Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Bug Guts & Romance


My husband & I went on a five-day getaway to the Black Hills of South Dakota. It was a last ditch effort to get away from our grown children, the dogs, and the feeling of impending doom Leon always has as tax season slowly encroaches like the shadow of a giant Ogre.

We decided to stop at the family farm on the way across South Dakota and stay the night, killing two birds with one stone. (his words-not mine) We pleased his parents and got one free night of lodging. That may sound cheap, but he is an accountant after all. You have to cut back somewhere. I didn’t want it to be my Dairy Queen Moolatte.

The next day we took our time wandering through the Badlands from the saddles of our motorcycles. Much like cowboys of the old west, only with paved roads and convenient rest stops where you can buy overpriced snacks and pottery with pictures of buffalo.

We stayed three nights at the Best Western Inn in Rapid City. There was a bit of nostalgia involved when Leon booked the room. We used to stay there during MEA weekends when our kids were small. The Best Western once had an indoor pool, but that has changed. So—no swimming for Leon cause the outdoor pool was already closed for the season. I had no problem with that as I still refuse to put my face under water that doesn’t come out of a showerhead.

I didn’t mind the cheap accommodations until I lay down on the bed. Hospital beds have a bad reputation as being hard and uncomfortable. They don’t even compare! This bed had obviously been cut from a rock quarry in the hills. The pillows were nearly as firm. I’ve never been bruised by a bed before. Okay, maybe I am a bit spoiled by our King-sized sleep number at home, but toddlers couldn’t even jump up and down on that motel’s bed without breaking their legs!

We spent our days cruising the mountains, winding around narrow cliff face roads while taking pictures with our cell phones. (Walking and texting at the same time is probably the second most dangerous thing you can do with your cell phone.)

We went through Custer State Park, stopped in Deadwood to visit Wild Bill and Calamity Jane’s graves and even drove out to Wyoming to see Devils Tower one afternoon. Hundreds of miles of curvy roads, thousands of bugs squashed against my helmet shield, two sore and aching buttocks, and one really, really hard bed at the end of the day.

Now you are probably wondering where the romance comes into this story. Well, at the end of every long day’s ride, my husband would shake up the big bottle of Aspercreme and massage it into my aching muscles. Yes—romance does come in a bottle, in the pain medication aisle of your nearest Walmart.

The day we headed home turned out windier than the Bermuda Triangle during hurricane season. After nearly being thrown into the middle of the freeway while passing a semi truck trailer, we decided to get off onto highway 44, pass back through the Badlands and stop once again at the family farm for one last free night’s stay.

Following a pack of Harley riders, we pushed on through cattle grazing land and an Indian reservation, fighting a fierce wind coming from the south the entire time. My neck was bent sideways like Gumby. I finally couldn’t take anymore and stopped along the road to vent my frustration and peel off my leather coat and chaps. My nuclear core eventually cooled but the splatting of bug guts against bare skin was a little too “earthy” for me.

Hwy 44 goes on eternally. As far as you can see there’s no gas station, rest stop, or even a tree. Like some lost soul in a desert I went through different stages of emotional breakdown.

First I was angry at the wind for blowing and at my husband for taking me down this road instead of letting me die on the freeway. The distance between our bikes grew as I gave in to my temper.

Then I realized God was in control of the wind and I was his child, so therefore I should be able to command it to stop and it would be done. “Be still!” I yelled into the enclosed space of my helmet.

Nothing.

The wind continued to bend my neck at a ninety-degree angle. Not so surprising. After all, even Jesus’ disciples were never recorded stilling a storm.

So I pleaded with God to take this trial from me. “Stop the insanity!” I yelled.

Nothing.

I was sure that I was being taught patience the hard way.

Finally, I hit rock bottom. I just wanted God to take me home so I wouldn’t suffer anymore.

That night I fell into an exhausted heap on the bed upstairs, sinking down into a mattress not carved from granite.

On Sunday, my loving husband suggested I save myself another day of wind buffeting by riding close enough to draft his bike. I stayed glued to the left rear side of his BMW like a leach on a mud turtle. The ride was much more enjoyable as I learned to follow.

When we stopped to rest, I told him I’d found the G-spot and was sticking there.

“You mean the sweet spot,” he said.

“If you say so.”

Actually, I’d raise it to the H-spot level. I was so thrilled not to fight the wind that I was singing as I rode, “Hal—lelujah, hallelujah, hallelujah, hal—le—u—jah!!!”

Friday, September 11, 2009

PC-bots vs Mac-cons


PC-bots vs Mac-cons

Posted using ShareThis
Very funny video for those of you that enjoy Terminator, Transformers, robots taking over the world kind of movies. I used to be a PC but I have been fully converted to the ease of the Mac world and this video confirms the wisdom of my decision.

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Impatiently Living




Okay, I survived another year with little or no aging. At least in the eye of this beholder. I admit I may be getting a tad far-sighted. But I don’t need those reading glasses just yet! Besides, if the writing on the back of my senility pills is too small to see, I have two adult children with perfectly good vision to read it for me. They live here for free. It’s the least they can do. The very least.

Getting closer to the big 5-0 has made me cognizant that my patience is getting shorter and shorter in certain areas. That must be surprising to those of you who look up to me as the patron saint of patience, but things change. You’d think with age would come some kind of immunity to such things. Or at least wisdom would override emotion. But when someone drives fifteen miles an hour under the speed limit in front of me, I realize my last ounce of patience is exhausting out my ears in a billow of angry smoke like a cartoon character. It’s not that I have anywhere more important to go than the idiot in the tiny car that runs on sunshine and the color green, but could we get there before my arteries harden?!

Another thing that causes me tremendous impatience is a movie filmed so quietly that only dogs and the Bionic woman can hear the dialogue. What is the director thinking? If the story is barely audible does it make it more literary? I have to admit that in my younger years I would have sat watching to the end, my ears straining to hear, my brow furrowed with confusion, but no more. I turn it on and if my dogs flip their ears up to hear better, off it goes back to Netflix without regret.

You know that I love books. All kinds of books. Until recently, I had never started a book I didn’t finish. It didn’t matter how boring it was. I took pride in the fact that I read it from cover to cover. This past year I stopped reading TWO different books that I just ran out of patience with. I closed their pages and never looked back. I couldn’t see wasting my free time reading something I had absolutely no interest in. In the dark of night I have had a twinge of guilt over it, but it quickly passes.

I know patience is a virtue and all that. I know if I can’t wait for water to boil there will be no pasta. And I know Mr Clean doesn’t do the floors for you if you open the bottle and leave it out in the kitchen. Which is a real shame, cause I've always wanted a Jeanie in a bottle.

Maybe this getting older just makes me realize I don't have time to waste. But the day my patience wears thin with the microwave--I’ll know I’ve gone too far.