Archive | February, 2012

You Down With G.O.P.? (No, Not Me.)

29 Feb

Horowitz: sometimes I hate the Democratic party

Jennie Smash: i know what you mean

Jennie Smash: what is it this time?

Horowitz: pushy fundraising phone call

Horowitz: the thing is I try and support Democrats, even in small amounts because I know how much money the GOP has

Horowitz: but the DNC is always so obnoxious about asking for money, it puts me off donating

Horowitz: like if you don’t give money right this second the Republicans will win and chain us all to the wall

Jennie Smash: oh my god, i know

Jennie Smash: they have my email addy

Jennie Smash: and i’m thinking about sueing them for stalking me

Jennie Smash: and their headlines are the worst

Horowitz: Exactly

Jennie Smash: they’re always like, ASS ON FIRE

Horowitz: yes, DOOMSDAY!!!!!!

Jennie Smash: PUPPY IN A BEAR TRAP

Horowitz: lol

Jennie Smash: MITT ROMNEY IS HAVING SEX WITH YOUR MOM RIGHT NOW

Jennie Smash: IT’S ALL YOUR FAULT

Horowitz: IF ONLY YOU HAD DONATED YESTERDAY WE COULD HAVE STOPPED IT

Jennie Smash:  ha ha ha

Jennie Smash:  OR AT LEAST GOTTEN HIM TO USE PROTECTION. NOW SHE HAS GOP HERPES. YOU SEE WHAT YOU DID?

We Live by Trickery

16 Feb

The other day — Valentine’s Day, in fact — I had to go to the store to pick up a prescription. I had one other mission in mind: Not to buy Sgt Lucky a present.

This will sound strange to you, or even kind of mean, but since we have entered the new austerity, we try not to get loads of presents for each other, especially when it’s a holiday and everything is overpriced. So I wondered around the store, picking up heart-shaped candies and stuffed koala bears holding lollipops and I felt generally pretty grim about the whole deal.

Not buying anything was making me feel poorer, I realized. This is a magic trick that poverty performs upon your person. It’s happened to me before. The other big trick is that it makes you think that you’re going to be poor forever. That one usually dissipates after a few years. I hope it does this time, as well.

In the end, I bought Sgt Lucky a bottle of Monster Energy Drink, because he loves it and never buys it, and I bought us both some vitamin D, because I think we’re both depressed — either because of not getting enough sunlight, which the vitamins might fix, or because of not having enough money, in which case, they didn’t make a vitamin for that. If they did, that shit would be sold out all over Brooklyn.

When I got home, I handed Adam the Monster and vitamins and said, “Take two of these, with a meal.”

He popped them in his mouth and swallowed them immediately.

“Wow,” I said. “Usually, I have to fight you to get you to take any medicine at all. What’s up?”

“It’s like giving a dog a pill wrapped in a piece of cheese.” He held up the can. “The Monster is the cheese.” He paused. “Wait. Did you just treat me like a dog?”

Only kinda sorta. For one thing, he won’t do tricks at parties no matter how much you beg. I’ve tried.

Image: http://unobtainium13.com

This Is My 1000th Post, This Is My 1000th Post, This Is My 1000th Post

8 Feb

…and fittingly, it might be a little incoherent, as I’ve just taken what I refer to as Mama’s Lil Sleeping Medicine. (It’s Ambien. I know I don’t need to be folksy with you. It’s just plain old Ambien.)

Which leads me to an interesting experiment I’ve had in mind for awhile: Take Ambien, and then go about my end-of-the-day business. Then, when I wake up, fully rested, with the sun attempting to shine through our black-out drapes and a pigeon cooing away on the fire escape, I will sit up and try to remember what I did the night before. There are always many possibilities, for instance:

1) I once bought a pair of green-blue tunnel loafers from Marc Jacobs, in a size that isn’t even the same shape as my feet, while under the influence. I eventually gave them to a quite petite friend. Now I have a strict shoe uniform of Doc Martins in the winter and gold sandals in the summer. Takes care of all debates about shoes.

2) I have on more than one occasion watched a whole TV show or movie with Himself, only to forget about it. Watching those shows again makes me realize that deja vu is probably crap. I’m sure it’s just stuff we knew and weren’t paying attention to.

