Sunday, November 28, 2010

Is being annoyed by your family a sign of growing up?


If so, I don't wanna grow up. I wanna be a Toys R Us kid forever, just like that damn jingle. I've had some unfortunate "growing up" moments this holiday season, and it's not even Christmas yet. Well, is it growing up, or do I just need to start taking Xanax like the rest of America? I guess we don't know that yet. Anyway, for my whole life, I guess you could call me a "momma's girl," the "baby of the family," you know...a real wimp when it comes to family stuff. I'm the dork who would rather sit at home on Saturday night and watch old TCM Robert Mitchum marathons with their parents rather than go out to a hipster dance party in East Austin.

But lately...something's changed. No, it's not that I'd rather be out partying hard and chugging Lone Stars. I wish that was the case, but I haven't gotten out of my sweatpants in several days. Rather, I'm just annoyed by my family. It doesn't help that my parents are both retired, my brother is home from Alaska for a month, and I just moved back home from Paris with absolutely no idea about my future. So imagine a smallish house filled with four more or less grown-ups wandering around getting up in each other's business day after day. I mean, it's a recipe for disaster. Why has there not been a horror movie made starring Ryan Reynolds about boomerang children killing their parents?

It's not that I'm bored, exactly. I'm very easy to entertain, as long as I can do whatever I want. This means stalking more successful friends on Facebook, knitting ugly scarves for cheap Christmas gifts, scratching my pug's belly, slowly walking around the neighborhood and telling myself it's cardio, re-watching the entire season of Mad Men...look, I just summed up a week of my life. But I have the parents that don't understand privacy. It's considered rude and weird to go in your room and close the door. Also, my parents like to keep up some sort of semblance of a working life, so they get up early and put on real clothes and do little "projects" all day. No sitting down and watching TV until after dinner. I guess it's these strict, arbitrary rules that make them feel like they have a real life, instead of being retired. But it's an unspoken rule that we boomerang children must comply. So even though I would rather stay up all night and sleep until noon and eat Reese's Peanut Butter Puffs for dinner...it's not really "allowed." And I'm already on thin ice with the parents for quitting my (their) supposed dream job, so I play the retirement game with them--minus the decent pension plan and health care.

But what I'm trying to say is that I had a not very enjoyable Thanksgiving, which makes me sad. Parents, grandparents, aunts and uncles...everyone was quizzing me on my future and generally annoying the shit out of me. I had expected warm and fuzzies and instead felt cold and prickly. Does this mean I am finally growing up or that I am just a post-adolescent asshole? I'm guessing both.

On the other hand, I may not be the only one suffering from family overload. Thanksgiving evening, my fifty-year-old aunt snuck out of the living room where we were all gathered, then sheepishly sent a mass TEXT to everyone saying her thanks and goodbyes...

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Grey Gardens on Robin Hood Trail Part II


I find the office, wait in line for thirty minutes, and pick up her cable starter kit. Everything is going a little too well for me. I call her with my good news, and she asks me to come straight to her house to get some coupons. I readily agree, and find her house is only seven or less minutes from my apartment. The neighborhood is beautiful, old, wealthy West Austin. Gotta love the white folks and their oil money. Her house is small but adorable. It’s yellow and white trim 1920s style. Vines have completely enclosed the fireplace outside and even poof out at the top—it’s like chimney smoke, but green and vine-y.

She opens the door before I can even knock and shrieks, “Don’t trip!”
I look down, expecting to see a rotting stair or something equally dangerous, but there is only a rug. Perhaps it is a rather slippery rug. She ushers me in and starts talking a mile a minute. I’m too overwhelmed to really listen. The first thing I notice is…roses. Pink, fake roses are everywhere. In bouquets, bundles, on furniture, and loosely strewn on the floor. There’s a ten-foot long garland of red roses in the living room, and wreaths to match. Still left over from Christmas, perhaps?

Robin is wearing a white T-shirt and red sweatpants hoisted up below her bosom. She’s also got some snazzy baby blue clogs on. Her face is caked and cracked with makeup. Hot pink lipstick and purple eyeliner….gotta love it on a sixty-year-old.

The house, from what I can make out under the boxes and boxes of crap, is gorgeous. Wooden floors, an ornate white fireplace, small tidy kitchen. Perfect for a young couple or a personal assistant who happens to be in a rich old lady’s will. Robin and I actually have very similar taste…if I were fifty years older, schizophrenic, and suffering from “Daddy’s Girl Syndrome.” There’s a tea set on the floor, and baubles and trinkets in random corners. Gorgeous costume jewelry hangs tantalizingly on doorknobs. Her bed is huge and all white. I make the mistake of setting the cable box on the bed.

