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The one where I should have just played some Solitaire or something

So last night, I was bored. And what do bored people do when they are home alone and have already watched all of their DVDs and they should be working on their grad school applications and researching schools but they really don’t because it just seems like a waste of time and they just found out that they could get into Notre Dame if they only had $25,000 a year tuition and that doesn’t even include books or silly things like food and shelter and really, why are they even considering such things when they already owe the government a German automobile with leather seats that should be racing at 145 kph on the Autobahn and is instead the sole result of some five years spent studying English and Psychology only to end up talking to people over the phone, saying things like ‘Do you see your Start button on your task bar? Right click on that. No. Right click. RIGHT click. With the mouse. Yeah.’?

I’ll tell you what they do. They log onto IRC.

I hopped into a Wisconsin room. Immediately I was private messaged.

HornyNetGeek> Are you wearing a thong?

I was flummoxed. Was I wearing a thong? I didn’t know what to say to that. I mean, what did that have to do with being from Wisconsin? I was not, in fact, wearing a thong. I was actually wearing my Strawberry Shortcake undies, but I didn’t really want to tell him that. It seemed overly personal.

I sighed. And replied.

Wendy> Yes. It’s made of barbed wire.

I closed his little chat window. Then I had The Guilt. I don’t like to be mean, especially unnecessarily and blindly out into the cyber void. But he was so rude. I can’t imagine that he thinks this is the correct way to act. ‘Hey, how low do you hang?’ when meeting a business partner?

The little window popped back up again.

HornyNetGeek> ok pic?

I logged off. Gah. I should have known better. Sometimes I think I’m entirely too naive for the internet.

On Grease 2

Poor poor Michelle Pfeiffer. I doubt that she fully understands that like a zillion women in their late twenties/early thirties spent their adolescence secretly wishing for a Pink Ladies jacket and black Capri pants. Possibly if she had a firmer grasp upon this, she wouldn’t feel as though she had to appear in movies where she is a frazzled mom who trips over things so that we won’t hate her because she’s beautiful. She realizes that women can’t think she’s a skinny bitch if she’s clumsy.

But she needn’t dump a goldfish bowl filled with water down her shirt just to prevent me from hating her because George Clooney wants to sleep with her.

I like Michelle anyway (and besides, I have absolutely no interest in sleeping with George Clooney). I almost ruined my braces chewing bubble gum in that snotty J.D. way. I couldn’t understand why she was with Adrian Zmed in the first place. His hair looked like the shag carpeting in the back window of my neighbor’s Camaro. I don’t know why he felt the need to put black shag carpeting back there. It always smelled somewhat of hot dusty wet dog and that is what I have assumed Adrian Zmed’s hair would also smell like. I mean, why would she want Adrian when she could have had Louis DiMucci? At thirteen, let me tell you, I was ready to do it for MY country too. Dayum. And he had a voice. Yum.

Epistolary

Dear Michelle Branch,

I’m grooving on ‘All You Wanted‘ but ever since Mo mentioned that when you say ‘So busy OOOOUTTT there’, you sound like the boys from Hansen, I expect you to break into ‘mmm-bop’ at any second. On the bright side, I hear that they’ve hit puberty now, so you’ve probably got a lock on the prepubescent boy sound for a while, anyway.

Also, how did you score the gig on Buffy? Because you just don’t seem quite that cool. Even so, I just found out that I’m going to your concert in six weeks. So try to lose the Zachness, ok?

Sincerely,
Wendy

Dear Cubicle Desk,

What the hell is the greasy stuff that you keep getting on my pants? It’s been like two years and you’re still messing with my clothes, but I can’t figure it out. And Shout Wipes just do not take care of that crap. Where is it coming from? Why are you making me feel so inept and stupid?

Also, do you think you could be MORE exposed to the world, the way you’re positioned so my ass faces back into the department? So that when people walk into the department, they get a lovely view of my ass? It’s a feng shui nightmare. I feel like a ham in a butcher’s window. A curvy round sexy kind of ham, but a ham nonetheless.

You’re too low, too. It’s not ergonomically acceptable.

