Friday, April 25, 2008

Madam, I May Have Silly Fears but*

There are many reasons people choose not to have children. They may not like kids, or they may recognize that they are not mature enough to take care of them. They may be concerned about the future of our society or too scared by the current political administration to subject an innocent person to it. Perhaps there are significant health risks that run in their family, or they remember too clearly their own fucked up childhood (because, really, who didn’t have a fucked up childhood?). Or perhaps, like me, they are just petrified of vomiting.

It’s not that I’m afraid of baby spit-up or even full fledged toddler rainbow yawns at public functions. No, I’m afraid of ME barfing. Specifically, I am afraid of what people have cutely termed “morning sickness.”

Doesn’t this bring to mind, if one pushes aside the automatic thoughts we’ve grown accustomed to thinking when hearing this term, a woman circa 1880 wearing a frilly yellow gown, half collapsed and fanning herself on a velvet fainting couch? Something likely to be the result of a too-tight corset? It does not sound like a modern day full time working mom hurling into a garbage can on the corner of a busy street, while a bum looks on clearly thinking, “Hey! I EAT from that!” (Yes, firsthand. And to the mother-to-be’s significant credit, she just tidied herself up, grinned wryly to a concerned passerby “morning sickness,” and kept on moving. I would have burst into tears and collapsed on the nasty curb while the bum looked on thinking, “Hey! I SLEEP there!”)

I can name every time I’ve puked as an adult. I’ve only done so maybe a dozen times, and I’ve definitely beat Seinfeld’s no-barfing streak, thanks to staying away from those god-awful black and white cookies and sheer determined willpower. I loathe throwing up. It is hugely traumatic for me. This is the reason I will never be a drunk or a bulimic. Or get pregnant.

Tom and I have been asked, pretty much since the day we said “I do,” when we are going to start a family. Some have been more persistent than others (Katy, I’m looking at you) and some have kept completely quiet, but don’t think I haven’t seen that gleem in your eye whenever a baby is mentioned in casual conversation. Last year during the holidays my father-in-law kept intoning not so subtly, and - I’m sure I’m not imagining it - accusatorily, that Christmas is really “all about the kids.”

I know it sounds lame and ridiculous but honestly I can’t stand the idea of puking. It goes against nature! That pipe is meant for things to go down, not to come up. I hate the feeling of being completely out of control of what my body is doing. I hate the smell, I hate getting it in my hair, I hate that burning sensation in your throat afterwards. I hate the unattractive contortions my face makes and I certainly hate the possibility of doing it in front of other people. Yeah, sure, childbirth sounds pretty awful too, but at least you can get an epidural. And the puking lasts for MONTHS. Months! How does anybody put up with this?!

So until the medical community agrees that it is okay to put a pregnant woman in a coma for the first trimester or until the nausea passes, whichever comes last, I ain’t gettin knocked up.

I don’t care how cute that baby over there is. With his itty bitty fingers and his chubby cheeks and…

* From Dave Barry’s version of the Winston Churchill (a well known drinker) quote: “Madam, I may be drunk but BLAARRRRRGH”

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

And on the seventh day... they fixed the toilet

Today's blog is more of a status report than my usual griping. You know that saying "everything that can go wrong, will"? Well, that didn't apply to THIS move, which means I have relatively little to kvetch about. I mean, it wasn't FUN, and of course it ended up costing almost twice what I was quoted, but it's not like that's anything surprising.

One of my favorite authors, Suzanne Finnamore, wrote, "When planning a wedding you should know that everything costs a thousand dollars, except for the things that cost more than a thousand dollars." This can be applied to anything associated with purchasing a home, except of course for the home itself, which costs, well, let's just say WAY more than a thousand dollars.

After lucking out on the weather - a gorgeous, sunny day with a hint of warmth to it - and watching in terror as the moving guys schlepped our posessions up that steep driveway without dropping anything, we were due for some poorer luck. The moving bill was one thing, but (and don't tell them this) I would have paid one million dollars to not have to lug all that stuff up that driveway myself. So the fact that we went $500 over budget still seemed like a win to me. The treadmill alone was worth that. Those poor guys. I hope they are okay. I hope they are taking ibuprofen.

Anyway, yes, as I mentioned before: there is surprisingly little to report. The rest of the weekend went kind of like this:

  • Unpack 10 boxes
  • Spend $200 at Target
  • Unpack 10 boxes
  • Spend $500 at Lowe's
  • Unpack 10 boxes
  • Spend $250 at Costco
  • Unpack 10 boxes...

