The Hell You Say

Entries from January 2009

President Cartman Has Left The Building

January 29, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Screw you guys, I’m goin’ home.

A few days ago, a friend sent me this photo of the inauguration. It’s a high-resolution panoramic shot, so you can zoom in or out, move up, down, left or right, and focus in on whatever or whomever you like. I like to the shot of Clarence Thomas a few rows behind President Obama. What’s he doing on this momentous occasion? Sleeping. There’s a man with a sense of history, meaning, and the weight of a moment. To the left of Thomas is Antonin Scalia, as fat as schmaltz and looking for all the world like a Borgia plotting to be Pope. Way in the back, several rows behind Thomas and Scalia? There’s a guy in a brown hood. My friend says it’s Darth Sidious, but I think it’s Obi-Wan Kenobi. That’s because I’m an optimist, and he’s a pessimist. Or he has better eyesight.

Pan left, however, and you come to George W. Bush sitting next to a wheelchair-bound Dick Cheney. (Nice hat, Dick, but I’m not buying that story that you’re in a chair because you hurt your back moving stuff. Come on. We’re supposed to believe that you, Dicky Ticker, tried to lift a box? Nonsense! What happened is that as soon as your eight Faustian years were up, the Robot Devil from Futurama came to reclaim his artificial heart and return your dark and crispy own.) But back to George. What is that look on his face?

He wants his cheesy puffs! He has finally begun listening to what Obama has to say, and it isn’t nice. It isn’t flattering. It’s awful, it’s honest, it’s direct and yet polite, and there isn’t a thing he can do about it. He came out in the cold for this? Maybe he really is leaving office with a 22% approval rating. How could that be? He respected the Office of the President of the United States. He wouldn’t let anyone in the Oval Office unless they were wearing a suit and tie. He had standards. Damned if he wants to sit in that well-upholstered front row seat anymore.

Screw you guys, I’m goin home!

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From Hell to Breakfast

January 22, 2009 · Leave a Comment

It’s finished! My second novel. It was supposed to be finished two years ago, but who’s counting apart from my friends, my foes, my mother, and those poor benighted souls who placed pre-orders on Amazon. Speaking of which, do not order From Hell to Breakfast from Amazon – not yet. The edition listed there does not exist. Why? Because I changed publishers in midstream. Unfortunately, that publisher had already generated a book cover and an ISBN, which has confused and confounded many, but all will soon be clear.

From Hell to Breakfast will be published at the end of this month (January 2009) by Blue Feather Books. I will have my first book signing at the Seattle Mystery Bookshop on February 14th. And just for kicks, did I mention that we have a brand new President of these United States of America?

I can breathe again.

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Thyroid and Sea Monkeys

January 7, 2009 · 1 Comment

Filled as I am at this time of year with the Holly Jolly Spirit (AKA the Blessed Parakeet), I shall begin with a parable.

Ever have Sea Monkeys when you were a kid? I got them so long ago that I had to order them from the back of a comic book. I saved my money, gave it to my mother, she wrote a check, and the little devils duly arrived parcel post. It was magic! They came with a plastic Sea Monkey Palace, powdered water purifier, a packet of instant hatch eggs, and some Growth Food that you measured out with the end of a matchstick. I read the enclosed booklet, followed the instructions very carefully, and voila! I had Sea Monkeys!

Being a third grader, I was of course pissed that they didn’t actually wear little crowns or smoke pipes, nor could they be trained to read Aristotle or swing on the flying trapeze, but I got over that. It was fun to watch them swim around and occasionally devour one another in a cannibalistic frenzy. What sucked was when they kicked the bucket. They were supposed to live three years, but instead, they lived three months. They just shriveled up and died.

But the handy Sea Monkey booklet had a ready-made solution. If I just let the water in the Sea Monkey Palace evaporate — let it completely dry out — I could add some distilled water and, Bob’s yer uncle, my Sea Monkeys would be reborn! They’d unshrivel, rehydrate, and come right back to life.

Except they didn’t, and this is where my thyroid comes in. The damned thing is acting like a Sea Monkey. It has dried up, petered out, gone with the wind, and no matter how much water I drink — and I drink a damned lot — it’s not coming back. Once your thyroid gives up the ghost, you might as well bury it and sing Danny Boy.

Why my thyroid died, I do not know. My doctor speculates that I may have had a hyperactive thyroid in my hyper-athletic youth, and perhaps I wore it out, like an old pair of sneakers or those awful Mark Knopfler sweatbands I used to wear to my softball games. Whatever the cause, all I know is that a dead thyroid makes you depressed. Deeply depressed. Sometime in early December, I began to feel wretched. On a scale of 1 to Sylvia Plath, I was hovering around Robert Lowell. So, I went to see my doctor, Clever Elise, and we went over the usual things that bum me out. Sleep (poor). Work (drag my ass there every day but am underpaid and very tired. The weather (oh, God). The in-laws (oh, Cthulhu). And then there was that general feeling of lethargy, misery, hopelessness and malaise. We also talked about the weird cholesterol spike that had shown up in an August blood test, a 100 point jump that had neither a genetic nor a dietary explanation. Hmm. One of the hallmarks of a dead Sea Monkey . . . I mean thyroid.

[Side note: Want to knock a quick 30 points off your cholesterol? Try taking 500 mg no flush Niacin. Man, that stuff is magic.]

So. I felt like the last passenger on the Titanic. It was jump into the icy sea or listen to that Celine Dion song. My choices were not good. It was on Dec. 11th while I was sitting in the Spokane Airport waiting for my flight to Raleigh that Clever Elise called to tell me that the source of my misery was a dead thyroid, that it was tired and shagged out after a long squawk, that it had rung down the curtain and joined the choir invisible, etc., etc. She suggested that I needed to begin taking Levothyroxine as soon as possible, i.e., tomorrow. I said that I could start taking it next week as I was off to visit my mother for five days. She wasn’t happy — no doctor with a bad Sea Monkey on her hands is — but I pointed out that Raleigh has both hospitals and mortuaries, so I was covered for all eventualities.

That’s the medical news in Opyrland. I feel like an old woman blogging about it — like my paternal grandmother, who fills her letters with the juicy details from family obituaries. As my grandmother is 88, I cut her a lot of slack. Why shouldn’t she take pleasure in the obituaries? She’s lived for nine decades. When you spend as much time as she does dwelling the details of your cousin’s cancer or your brother’s cirrhosis, it’s clear that you don’t fear death, and I can’t help but be glad of that. However — and this is a big however — I am less than half my grandmother’s age. That means that I am way too young to be going on about what the hell is wrong with me. Soon I’ll be blogging about moles I’ve had removed, about bunions, about my rotten eyesight and the hearing in my left ear (blew that eardrum out at a Police concert in 1984).

And to think that my downhill slide will have started with a Sea Monkey thyroid.

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