Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Bay Breeze


Can't sleep again. Actually, that's not true; I've slept well, only I've slept enough, and now am awake; I don't want to over-sleep. Haruki Murakami, who runs every day, also gets up at five every day, and writes every day, and in so doing managed at 33 to morph his life from that of a semi-successful bar owner to that of a professional novelist. He writes and runs in Japan, in the Eastern United States, in Greece, in Hawaii. He ran the original marathon, from Athens to Marathon, alone. Funny how though I enjoy his novels for the magic in their domestic details - boiling spaghetti, answering the phone - I find his running memoir superficial and bland.
A walking memoir might be similarly bland, if not careful: today I walked from Stow-on-the-Wold to Burton-on-the-Water. There were sheep. Fences and trees and sheep. My knee hurt. My ankle hurt, my boots pinched, then I strained my knee. There were golfers. We crossed a road. Etc.
I'd like to walk The Pilgrim's Way and write about it, though - that would surely be more interesting, especially if I were at a crossroads in my life, and arriving at the cathedral in whatever town that is again that is the destination I also arrived at a decision, THE decision that would alter everything. I'm sure it's been done before, a hundred times, but then everyone must get something a little bit different from it - we're not all the same.
We're all the same and not the same.
Yesterday evening I finished the crisp blush wine that Joanne brought over, licked potato salad from the fork in the sink, made a stir fry with leftover steak ("I look forward to our stir fry nights; you make the best stir fry, Mom," said Caleb - what a sweetheart). Then played Super Mario Bros. with Jule, sorted through the rest of my old letters - from Erin, Reinhardt, Nadine, Alison, Grandma and Grandpa, etc. - and took Jule to bed with me, oh lovely boy. Oh, wait - somewhere in there I also made a cocktail, a Bay Breeze, which is why I'm writing this, in fact. Oh, yeah - the point of this blog. I figured out a better way to make pineapple juice, by squeezing fresh pineapple chunks in a garlic press - it worked perfectly. Clear, sweet juice. I realized that I really don't like pineapple in drinks, though, unless combined with coconut cream. Once and for all, I have decided.
I took two sips and dumped it, moved on.

Saturday, June 19, 2010

Bloody Mary


It's been a crazy week, starting with last Friday, peaking on Wednesday, on call. Unusually empty walk-in clinic then early evening, people came flooding in. I ate for once, a denver on brown, brought by Pat and Jule. Our Regina road construction ritual. We'll be in Prince Albert again this summer, the city where we met, down by the river, jogging by the correctional center.
I think that perhaps I can write fiction now.
Where am I with this project? Stalled somewhat, but I have found a number of drinks that I can make this weekend, and I haven't even really gotten to the rum section yet, or tequila, or "Best of the Rest". A Bloody Mary yesterday, and now I see why the Caesar is more popular. Cayenne pepper - really? Lemon and lime? Today I made a martini called Maxim - gin and vermouth (dry) and creme de cocoa and a cocktail cherry. Nice. Caleb made a virgin cocktail for me to try: lime juice, lime cordial, soda water and a dash of Perrier, and a cocktail cherry, in a champagne flute. I suggested he add sugar syrup but he said he wanted to keep it Lo Cal. Jule then whipped up a drink for Pat in the blender: V8 juice, apple juice, lime cordial, and an entire lemon including the peel. Good dad that he is, he tried a sip, and we roared laughing, then listed the ingredients. He washed it down with beer.
For supper, perch that Caleb caught in Perch Lake this morning, asparagus, and bruschetta, with basil from our garden. A more complete meal than I have had all week. Then I played a Mozart sonata, full of mistakes but banging and fast and Caleb pointed out how it's really just scales and I was thrilled that he noticed that - the same criticism laid on Mozart by his detractors in "Amadeus". I hope he keeps up with guitar, or learns piano, or becomes a chef like he says he will, or whatever, whatever, absolutely whatever it is that he really wants; that's what I want him to do.
We watched "Land of the Lost" and it was hilarious. But then it has been that kind of a week. Mad Magazine seemed to me on Thursday like the funniest collection of jokes in the history of the world. I connected with everything that day, with everyone; the flagperson on the highway, my drug-seeking patient who nabbed me on the street, the cashier at McTaggarts and the owner of Betty's, over furs. He's going to be getting in a silver fox, maybe a red fox for Christmas, and I will buy it, and give it to Caleb, for his collection.
If I make it until then.