So far our new home feels somewhat like a vacation resort. We have this ginormous master bath with a double vanity, waterfall shower and japanese soaking tub. It feels like our honeymoon. I managed to dry myself off after my shower without bumping my elbow on anything for the first time in over a year. I ran on my very own treadmill, which faces the window overlooking these two huge trees in our yard in which squirrels and birds frolick and chirp, providing me with my very own personal Animal Planet broadcast.

Speaking of which, Theo is still getting used to the whole yard thing. She'll wander and explore so long as she thinks one of us is out there with her, but as soon as she sees we've snuck back inside she stands at the door and looks perplexed. Also frustrating her are the stairs. She is no longer able to sit in one spot and keep an eye on both of us. There are four more rooms and two levels. All day long "click click click click" as she trudges up and down the stairs and hallways, trying to maintain a constant log of where we both are. Not easy when we are running all over the place unpacking. She was so tired from all the stair climbing at the end of the first day that we had to help her up onto the bed.

There were a few discoveries that led each time to my envisioning Tom Hanks laughing uncontrollably when his bathtub fell through the floor. Comparatively things like the rack in the dishwasher needing a part, and the hot water being yellow, are fairly minor, but as a new homeowner it doesn't take much.

Tom meets each of these challenges by driving to Lowe's and spending two hundred dollars. So far nothing has actually been fixed, but we could start a little hardware business of our own out of the garage. In theory we will put all these purchases to use soon. The first weekend we spend weeding the yard and putting in a french drain (I do not know why it is French - perhaps it is a very rude drain?) will probably return me to my normal, crabby nature, and provide much more fodder for your amusement. But for now... I'm going to soak in the tub and crack a bottle of champagne!

Friday, March 14, 2008

Buying a House is a Very Stupid Thing for a Young, Healthy Person to Do

I used to be full of life. My eyes were bag-free, I fit into my jeans, I laughed, I went out with friends. That was only last month, but I can kiss that kind of carefree life goodbye because I bought a house.

Seriously, WHY do we think buying a house is such a great idea? Who started this rumor? I bet it was the Republicans. They are always trying to beat us down with the old "it's un-American" guilt trip. "Tell them that spending three times their annual salary on an item that will take them 30 years to pay off and will suck up all their free time and certainly any energy they might have is the American Dream! They'll never go on vacation again and all their money will land in our pockets! We'll own their souls!" "I don't know," Cheney chimed in, "that doesn't really sound awful enough. I know! Why don't we also discourage insurance companies from covering therapy sessions? Mwahahahaha."

Another person who I'm no longer too fond of said recently, "Just be glad you bought a house that is move-in ready."

Move-in ready?? I don't think so! I am dealing with floor people, paint people, cleaning people, moving people, delivery people and, soon I hope, psychiatrist people. My people have people. I have so many people. And of course this doesn't include all the work people who have already made it their life goal to see that I never sleep soundly again.

Just when I think I have one thing taken care of, can make that satisfying CHECK on my long list of to-do's, it gets undone and creates several more. To-do's spawn like devil rabbits when you buy a house. The whole of last weekend was spent buying a guest bed and returning it. We wound up after 8 laborious hours - 8 hours which we absolutely cannot spare right now - in the very same place we started. It's a long and not very interesting story, but basically we bought a bed which could not be delivered so we strapped it to the roof of the car with about 3,000 bungie cords that my husband always has on him just in case (no I'm not kidding) and then drove it to the house where we braved the driveway and actually managed to get the car up it, unloaded the bed, deposited it in the house, went back to the apartment to resume packing where we received a call from the store that we'd been given the wrong hardware for the bed and that no, they didn't have the right hardware to give us. So... reverse above, ending the day with no bed and nothing else done, either.

Well, at least the painter was well underway and the upstairs looked fabulous. But... Tom called me from the house yesterday morning to let me know the floor guy hadn't shown up (which didn't do much to help the gastro-intestinal issues I've developed in the last couple of weeks) oh and incidentally did I mean for the master bedroom to be baby blue? Not that he couldn't live with it but... NO the master was not supposed to be baby blue! It was supposed to be a subtle gray. SO... back to the house for an emergency meeting with the painter while my cell phone rang itself hoarse as, apparently, the entire working world ground to a hault because I'd had the audacity to leave my desk for an hour.