“No!” she shrieks. “Don’t do that, ever.”

Okay, so apparently the bed is off limits. Hmm that sounds dirty but it’s not supposed to be. I clumsily try to set up the cable, but I’ve never done it before. Don’t most people (especially rich ones) have some fat guy with a plumber’s crack come over to set these things up? I guess this is what personal assistants are for: doing bitch work. I’m sure everyone else in the world knew this but me.

She gets tired of watching me tangle up the wires and snaps, “Actually, I used to work in the film industry, so I’m good at things like this. Let me finish.”

I gladly hand it over. Then Josh pulls up. Josh is another unsuspecting victim like myself. He, too, was just hired today. We look at each other and I know the fear I see in his eyes is mirrored in mine. He had arrived with two hundred dollars worth of cyclamens and shrubs. It’s landscaping time here at the crazy house. Josh starts to carry out the cyclamens and I hear Robin moan.

“No! No! All wrong! Those are FUSCHIA!”

She runs inside the house and returns with two pink sweaters still inside their packaging.
“See, Josh? This one is SALMON, and this one is BUBBLEGUM. These are colors Home Depot promised me they had. And you brought me FUSCHIA, which IS BLUE-PINK. You’re gonna have to take those back…NOW.”

But first, Josh had to help her decide where to put her shrubs. She declared she wanted her yard like a poodle: poofy, symmetrical, and perfectly manicured. Never mind that it takes years for shrubs to grow enough to trim them into a nice round shape.

Then Robin decides it’s time I returned some clothes for her. We set off on a mission to find the receipt. Oh god, the receipts. She has three binders alphabetized and crammed with every single receipt imaginable. The only upside to this craziness? I got to look at all the weird shit she buys. How about twenty string bikinis at Wal-Mart? Or the 10,000 bill for a plastic surgeon? We open the trunk of her brand new Jaguar and I almost gag. It’s crammed with crap. I can’t even describe all the shit she has, it’s just crap. I’m pretty sure there was some food disintegrating in there, too.

Let’s not even begin about how we got the garage open. She was convinced she had left the garage opener in her Jaguar and we were gonna have to break a window to get in. Luckily, I had the sense to try some keys before we resorted to that desperate measure. She calls a gas station on Windsor and tells them I’m coming, and to fill up my tank with twenty dollars. This part I like.

Then she calls Bed, Bath, and Beyond and tells them to hold six pairs of moss green velvet curtains for her. I am to pick those up along with returning the Ann Taylor pants. Still haven’t found the receipt for those. There’s around fifty receipts in the “A” section. I set off for the Arboretum, already hating this drive up Mopac. I have a feeling I’ll be doing this a lot. The incident at Ann Taylor was awful, but luckily the girl there was a sweetheart. She helped me find the receipt and had to get bitched out on the phone by Robin, but I finally returned the damn pants.

Picked up the curtains and headed back to crazyland. Not without a screaming phone call of course.
“LINDSEY! MY CABLE ISN’T WORKING!”

Well, of course not. I didn’t finish hooking it up.

“AND IT’S THE WRONG BOX! OH, GOD, THIS HAS BEEN SUCH A WACKY DAY AND I JUST NEED TO GO SWIMMING AND THAT’S WHY I HIRED PEOPLE, SO THAT I WOULDN’T HAVE TO DEAL WITH THIS SHIT! MY DAY IS WASTED, AND NOTHING GOT DONE AND I’VE BEEN CALLING THE TIME WARNER PEOPLE AND NO ONE WILL PICK UP AND IT’S THE WRONG BOX AND I DON’T HAVE MY PREMIUM CHANNELS!”

“Let me get home, and I’ll look at it.”

I was not going back to that fucking office again. No sirreebob. I arrive back and Robin meets me…..considerably disheveled. Her right leg is completely bare. Bare as in she pulled up the leg of her sweat pants to her crotch. Yowza! On in the inner thigh is a nasty bruise smeared with something…shiny. She’s got a cable guy on the speakerphone and I feel so so sorry for this man. But more sorry for myself.

