I don't know when Halloween became a chore for me.
After years at Club Dedo things threatened to become a bit lack-luster in the costume department. It was difficult to top the atmosphere, drink to wait time ratio, social satisfaction departments. Maybe it was the make-outable DJ's. Maybe it was the bartenders willingness to put up with my shit as well as pour candle wax over me when things were slow. Maybe it was the goth drama. Maybe it was "love you even if you're too loud" vibe I caught... Maybe it was in my head.
For a few years I became the Hostess with the Mostest for a Halloween shindigs that encompassed all of my social circles. Tip of the hat to my parents for havin' a place with lots of room, a tree house, a hot-tub AND a fire pit. I could throw a party that included Vagina Veterans, Rotaractors, Japanese exchange students, my family, co-workers, ex-best-friends, new best friends, and friends of friends of friends.
It didn't matter because we had enough hot dogs and marshmallows for everyone.
But at one point I lost control of Halloween celebration. I might be able to trace it back to being engaged to a man that refused to dress up.Think again. Another story.
Obviously that ended badly and I tried to move VERY FAR away. Only that fell through... only a year later... only a week before Halloween. Giving me no time to arrange for a Martha Stewart level Halloween Party .
Instead I made pumpkin-pineapple-ginger eggrolls and lit up a campfire. At the last minute I let people know there was food and fire to be had.
The ones that I love the most, they were there. The ones I would love deeply showed up by accident.
It was a good Halloween. My last great one.
Now New Orleans had to make up for the lost time and the great memories.
What NOLA does not have? My baby brother, my nephews and niece. Just Dance. My Vaginas. A hot tub in my backyard.
What NOLA does have? Frenchman Street. With Christina at The Revival Outpost inspiring my costume. Friends visiting from out of town. I can't wait to see V.!
A great job.
A snoring boyfriend.
Things will balance out.
Sunday, October 28, 2012
Saturday, October 13, 2012
PB and C mini muffins
2
cups all-purpose flour
1/3 cup granulated sugar
2 tsp baking powder
1/3 cup granulated sugar
2 tsp baking powder
1/2
tsp cinnamon
1/2 tsp kosher salt
3 Tbsp unsalted butter, melted
1/2 cup peanut butter
1 cup goat milk
1/2 tsp kosher salt
3 Tbsp unsalted butter, melted
1/2 cup peanut butter
1 cup goat milk
1
tsp vanilla extract
1large egg, beaten
3/4 cup carob chips
Preheat oven to 350°. Combine the flour, cinnamon, baking powder,
and salt in a large mixing bowl. In a separate medium sized
bowl, whisk together the butter, sugar, peanut butter, vanilla
extract, egg and milk. Pour the wet ingredients into the dry and stir
just until combined; fold in the carob chips.1large egg, beaten
3/4 cup carob chips
Coat a nonstick muffin pan with a mist of olive oil from your awesome PC oil misting thing. Fill each of muffin cup about half full with batter. Bake 15ish minutes or until bottoms of muffins are golden but the tops are oddly not. Make sure they are baked all the way through... by eating one. Try to let it cool first. But you know... don't stress about that step.
Bring to your favorite deli and feed your meat slinging, bagel slicing deli boys.
Maybe undress the man you are dating with your eyes.
Yes, but is he Jewish?
After a few months of my mother
struggling off and on with my spiritual path she said something the
other day that was so “Jewish Mom” that I had the opportunity to
feel normal about being Jewish.
Alienated. But normal alienated.
I informed her I was dating again. To
which she asked, “A girl or a boy?” Because in my mom's mind I'm
still just a lesbian waiting to happen. I also have a few lesbian
friends who feel the same way. Secretly I think it's because of my
bazooms of doom... and raging feminism. In any case. After I
reconfirm that I self- identify as a heterosexual female my mom hits
me with this gem, this rite of passage.
“Is he Jewish?”
I sat and stewed in the iconic and
ironic glory. Is. He. Jewish?
No.
Which immediately set my heart and soul
to racing. I mean, am I going to miss out on having spiritual spark
in my relationships if I don't seek out Jewish men to date? Are
non-Jewish men bound to never “get” me? Gosh, what if the man I
end up falling in love with is not down with raising Jewish children?
Can of worms. Ye hath been opened so
hard.