This whole situation has me in knots. I have so many balls in the air I can't see even a piece of sky. I am completely scatter-brained. I don't know how people who have kids manage to buy houses without losing their jobs. Thank God I don't have any kids - at least, I don't think I do, since I'm not remembering much these days - because I would accidentally pack them or forget to feed them or something. As it is I feel like my head is going to explode. I am answering messages people never left and not answering messages people did leave. My friend asked me today why I hadn't responded to her email and I seriously had no idea what she was talking about. Meanwhile earlier this week I told another good friend how sorry I was to hear she was sick and she replied, "I'm sick?" I could have sworn she sent me a text saying she was sick, but no such text existed.

It's a little alarming, to say the least. I used to be really on top of things, back when I didn't have bags under my eyes and could fit into my jeans. My jeans... shit. I seem to have left them at home again. No wonder I'm getting such weird looks at the office.

Friday, March 7, 2008

I am never moving again until the next time

Shy violets cover your ears: Moving fucking sucks.

We have just a few short weeks before we are moving to our new home. I don't think I'll have the opportunity to enjoy the new home because I will likely be bedding down in a mental institution.

I am trying to space out the packing over these few weeks by first packing the stuff we haven't touched since the last time we unpacked it. But here's a funny thing. Even though you never use most of the crap you own, the second you decide that something is superfluous enough to pack it you will need it. Another funny thing is that as soon as something is packed you will have no idea what box it is in even if you take meticulous notes, which I do. If it is packed you just have to assume you will not see it again until after you've moved, if ever, because we all know things go mysteriously missing as well.

Another funny thing is that everybody who works for the cable company is crooked and on drugs.

My conversation today:

"I would like to transfer our cable to a new home."

"Okay, the new monthly bill will be $170."

"Why? It's only $150 now."

"No it's not."

"Um, yes it IS. I'm looking at the bill."

"I'm sorry MA'AM," in that snotty "what have I done in this world to deserve having to deal with idiots like you all day" voice that they get. "But that is incorrect."

"Okay, let's move on. What did you say the new bill would be?"

"$132."

"I thought you said $150."

"No, MA'AM. That's what it WILL be."

"You said it WILL be $170."

Heavy sigh. "What date would you like to move your service over MA'AM?"

"The 22nd."

"Okay, we will send someone the 24th and you do not need to be home for the disconnect."

"The 22nd, please, and if I don't need to be home, does that mean you do this remotely?"

"No."

"No, you don't do it remotely, but nobody needs to be at home when you disconnect the service?"

"That is correct, MA'AM."

"So they won't need access to the home to disconnect?"

Heavy sigh. "Yes, MA'AM they will need to get in the home to disconnect your service."

"But I don't need to be there?"

"That is correct MA'AM."

"But then how will they get in the house if I don't need to be there?"

"I don't know, MA'AM. It's not my job to know the answer to that. I'm in customer service."

I am speechless.

"So we are all set for the 24th MA'AM."

"The 22nd."

"EXCUSE me?"

"I asked for the 22nd."

Silence for about 10 minutes except for the tapping of fingers on a keyboard.

"Okay, MA'AM you are all set for the 18th. Is there anything else you need?"

"Not the 18th. The 22nd!"

"I put the 18th but they'll be there the 22nd. But you don't need to be."

"I don't need to be there the 18th, or the 22nd?"

"You will not need to be there when they disconnect your cable as I said before, MA'AM."

"And what date will they be disconnecting my cable?"

"The 20th."

"Right. Okay! And how much will the new bill be?"

"$163, as I said before, MA'AM."

"Okay! Now we're making progress! So I'll see you on March 18th."

"No, MA'AM, the 22nd."

"You're right as always! And our bill will be $163."

"No, MA'AM, the bill will be $132 as I mentioned earlier, MA'AM."

"Okay! Well thank you! You've been so helpful I'm just going to put a thank you card in the mail to you right now!"

"You'rewelcomethankyouforcallingcomcastclick."

Next on the list - utilities.

"I need to move my service over to a new address."

"We don't have your current address listed MA'AM. So would you like new service?"

"What do you mean? I have service right now. Can't you hear the TV? Could I have the TV on if I didn't have electricity?"

"I'm sorry, MA'AM but our records indicate..."