She is screaming at the man, calling him an asshole, and demanding to speak to a supervisor. The guy finally hangs up on her. I feverishly try to fix the fucking cable but it’s hard to concentrate when a schizo is shrieking at you with her entire leg exposed. She goes to sit on the toilet and resumes her slathering of….aha! Aloe vera! That explains the fifteen or so cut up plants I’ve seen all over the house. She is really into the natural cures I see.

“I’ve had this bruise for six weeks and I SWEAR, I’ve just been NURSING it like a wound my GOD it just won’t HEAL!”

God finally comes to my rescue and makes the cable work. I’m ready to run sobbing out the front door, but not before she writes me a check. Which she does. Forty dollars for four hours. Not too shabby. No taxes taken out at the crazy house! Then she asks for my school schedule, and when can I come tomorrow?

She says, “I don’t want to lose you, so what time is best?”

Oh, God. Am I really going to come back? Yes, yes I am. I swallow my fear long enough to squeak, “Is one okay?”

“One is good…one to four? Okay, thank you, Lindsey. I promise you I’m not always like this. I don’t like to scream, but it’s just been such an awful, wacky day.”

Lady, you have no idea. “I’ll see you at one, Robin. Bye…….”

Oh, god! God, why?? Here’s the deal: I’m giving it a week. We’ll see how well crazy lady mixes with school. I’m never gonna go out of my way to see her. Fifteen hours tops. I have a feeling she goes through young, helpless UT girls like there’s no tomorrow. How many have stayed? For how long? How I’d love to talk to one of her former slaves. I hope Josh stays. I can do it as long as there’s another sane person involved. And Sergio. She hired Sergio too, another UT student to do her landscaping.

Sadly, this is the end of my story. I worked for her maybe a month before she accused me of stealing her crutches. I finally left a note on her front door telling her I had moved. She still called me a couple times after. Ah, hooray for crazy jobs!

Crazy Job Blast from the Past

I think I have a problem with accepting jobs I know will be crazy/weird/awful/scary/funny ten years from now to talk about...while going through some old stories I had written, I found this little gem. During college I worked as a personal assistant for a manic-depressive middle-aged woman named Robin. Actually, I don't know if she was mentally ill. For all I know she could have just been wealthy, coddled, old, and single for too long. Either way...she was insane. Please enjoy below.



"Grey Gardens on Robin Hood Trail"


I am mentally drained, but I feel I should write down every detail of my day before I forget it all. It was, without a doubt, the most bizarre day of my life. Yes, I’ve had a boring life…but that should not downplay the significance of today. Brandon (my ex-boyfriend) gave me his password for a site called “hire a longhorn” job bank. It’s basically a posting of full and part-time jobs for students. I was drawn to one ad that said this:


Personal Helper / Handyperson

Single woman needs help around the house. The house is located near the Hula Hut, just off of Enfield. Help is needed with odd jobs in one or all of these areas: packing boxes, light housekeeping, running errands around town, pick up and delivery of items, and yardwork. You decide how much work you can take on. Qualifications:
Must have own reliable transportation, be reliable, mature, responsible, self-sufficient, and resourceful. Be willing to take on any task and work independently with minimal supervision.

I liked it because a.) It was off Enfield and close to me. And b.) it paid ten dollars an hour. C.) I could make my own hours.

What could go wrong? A lot, apparently…I called Robin at 11:30am Saturday morning. I thought perhaps I’d go in for an interview sometime this week and would need to make an elegant resume on Microsoft Word. Robin….the name sounds like someone small, chipper, with a sing-song voice. A perky little personality with a lot pizzazz. The Robin I spoke to was more….Whatever Happened to Baby Jane with a dash of Mommie Dearest. Robin answers my call using speakerphone. I will later learn it is the only way she talks on the phone—loud, shrill, and frightening.

She says, “Do you have a car?”
“Yes, I do.”
“Is there gas in it? Or do you need to fill up?”
“Umm…there’s some gas in it.”
“Not that this means anything, but the football field at UT is named after my uncle. He gave a lot of money to this school. And my Daddy was on the Education Council.”
“Wow, that’s…really neat.”
“Okay, great. I just need to you to go to the Time Warner offices and pick up my converter box. Call me when you’re done with that. Okay? Thanks, dahlin’.”
So—I guess I’m hired? For the time being, at least. I Google directions to the office and set out. Full of trepidation, I think of every worst-case scenario that could possibly apply under these specific circumstances. The most mild involves me losing a lot of time and a lot of money. I mean, gas IS getting higher every day. It ain’t cheap to run errands all over town. But we'll see....

