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It got cold enough this weekend to break out the heated mattress pad, meaning that until spring I can enjoy blissful sleep until approximately 7:30 a.m. on the weekends.

Yin, above left, The Cat Who Cares, spends most mornings during the warmer seasons doing his best to get me up at 5:30 every morning. Yang, The Cat Who Couldn’t Care Less What You Do All Morning, sleeps in regardless of the weather.

The heated mattress pad keeps Yin in snuggly comfort for a couple more hours in the a.m. Maybe it’s the electromagnetic field.

Goats of Wrath


I don’t have a thing for goats. Really. The photo at the top of this blog just struck me as a cool image, a unique moment in time.

The husband and I had just finished making our way through a north Alabama corn maze (an especially bad idea, given that I grew up spending summers on a Mississippi farm and knew how miserable a cornfield was in August). Making our way back to the car, we stopped at the advertised “goat walk,” and this is what we found. A lone goat on an elevated walkway. He wasn’t picking stocks or diving into a plastic pool. He was just walking. On the goat walk.

When I was about 2 years old, I’m told, I developed a terrific fear of goats. I got my signals crossed with the “Billy Goats Gruff” fairy tale and thought that goats were the bad guys. This may or may not have had anything to do with my grandfather, whose story embellishments were legendary.

At any rate, my fear of goats led me to pull my feet up anytime I sat down, proclaiming that the billy goats were going to get me. This lasted until my dad took me to the nearest petting zoo and introduced me to the goats, decidedly non-scary furry creatures. My phobia was cured.

So goats and I go back a long way.

The goat on the goat walk seemed a little embarrassed, like he knew how ridiculous the whole contraption really was, how futile it was to be part of a rural circus put on for city folk. I felt a little embarrassed for him, too.

Light it up

I think my house should smell like my personality. This scent is reminiscent of Pier 1 Imports, circa 1986.

I don’t make the rules. I just light the incense.

Career Opportunities

While browsing the List of the Day archives, I spotted the September 17 entry, Your Worst Job, and began analyzing my own early career path.

Having avoided the service industry for most of my working years, I don’t have too much whining to do about my jobs of yore. My fellow cube rats will agree that the white-collar environment can be a special circle of hell, but I’ve always had some guilt about excess sniveling when my job involves an air-conditioned environment, free coffee and access to clean restrooms. I feel like an overeducated tool – an overeducated tool who isn’t above griping about her job, but at least I’m a little uncomfortable about it.

That said, I have had some notable jobs that “informed my character.” The significant ones:

•Babysitter of three little boys, ages 2, 3 and 4: I made megabucks from this gig. Nobody else in my suburb was willing to take on these guys, so their mom had to up the hourly rate significantly.

At their house, I learned the art of loose parenting. They could have Popsicles once a day, outside, while wearing only their diapers. Afterwards, they got rinsed off with the garden hose before toweling down and coming inside for fresh diapers. Mom’s orders. Who was I to argue?

They also ate quiche for lunch once a week. None of the toddlers I currently associate with would even consider eating quiche.

•Cashier at Jitney Jungle: This was a joyfully monotonous job. My duties included scanning groceries, checking IDs, counting cash (this was in the Olden Days, when people used cash) and stocking cigarette and candy displays.

It was a people-watcher’s delight. The poor, the rich, the drunk, the recently paroled, the great unwashed … a sea of humanity made its way through my lane day after day. Most customers were friendly, though some were crotchety. It was always a delight to bend the rules for the friendly customers and enforce them to the letter for the crotchety.

My favorite customer was a man who always told me that he was going to pay me with “Hawaiian money.” I was the only cashier who ever got his joke; more than one freaked out and ran to the management booth for help.

I enjoyed analyzing the combinations of products that people bought, stringing together my own narratives for their lives with plot details involving the contents of their shopping carts. Cigarettes, beer and diapers were a popular combo that really needed no explanation. My favorite grouping was a bottle of bleach, a hairbrush and an order of potato logs from the deli.

I only caught one shoplifter. It was an elderly lady who added up her purchases on the back of an envelope and paid me with wrinkled bills and coins that she carefully mined from the bottom of her old, ragged purse. She never bought a brand-name item if there was a generic version available, and there was never a hint of luxury in her basket.

One day, I saw her in an empty lane slipping three or four Snickers bars into her bag. My duty, of course, was to Get The Manager, but instead I played lookout for her, making sure that no one else saw and that she got out of the store with little fanfare for her walk home.

I imagined that this was a special circumstance. Maybe she had a grandchild visiting, or a friend coming over to watch a rerun of a favorite movie on her old TV set that, no doubt, sported a pair of foil-covered rabbit ears.

Maybe she stole things all the time and I just didn’t know it. Maybe she was getting senile. It didn’t matter. I wasn’t about to have a poor old lady arrested for a little chocolate.

•Marketing Coordinator, unnamed small business: I extended two weeks worth of work into six months of employment with this company. The boss knew it and didn’t care. What counted was that such a small business had a Marketing Coordinator on staff, even if there was nothing to coordinate.

Luckily, I was by myself in the office most of the time and had ready access to the Internet and free coffee. Not so luckily, when the boss was there, he grooved to barbershop quartet music and Rush Limbaugh. He also whistled. Inside. A lot. To this day, I can’t help but glare at anyone who dares whistle in my presence.

My replacement tracked me down several weeks after I left and called me to see what the job duties were supposed to be. I still remember his exact words when I told him the truth: “Seriously? Christ.”

(Editor’s note: I realize a lot of people are reading this to actually find the plural of podium, and not discuss presidential debates. So, it’s either “podiums” or “podia.” I’d go with “podiums,” because the other choice, frankly, sounds like hypercorrection.)

Politics and preferences aside, last night’s presidential debate set-up was certain to make one or both of the candidates appear gawky and/or ill at ease. While waiting for Obama to finish his answers, McCain either leaned back stiffly on his stool or wondered around the stage. Obama, through a combination of unbeatable posture and body-language coaching, sat on his stool like it was an ergonomic office chair, and looked perfectly relaxed and polished while listening to McCain.

The staging was a disservice to the candidates and the TV audience. It’s one thing to see how a candidate is reacting to what his opponent is saying. It’s simply ridiculous to have to watch a candidate try to lean comfortably on his ridiculously-sized stool or pace around the stage, probably looking more nervous than he has to.

Americans may discover that we like our candidates the same way we like our college professors and preachers: behind a podium.

The setting: A country restaurant in Meridianville, Ala.
The characters: An elderly couple, in their 70s or 80s.
The moment: As they were getting ready to leave, the husband walked slowly around the table to help his wife, who was using a cane and having a hard time getting up. As he carefully helped her get to her feet, he smirked and said, “Jump.” She giggled at him and they hobbled away, his hand on the small of her back.

I want to grow old with someone willing to keep making me laugh, and who’s not afraid of a light mocking every now and then. Pretty sure I’ve found him. He’s already poked fun at me for today’s basketball injury. Hell, I’m already halfway to old lady with this heating pad wrapped around my shoulder.