From what I understand Jewish men my
age (or younger) don't get the idea of “spiritual spark” until
later... or at least until I'm out of the picture. The number of
unattached Jewish men in my age group I've met at temple? Zero.
So he's not Jewish, so what?
He's sweet. When I do something nice
for him he is surprised, humbled and grateful. He gets dreamy eyed at
me. He's honest. Honest about things most people would lie about.
Which is to say more honest than I've experienced in quite some time.
BUT... you know... he SNORES. A lot. So that might be a deal breaker.
Heh heh.
I'm a 31 year old poet with maybe a bum
cervix and a bad credit score. There are worse things. We both have
elements of our past that we're ashamed of. Who doesn't? I could
certainly never run for president. Anyone that knows me from age 13
to 28 knows that I spent a solid decade and a half mangling my
reputation and tempting fate. I got over it. Some people are capable
of that sort of redemption. I might go so far as to say MOST people
are capable of redemption.
I don't believe in throw away people.
After the damage we sustain in life... we deserve reprieves. After my
father treated my mother poorly, people may have regarded her as a
throw away. A woman so wound up in pain that she could not love or
would do anything to seek the approval of love. Even wait. And wait
for love. My step-dad did not see her like that. He just swooped in
and loved her.
My Ellie-mom. She got the hell out of
situations before anyone could try to pull that shit on her. She is
fucking zen-core like that.
And my sister? She's been told time and
time again that she's a throw away. Thankfully she has the type of
attitude that doesn't give a shit about what people say. She has the
type of spirit that means to redeem lost causes. Her own as well as
the causes of others. Might be the only reason why she's still with
us today. With us and full of life... and bullshit.
I've been thrown away. A lot. So now
I'm persnickety. About pretty much everything.
Only, right now, I'm around someone
that doesn't mind the attitude. Someone that nose dives into a book
about Shabbat. Someone that snores... snores so hard.
Get the fuck out. Sometimes I can be
that simple.
A guy walks up to you in a deli and
asks about the book you're reading.
The rest is presently surprising you.
Friday, October 5, 2012
Light after Lonliness
A few weeks ago, during a sermon, Rabbi
B reminded us that life is full of interruptions. Her interruptions
had/have a capital I. Mine... not as much. In life, I think, there
should be such a thing as middle case. Middle case maybe.
Hurricane Issac was an interruption. It
was devastating in unexpected aspects of my life-- emotionally,
financially and spiritually.
No one can really prepare you for three
days alone in a house with your cats. Isolation. ISOLATION. Middle
case isolation, maybe. Alone with per-cancerous cells, cat fights and
lots of thoughts. Thoughts of family, friends, friends (who are not
speaking to you for their own reasons) fatal friendships, family
fatalities, genetic dispositions, your own look on life and it got
that way because of your choices, choices you wouldn't have made if
you'd known people were not going honest and true to you, and how
does anyone know how to be honest and true when all their hearts know
is the bob and weave of listening art... and who are you to accuse
because all your heart ever wanted was the bob and weave of speaking
art. How does any love ever happen between the two when the zig to
the right and the zag to minor never meet?
You're alone with that conglomeration
of catastrophe.
And then there's the turmoil of trying,
having tried for weeks before Issac, to meet with your local rabbi.
To meet with a rabbi, one has to have a few weeks notice. Can you
meet on Day XYZ? No. Then you can meet with a rabbi on day A. Ok.
Only something has happened on Day A. And then the Capital H came in
on the anniversary of Capital/Bold K. You can't expect to meet with
anyone during High Holy Days which is stressful.. because... like..
first High Holy Days since you decided to become a Jew... all on your
own... so talking to someone about that would be nice.... better than
nice... it would be a life line. But that's not going to happen. So
you ask to have certain days off so you can attend to your spiritual
business as efficiently and business like as possible only to realize
you have to prioritize. And a rabbi has to prioritize. Somewhere in
the middle you'll keep missing your connection.
And it has STRESSED ME OUT.
Until my best friend was in town.
Strained as the friendship is right now, God knows how good it is,
because it was when Ariel was here that I was asked to light the
candles for Friday services.
In all the isolation and desperation
and stress and insecurity.... in all the chaos... a very select, very
important moment was created for me to have with someone I love
deeply and then shared with a community that is creating a learning
and loving experience in my life.
