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Adventuresome
Catch
Oatmeal
Give A Little, Get A Lot
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Adventuresome

Thursday, Mariah flew into town and we spent the day shopping for lingerie and then late night walking around Towne Centre and talking over Chai Lattes.

Friday, we played in the woods with some other homeschooling families.

Saturday we chased the sun down A1A in a Mustang convertible, dined in Margaritaville, walked around Key West, and took pictures at Southernmost Point in the middle of the night. On the way home we nearly got the Mustang towed away by a giant penis disguised as a Monroe County Sheriff.

Sunday, we shuttled around the airport chatting it up with the shuttle bus driver and acquired a possessed red Sebring convertible, and then whittled away the evening getting flirted with by various old men (and a couple of brave younger ones), all while playing the slot machines and floating in International waters well off of the twinkling coastline of Ft. Lauderdale/Aventura/Miami. After returning to the mainland we got lost on the very non perimeting Perimeter Road around the airport trying to exchange said possessed car for a lesser possessed silver version, which was accomplished relatively easily once we found the non padlocked entrance to Avis.

Monday, the children and I rested while Mariah visited family in Ft. Pierce. Then in the afternoon we went back to the airport to return the silver convertible. We spent the evening with the children and gave Mr. Monkey a well needed break from being The Best Dad And Husband In The Whole Freaking Universe so he could go see Monster at the theater.

Tuesday, we sat on the beach for an hour and ate lunch and then made our way over to a friend's house and ate King's Cake while attending a Mardi Gras party complete with a congo line of six year old Brownies, plus siblings. Then we had to take Mariah back to the airport and put her on a plane for home.

Lots of other interesting things happened in between and we had a lot of fun. I hope she did, anyway. And so begins the second leg of the week in the Monkey household.

Posted by gwendolyn on February 25, 2004 at 08:36 AM

Catch

During my many years of teen angst I spent most of my time locked away in my black room with my black lights making my gigantic posters of Robert Smith look even more scary than they already were. To school, I wore my black combat boots with my long black skirts and long sloppy black shirts. Most of the time I wore men's clothes that were big, baggy, shapeless, and conservative. My long straight blonde hair parted to the side, generally covering up one eye completely, after all, I was in my own little world anyway. Black nails. Silver jewelry. Red lips.

My friend Lee and I took up smoking cigars on our lunch breaks wherever we happened to be, usually with Terry on some back road. I took up sex, comic books and power drinking. Nine Inch Nails, Depeche Mode, The Smiths, The Cult, REM, Misfits, Danzig, Sex Pistols and countless others singing constantly in the background of my drunken life. As Henry would say, I was writing with black ink on my black paper, all of the deep dark thoughts in my head. This is how I spent my time. It was lovely. I miss it a lot sometimes.

Terry was the big influence in my musical taste. He pretty much introduced me to everything I listened to during that period of time. Before that I only really listened to old Rock. Jethro Tull being one of my favorites, of course. I wasn't into much pop music in the 1980's. I was impressed with Madonna's balls. I wanted to marry Bruce Springsteen. Until 1989.

After that I just wanted to marry Terry. Or Robert Smith. Whichever one asked me first.

Now I see kids on the street who look like that all the time. Today it isn't unusual at all. Sometime along the timeline it went from being alternative to main stream. I think they call themselves Goth. Now I hear Love Song on the Muzak in the grocery store. It makes me cringe and I don't know why. Pictures of You is now some theme song for a commercial. It all makes me die a little inside.

In 1989, I was the only girl in my little midwestern town like me. It wasn't the cool thing to do. Other girls my age didn't have pictures of Robert Smith plastered all over everything they owned. Other girls didn't wear men's clothes or wear combat boots. Looking back I am so glad I wasn't like the other girls. Even with all the horrible things that had happened to me before I met Terry and the depressing situation that was a miscarriage at fifteen and then constant turmoil and solitary confinement at home for the rest of my years there, I liked who I was and what I was.

May 2, 2004 I am going to Indio, California to Coachella to finally see The Cure play.

I always cry when I hear this song. I sometimes felt like it could have been written about me. I cried a lot for a girl who died so many years before.