I hate you.
Wendy

Dear Ricky Fitts, my beloved TiVo,

I love you. You’re so tasty that I want to lick you.

You are my favorite person in the entire world. The way you care for me. The way you show me Martha Stewart to watch while I’m doing my ab crunches. The way you giggle with glee when I fast forward through her stupid segments, like when she shows us the proper way to make a bed or detail the different kind of caviars. The way you showed me not one but two episodes of Two Fat Ladies that I had never seen and it’s like the Holy Grail of Unhealthy Cooking Shows. The way you allow me to stash them away to savor later and not delete them in favor of Steven’s Cowboy Bebop stuff. You show me everything that is beautiful and good.

You are perfect. Never change.

Kisses on your hard drive,
Wendy

101 uses for a bad egg

While I was in line at the grocery store, I heard this voice,this pained needle-like voice,like an irritated morning alarm clock buzzer,coming from the next line over. Standing there were two very nicely dressed older people. They were trying to hurry along the cashier, as the Packer game was starting in three minutes and it was the sixteen-year-old cashier’s fault that they chose the busiest grocery shopping moment of the weekend in which to pick up their smoked salmon, brie and Doritos.

The woman was one of my arch nemeses.

I don’t have much white-hot hate in my life, but she really fans the coals of my most bitter ire. In truth, I’m probably over-reacting. You be the judge

She was my honors English teacher during my junior year in high school.

Her name is Ms. Mangoe.

Not really. That’s not her real name, but it’s close enough. It’s also appropriate because her overly-permed rich lady hair was the color of the flesh of a slightly rotten mango. She usually matched her blush to this color, creating an artless stripe on either side of her face, giving the appearance of having gashes along her cheekbones. As if she had somehow sprouted gills. This was particularly attractive when she would wear a Hazard Cone Orange full-body jump suit, like an escapee from a prison work crew. I used to imagine that she would be the worst kind of female prison inmate, harsh and uncaring, doling out her attention like cigarettes to her favorites, snidely sneering to show disdain to the underlings.

Prison and high school are disturbingly a lot alike.

She hated me. Or rather, she ignored me. I was not worth her attention. I did not toe the line. I did not come from an exclusive zip code. I was not a cute perky high school girl. I did not type my assignments. I did not lust over Emily Dickinson or Anne Bradstreet. I thought (and still think) that ‘The Red Wheelbarrow” is a cruel thing to plant on 11th graders, who after spending a semester trying to read into obscure 17th century text start looking in symbolism where there is none.

She used to give out ‘class participation points’. She felt that everyone had to speak in class at least once in order to gain a C for the day. More participation earned more points. No participation garnered a zero for the day, fewer points than if you had been absent. This isn’t too terrible, right? Except that you can’t control whether you got called on! She would only call on her favorites, sometimes seven or eight times in one class period, ignoring the plebes who tried desperately to gain their one participation point in order to simply tread water.

Because of my last initial, I sat in the very first row by the door. The second the bell rang signaling classtime, she would stand there to collect assignments. One time, I could not find my assignment immediately, as I had just made it to class (my previous period was far across campus). She made a rather dramatic show of waiting and sighing for thirty seconds at the top of the row and then moved onto the next row to collect their papers. At that moment, I found my assignment and brought it up to her. She waited until I was standing next to her and then moved to the next row. I simply put my paper onto the pile in her hands.

‘Too late.’ She said, not looking at me, handing the paper back.

She then addressed the class about how if we expect to make it in college, we need to be better organized. She was really doing this for our benefit, you see.

Another time, she handed out our midterm exam. Seven single-sided sheets. After writing extensively, regurgitating all of my brain guts onto the page about transcendentalism, Herman Melville and the like, I finished my test first and brought it up to her. She raised her perfectly drawn eyebrows and flipped through my test, lips pursed. She looked at the back, said nothing and then placed the test into a manila folder. I sat back down. And waited. And waited. And all around me, people wrote on their papers. It turned out that she had more test questions on the back of page seven.

Yes, page seven was the only page which had questions written on the back of it.

