Thursday, October 18, 2012

Frisky Business

We recently flew our friends the Sharps up to Portland for date night.  Deanne was a little nervous about flying in such a small plane so I decided to help her feel really safe by offering a spontaneous safety checkpoint so she could be fully assured there was not be any 16oz. bottles of lotion or nail clippers aboard the aircraft.

Heaven knows I've had plenty of pat-downs at the airport and I'm a real pro at these sort of things.  

This bit of pat-down awkwardness made Deanne forget completely that her life was in the hands of the Mark and his trusty auto-pilot feature in a teensy weensy little airplane for the next hour.  

Thanks Sharps for an AWESOME date night!


Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Only One Likes it Hot


I'm a big fan of spicy and hot.  Trouble is, no one else in the house seems to have my peculiar penchant for the pungent.  And since I'm the one who also does all the cooking around here, I seem to cook to my taste.  I just can't stand bland food.  But for years now my family keeps telling me to kick it DOWN a notch.

We have some friends who sometimes invite us over for a taco fest.  I love taco fest at their place for two reasons:  One, my friend makes a mean taco-- but two, and even more important, is that her husband is somewhat of a hot sauce aficionado.  He's got an uncountable collection of bottles of the hard stuff.  And for a gal like me that feels like her kitchen has become somewhat of a hostage situation, taco fest delivers me from the doldrums.

I grew up on hot sauce, liberal amounts of the stuff--which may explain a lot of things--now that I think about it.  I like it to be hot enough to make the back of your neck sweat but not so much that your eyes involuntary shut and refuse to reopen, though I eat that stuff too.  But no matter how hot the sauce is, its gotta have a really good taste that lingers on your tongue--should there be anything left of your tongue after the scalding heat dissipates.

After an extensive taste test of all my friend's hot sauces I found one that was better than all the others.  I had tasted them all without looking at the labels and to my horror I realized my newly prized hot sauce was called...

How horrifying is that?  How do you go to your local grocer, and with a strait face, inquire as to whether they carry "Sphincter Shrinker"?  Even the sauce named "Colon Cleaner" sounds a bit more up market.  So scouring the town looking for this new favorite sauce puts one in a bit of a pickle.  I've settled for just using it at my friend's house at taco fest rather than enduring the untold mockery and humiliation that would come from having to inquire the whereabouts of the sauce.



Back in my own kitchen, sans the 'Shrinker Sauce' that I was too embarrassed to ask around for, I had a craving for my dad's enchiladas.  My dad was a great cook and made an awesome stacked enchilada--as opposed to the rolled and baked kind.
He always used a canned sauce that was really good and kinda spicy.  Whenever I make them I always make sure to go and buy the sauce in its wimpier milder version so as not to kill my off my little clan of cowards.

These stacked enchiladas are made one by one so as I served them up, one at a time my kids started saying how spicy they were.  I just shook my head at my puny progeny and told them they were all weak. But they kept insisting it was REALLY SPICY.  This is when I explained to them the difference between spicy and hot.  But still they kept belly aching.

I picked up the can of hot sauce and showed it to them to prove that it was honesty and truly mild and that they were being cowards.
 
After I finished my discourse on spice vs. heat I went to put the can back down and discovered something odd about the second can right behind it...
Yep, apparently I'd assumed all the cans I grabbed were mild.

Oops!
I hate having to apologize.  Absolutely hate it.

I didn't feel too bad though.  As my family all ran for ice water, I sat down at the empty table and enjoyed an amazing stacked enchilada that would have made my father proud.

And as for "Sphincter Shrinker", If anyone out there is brave enough to seek out and find me a bottle of this hot mess, send me some please. I'm too embarrassed to look for some myself.



Thursday, October 11, 2012

More Mischievous Handiwork

-->

Monday, October 8, 2012

Pickleball Elbow

I seem to involve myself frequently in activities that garner little sympathy should I get hurt or sore while doing them.

