outcome. I knew this was a possibility; this is what was supposed to happen, perhaps I should have known when my backpack was stolen that he wasn’t meant to be a part of this experience. I just feel guilty and sad that my son will never know whom his biological father is but maybe that’s a good thing.

I waddled through the airport trying to find my gate, I felt someone run into me from behind with their luggage cart. I turned around so that they could apologize; instead the French bitch rolled her eyes at me. I kept waddling and she did it again. “Hey”, I turned and shouted, “It’s rude to run into people!”

She rolled her eyes again. “I hope you get lung cancer and die!” I yelled as my hormones took control of the situation. Get me out of this country I thought as I waddled to my gate.

Son, I hope you will understand that I love you so much, that I will travel to the other end of the world for you. I hope that you will accept who we are and find the unique qualities that make us special. I want you to realize that being normal is boring and that our life as survivors builds character and makes us interesting. I hope to encourage you to believe you can do anything you work hard enough for, just like grandma believes in me.

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Aug 29 2008

Know it All

I met Mallory in Tuscany, we were roommates in the castle at Spanoccia. When I met her the first time she announced that, there was only one dresser in our room and she would take the top drawers because she was five months pregnant and I could have the bottom.

“My backpack was stolen, all I have is the outfit I’m wearing so help yourself,” I said.

“Well I suppose you could borrow my clothes, but I will expect you to wash them before returning them,” she offered.

“Thanks, but I don’t mind wearing the same thing for two weeks, I’m hard core.” I joked. “I only wish I could find sunscreen, apparently Italians don’t use sunscreen.”

“I guess you can use mine, but only use a tiny bit, it’s all I’ve got,” she said handing me her Costco size bottle.

I took the final bite from my apple and tossed the core into the trash can.

“Don’t do that! There’s a compost bin downstairs!” she scolded.

I’ve only been this woman’s roommate for fifteen minutes and I already can’t stand her. Maybe it’s her hormones raging on me. I’m convinced that my ovaries smelt her growing fetus and knocked themselves up, like a contagious disease.

I’ve been emailing Mallory the Bad Mom Series and she always has a response like, “you should be using cloth diapers and you wouldn’t have leakage. The library has separate baby hours on Wednesdays between noon and two, you should go then and you wouldn’t have any problems. You shouldn’t bring the baby be on the bus, there are too many germs for his immune system.”

Everything I say or do she disagrees with. Now she wants to get together and hang out with our babies. Let’s face it Mal, I hated you in Italy and I still hate you now.

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Aug 24 2008

Flow

 

I boarded the 75 bus crampy with my sweatshirt tied around my waist; wearing my baby’s diaper…..flow was back.  I haven’t had a menstrual cycle in…well, nine months of pregnancy and another nine of breastfeeding…carry the one, that’s 18 months of bloodless panties.   Of all the times and all the places why did that bitch show up, unannounced to a slumber party? 

     Once a month or so my very good friend Jade and I gather at her home way out in St.Johns for cheap wine and expensive cheese.  We have hours of drunken girl talk then I crash on her blow-up mattress.  The baby woke me up at the wee hours of the A.M.  As I grabbed my boob to shove in his mouth I noticed my hands covered in blood which now covered my boob and was smeared on my baby’s face.  At first I thought I had been shot as Jade was just telling me that her neighbor was threatened at gunpoint all for a measly bicycle.  I scanned my body for bullets until I realized it was coming from my vagina.  My period was everywhere as if it had been building up for 18 months until my uterus exploded onto Jade’s white down comforter.  I went to the bathroom leaving a bloody imprint of my ass on Jade’s toilet seat.  I scurried around trying to clean up the mess before she woke up.  I found some tampons in her bathroom and quickly injected one except later I realized that this was no job for a tampon as blood was soaking through my designer jeans, I needed super absorption, I needed a diaper.

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Aug 19 2008

Sue Me

Published by molly under depression, white trash Edit This

My mom’s crazy boyfriend’s crazy brother: lets call him “Ding Dong” is threatening to sue me and my publisher for defamation of his brother’s character which I mentioned in my book Scars of Paris.  Monty used it as amo to blame mom for his issues…again.  Whenever he gets drunk he uses the excuse that he “doesn’t remember saying that or doing this.”  So why would you remember the stories I tell about you breaking into my apartment and tagging swastikas on my walls.  The truth hurts fucker, take some fucking responsibility and stop blaming my mother, Mother Fucker!

Just to give you an idea of who I’m dealing with; the ding dong came out to visit last summer where Monty threw a fit that me and my newborn baby were occupying the guest room where his brother would stay while in town for the annual Unitarian Conference.   Luckily I was able to get dorm housing on campus so ding-dong could have his own bedroom.  At check- in ding dong went into one of his scitzo fits and began hailing Hitler.  When the head Unitarian tried to calm ding dong down he told him to fuck off!  They denied ding-dong entrance to the conference fearing his emotional instability.  Mom encouraged ding-dong by walking him down to the dollar tree for protesting supplies.  He pretended to be lawyers and threatened the Unitarians to let him in.  He called the media about the unfair treatment he was receiving. 

He went back to wherever it was he came from and has now made me his newest target for crazy talk.  This is what he had to say on Amazon.

 

   

“This is a manhating book that should have never been published. This woman clearly has psychiatric disturbance. I clearly don’t believe most of the content of this book. Don’t waste your money.”

This one is going on my refrigerator!

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Aug 10 2008

Depression

 I house sat over the fourth of July weekend for friends who alphabetize their video library.  Not having a T.V myself meant some serious movie watching.  I got started in the “A’s” and decided to watch every movie with the word “American” in the title to celebrate the birth of our fine country.  My first selection was How to make an American Quilt. Chick flicks plus post partum depression are a bad idea.  I cried like a baby and before I knew it I was sending text messages to my ex-lovers, typing things like: “I still love you.”

Next I popped in American Beauty, which motivated me to call my pot dealer for a dub. 

Now that I have the munchies I ended my movie marathon with American Pie which just made me horny and depressed because I’ve convinced myself that nobody will ever want to have sex with me now that I have a baby.

I jerked myself off and stepped outside to smoke a cigarette.  My friend’s neighbor looked up from her gardening and scolded, “You shouldn’t smoke with a baby.”

“Oh, I don’t smoke, I’m just depressed,” I assured her.

“But it’s going to kill you,” she replied.

“I WANT THEM TO KILL ME!”



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