And to her,it appeared that even though I had scads and scads of opinions about ‘The Ryme of the Ancient Mariner’, onomatopoeia, and Robert Frost, I had no opinion,not even a smidge of thought about Romanticism, Edger Allen Poe, or ‘The Rape of the Lock’.

I was no slouch. Let’s just get that out in the open right now. English is my passion. I love words. I love reading. I love literature. I was taking senior lit classes when I was a junior. I was not a slacker English girl.

She used to delight in making herself look smart. She’d ask us these questions that she hadn’t covered in class. I sometimes think that she had the pomposity of a spurned professor and perhaps she was bitter that she was stuck teaching the dregs of education in a public high school.

Once, she asked ‘What is the literary technique in which an author shows an evolution of a character, such as an initiation to adulthood.’ Silence. Crickets were chirping in the background. She gloated, superiority glowing down upon the blank stares of a class of juniors.

Then I tentatively raised my hand. Despite the fact that she never called on me, I was still giving it my best shot, unwilling to back down. She looked at me and then continued to peruse the class of twenty students.

‘Anyone? Anyone?’

I cleared my throat.

‘Very well’. Weetabix.’She said, benevolently indulging me in what she knew would be incorrect.

‘Rites of passage?’ I said softly.

‘No it’s…what?’

‘Rites of passage?’ I repeated, nervously and unsure.

She looked annoyed. ‘Yes. Rites of passage. Now, as I was saying…”  and then continued on her tirade about James Fenimore Cooper.

Across the room, my friend Fern was squeezing her legs to prevent herself from peeing her pants. She said it looked like Ms. Mangoe had swallowed a bug.

She never wrote down my participation point for that answer, either. I don’t have to tell you that if one of her two golden students in the class had pulled that answer out of thin air, the clouds would have opened and a holy light would have bathed them in the undying platonic love of Ms. Mangoe and God, who were, in actuality,o ne in the same.

She told my mother at teacher conferences that I was not college material.

When I, along with Fern and our friend Michelle, tried out for the English Academic Competition team, figuring it would boost our grades, she dropped us from the team without telling us. She had them announce the members of the team over the loudspeaker instead.

Ms. Mango sucked.

Despite this, I still managed to go to college. I still managed to major in English. I still managed to love literature, although I hate Emily Dickinson with a passion, as she reminds me of Mangoe’s lusty lectures on the thin, asexual waif. I think she identified.

Two years later, I participated in a questionable act of anarchy against Ms. Mangoe.

It was my freshman year in college. I was home for my high school homecoming,as was Fern and many of our high school friends. We must have been hanging out with another of our friends, Ms. Tschuss (name changed to protect the barely innocent) and Tschuss mentioned that she knew where Ms. Mangoe lived.

Death to the Literature Tyrants!

I had a flash of brilliance. Back in June,when I had been baking a cake for my graduation party, I was cracking an organic egg into the bowl of cake mix. It was rotten and it was, to this day, one of the most disgusting things I have ever seen. The yolk was actually black, covered with a sick yellow crust,like the surface of the moon. I gagged and threw the cake mix into the garbage disposal. It was one of the eggs that my hippy mother got from a local farm. Because I didn’t want to put them in the garbage where they might break open and stink up the entire house, I put the entire dozen (minus one, natch) on the back porch, where it sat through one of the hottest summers in recorded history. Remarkably, the eggs were still sitting,untouched, on the back porch that October. They looked so very innocent, although their shells looked more translucent, as thought the fetid evil inside them was eager to escape.

Kelly (another wronged Ms. Mangoe survivor and whose name I’ve also changed), Fern and I waited up,giggling,until 4:00 a.m. Sunday morning. Stealthily, we crept up the ritzy streets of Ms. Mangoe’s neighborhood,where she lived with her husband, the District Attorney. (Yes, we were inordinately stupid for college freshmen.). Kelly carried an industrial size pack of plastic forks, Fern carrying a twelve-pack of toilet paper, and I carried the carton of foul ovarian bombs. From a distance, I imagined that we looked like some kind of strange processional…a kind of Three Wise Kings of Mayhem. We had to stop every forty feet for a burst of quiet giggles, the kind that make your bladder weak and trembling and ready to burst. There is something about the need to be quiet that makes a normal teenager erupt into the most hysterical laughter imaginable. I doubt that I’ve ever found anything funnier in my life.