Marathon spectating for one.  And now, my latest sport of choice seems even more unlikely to earn any compassion should it debilitate me temporarily to any degree.

My new love is Pickleball.

[“Yes, pickleball” I mutter.]  You read that right.  And I’m not ashamed…of the sport anyway.  However, the name of said sport, yes.  Who invents a challenging game and then intentionally gives it the most ridiculous name ever?  My spell check doesn’t even recognize the word “pickleball” as legitimate unless I type it as two separate words.  While I write, my computer is rudely underscoring it in red every time I type the name, just to oppose the nonsensical nature of such a malignantly titled sport even further.  Humph.

Photos on the internet like this don't help the matter much...

But there you have it.  I’ve gone and found an ideal sport with an absurd name.  And what’s more, I’ve swapped it in for a legitimately named one.

Let me explain. I love the game of tennis.  Love it so much that I even watch a fair amount of tennis finals on TV.  I have for years.  I don’t live and breathe the sport but I really enjoy playing and watching it when I can.

The only problem is; no one in my family will play tennis with me.  Playing tennis requires a considerable amount of skill and if you don’t have it, you’re not gonna wanna play tennis at all.  Clumsy tennis players end up running around for two hours fetching the ball and rarely hitting it.  Ball fetching is not an entertaining sport.  Consequently there’s a lack of willing tennis opponents around my house, which, has inevitably caused my game to suffer.  I have gotten so rusty that now I should in all reality be classified as a “ball fetcher” than as an actual tennis player.

Then last year, while waiting for my macho husband at the finish line of a marathon, the solution to my tennis quandary presented itself.  There, while standing for three hours at a barricade, I caught a glimpse of what appeared to be a tennis tournament underway at some courts that were adjacent to finish line.  My eyes narrowed and focused intently until I realized they were pickleball courts!  It was a pickleball tournament! [yes that deserves TWO separate exclamation points thankyouverymuch.]

I had long forgotten about my days in high school gym class when I was a reigning doubles pickleball champ in my P.E. class--two years in a row no less.  Yes, prestigious, I know.  I’m a gym class record holder.  I can feel your adoration—or is that mortification?  What’s even grander, (yep, I’m continuing my highly misguided boasting as if I didn’t pick up on this being ridiculously embarrassing) is that my fantastical show of expertise and agility on the P.E. pickleball scene, runs in the family.  My son Mitchell mastered the same coup in his P.E. class some twenty years later. Yes indeed, were a family of remarkable champions aren’t we?  So there I was, caught in a flashback--in the swirl of distinguishing under-achievements and tender nostalgia for those P.E. days long gone by--that I almost presently missed Mark’s grand marathon finish.  So while Mark crossed the finish line, my mind was made up. I crossed over to the dark side of geriatric tennis...Pickleball.

At this point I must tell you that not only does pickleball have a lame name, but it’s also got a bad wrap.  You see, it’s known to be a sport for blue-hairs.  Yes, an old peoples game.  When you’re too elderly for tennis and lack the stamina to play the real game, apparently one converts to pickleball.  It’s where every exasperated “ball fetcher” turns when they’re ready to admit Tennis is outta their league.  They trade in their racquets for a paddle.

It was that day, when I should have been concentrating on Mark’s marathon but was really preoccupied with the blue-haired pickleball tournament, that an idea stirred. I went home and ordered: 
  • 8 paddles
  • 24 pickleballs, and
  • 2 official Pickleball nets
I was all in. This was something I could convince my family to do!  Not to mention it would put me back on a court, albeit a smaller and more geriatric one, playing a condensed version of my beloved tennis.  And guess what?!  It worked! 