For months I've been trying to be loved
by Judaism. For months I've been stressed out and hurt because I
didn't feel that I was being loved from a place that I had found
love.
Love. Capital in all ways. LOVE.
And just a few moments of creating fire
and speaking poetry on the right night, in front of the right
people... is all it took to renew my faith in love, God, greatness
and light.
Because. ABSOLUTELY... it is no
question of maybe/middle cases.
Love alone will Shine.
For what it is worth. For all my
faults. And all of yours. It still will Shine.
Friday, September 21, 2012
we'll know the reason why
The second semester of my second senior
year (say that seven times fast) I had a part-time job on campus as a
scholarship fundraiser. I would call up alumni and convey this
sentiment, “Hello respected alumni, the pride of NMSU, tell me
about where life has taken you. Give unto me the wealth of
information that you have to bestow upon your fellow Aggie! And now
that we have spoken about that.... let me remind you of an incredible
opportunity --a chance for you to assist students that ARE as you
WERE once. Struggling perhaps and just very deserving of financial
support and the emotional and academic relief that comes with having
earned and received an alumni sponsored scholarship. This is your
chance to share your success with your department and your Aggie
community.”
And while you might think that sounds
cheesy or pushy... I had many amazing conversations with many awesome
Aggies who were happy to donate a little here or a lot there. These
people were excited to hear from a student and they wanted to know
how they could help us.
Tonight was my turn.
But before I could get a call from NMSU Foundation
I received an entirely different sort of call.
A call from ACS. And they ask me the
same things they always ask me. Asking me to confirm my address,
which takes a few tries because after THREE MONTHS and dozens of
calls they STILL HAVE NOT UPDATED my contact information. They ask me
why I haven't made a full payment. I break down the math of my budget
for them. I live off of less than $200 a month after expenses and
partial loan payments. They ask me if I am in school and I tell them
I'm not but, “I am considering going back to school to put myself
further in debt if it means I won't have to get your calls for a few
more years.”
Then they drop the bomb.
“Do you intend on paying this loan?”
Tonight, I finally lost it. I said
something like, “Let ME ask YOU a question. Does anyone ever say,
'NO. I do not plan on paying this loan back. I think I will allow my
credit rating to continue to plummet and create a financial situation
in which I will never ever be approved for a loan ever ever again.'?
Does ANYONE ever say that? Does anyone ever tell you that they DO NOT
INTEND ON PAYING BACK THEIR LOAN?”
The answer is no. No one ever says
that. We all went out there and took out loans to get our degrees
because once we had said degrees amazing American boot-strappy jobs
were supposed to be all around for us to GET and then live out some
intellectually refined professional life that provided financial
stability for ourselves, our spouses and our many American babies...
who were going to go to college someday. JUST LIKE MOM AND POP!
Paying back our loans was going to
happen in the months following landing that first job-- doing
something that wasn't what we always wanted to do, but at the very
least would LEAD us to becoming that thing we had always wanted to be
when we grew up.
Astronauts. Engineers. Architects.
Doctors. President.
English teachers who moon-light as
small press authors of poignant and modern poetry that will
revolutionize nothing but at the very least stir some hearts.
I mean, the revolution part would be
nice, but it is not expected.
Sometimes these things don't happen in
the time frame between getting a degree and the first round of calls
from the loan collectors. I remind myself that it is totally ok. They
can't get blood from a stone. I'm a first generation graduate.
Obviously there is a period of trial and error. Adjustment. Whatever.
After standing up to the innocent
(she's just doing her job) out of country (wouldn't it be cool if ACS
created some jobs for a country full of Americans who can't find
jobs or pay their loans?) outbound phone support agent... I am still
a little indignant about the humiliation of it all. I go to choir.
Decompress about debt and re-compress about my sociological place in
my synagogue (which is another blog for another time).
That's when the baby Aggie calls me.
As soon as I hear him I know. I KNOW.
And I am devastated.
When I had his job, I swore to myself
that I would give something each time they called me. I promised
myself that I would help sponsor a scholarship in my department. For
a few reasons. One- I had received a scholarship for a set of poems
in 2008. It wasn't from NMSU Foundation funds, it was from LOLA. But
it was a scholarship and it made a, “I don't have to pay for
textbooks next semester” kind of impact on my life. Two- the
majority of alumni that I called donated to their departments... Ag
and Eng. Ag and Eng. Ag... and Eng. Very few Lit majors were in the
roster and those that were... didn't have money to give. Three-
employees get a lot of praise for landing a donation. After dozens of
hang ups, answering machines, wrong numbers and the like... it always
just felt good to talk to another Aggie and land a donation. ANY SIZE
donation.