Monday, November 8, 2010

The Hipsters of Belleville

So...where the hipsters at? I mean, really. I’m in Paris, the chic capital of the world. Where are my walking American Apparel ad ladies and flannel-wearing men? Where is the Greenpoint and Silver Lake of Paris? It’s harder to find than you would think. Or maybe I’m just not cool enough. My theory is that hipsters in Paris are much more discreet and underground. They’re not as concerned as Americans to be “seen” around the town. They cozy up at each other’s tiny-ass apartments, or huddle in dark cafes talking philosophy and smoking Lucky Strikes. But I think I might have found one of their neighborhoods last night: Belleville.

I got another random reach out from a girl who found me on an ex-pat website. Again, I would probably never go out of my way to meet people online back home, but here, I will never turn down an invitation! Unless it’s clubbing on the Champs-Elysees. (I am still amazed at how much that particular activity sucks.) She invited me to Aux Folies, a neighborhood dive bar whose terrace is apparently always packed—-even when it’s below 40 degrees. It definitely had a “le cool” vibe and wine was pretty cheap and the people were beautiful and the service shitty. Sign me up! My new friend was very pretty, very skinny, and somehow managed to sit outside in a jean jacket and leather pants and look effortlessly chic, while I tubbied it up in a sweater, hoodie, long coat, wool scarf, and hat. Honestly, that might be the biggest reason I hate cold weather. I just can’t be as cute as I am in, say, LA weather. I’m a cotton dress kind of girl. I feel best in a simple dress, tights, and boots. Taking your winter coat off and on, lugging it around to clubs, finding places to put all your shit, losing your gloves on the metro…it’s annoying. All those damn accessories that take up so much room and cover up your cute outfit. Most of the time I think, shit, I might as well just wear pajamas underneath this crap because I’ll never get warm enough to take it off.

The girl has lived long enough in Paris to know her way around, and has a French boyfriend in a band. All signs point to…cool. We had a good chat discussing our lives and then Annabel and Kacy showed up. At Addison’s recommendation we headed to a café that played classic “American clubby dance” music and boasted 10 Euro double mojitos. I made the mistake of ordering something called a “Poire Miel” for half the price…which of course turned out to be a thimble of some kind of aperitif. Delicious but gone in five seconds. Not to worry, because then a DJ (who looked like every chubby hipster dude from Chicago) bought us all shots. And then Addison bought us tequila shots. And then some nasty-ass French dude Kacy was flirting with bought us tequila shots. And then we began dancing. And then poor Kacy and Annabel got incredibly drunk and we all got separated. And then Addison recommended we head up to Montmartre to meet some friends. And I might have agreed without saying goodbye. God, I’m a terrible friend.

So, both of us very tipsy, we headed to Pigalle and went to some girl’s apartment and drank lukewarm 1664s with some French kids. They were actually very nice but it was 2am and I was drunk and feeling not-so-charming. Then Addison sat on a girl (who was apparently sleeping under a huge blanket on the couch and therefore invisible) and the girl got pissed and we had to take a cab back to her place. Two other people from the “house party” joined us and we sat in her tiny-ass living room and listened to music. I think at some point I fell asleep sitting up. Then Addison was kind enough to let me crawl into her bed and I passed out with my coat on top of me. Luckily (unluckily?) the boyfriend was out of town, so no ménage a toi.

It’s a strange feeling to wake up in a strange bed in a foreign city and be incredibly hungover. My first worry: where the fuck are my priceless vintage glasses? I have to pee. This is kind of awkward, I think there’s a girl I just met sleeping next to me. Is it rude to sneak out? Is that like a platonic one night stand? I want to be home right now in my pajamas. It was around 10am, but luckily my moving around woke Addison up. I got us some water, shoved my bra in my purse (a Lindsey classic from the old days) and wished her a good day. Then I got to experience the glory of the walk of shame in Paris! Guess what! It’s so much worse than just driving home hungover in Texas! It probably took me an hour to get home, and I thought about barfing on this kid on the bus who wouldn’t shut up. I couldn’t imagine living with a family like most of my au pair friends do. I mean…walking in at 11am on Saturday, smelling like booze and cigarettes and makeup smeared? “Hiya kids! Nanny partied a little too hard last night!”