3) Barely related, but as I have a number of interesting parasomnias besides insomnia and Ambien-induced amnesia, I figure this counts: Once, at a sleepover in middle school, sat bolt upright in my sleeping bag and started loudly denouncing a girl at the party, until she cried and woke me up, whereupon I began loudly denouncing her for crying. Awake or asleep, I was a real bitch at 13. Sorry, planet earth and everyone on it.

And so there you go. This is my 1000th post, and it is all about Ambien. Feel free to use it as evidence at the hearing. I won’t remember.

Also, here’s how much the internet loves pills. I have a series of stock art to prove it:

This sexy mouth loves pills.

The Lucky Charms Leprechaun loves pills.

Robots love pills.

Your gramma loves pills so much, she keeps them in this coffee dish.

This guy is kind of sad about his pills.

But it's OK, because these pills love being pills.

Diabeetus Cat Is Not Totally Happy With Your Face

2 Feb

“I’m not totally happy with this fasting glucose level.”

On a scale of 1 to “it’s inoperable,” this is probably about a 6, in terms of things I do not want my doctor to say to me. And yet he did say that to me, while holding my lab in his hand, just two days ago.

“What does that mean?” I said. “Is that bad?”

“Well,” he harrumphed. “I mean, don’t worry about it. You’re not … you’re not going to turn into a pumpkin or anything.”

In fact, we both knew that my turning into a pumpkin was precisely what had caused this problem. I wasn’t being totally honest when I asked him what that meant. I know what that means. It means you’re pre-diabetic, which is not good news, especially if your dad is diabetic. And his grandmother was diabetic. And your uncle is diabetic. You get the picture. Basically, if you want to clear out a Hubley family reunion in a hurry, all you have to do is yell, “THAT COFFEE IS FULL OF REAL SUGAR!” and everyone will go running for their insulin or metformin or what-have-you.

Still, I gave stupid another go. “Hey,” I said. “Just as long as I’m not, you know, pre-diabetic or anything!”

Crickets.

So. Pre-diabetic then. Anything I can do?

He shrugged. “It’s not … you don’t need to worry right now. I mean, you’ll be fine … for the next year or two.”

I am 35 years old.

I should mention here that my doctor is the tops. He wasn’t bullshitting around with me because he didn’t want to have a hard conversation. In fact, I suspect that he was trying to be kind to me, because he knows how hard I’ve worked to keep my weight under 200 pounds since my thyroid crapped out a few years ago.

“OK, let’s say I lost 20 pounds,” I suggested. “Might that help.”

“Sure!” he said, as if he felt that was just as likely as my growing a unicorn horn and using it to catch hula hoops in front of the statue of Columbus outside his office.

So I went home. I waited to feel terrible, but actually, I felt sort of accepting. OK, pre-diabetes. Basically, I was thinking a simple flow-chart, the kind they made us do in fifth grade, once all our imaginary families had died of cholera in Oregon Trail. I loved flow-charts, and spent a lot of time thinking of ways to make my real life fit into them. It actually did help with decision making.

My flow-chart for pre-diabetes looked like this:

It seemed workable. I texted Sgt. Lucky and announced that I would be losing 20 pounds, due to a scary sounding condition he’d never heard of. Once the heart attack subsided, he was pretty calm about it.

I called my sister and she was super mad. “You have fruit and nuts for breakfast,” she said. “How can you be pre-diabetic?”

“I don’t know,” I said. “It doesn’t seem fair. But that’s genes for ya.”

“Well, you’ll always be my little Diabeetus cat,” she said. “My little Wilford Brimley.”

This is truly, and I am not kidding, what family is for.

Later, I made it a Hubley hat trick and called my folks, who were much less concerned.

“I don’t believe in pre-diabetes,” Ma Smash, our nurse, said. “You’re diabetic or you’re not, and 103 fasting isn’t diabetic.”

“You probably have some glucose issues,” Pa Smash said. “Just about everyone who isn’t at the weight they want to be will have those, at one time or another. But I’d kill everyone in this neighborhood for sugars like that, and you’re doing everything right.”

Family, man. Who needs sugar when I have a whole team of sweeties? Love ‘em.

Image via Memestick.

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