There we did unspeakable things. Unmentionable things. Horrible things. Unladylike things. Illegal things For this reason, no one ever suspected that it was us. I mean, we hadn’t been inflicted by Ms. Mango in a year and a half. Suspicion would immediately fall upon the students who had Ms. Mango THAT school year or possibly the seniors who had Ms. Mangoe the previous year. Never would she suspect three college girls. Nice girls. No one saw us. No one ever knew. Until now.

To be fair, we were thoughtful vandals. We did not, for instance, do anything that would stain paint or concrete or injure plants. We did not do anything to the unlocked Porsche in the driveway, although we did lace toilet paper around the steering wheel to show that we could have done something to it. We were, instead, more creative. We hid eggs where someone ELSE would break them, like under the rubber boot scraper or the back wheel of the tire. In my memory, which is filtered with the fog of poetic justice, I am thinking that we recited Keats and Longfellow and other incredibly boring poets as we twirled amidst the fork-filled lawn, but I think that would have made us laugh too hard and then we would have peed our pants with wild abandon.

The next morning, at 11:00 AM, we drove by carefully,to survey the damage. It was gone. All of it. All 100 forks. All of the eggs. All of the toilet paper. Gone. It was as if the previous night had been an elaborate Id-inspired dream.

So that’s my evil past. That’s my black secret. My dalliance into the wrong side of the law. And I never did know what happened when she saw it. It was as if it never happened.

So,standing there in line, I wanted to walk up to her and say ‘Hey,remember me? I’m that poor-assed girl from the wrong side of Mason Street whose literary aspirations you did your damnedest to quash and you know what? I’m a writer. I have a degree in English. I received a distinction in the major. And not one of my professors ever would have not accepted an assignment because it was forty-five seconds late’.. BITCH!’

But I’d already had my revenge. Instead, I rested certain in the knowledge that she was gaining new enemies as I watched the cashier squint her eyes and silently burn.

But that right there…that’s why I have bad karma. Right there.


Dear Law Enforcement type people,

The above was a work of fiction…yeah, that’s right…fiction! I never would have dreamed of vandalizing anyone’s home! Nah! Not me! I’m a very upstanding citizen and I pay taxes. Lots of taxes. More than my share. And might I add that I wear my seatbelt almost all the time? And my car registration is up to date? And I have the fancy conservation license plates that cost $15 extra a year on BOTH of my cars. So just remember that if you are getting any ideas about any of the people mentioned above. It was all a dream.

And every word of this is completely made up.

Yeah.

Let’s all go and break into her house to read her manuscript.

Once upon a time, there was a little girl who was funny and bright and loved to read 19th century English literature. She wandered through her eclectic little life quite happily, flitting from book to book, occasionally making failed attempts at emulating Martha Stewart. Then one day, she picked up a new book, a children’s book. ‘Harry Potter?’ she said, inquisitively. ‘I’ll give it a go.’ She predicted that she would become exasperated with the writing within twenty pages, but wanted to see what all of the fuss was about.

Four books later, she’s a drooling, psycho maniac. When, oh when will the next book come out!!!

Six months, people. Six freaking months before J.K. decides to earn another million dollar check from Scholastic Books. The woman is the second richest woman in England. I suppose the Queen is the richest. I’m not entirely certain.
Damn her. Damn her Muggle ass all to hell.

It’s here! It’s here! It’s here!

Today is the day that my town gains its own center of beatnik culture.

Da da da DA!!!!!!!!!

Barnes & Noble!

I finally got to leave work today for lunch at 2:30 in the freaking afternoon. Good thing I was able to gnaw on that intern for a while or I would have been a bit growly.

The place was packed. I had been thinking that perhaps I was the only person in town, other than the Barnes & Noble employees, who knew of the store’s existence. This was not the case. A news crew blocked the entrance with their tripods. The caf’ was brewing with activity.

I mosied around, lingering only to brush my hand longingly over Michael Ondaatje as he whispered to me promises of long afternoons, just he and I together. Then Oscar Wilde yoo-hooed madly at me from behind another stack, telling me to ignore that Ondaatje loser and have fun with him.