Once I had them hooked, it was time to widen the “senior circle”.  But it’s not easy to convince a tennis player to step onto a pickleball court.  I only succeeded once.  I had to swear on oath, that I would not tell ANYBODY that a certain male acquaintance (a bonafide tennis enthusiast) and his wife came and played pickleball with us.  ANYBODY.  See how bad the stigma is?  However after one game he and his wife were hooked.  Do you know how you hook a tennis player on a cheesier version of their beloved racquet sport?  You convince them to place a bet on the game, say, like dinner out, for instance, and then you annihilate them on the court and then talk trash about how easily they lost over dinner they have to pay for!  Sweet success. 

The second route to recruiting new players is to find people who’ve never heard of the game before.  On this wise, you don’t have to look far.  You sucker people in with the likelihood of going out for ice cream afterwards.  In life, most people are in it for the ice cream.  You can pretty much talk people into anything if you lure them in with a trip to an ice cream parlor afterwards.

I knew exactly which family to profile.  The Sharps.  They’re our dune buddies and you can count on them to always be up for anything, especially if it’s a friendly competition.  It only took one game and they morphed into pickleball purists.  It brought tears to my eyes when they went out and ordered their own net and paddles.  We now have regular tournaments, which puts me back on the court again!  Mini court yes, but court nonetheless.

The first time we played them our family showed up in 80's sweatbands and dorky clothes just to set the right mood...that we were absurdly serious about playing the lamest named sport on the planet.

Over the course of our informal tournaments, Deanne and I paired up as a doubles team and we’ve started taking it pretty seriously.  We like to win.  Or at least we hate to lose to certain opponents.  We recently stepped up our game and Deanne and I decided we needed our own custom uniforms.  Yes, I’m being serious here.  We didn’t tell anyone about this ahead of time, and we decided to unveil our unified look at our most recent family tournament.  We call ourselves “Queens of the Court” complete with a custom designed logo by yours truly.  
 


Please note though, that this is the one and only time you’ll ever catch me purposefully matchy-matchy with another human or even non-human for that matter; coordinated shirts, shorts, and socks and pink tiaras to top it all off.  It was a wise move, these things all successfully throw your competitors off their game.  We looked absolutely ridiculous and the great Sun-Zsu himself, the foremost authority on annihilating one’s opponent, even he would have been proud of this tactical matchy move. 

Here’s the trouble though.  I get so serious about not wanting to lose (which is waaay more important than the winning part), that I give the sport my all.  Barbaric grunts, wild gestures at my opponents, mocking commentaries directed across the net, and yes, even cutesy high-fives with my doubles partner.  I do it all. Indeed, tactics which are embarrassingly cheesy yet victoriously effective...as you see here...
Yep, that's Deanne and Me at the top of the podium with our cheesy plastic FIRST PLACE trophies!  Which I have proudly displayed on my bedroom mantel:

The result of trying to win so bad?  Besides a shiny plastic trophy... Pickleball elbow.  No joke.  It's like being disabled from tennis elbow only far more senior sounding and embarrassing.  My freaking elbow is sore.  And if I move it in any way that makes it appear as though my arm feels uncomfortable, then people are sure to ask what the heck is wrong.  Telling people you’re sore from pickleball is sure to elicit more ridicule than sympathy.  Even your neighbor the bowling champion will disdainfully laugh at you.

I tell you with all seriousness, pickleball elbow is no laughing matter.  Nor is recuperating from spectating a marathon. However, it seems there both matters to get you laughed at.  

Note to self: Need to find a reckless hobby.

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Follow the Flannel

On our flight home from the Marathon I realized I’ve unconsciously developed a handy system for finding my gate at the airport.  After Mark and I make it though security-- he through the detectors, and me usually enjoying a soothing pat down--we then pause long enough to see what gate our flight is departing from.  A quick scan overhead for the signs that will lead us in the direction we need to go, officially begins our hunt for the right gate.  This is the one and only time we tend to use a posted airport sign to find our way.  From then on we just go by instinct.

This system only works when you’re flying home.  We always use signs to direct us to the gates flying to somewhere. But when we're returning home, I’ve noticed all you have to do once you’re initially headed in the general direction of your gate is to simply... 
“follow the flannel.” 