The autumn two-week holidays for kids begins this week. And, to further continue the theory that I picked the shittiest, middle-classiest family in Paris, mine are staying at home. Yes, most of my friends are either going with their families to French islands, their country homes in Brittany, or grandparent’s homes in the south of France. And if they’re not joining them, they at least get the whole house to themselves for a week. I would be more than happy with that. But nope. Mine’s staying here. I don’t know if my family is just incredibly boring or just not that wealthy. Either way, they suck.

But, it could be worse. I could have to take care of the kids. But I told them six weeks ago (as soon as my mom booked her plane ticket), so they made plans for the dad to take off work and stay at home with them. God, how miserable he will be by the end. Sounds like a shitty vacay to me! So yeah, my mom is coming on Monday! Hopefully. You know, assuming the strikes and petrol shortage don’t ruin everything. I really can’t believe I’m going to see my mommy in Paris. I feel like I’ve been living this weird, surreal, kind of fake life in Paris. Like time has stopped back home and I’m just in this bizarre European world waiting to go back home. I’m really curious to see what my mom thinks about my French family, my attic prison, getting around the city, the people, the food…we’ll have a lot of fun.

And then Colin in three weeks. Crazy. I really can’t imagine him here. I wish I had an amazing itinerary planned, but honestly, I just don’t do that much here. I don’t have enough disposable income to have a favorite restaurant, café, bar, museum, neighborhood yet. Every day I play “poor confused tourist.”

Okay it’s raining and horribly cold outside. It’s time to watch a 1980s John Ritter film and eat stale, expired bread with jam…yup, this is my life.

Kevin Costner is vanilla hot

So joining the American Library in Paris was the best investment I’ve made so far. It cost a refundable 60 Euro fee and a four-month membership for 47 Euros. A lot for a poor nanny, but can you put a price on virtually unlimited old-fashioned entertainment and free Wi-Fi? If I could walk to the place I would be in pure heaven. Unfortunately, it’s on the opposite side of Paris, right next to the Eiffel Tower. But it’s well worth the 45 minute trip to walk in and find an oasis of quiet. I love libraries. They’re as comforting to me as a cup of hot chamomile tea. Maybe it’s because I spent most of my days after school playing in my mom’s library waiting for her to finish work and drive us home.

I’m convinced that’s why I flourished in my English classes throughout school: writing, vocabulary, spelling, random knowledge, knowing how to make a toy out of a pig’s bladder (thank you Laura Ingalls Wilder) all came out of those afternoons. I would park my bottom in the little school chairs in a quiet corner and read whatever book tickled my fancy. I’m pretty sure I worked my way through most of the alphabet before I began middle school. How different would I be if I had watched Nickelodeon or played some inane Mario Brothers video game? Being a shy bookworm is probably the best thing that ever happened to me. I’m no good at sports and ballet was much too strict, so thank god I had the smarts to fall back on. Sure, I do regret missing some spectacular vista views on family road trips. My mom would be prodding me in the backseat, saying “Lindsey, there’s the Grand Canyon. There’s the mountains of Colorado. We’re crossing the state line into West Virginia…” and I’d just be completely zoned out reading the Chronicles of Narnia. But who else can claim to have read the entire series of Anne of Green Gables in a Chevy Astro van in two weeks?

So, yeah. I love the library. I need to volunteer there, just to get me out of the house on rainy days and feel like I’m contributing to society in some way. Plus nothing would make me happier than to make some old, cultured ex-pat friends. I mean, a dinner party with fifty-year-old professors on a Friday night sounds like sheer bliss right now. My party girl au pair friends have discovered the “Sixth Street” (sorry, Austin reference) of Paris…it’s Bastille. A bunch of narrow alleys jam-packed with Australian bars, latino clubs, Guidos, tourists, and the ever-present mojito special. What’s up with Parisians loving mojitos? I think they’re great poolside on a sunny day, but on a freezing winter night? Yech, give me a vin chaud any day.

I’m starting to get the reputation of the “party pooper.” Didn’t take long. Factor in frigid temperatures, no money, expensive drinks, lecherous guys, metro closing times, and a long-ass walk home…and you’ve got Lindsey pooping out every time. Riding the night bus home with a bunch of sketchy Arab dudes at 3am does not a glamorous night make. Somehow, Kacy and Annabel are able to score free drinks, dance at clubs, stay out until 6am, and get rides home with strange men…all without getting raped! More power to them. Although the last time I left Kacy at a club she somehow lost her scarf, jacket, and shoes…so there is a price to pay.