There’s still a bit of strangeness with this new B&N, though. For instance, in the periodicals section, scattered betwixt the issues of Ploughshares, GlimmerTrain, and Paris Review sit the Reader’s Digest with smiling Tim Allen on the cover. That’s like taking a fine souffle and barfing a hairball right in the center. Also, I noticed that they gave Chicken Soup for the Soul books their own sections. I guess I can’t blame them for that one. I’m thinking that all the other sections wouldn’t have anything to do with them.

The people of the city of Green Bay don’t seem to know what to do with a big book store. I saw a man wearing a John Deere cap, wandering around looking for Don DeLillio. That was strange. But then, eventually the people who are just checking out the place will dwindle away and it will be left to those of us who are snobby readers.

I should really find another hobby.

Oh, and I burnt the hell out of my tongue with their Blackberry and Sage tea. I don’t think the baristas really have the hang of it yet.

Class guilt

I’ve been jonesing for the Barnes and Noble to open its latest store nary half a mile from my office. I’ve been envisioning lovely lunches spent reading expensive photography books while drinking warm Blackberry & Sage tea or writing in my red velvet schmancy journal which I never write in. I’m agog with delight over the prospect of ensconcing myself in a nice new overly stuffed chair and putting my feet up on their hearthstone before the gas fireplace.

But here’s the stitch.

My local lovely independent bookseller, with it’s green slate floors, two cats named Stan and Ollie, and its abundance of Margaret Atwood and Gerald Locklin books. My lovely independent bookstore in which I have read barely dry short stories to adoring listeners sitting in antique chairs. I read an article about them in the local newspaper, about how they’re not worried, about how they have very loyal customers who won’t be lured by a Starbucks, Godiva chocolates and gaggles of comfy armchairs.

In my excitement to have tens of literary journals at my beck and call, I had forgotten about my little 18×30 bookstore with no discernible parking spaces.

Hence, the guilt. And the fact that it is EXACTLY like the plot of You’ve Got Mail doesn’t help. If they end up closing and put up a little sign in their window that says ‘We have loved being a part of your lives’, I will just vomit.

Then I’ll probably need a Godiva chocolate and a nice comfy chair while I read the latest issue of Utne Reader to get over it.

People magazine and the National Enquirer are NOT a good summer reading list

Big Brother 2 has me completely in its thrall. God help me, I actually find Will charming, despite his evil tendencies. In the beginning, I thought Hardy was a doll, but now I’m finding myself rooting for Kent, as he truly seems more genuine. Hardy is just fooling himself. Hardy has convinced himself that he’s trying to help other more worthy people win the game, but in actuality, he will be doing this by bringing himself to the final three, at which point the voting is out of his hands. He could theorhetically then be voted in by the jury and never be morally held responsible for being evil.

I believe it’s in Isaiah: Woe to them who call evil good and good evil.

Don’t be impressed that I knew that’. It was in the epilogue to A Prayer For Owen Meany by John Irving. I’ve never even looked it up. I’m taking John’s word for it.

Speaking of John Irving, his newest book The Fourth Hand has an incredibly sexy woman (who is not traditionally beautiful but sexy just the same) who lives in Green Bay. I think this is a shout-out to moi, non? I’d like to know the story behind John Irving picking Green Bay as a setting. He describes our sad ‘riverside mall’ and the mountains of coal.

If he was actually here, scouting out information, I will likely kill myself. John Irving is my idol. John Irving is a literary god. That being said, ‘The Fourth Hand‘ is not so good. It’s ok. In fact, his last three books have been not that great, but his writing in ‘A Prayer For Owen Meany‘ earns him an eternal spot of honor in my heart on its own. His cumulative works (including ‘The Hotel New Hampshire‘ and ‘The Cider House Rules‘ are exceptional as well). Irving has been my favorite author since I was twelve and read ‘The World According to Garp‘.