Charlotte Sometimes

All the faces
All the voices blur
Change to one face
Change to one voice
Prepare yourself for bed
The light seems bright
And glares on white walls
All the sounds of
Charlotte sometimes
Into the night with
Charlotte sometimes

Night after night she lay alone in bed
Her eyes so open to the dark
The streets all looked so strange
They seemed so far away
But Charlotte did not cry

The people seemed so close
Playing expressionless games
The people seemed
So close
So many
Other names…

Sometimes I’m dreaming
Where all the other people dance
Sometimes I’m dreaming
Charlotte sometimes
Sometimes I’m dreaming
Expressionless the trance
Sometimes I’m dreaming
So many different names
Sometimes I’m dreaming
The sounds all stay the same
Sometimes I’m dreaming
She hopes to open shadowed eyes
On a different world
Come to me
Scared princess
Charlotte sometimes

See the sun is gone again
The tears were pouring down her face
She was crying and crying for a girl
Who died so many years before…

Sometimes I dream
Where all the other people dance
Sometimes I dream
Charlotte sometimes
Sometimes I dream
The sounds all stay the same
Sometimes I’m dreaming
There are so many different names
Sometimes I dream
Sometimes I dream…

Charlotte sometimes crying for herself
Charlotte sometimes dreams a wall around herself
But it’s always with love
With so much love it looks like
Everything else
Of Charlotte sometimes
So far away
Glass sealed and pretty
Charlotte sometimes

Charlotte Sometimes- The Cure

Posted by gwendolyn on February 18, 2004 at 04:01 PM

Oatmeal

This morning I made oatmeal for myself, Hope and Logan for breakfast. I don't make it very often. As I was standing there stirring it, watching it bubble and thicken, I had a flashback of my grandma Elizabeth. She is my maternal Great Grandmother. She is the mother of my mother's father. She lives with my step Great Grandfather in my home town. I ask about her occasionally. I am told she is okay. Her health has been failing for several years though. She was old when I was born. In my eyes she is ancient now, and I do not mean that in a bad way. Being ancient is highly respectable.

When I was born she insisted my mother name me Gwendolyn Elizabeth, which my mother did not. She brought us food all the time when we were little as she suspected we were nearly starving, sometimes we were sometimes we weren't. She brought us things canned from her garden and meat she bought in bulk from the butcher. She always brought us homemade jelly and jam. I loved her for it and never really understood what a gift that really was until now.

She always wanted my brother and me to stay the night with her and she would feed us lots of hard candy and homemade cake and pie. For breakfast she made us oatmeal. More mornings of my life were spent eating boiling hot oatmeal with brown sugar on top, swinging around in her swivel bar stool chairs at her counter top, than I can count. She took us shopping and showed us off to her neighbors. She took us berry picking. She made the best blackberry cobbler. She made me a German Chocolate cake every single year for my birthday no matter what anyone else was doing. She was always giving us money.

She was already retired by the time I was born but she was one of the hardest working women I ever met. She kept her house sparkling, and everyone elses too. She took care of her own garden and her own lawn. Money was always very important to her and she always encouraged me to save all mine. In fact, she saved spare change for me in a savings account from the time I was a toddler and it grew into enough money when I was sixteen years old to pay for nearly half of my near perfect condition powder blue 1979 Chevy Impala. I immediately wrecked it several times. Each time I would grow to understand more and more of the value of my money as I had to work and pay for every repair, my payments, and my insurance. I wouldn't have it any other way. I hope she was proud of my independence with the car thing.

She was always the loud one of the family. Insulted people without blinking an eye or even sometimes realizing she was doing it. She was obnoxious at times. Embarrassing others. She cackled when she laughed. She cooked with lard. She was a very good cook. She dyed her hair jet black. She always wore the strangest things. Lots of polyester. She loved costume jewelry and red lipstick. She was a party girl in her day. She has been married five or six times, twice to my late Great Grandfather with a husband in between, I think. She is a perfectionist, a clean freak. If she doesn't think your house is clean enough she will just clean it for you, whether you are there or not. She has to keep up with the Joneses. She always drove a silver Cadillac. It looked like it had never been out of the show room. Tissue box in the back and it smelled of roses or something equally perfumey. So did her bathroom. Every once in awhile I will be in a place that smells like her bathroom. Even Terry knows the smell. It smells like little rose shaped decorator soaps. I miss that smell.