After a long trip away, we are always surprised just how easy our fellow Oregonians are clearly and somewhat stereotypically easy to spot no matter what airport we're in. Oregonians, quite frankly, have an uncanny knack for sticking out in a crowd.

Here’s how my fail-proof system works:

First you scan the people headed in your gate’s direction and look for folks wearing discounted t-shirts with a vacation destination emblazoned across the front.  Bright Chartreuse colors seem be the favored shade.

These shirts are easy to spot since the people wearing them usually look excruciatingly bright pink from being scalded by the unexpectedly blistering tropical sun that native Oregonians are largely unfamiliar with.  Nicely bronzed travellers from places like Arizona and California are always prepared for vacation sun exposer and never get caught off guard.  They will look robustly tan and not fried.  But Oregonians, those sun-blistered souvenir-shirt wearing folks, walking around the airport, they are all headed to gates that lead to the general vicinity of the great Northwest.  Follow them.

Now it’s time to narrow down and pinpoint the Oregon gates.  Simply scan for classic labels which all Oregonians seem to favor.  The stiff fancy wheeled luggage will begin to dissipate and give way to North Face backpacks, Cabela windbreakers, flannel jackets, or the indicative Duck and Beaver fan shirt.   

Sensible shoes are also your tip-off.  Oregonians have a weakness for the sensible shoe.

To further isolate southern Oregon from the rest of the gates, you’ll know you’re headed in the right direction when the high-priced haircuts have dissipated into “easy care” styles like dreadlocks and mullets, with a literal bowl-cut and even a handful of 'Dorothy Hammil's' interspersed. 

About that time the realization you’ve arrived at the right gate will all fall into place.  An harmonious hodgepodge of camouflaged baseball caps, a few 'Members Only' jackets, and a sprinkling of hairy legs burrowed effortlessly into Birkenstocks will be your clue.   
A curious swirl of patchouli oil, organic snacks, and chewing tobacco wafting though the terminal confirms you’ve made it to your destination.

Now don’t get me wrong, Oregonians are a fine blend of humanity. I love Oregon!  In fact, I often reassure myself that if my plane goes down in some crazed accident on my return flight home, these are the folks I would want to survive such horrific events with.  Passengers on a downed flight from a big city would not persevere very long stranded.  Deserted with a bunch of Oregonians would be your best bet. The naturalists among an Oregon bound flight could forage for organic berries and weave hammocks and blankets for the rest of us while the guys in the cammo hats would hunt for game and keep us well fed.  The avid hikers would certainly trek us back to civilization.  Yes, these are the people I’d prefer to crash with any ol' terrifying day.  What good are the perfectly manicured nails and matching handbags of big city folk in a dire situation such as this?  Yes indeed, I’d stick with my people, 
the Oregonians!

My new airport system really works.  Without ever looking at sign, I can always easily find my gate to Oregon...

Just follow the flannel!

Monday, October 1, 2012

No Sympathy


Mark and I recently flew down to Utah for a marathon.  Not a marathon for me to run in mind you, Mark’s the insane runner in our coupledom.  He went to race and I went to spectate.

Now before you think Mark is the more robust of us two for such daring athletic prowess, let me appraise you on the subject of being a spectator.   To be clear, this is no easy task.  In fact, after my little soliloquy here, perhaps I will have convinced you that spectating should involve shiny metals like the marathoners get--a personal cause which heretofore has fallen on deaf ears.