And now that I’ve plugged John Irving, I feel as though I must plug T.C. Boyle (also known as T. Coraghesson Boyle). He is a fabulous writer, particularly of short stories. I highly recommend picking up ‘If The River Was Whiskey‘ or ‘Descent of Man‘ (both of which are short story collections) the next time you are at a big bookstore with a coffee shop in it. It disturbs me that I’m the only person that lists him as a favorite author in their profile. Maybe no one knows how to spell ‘Coraghesson’.

And if you haven’t yet read ‘A Prayer for Owen Meany‘, go read it, dammit. That’s your summer reading list. Oh, and also check out ‘A Handmaid’s Tale‘ by Margaret Atwood. Also a very good read. I purchased that book at the little book store up in Manitowish Waters and inhaled it in one afternoon. Now I always associate it with camping and summer, even though it’s not particular to either. But anyway, I have no doubt that you’ll love it as much as I do. Oh, and another recommendation for a fun summer read: ‘Microserfs‘ by Douglas Coupland.

Man, I just listed my favorites on my profile. I might as well make it a full house: Also read ‘Much Ado About Nothing‘ by William Shakespeare. If that’s too daunting (and it shouldn’t be, it’s not too tough people’ much lighter than, for instance, ‘Measure for Measure‘ or the weighty ‘Richard III‘), rent the Kenneth Branaugh movie instead and laugh at the sad performance of Keanu Reeves as Don John. The robotic Evil Ted in ‘Bill And Ted’s Bogus Journey’ had more versatility and emotion than his Don John portrayal.

There. Now go. And stop reading those damn Oprah books. Oh, except for Toni Morrison, who is acceptable, especially ‘The Bluest Eye‘. But Wally Lamb should burn in hell. Just so you know.

(sigh)

I should write more instead of reading everyone else’s stuff. I read that ‘Ellen Foster‘ thing that Oprah ended up putting on her list and it was SO pale and shallow, I could barely stand it. Some of the crap that’s getting published and lauded as being literary makes me ill. I should just go back to school and get my Ph.D in English and do something other than working technical support. My sister Mo (notice the use of the pseudonym there? Nice, huh Amy? —ooops) told me that I was too talented and should be doing something else.

Just go read your books. That is all.

Obey

For some reason, I feel compelled to now give you a bit of Wendy Wimmer trivia: I once touched Andre the Giant’s sweaty arm. Yes. Be in awe. I think that possibly his sweat absorbed into my skin and the free-floating testosterone then caused my upper lip to need waxing for the rest of my life.

I think I’ll make a snappy new day

I was thinking about immortality last night and I ran into a show talking about Fred Rogers. And I then decided that if I had the chance to grant immortality to any person on the earth, it would be Mister Rogers. Simply because Mister Rogers should never die. Not ever. I will bawl big horrible tears and my face will be screwed up for days if Mister Rogers should ever pass away.

The man’s voice is phenomenal. It’s better than Prozac and years of therapy. Think about it.

Can you think of a single happier place to be than Mister Roger’s fun little cottage, with it’s little fish tank and shelf full of the miniatures from the Land of Make Believe? I mean, Mister Rogers was really the voice of King Friday! And Trolley! Wasn’t Trolley the coolest damn thing you ever saw in your life?

I was always pissed off that I had miss Mister Rogers when I had to go to grade school in the dark ages, before VCRs. There was no edge, like the Electric Company had. There was no simpering, like Sesame Street. Just you and Mister Rogers and Lady Elaine Fairchild and Prince Tuesday and the like.

Mister Rogers is retiring from making the Mister Roger’s Neighborhood show. He’s planning to do some educational recordings and computer programs for children now. But it makes me so happy to know that SOMEONE when I was growing up recognized that he knew I was special and I had him as a friend. And that makes my world a better place indeed.

Eddie Murphy should apologize to him for making fun of him on Saturday Night Live so many years back. But then, I know Mister Rogers wouldn’t require him to do that. Mister Rogers would forgive him. That’s why I love Mister Rogers so much. He’s so much better than most of us.

Thus, Mister Rogers should be granted immortality.

But I do think that possibly Lady Elaine had a drinking problem. And she might also have been a relative of Jane Hathaway from the Beverly Hillbillies. Not certain. But I should probably go to hell for thinking that.