But I can't tell you what happened next because this is when I threw the phone out the window and started binge drinking.

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Careful What You Wish For

You know how as soon as you light up a cigarette your bus comes along? (Not that I would know first hand, of course, because I don't smoke and never have. Hi Grandma!) Or how as soon as you get up to go to the bathroom in a restaurant your food arrives? Or when you've finally had it and send a scathing email to someone demanding to know why they haven't done so-and-so at the exact same time an email arrives from them explaining their dog just died?

My last blog about house-hunting was very down-in-the-mouth, I-don't-want-to-play-anymore, because it was written just a couple of days after we fell in love with a house only to find out that mere HOURS before we saw it, someone else had made an offer and was already under contract. The house had been on the market for TEN MONTHS and the day we saw it, someone else made an offer. That is just wrong. So I threw myself a full-blown pity party complete with pointy hats.

Then, the day I posted that last blog, our realtor called to let us know the other buyers pulled out, and were we still interested?

Wood eye, wood eye!*

A flury of action ensued during which all emotional thought processes were shut down in an effort to Get That House before anyone else could. We offered. We shook with anticipation and fear. They counter-offered. We debated. It was about $15,000 more than we said we'd spend. Well, more than we said we'd spend the last time we raised our limit. Technically it was, oh, $42,000 more than we wanted to spend. But why split hairs? The house was so close, so close... so we said yes.

HOLY SHIT.

We just went over-budget to buy the ugliest house on the block. While I understand this is a good position to be in when it comes to real estate value, well, it is the UGLIEST house on the block. But I love it. I love it like we all love E.T. and pugs. In a roomful of Miss USAs it is the woman with a hare lip. But like the hare lip our house was just victim to genetics. The houses around it had the good fortune to be born during the Victorian era with gingerbread touches and wide porches. Our house was born during the architectural short-bus decade: the 1960's.

There are a few other concerns as well. After all, you can't expect to have everything when you go only $42,000 over budget. For example, the driveway is so steep that climbing it could be a new Olympic sport. We can't get the car up it, and getting ourselves up it requires considerable effort. If we are in this house more than ten years we will have to rig some sort of pulley system to deliver our groceries to the front door. We ain't spring chickens anymore, after all.

But that was nothing compared to the issues that came up during inspection. Well, one issue in particular. Well, no, I correct myself again - dozens (hundreds?) of issues: RATS.

When I think of rats, I think of the boat-sized monsters with whom I shared New York City begrudgingly, and only because they were bigger than me and had sharp, nasty teeth. I've seen rats the size of footballs. I can't stand rats and I don't even want to think about them burrowing in my new, really expensive house.

When I was living in New York I had a mouse infestation. At first I thought it was only one mouse and I thought that was sort of cute, and I would hear him rustling around under the sink and enjoyed having what I thought of as a second pet. Knowing me I probably named it, but I don't remember. But then somebody with a sharper intellect than mine explained, "Karen, there is NEVER just one mouse."

This encouraged me to brave foraging under the sink to see just how badly my hospitality had been abused. It had been REALLY abused. Like, beaten to within an inch of its life abused. There were droppings everywhere. They had gotten into the oven and burrowed condominiums into the insulation (typical of a New Yorker, I never used my oven, so they were able to enjoy their home completely unmolested). I called an exterminator in a panic, and he brought even worse news - they were all over the apartment. They had chewed up the mattress in the pull-out couch. The entire place had to be completely taken apart, cleaned, fumigated, plugged up... it was beyond nasty. But the worst part was perching precariously in the middle of the living room (I was too grossed out to sit on the couch) watching TV in the evenings and hear a sudden SNAP. And I knew one of the little mice had just lost its head and, worse, I was going to have to dispense with the bloody mess.

Now, imagine that whole scenario but with a rodent ten times bigger and with red eyes. Yeah, I don't want to, either.

The inspector went on to list for what seemed about two weeks the myriad of other issues with the house that, as Proud Homeowners, were now our problem. I started to break out in a cold sweat; it seemed awfully daunting to me. He assured us this was "perfectly normal" for a house this age but I didn't see how that was any comfort. Let's see, I just offered to pay a crapload of money for the honor of spending every spare moment doing things I hate, like yard work. And things I anticipate I will learn to hate, like unclogging a 45-year-old toilet.