So the library. It’s great. Their DVD selection is pretty shitty, but I’ve lowered my standards and will watch pretty much anything except the full season of 24 or Grey’s Anatomy. I just finished watching Mr. Brooks (starring Kevin Costner) and it was surprisingly not bad. The violence was too much, but I was very much intrigued by Kev’s character, and it was set in Portland, Oregon. Kevin Costner…man. He is dreamy. He’s the kind of attractiveness that is so bland and clean that you kind of forget about him, but then he puts on tortoiseshell glasses and a cozy cashmere sweater and I just want to walk with him in the park with our Golden Retriever dog named Lucy and then return home to our 1850s farmhouse in upstate New York. Yup, that’s my sexual fantasy these days. Getting domestic in the country, cooking apple pies, and knitting hats out of alpaca yarn.

Friday, November 5, 2010

My wet dream of a movie

Why did guys in the 50s and early 60s look so good? Because they were so fresh-faced and clean cut, looking like they just stepped out of a Ivory soap commercial all scrubbed and dry and shiny bright. Starched white shirts, skinny black ties, high-waisted pressed pants, black shoes shined to a gleam, sharply cut crew cuts, tailored blazers…can you tell I’m drooling by now? Enter the film The Right Stuff. First off, it’s written by Tom Wolfe, whom I love. (Any man who dresses up in his own, timeless white suit every day is a winner in my book.) It stars the bleached-clean Ed Harris, the devilish smile of Dennis Quaid, nerdishly sexy Jeff Goldblum, and my soulmate: Sam Shepherd. Oh yeah, I had the realization I should probably marry Sam Shepherd. First off, he’s a lockdown in the looks department. Piercing blue eyes, tanned chiseled face, his sun-scorched leather bomber jacket, the fact that he’s also an amazing writer in real life, and he played Dolly Parton’s husband in Steel Magnolias…what more does a girl need?? He’s impeccable.

So The Right Stuff follows the story of the original astronauts and the beginning of NASA and the space race. It’s basically one big cheesecake photo of men shirtless, goofing off, and wearing shiny space suits. I actually really hate space travel, mainly for the fact that I think it’s the biggest waste of government money. All those billions of dollars poured into research, and what have we done with it? How has it benefited anyone’s life day to day? There are mentally ill homeless veterans on the streets and people dying because they don’t have adequate health care, but hey! John Glenn went into space! But I am shallow and lusting after the men, not the space angle, in this film.

It makes me really sad that those days are over. Now men dress like slobs in cut-off shorts, or they go the other revolting direction and become metrosexual Guidos with too much hair gel and sequined dress shirts. I just want Gregory Peck in his horn-rimmed glasses giving an impassioned speech in a Southern courthouse. Is that too much to ask??

Monday, November 1, 2010

I miss

That horribly cold Saturday in Canton
The drive there
The disgusting bathroom graffiti in a small-town gas station
The solitude and grace of the numerous antique stalls
How I felt truly comfortable and not cutesy act-y when stopping to admire costume jewelry and Mamie dolls and framed family portraits of strangers
I knew you'd understand, talk me out of impulse extravagances, but give me time to linger
We walked in squares until we got lost
Hot chocolate
Concerns about a friend--advice--duly ignored
It was so bitterly cold
And then--
A discovery of true junk stalls
The stuff dreams are made of
No more glass cases or Art Deco period pieces
Just good, salt-of-the-earth people with garage sale prices
I flirted with the old man to get you a better price on a chrome dinette set
(How many men in the world appreciate a chrome dinette set with mustard yellow upholstery?)
And Jetsons-style glassware
And wooden silverware
It was one of those Vegas-style hot streaks where everything I picked up was amazing and cheap and looked exactly like him and for that reason it was the most beautiful knife and fork I'd ever seen
I had an intoxicating glimpse of domestic life that for once didn't sicken cynical me
The loading of our prizes in your father's suburban
The joy
The adrenaline rush of the shopper's high
The reward of hot fried corn nuggets in a cozy small-town burger joint complete with local FFA kids' pictures on the wall
(Emory Wilson: black AOB steer named grand champion of the 2010 Palo Pinto County Livestock Association’s Junior Livestock Show)
A quiet drive back
Perfectly content
Perhaps wine and a movie that night
Perfect
It was perfect

And

And

And now it's gone.