She has to have the nicest everything. She had a framed portrait of JFK on her wall. She had a print of a little girl with blonde curly hair and a red coat holding a black puppy on her wall. She liked colored glass everything. She had butterscotch candies in one of the many glass bowls with a lid on the right end of her coffee table. After dinner mints like you have at baby showers in another. Her basement was as clean as her house. If you stayed the night with her she washed your outfit in her washer even if there wasn't anything else to wash with it.

She used to call our house everyday and ask a lot of nosey questions. She has to know everyone's business. She snoops. She is now old and cannot drive over to families' houses to snoop around and tell people how they should be conducting their lives. I used to find it annoying. Now I miss it. I miss her calling me Gwennie and talking about her great adventure driving to Utah in her Winnebago to bring my pregnant stranded mother and me home from what she assumed was the depths of hell that was our life there.

Yes, my father dragged us out there and then abandoned us for months straight. Yes, he came back occasionally to beat the shit out of her and destroy the place. It was the first memory I have of seeing my father with other women. It was very scary at times. However, it wasn't the worst thing that could have happened to me. Believe me, it wasn't. Times were hard and we were sometimes very cold and very hungry but we survived. It is ironic that she feels she saved me from such horrible things when in actuality she brought me back to a much more horrible life.

I turned five on the drive home from Utah. We had driven to Arizona to visit distant family of some sort. I nearly drowned in a pool. I walked off into it after a floating boat raft. Some lady, a distant aunt or something, jumped in fully clothed to drag me up from the bottom. It must have been a sign. My mother should have bought a greyhound ticket and went right back to Salt Lake City and stayed there. Grandma Elizabeth's quest to bring us home started a whole new set of hardship in my life.

It was one of the worst experiences of my life driving home in that camper with half of my maternal family. I could never tell her that. In her mind it was one of the most noble things she ever did. I could not tell her that her oldest son, my mother's father, molested me during the trip home and that it was one of my first memories of a very long strand of horrific memories. I couldn't tell her that whenever I looked at the picture of me sitting at the table in the camper with a pad of paper and a pen, wearing my red white and blue gingham sundress with matching bloomers only brings back the memory of being molested that very day.

Her grand mission to rescue us from poverty and the years of my childhood after that ultimately rendered her yet another casualty of my life. I wonder what she would think of coming to "take us home" now if she knew. I will most likely never see her alive again. Funny how cooking oatmeal affects me. No wonder I don't make it very often but I love it so much.

Just the other day I was commenting to a friend about how much of that bad stuff I have let go of in the last year. I am not so sure if that was as true as I want to believe. I do try not to dwell on it though. A year ago I would have gotten very mad at myself for letting those memories come back up and would have felt even more angry at people. Now I just am a little sad and thought to myself that if there is any truth to the theory of reincarnation, that I hope I get a better shot at childhood next time.

Posted by gwendolyn on February 17, 2004 at 04:04 PM

Give A Little, Get A Lot

After spending the better part of Saturday riding along Loop Road, the supposed location of the ruins of Al Capone's mansion an, at five miles per hour, in the Everglades, catching glimpses of light and shadow playing on the water and trees, people watching (believe it or not there were people out there), spotting various wildlife, while munching on picnic style snack food we holed up for the rest of the weekend in our bedroom. Scanning. Then printing. Then scanning and more printing. We scanned and printed hundreds and hundreds of pages. We used probably three reams of paper. There were two trips to the store for ink. After we are finished with what we have here we will be getting more. It is a very slow process. Yet it is a process I am more than happy to endure for the end result. The one hundred dollars we have spent this weekend in supplies for this project will have literally saved us thousands of dollars in the end. It will be worth all the effort. I hope.