Remind me again why I wanted to be a homeowner? Why is this part of the American Dream? Why wouldn't I just keep renting so that whenever anything goes wrong it's never my problem? Why not - wait, what's that? You say it has a japanese soaking tub in the master bath?

Wood eye, wood eye!

** A man with a wooden eye is unable to get a date. A friend of his encourages him to come along to a dance.

"Nobody will want to dance with me," the man lamented.

"Just find a girl who also has some sort of affliction and ask her to dance. She'll probably be grateful to be asked," the friend suggested.

The man agreed to go to the dance. He looked around the room and saw a woman with a hare lip and got up the courage to approach her.

"Uh, ahem," the man said shyly, "I was wondering if maybe you'd like to dance."

"Would I? WOULD I?" the woman cried happily.

"HARE LIP HARE LIP!" the man yelled.

Sunday, February 10, 2008

Thank God It's Monday

Our weekend started off as most of them do; arriving gratefully home on Friday night, leaping into comfy clothes, and meeting on the couch for a relaxing evening of wine and a movie.

Tom had been chastising me lately for my selection of movies. The last two that happened to come up in the queue were Letters from Iwo Jima and Reign on Me, about a man who lost his whole family on September 11th. "The next one better be something with cute computer-generated talking animals," Tom grumbled unhappily after we'd spent another evening weeping. This evening's selection (again, my choice) was Oscar and Lucinda.

About forty-five minutes into it, I couldn't hold back. "Wow," I slurred through a couple glasses of wine, "this is a BAD movie."

But we kept watching, largely because neither of us had the energy to get up and turn it off.

"GOD, this is a bad movie," I mentioned about thirty minutes later.

"It's pretty awful," Tom agreed.

We kept watching.

"This is, like, the worst movie EVER," I commented, about ten minutes before the movie would put us out of our misery.

Saturday we had plans to see Jeff Dunham, creator of the famed and funny Achmed the Dead Terrorist. The show began at the awkward hour of 7pm - too early to get dinner first, but too late to get dinner afterwards. I came up with the grand plan: we would take the bus into town, thus doing our part to save the environment (and, incidentally, avoid the $20 downtown parking fee). We'd get there about one hour before show time, enough time to get a light dinner using the funds we would save by wisely taking public transportation.

So we bundled up and headed out and after fifteen minutes of standing in the freezing cold, realized we had missed the bus. Our luck, it must have come early. So we trundled back to the parking garage and got the car out. No worries - we'd have to pay the astronomical parking fee, but the theater was just five minutes away, still plenty of time to grab some food.

We managed to go about three blocks before making a wrong turn which, in Seattle, pretty much means you can kiss the next three days goodbye. You make one wrong turn downtown and you are plunged into a nightmare of one-way streets that have no pattern or reason to them. We spent the next forty minutes re-routing, then circling for a place to park. We had completely given up on getting a full meal and had resigned ourselves to whatever snacks were sold at the theater, but at this point we were running the risk of missing the show entirely. Finally, Tom said, with not a little venom, "Enough of this, we're parking HERE."

"But we'll be at least three hours and that's-"

"I don't CARE," Tom said. "I'm HUNGRY."

So we parked the car and found our way to the theater where we got in the line for the bar. We go to the theater often enough that it should have come as no surprise that it was cash only. However, neither this nor any of the other things for which the old-fashioned method of payment are required have managed to put us in the habit of keeping any cash on hand. We scrabbled through our wallets and, together, came up with $5. We decided on a water and some M&M's with peanuts. "Protein," I explained to Tom who was starting to look a bit woozy. Neither of us are pretty when we are hungry, and Tom looked like, if he'd had the energy, he'd have leapt over the bar and started gnawing on the bartender.

I thrust the peanut M&M's at Tom and begged him to eat. No matter how many times he tried to offer me some of them, I grandly refused. This was not a selfless act on my part, despite my own hunger. I was strictly saving myself - or so I thought.

After climbing about five flights of stairs we found ourselves in the nosebleed section and squeezed ourselves into the tiny, uncomfortable metal folding chairs that folks of our class were lucky to get. It was like the balcony section of an Elizabethan play, musty with the dust of unwashed bodies. I think some people had even brought their chickens. As it turned out, we were so far up that we couldn't see the stage at all; instead, we had to watch the giant screen where the action was simultaneously projected. In other words, we were watching the guy on TV, which is something I had already done quite a few times but in the privacy and comfort of my own home, with plenty of food right nearby that didn't require cash.