First off, to spectate a marathon properly one must be in peak condition.  It is important to practice polite-but-firm shoving skills and a few sets of light elbow jabbing to get yourself in prime conditioning for the clash that occurs when trying to get a glimpse at the runners coming toward the finish line.  Most importantly you’ve got to condition your calves by doing copious amounts of leg raises so you’re fit enough to repeatedly lift yourself taller so you can see over the mishmash of heads in order to spot that runner you came to cheer for.  Next comes larynx conditioning.  Even with a voice like mine, well known for its legendary and admittedly obnoxious volume capacity, it will certainly be tested to its limits. Spending a few weeks before a race hollering at random people will strengthen the voice muscles and get your lungs at their peak performance.  Finally there’s the palm conditioning.  Palm preparation is also vital. Liberal amounts of clapping can wreak havoc on ones hands, as I will demonstrate later.

No doubt I’ve blogged about my unusually loud clapping skills.  I was cursed with a loud clap (which you can be certain I all too often use to my advantage in immature and impish ways).  It's an undisputed fact that my skills are so good that if clapping were an Olympic sport, I’d be the Nadia Comaneci of clapping, elevated to that esteemed spot on the tallest podium bungling the words to my national anthem under the weight of a dozen gold metals.  My clapping is so inexplicably extraordinary Olympic officials would get suspicious and have me tested for doping.

Speaking of gymnasts, Peter Vidmar happened to be one of the runners there at this latest marathon.  Mark was all excited because people kept coming up and asking him if he was Peter.  He was pretty proud that people were mistaking him for a world-class athlete but I pointed out that there was a high probability that all they were really doing was indirectly calling him “short”, or worse, perhaps an ‘aging athlete that looked pretty good for his age’.

But I digress….

Lastly, any experienced spectator knows you must strengthen your arms.  You risk great peril if you hold up a sign overhead too long, there is a real jeopardy of putting your arms to sleep.  This is a large tactical error--prematurely weakening your arms-- which will be needed towards the end of the race in order to position your hands for the all-important finish-line clapping phase.

Over the past few years I’ve spectated at many a race.  A handful of marathons, a couple triathlons, and a few 10 mile “quickies”.  So this latest marathon was definitely not my first rodeo.  I was in prime spectating condition…or so I thought.

This time I would be cheering on three racers--far more of a challenge than I surmised. Little did I know this sort of spectating should have required me to do more extensive cross-training beforehand to adequately prepare...and perhaps I could have had on hand a little bottle of 5-hour energy…just in case.

These races always begin in the wee hours of the morning, long before it gets light outside.  This is why you’ll likely never see me enter an event such as this.  The copious amounts of cussing I do in regular life are wholly exacerbated before dawn—or really anytime before 9am.  Add that to the fact that I hate to run and you’ve created a situation prolific with profanities.  Therefore I avoid marathon running like the plague.

So at 3:15am Mark and I, and my niece and nephew Danielle and Andrea, all piled into the car and headed to the race.  I dropped the three off at the appointed spot where they would be driven by bus to the starting point.  

Not even my iphone's flash wanted to wake that early in the morning...

This marked the start of my marathon spectatorship… 

First you have to stake out a parking spot.  Some races this can be an uphill battle, despite the absurd hour you find yourself doing it.  Popular races are a nightmare to find parking even at 3am.  You need to keep a vigilant eye out for a space.  Sometimes you have to hunt really hard which requires periodic rehydration using ice cold diet cokes just to keep you in the best condition for skimming and scanning parking lots.  Once you claim a space it's imperative you get a little shut-eye and rest up for the viewing obstacles you're about to surmount.  But this is no cozy nap mind you.  You find yourself cramped in the back seat praying sleep will come despite the frigid conditions you find yourself surrendering to. You're now about to toss and turn for a hour...

About ten minutes after you finally fall asleep, it's time to wake and scope out the finish line.  You see how early the crowd is amassing and whether you need to stake your claim to a small spot at the barrier.  Really jam-packed finish lines mean you won’t be able to camp yourself out in a comfy folding chair.  Often it’s standing room only for three to four hours.  But this is why you condition so hard for these epic ordeals.  Marathoners just don’t appreciate the stamina it takes to conquer the hellish conditions we onlookers are entrenched in at the finish line.