Posted by gwendolyn on February 15, 2004 at 09:20 PM

Evolution

Don't worry. It isn't broken. This is just the way I want things. As with all things, the past is in the past. Live in the present, and look forward to the future. Just try to keep up :)

Posted by gwendolyn on February 13, 2004 at 09:38 AM

Shifting Gears

Terry is home from his abrupt trip to Ohio. Hopefully things are on the mend there. Life in this house is kind of evolving again. We are going to try to combine our unschooling instincts with some unconventional yet formal curriculum. It will be more of a schedule than we are used to but it seems we are evolving that way anyway, it should put into use a lot of the things we have collected since moving here. I just have to try to find the middle of the road. Combine the best of both and hopefully create something well rounded. Something that works.

Posted by gwendolyn on February 09, 2004 at 11:20 AM

Shape Shifter

I am currently reading The Portable Henry Rollins. I hadn't read any of his books yet. I had seen his spoken word stuff on video before. I had read a lot of interviews with him. I listened to his songs. However, when I started to read his writing and his journal entries it really changed my whole perspective. I can see now that meeting him was a totally different experience than what I perceived to to be. His politeness to me, and everyone else he meets really isn't him at all.

In fact, I am the embodiment of everything he despises in the world. So are most of you. It would explain the way he looks at a camera the way he does, why he didn't say much, why he prefers to be alone, why he travels so much. It twists what I thought I saw in that ten minutes into something extremely different. It twists what I thought we all saw for three hours on the stage the night before into something else. It is amazing to see the whole thing again through the other person's eyes.

He expresses, in his writing, how much he loathes signing his name on pieces of paper for people. How numb he is to everything. How he feels about people like you and me. He may seem nice, shake your hand and thank you for coming, but you really don't exist in his mind. He would rather smash your head in. He is really consumed by his own hatred.

I like my perspective of the whole experience better. I like the nervousness I felt upon being near him. I like the funny laid back Henry I thought we all saw in his performance. I prefer to see him as some beautiful monster. I would rather be blind. I am weak like that.

Isn't that what we all are really? Someone else's interpretation of us?

"If you could see the you that I see

When I see you seeing me

You'd see yourself so differently

Believe me"

Low Self Opinion- Rollins Band

Posted by gwendolyn on February 05, 2004 at 09:59 AM

Grow A Spine

I have a couple of things, as a mother of small children, to say about all of the freaking out everyone is doing over the Janet Jackson and Justin Timberlake performance last night. Okay so that may not have been the time slot or network for what went on but neither are the content of half of the commercials, movies trailers, sit coms, made for tv movies, comedies or dramas that are on the same networks in the same time slots on any other given day. If you are offended by nudity or sex or even the slightest implication of either you might as well give up and throw your television away. It is there every single day. On every channel.

However, and I can't believe I am about to say this because even I am easily offended by the use of nudity and sex to sell anything, it is just a breast. It doesn't matter what you call it or how you package it. It really doesn't even matter if it was proceeded by the otherwise acceptable bumping and grinding that no one seems so uptight about any other year. Pastie or no pastie it is still just a freaking breast. Does it really warrant public apologies and denial of intentions? It doesn't matter what the circumstances are that it was exposed. It is just a breast. If you see a mother with exposed breast feeding a baby in a commercial you don't gasp and turn the channel. You don't walk into an art museum and insist that the statues need to cover up. Under those circumstances it is perfectly natural. Well you freak over a nursing mother if you are a closed minded immature asswipe. I understand that the half-time show was a bit much on the adult content but isn't most of what you see on television?

As a woman who isn't ashamed to talk about vibrators and how much wearing leather boots turns her on, if you are going to do this stuff live for millions of people to watch, don't be a puss about it. Issuing apologies after the fact and trying to deny that it was intentional while it was perfectly synched to the words "gonna have you naked by the end of this song" just makes you look like a fucking corporate puppet. If you are going to do it, just fucking do it. People may not have approved of it but if you were really that bold you wouldn't fucking care either way. At the very least I would have respected you more in the morning.

The whole thing is getting way too much attention. The amount of media coverage the whole thing is getting is more disturbing than anything they actually did.

Posted by gwendolyn on February 02, 2004 at 02:37 PM