Tom scarfed the peanut M&M's and whispered, "I saved four of them for emergency reserves for you." Because that's the kind of romantic guy he is.

About halfway through, I think my stomach started eating the surrounding organs in my body. I was doubled over in pain. I couldn't think of anything but food and the morbid possibility of fainting and tumbling down all those steep cement steps. Tom howled beside me at Achmed, blissfully unaware, full of peanut M&M's, while I writhed in pain and tried to get comfortable on that punishing metal chair. Finally I clutched at his sleeve. "Need those reserve M&M's." Tom dug them out and I shoved the melted mess down my throat. Nope, that didn't work.

"Don't feel well," I muttered.

"Do we need to leave?" he asked.

I hate even considering such a thing. We paid good money for these tickets. I was bound and determined to watch the whole show. What kind of a wuss was I that I let a few hunger pains keep me from enjoying myself? By God, I was going to -

"Yes," I whined.

In my defense I had been to the gym that afternoon, and hadn't eaten in about eight hours. But even in those circumstances my pain was severe, unprecedented, and certainly unpleasant.

"AAHHYYEEE," I moaned as we climbed back down to sea level and Tom led us the few blocks to the parking deck. I clutched my stomach in agony, doubled over. "AAAAUHHGGG," I wailed pitifully as Tom paid the parking fee ("Huh, it was only $5," I managed to muse even in my misery.)

Tom got us home quickly (we only had to consult the map about five times in the two miles). He was all concern, as well he should have been. I was in agony, white as a sheet, and so light headed I had to concentrate to walk. It was horrible. It was the worst I could remember ever feeling. I was terrified there was something horribly wrong with me. Maybe my appendix burst! Maybe we should have gone straight to the hospital instead of home. But then I had a few cheez-its.

"Hey," I said. "I feel better now."

On Sunday we had reservations for a guided snow-shoe hike up in the Cascades. I was quite excited about this. I'd been wanting to get up and see all the snowfall and I thought snow-shoeing sounded like a sport I might just, on account of the lack of speed, be able to manage. Tom and I got up early, looked up the weather conditions to make sure the roads were passable, got our showers, got dressed, went to the coat closet, and I realized: I had no coat to wear.

How this is possible when our coat closet is so crammed full of coats we can't close the door properly is beyond me. But it was true. I had a cute suede coat and a long, warm wool coat, and a short rain coat, but nothing appropriate for hiking in snow and rain in 30-degree weather. Huh.

"You didn't think about this when we made the reservations?" Tom asked incredulously as we stood staring into the closet, hoping perhaps some suitable women's winter gear would miraculously appear.

"Uh... no," I said.

So we cancelled our reservations and made new ones for a month out, because, naturally, every other weekend was booked, and spent the day at REI trying on extraordinarily unflattering "breathable" clothing. Is there worse torture for a woman than to spend $150 on clothes that do NOT look good on her?

We got home this afternoon, tired and grouchy at the horrible turns our weekend had taken, to be greeted by Theo who, after kissing us each hello, proceeded to drag her ass across the length of the hallway, leaving a blackish greenish streak in her wake.

"Tom, dog needs to go out," I said, as Theo turned and dragged her ass in the other direction, leaving a duplicate streak on the return. "Uh, NOW."

Tom grabbed the dog while I scrubbed at the carpet. Upon their return, Tom announced that Theo's rear-end was completely and thoroughly covered in shit. We spent the next thirty minutes on the bathroom floor painstakingly cleaning our dog's asshole. As much fun as we had, I do believe Theo had the worse time.

"Wow, this is JUST what I was hoping to do this weekend," Tom said, and suddenly we were collapsing in fits of giggles, surrounded by shit-covered paper towels and tufts of stained dog hair.

"Let me tell you," I said, "this is gonna be one CLEAN asshole."

"Our dog's asshole is going to be the cleanest on the whole block!"

"When we're finished here, by God, you could EAT off of -"

"Okay, that's enough," Tom interrupted hastily.

It's going to be hard to top such a nonstop, exhilarating weekend at this. Perhaps next weekend we will rent Where the Fern Grows, flush $100 down the toilet and see if any of the animals at the local zoo need a thorough asshole-cleaning. On the bright side, this is one of the few times in my life when I'm actually looking forward to going to work tomorrow.