Which is why I was nearly in tears
while the baby Aggie starts asking me how I am, where I am, what am I
doing.... It's all part of the lead up.
I tried to stop him. I said, “You're
from the scholarship call center aren't you? I used to have your job.
I have to tell you, tonight my answer is going to have to be no.”
And he says, bravely, “That's awesome
that you worked here. Then you know I have to keep trying, right?”
“Ok kid. Let's do this.”
I let him know a lot of things. That
I'm not using my degree. I'm working retail. I'm in New Orleans. Yes
he can update my contact information so they will put me in the right
time zone queue. Yes I know that NMSU Career Services can be utilized
by alumni. If I had to pick an all time favorite class it would be
Chaucer with Schirmer. Though to be fair I loved all of my teachers
EXCEPT Cunnar who was a sexist shithead. I'm sorry I can't donate
now, but I INTEND on donating to the department at some point. I
really, for honest and true, want to help someone in my department.
Someone that wants to write a revolution someday. I want to be that
alumnus.
All of this is while I am on Broad and
Washington waiting for my transfer bus. I have drunk people screaming
the N word, young men at least half my age eye balling my person, and
a car backfiring... repeatedly... in the back ground.
I tell the baby Aggie to tell the boss
I said hello. I apologize for not helping him land a donation and
wish him luck. All of this happens and I oddly feel a little more...
decompressed but not decomposed.
I've been in need of some revolution.
Or poetry. Or both. But just because I need a revolution doesn't mean
I get to act a fool and jump from the comal to the campfire.
Revolution or no, I've got to get a
plan.
Step one. Breathe. Slide. Aum. Shine.
And always now “here to do or die”.
Sunday, September 16, 2012
Time doesn't heal all wounds... but honey does.
The problem with feeling
that I was born to be Jewish but failed to be born to a Jewish
family?
I don't have a Jewish
mother. When I want to bake or cook something that is supposed to
evoke memory, tradition and comfort I have to search for a third
party fabrication. And pray that some comforting spark of
satisfaction will manifest through the unknown. I have to start from
scratch.
To be fair my mother
taught me a lot of things in the kitchen. Never how to braid a smooth
loaf of challah though. I'm sure that if my mom were Jewish she would
have taught me how to make matzo ball soup with roasted green chile.
I don't know if that's a thing yet... but I'm going to work on making
it a thing.
But there are other
problems.
I didn't have Jewish
parents that made sure I would be inspired by Israel in my youth.
Instead I have a parent that is too preoccupied with political agenda
to see that I'm just trying to quench a spiritual thirst that had
gone on far too long. So I have to go now or as soon as possible.
Before my heart becomes tougher with age. And it will get tougher
because sometimes I have days like today. Really. Bad. Days. Really,
“If this is a cosmic test of my strength and stamina.... why do I
have to prove that to anyone or God?” kind of days. I don't even
know what my dad would think about me leaving. Honestly, after the
first parental reaction... I don't want to find out.
I don't have Jewish
siblings to help me remember the words to songs. Or the right time to
put out Havdalah candles. Though if Annie were Jewish she would
probably think me living on a Kibbuz is overrated and mundane. As it
is she thinks it is way cool. And when you've been sisters for 30
years it's hard to come up with things that make your little sister
think you're cool. So maybe I'll get to be cool again.
All of this bubbling up
because I had a bad day when I was trying to have a good one. And
because of Rosh Hashanah. This time last year (ish) the man I was in
love with was trying to delicately tell me that he was just not that
into me. I cried and cried through a bowl of apples and honey. It was
no way to bring in a new year.
I mean, it's flippin' Rosh
Hashanah. A holy day covered in honey! It's a sweet and productive
taste bud party before some seriously heavy spiritual stuff goes
down.
To turn things around I
baked muffins. An army of muffins to keep the blues away.