Fortunately for me, this marathon was a brand new first time ever race.  An inaugural run.  And because of this I was surprised at how easy it was to park and how sparse the onlookers were.  I got so excited I ran back to the car to get my cozy camp chair and envisioned an easy day at the races.  But boy was I wrong.

I arrived back at the finish and had my pick of the place and set out my chair.  But no sooner had I unfolded it and set it in just the right spot to shade me from the rising sun when the first finisher of the half marathon rounded the corner and headed for the finish.  The first few finishers always merit a lot of hoopla from everybody so I refrained from sitting and commenced clapping and cheering, and rooting for the first runner’s big finish.  No sooner was he gotten through when the second and third place runners rounded the corner and began their final push.  Gotta keep clapping for them too.  Soon I realized all these runners were coming in and I was the only one clapping for them.  The few people standing there were obviously being miserly and only there to clap for their runner and absolutely positively NO one else.  What the??  It is customary that runners all finish to a chorus of claps and cheers.  The sheer size of typical finish line crowd often insures that everyone there just part-time claps and somehow the roar of the crowd never stops for four or five solid hours until the last man or he-woman is through. 

Nobody at this race seemed to have read the ‘Spectating for Dummies’ book, which, clearly states that people crossing the finish deserve applause.

So there I was, epic applauder, with a major dilemma.  Do I let people finish, tears in their eyes, clinging to the last thread of life, headed for a silent finish?  It just all seemed wrong.  So I commenced clapping and never stopped for three hours strait!  Do you know what that does to your hands? Seriously. I’m not sure many people actually know the pain and suffering it can cause the palms of your poor hands.  Combine that feat with two hours of cheering stragglers on and rising up on my tippy-toes (up and down, up and down) so I could see over the selfish non-clapping people obscuring my field of vision--and you’ve got a recipe for serious palm chaffing, voice losing, calf crippling injuries.

Thankfully, Danielle successfully finished her first-ever half marathon and then both Mark and Andrea finished their marathons before I was blistered and bloody--all three finished to the single solitary applause and cheers of yours truly.  It seems there was an embargo on ebullience and I was the only one who didn’t get the memo.

Here's Andrea headed for his big finish.  Do you see anyone clapping for him out in that sparse crowd of onlookers?  Ba-humbug!


Again notice no clappers to be found in the background of this shot either... That poor guy crossing the finish did so in utter silence as I was the only clapper and I was using my hands to operate a camera to take this shot.


After the runners had a brief recovery at the finish line, I gently loaded three tired, sore, and sweaty passengers into the car and drove them strait to a burger joint so they could recover over butter burgers and icy cokes.   
 
Then it was time to get home to recuperate.  This R&R is strictly for the runners and hardly for the spectator.  That’s because there would be aching athletes to help up stairs, to tuck in beds, and to supply ice packs and aspirin to.  The finish line marks the end for the runners but not the spectators.  Spectators, I’m afraid, have a few more hours of service in which they will have to draw upon heretofore unknown tapped resources of courage and stamina, “dig deep” as Mark calls it, to provide after care to the tired blister laden athletes.  No one realizes the spectator has been doing calf raises and sign curls for three hours strait and that you may be in need of your own nap and ice pack.

They don’t notice until the next morning when you seem to be walking stiffly from sore calf muscles and see that you can barely hold onto things with your chaffed hand-clapping palms.  Then they’ll curiously inquire why you’re getting around so awkwardly.  This is when you tell them with your hoarse and weakened crowd-cheering voice, that you're actually sore from waiting at the finish line for their grand finale.

At which point, said runners will squish up their face in total repugnance and say, “How does that make you sore??”

Absolutely no sympathy.

Danielle's First Half Marathon:

Andrea's First Full Marathon, clearly re-thinking the whole idea:

Mark coming in for a strong finish. 3rd in his age division:

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...
 
This Blog Has Officially Been HaXed by Justin Skillman!!!