Monday, January 28, 2008

Shacking Up

You may have heard about this alarming housing slump the country is in. Apparently interest rates are super low because the fed is panicking that nobody is buying, and home values are falling through the roof! Can you imagine? Yeah, well, we can't. Because apparently Seattle was the only city in the union who didn't get the frickin memo.

We didn't really think things through when we moved here. Naturally we knew it would be more expensive, as most of the more interesting places are, but we didn't really think about the whole water thing. Seattle is surrounded by water, and therefore expansion is extremely limited. Nearly halted, in fact. The city is so short on space that they are dividing lots, and then dividing THOSE lots, until they have disproved the theory that you can split something in half only down to the atom. In Seattle, even half an atom is prime real estate.

Since space is at such a premium, the fate of the real estate market is pretty much unrelated to that of the rest of the country. As Tom and I enter our second month of bone-weary house-hunting, our spirits have been broken down considerably. Things that formerly were on the must-have list have become far less important, such as indoor plumbing. Because when you live in a city that ran out of space about 75 years ago, you find that pretty much all of the houses are at least that old.

Here's what I've learned about Seattle history. In olden times, people didn't feel the need to be able to stand upright in all the levels of their homes. They seemed to be big on that point only on the main floor. On the top floor or in the basement you can just stoop.

Bathrooms were nearly superfluous and certainly a luxury. Two bathrooms in one house was simply foolishness. You were lucky you didn't have to go in the yard. Two bathrooms. Please!

Dining rooms were the center of the universe (on this point, at least, my forefathers and I can agree: dining is the most important expenditure of one's time). Therefore, the dining rooms are the size of football stadiums while living rooms are just slightly larger than the luxurious indoor toilet room. This is because there was no television, so the only thing they used the living room for was, well, whatever they did before television - knitting maybe? Must be. Knitting doesn't take up much room.

What I've learned about the present is this: if it sounds to good to be true, it costs a million dollars. If it sounds good enough, it causes cancer. For once I am not exaggerating. I fell madly in love with a renovated Victorian that was oozing so much charm I'm surprised it let me in its front door. I nearly wept with joy when I saw it, because it was in our price range. I should have known. Turns out it was near a major industrial wasteland, the kind that makes up Erin Brokovich's wet dreams, and the ground water was so contaminated that it was causing cancer in the local wildlife. This is why we could afford that particular house.

I was a wreck when we discovered this. I actually thought for a minute, would cancer be THAT bad, really? That's how difficult this search has been. I am so tired of falling in love and getting my heart broken every single weekend. It's like dating but so much worse. When you're dating, you meet a guy that seems like a viable candidate, what, once every few months MAYBE? And then you get all excited and your heart pounds and you tell all your friends and you gush a bit and then he turns out to be a cokehead or a mamma's boy or he spells "a lot" as one word and then your world is shattered for a few days and you drink too many appletinis and then you start the process over again. Now try speeding it up so that you go through this cycle on a WEEKLY basis. Is it any wonder that my face is broken out like a sixteen year old's and that I daily eat my body weight in chocolate?

There's also the added stress of apartment living to deal with - another comparison with the youth I am no longer. I am too old for apartment living with these kids playing their loud music day and night. And as grown ups we have furniture that needs to go somewhere. We were already fairly tightly wedged in to begin with but since we've been here I've added a purple velvet chaise (it was free, and what rational, normal human being would pass up a free purple velvet chaise?) and a treadmill that I am not allowed to use because the people who live below us threatened the poor apartment manager within an inch of her life because they thought their ceiling was going to fall on their heads when I used it. So I can't work off all the chocolate. All of this just adds to the aggravation and puts even more pressure on us to achieve the impossible.

After a few weeks it dawned on us, clever college graduates that we are, that perhaps we need to manage our expectations a bit better. So what if we don't get a house in the top school district, or that is within walking distance to shops? Pre-wired surround sound, two full baths, a roof... we don't really need those things. But even as we incrementally lower our standards and raise our budget ("the house will be so nice we won't want to go to the movies ever again anyway" is our reasoning) we STILL can't find anything I'd call liveable. Like with all its walls and maybe a hook-up for a washer and dryer. Is that so much to ask?

I'm starting to envy the homeless couple I pass sometimes on my way to work, who have souped up an old warehouse's entryway. They've got some nice digs there, and I bet they paid under 300 grand for it too. I think tomorrow I'll ask them about the school district.