Naomi's Apple Honey Muffins
Makes 12 muffins or an army of 24 mini muffins (I suggest making an army of muffins. They are more fun to look at, eat and share.)- 2-1/2 cups all-purpose flour
- 1-1/2 teaspoons baking powder
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- 1/2 Tablespoon salt
- 1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
- 1/2 cup softened
- 1 cup honey (the darker the better)
- 2 eggs
- 1/2 cup goat milk
- 1 cup chopped apple
Not all 24 muffins are present in this picture. I was hungry.
Tuesday, August 28, 2012
I'm sensing a trend here....
I haven't written in a while for the
same reasons I always avoid writing. Depression. I have an open door
policy about having bi-polar disorder. It's like a fail safe.
Obviously it is painful to be open about that sort of thing. But it
is also the safest way to be dangerously depressed. In any case-- I
dislike subjecting myself to retroactively self imposed cruel
criticism because I've said something brilliant under the stress of
depression.
Is that Naomi or Depression writing?
And if someone else finds the writing striking... what would it do to
Naomi if Depression is what deserves the credit and praise?
I avoid the issue all at once by not
giving depression the satisfaction of being a better writer than me.
CALL ME CRAZY.
Speaking of crazy. I made Hurricane
Challah.
That's how I deal.
The absolute most stressful part of a
storm when living in NOLA... is convincing everyone who loves you
that you will be totally and completely OK.
I'm OK.
I mean. I'm not OK OK. I'm stressed the
fuck out. Mu is meowing his brains out. It's sent my blood pressure
through the roof. Speaking of! Just last week my roof was leaking
from the pressure of a normal thunder storm. FUN! I'm going to miss
three days of work, putting my finances in an even bigger pinch.
GRAGH! All I have to eat is beans. Which I am, now that I think about
it, glad for! I've been to two grocery stores since they became sure
Isaac was heading our way. What I saw turned my stomach. Disclaimer
I'm about to sound like a judgmental bitch.
I saw men and women with children in
their carts, children in tow... loading up on shit. TOTAL SHIT. Junk
food that comes pre-packaged... and I see where they're coming from.
And then again.... I DON'T. We're talking about people who are so
wound up about the idea of a Katrina-like event that they want to be
prepared. Better prepared than the last time. They want to make sure
they have FOOD.
But what I see everyone buying is empty
calories. Sodium heavy, processed beyond true nutrition, low protein
value... shit that won't fill them up long, won't fuel their bodies
for anything more than farting and dashing to the commode because
they have high-fructose syrup solid, hydrogenated oil lubed turds to
purge from their nutrient starved bodies.
I've seen carts that are more full with
soda than water when water is actually available to purchase. People
are worried about drowning in storm water when they ought to be
worried about drowning in their own sugar powered food ignorance.
I've been reminded that some canned
vegetables have, IN ONE SERVING, have up to 20% a daily value of
sodium. Why? Not to mention many canned veggies have artificial dyes
in them. Because mother fucking nature didn't make GREEN beans
fucking GREEN enough.
Someone ran over my foot with a
shopping cart and didn't stop to apologize. That has nothing to do
with the food stupids and everything to do with common fucking
courtesy.
I went to the co-op too. Things there,
of course, were calm and not as gross. Canned beans were almost sold
out. Fair enough. The small bulk spice section had enough variety to
last you a few days of canned food boredom. I bought organic green
onions that will at least flavor up my boring diet of legumes and
tortillas. They'll keep out of refrigeration a day too. At least the
flavor will. And some garnet sweet potatoes because they'll cover a
craving for both sweet and savory if I get too stressed out. They
were well stocked, very calm, and sensitive.
I have canela and manzanilla to make
myself comforting tea. Brown rice and quinoa. Fresh made Challah.
Home made ghee (Someone else made it. I might make my own tomorrow).
Tortillas, corn and flour. A bag of spinach. Dried soup mixes full
of... you guessed it, beans and spices.
I'm not saying chowing down on some
junk food in a high stress situation doesn't calm you down a bit. I
would kill for some sour cream and onion chips right now. Or mac n'
cheese.With green chile.
But if you're going to run over my foot
with your grocery cart as if you're in some rush to get somewhere and
survive something devastating with someone(s) you love.... at least
buy the kind of sustenance that will... I don't know... SUSTAIN YOU
AND YOUR LOVED ONES.
Because if your dehydrated and
malnourished ass doesn't survive my pain will have been for fucking
naught.
Obviously... I shouldn't write when I'm
angry and anxious too.
But on a lighter note... The bread I made is amazing delicious.
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