Sunday, June 13, 2010

Orlando

Yesterday I made an Orlando, which sounded like it might be good, but was just plain nauseating. I blended fresh pineapple with water to make pineapple juice, shook it to a foam with gin and Chambord and plunked two raspberries in the middle, drank it with a straw over ice as instructed. Perhaps gin and pineapple juice just shouldn't be combined. Perhaps I don't actually like pineapple juice. So I dumped it down the drain and moved on to gin and tonic.
I've never been to Orlando. Growing up in Alberta, we found ourselves in California a number of times, but never Florida. I like Miami, though, come to think of it - it has more character than Los Angeles or San Diego; South Beach, gateway to the Caribbean, Key West, Ernest Hemingway, and then of course there's the U2 song. We've talked about growing old and getting a condo - there or in the Bahamas. Do I still prefer the west coast to the east? Did I ever?
It's been a blur of a weekend. Friday I brought lasagna home from P.J.'s, nibbled a few bites and drank opened-three-days-ago red wine that Patrick had poured for me, then played Star Wars Lego on the Wii with Jule, the first four levels, a new file, smash smash smash and I forgot to collect coins and I forgot which characters had force and how to switch between them. Then I organized the garage for our sale, it was dusk, I stepped out into the yard, a loon in the bush, clouds thick over the house, and thought - if a bear comes along and attacks me, this could be it. I am not normally so brave. I am deleriously happy, but won't always be; it would perhaps be a fine time to die - but it was only lovely and there was only the loon, and Shadow.
Saturday having slept very little I dragged myself up from Pat's side of the bed when he brought in coffee, placed it on the new hardwood floor. I drank it while I bathed, hot and hot and hot that strange chill from my chest up the back of my neck tried to burn it away but no - it was tenacious. My blood pressure must have been two hundred. My intracranial AVM quivering. By 9:05 half our stuff was gone, all of our neighbors having called, I ate Mini-wheats in the garage, Jule entertained himself nicely. I wore my War t-shirt and my Seven for all Mankind jeans, perfumed with Off. I boiled K.D. and tomatoes. The Ricci's bought our fridge, and lingered. The Mullner's admired our trailer. Super Smash Bros with Jule, "I'm in a fighting mood," I told him, and beat him round after round, he was surprised and I had to let up. Bike ride to the Nym Lake Road, Jule in the middle did well and no cars hit us. Pat took him along to the dump and I dozed off to "pretty hate machine" in Caleb's cool bed, nothing much better in life than sleeping in the afternoon, nothing much. Then I checked Facebook. Then listened to my ipod in the bathroom and cried; an impossible dream. Then cooked spinach and garbanzo beans, got drunk on gin, and walked down the highway with a mini-cigar willing a bear to come and rip me to shreds. Then I watched Spongebob Squarepants, and repaired some torn clothes, and called my mother, and read "Arthur's Pet Business" to Jule, and put him to bed. Two episodes of "Mad Men" with Pat: Donald Draper falls apart under the strain of concealing his secrets year after year and begs his mistress to run off to L.A. with him, suddenly a weak irrational man, suddenly human.
I slept very little and this morning it occurred to me to go to church for the first time in, like, five years, take communion and check out the new priest with the African accent. That or watch "The English Patient" again. I love Colin Firth and Ralph Fiennes both - who should she have chosen? A quiet life or a violent death? - and resurrection after death, forgiveness in the form of Juliette Binoche, what a strange heaven.
Instead I made coffee, had bran flakes and strawberries, watched "Madagascar 2" with Jule (oh my God the first twenty minutes or so of that movie crack me up, Jule was in tears he was laughing so hard), made him a salad which for some reason he requested at 10:30 in the morning, fed it to him in the basement on our grand leather couch. I answered the phone for once when it rang, and talked to Patrick's sister. I looked through old pictures. It occurred to me that I don't want to read fiction anymore, but rather a biography: John Updike's, or Arthur Miller's, Grace Kelly's, Gertrude Stein's... but I didn't have any of those. I searched my bookshelves and found Agatha Christie's autobiography, and read it. Her first husband left her for another woman, and then she found Max, a younger man, an archeologist. I spent more time in the bathroom, and came to a decision.
The chill is gone now. Still can't eat, though. Pineapple for lunch. I lay down with Jule in the bottom bunk, listened to Radiohead. Caleb came home from Cub's camp, and wanted privacy. We finished the living room and hung pictures, then celebrated with a cigar, a Pom, in the sun room. I found myself able to return to U2, "Achtung Baby", thank God for Bono. I lay down under the crocheted quilt, black with blocks of color, watched the wisps of smoke as they were sucked out through the screens like skinny ghosts, up to the trees. Boiled spinach, ate a little. Red wine, a new bottle, and sparkling water. I remember the first (only) time I was in Europe, we were kids still, food stand owners would ask how we liked our water - sparkling or still - and we didn't know what they were talking about.
I want to grow up now. I want to start my second life.
Caleb slept, exhausted. Jule watched "Star Wars 1: The Phantom Menace". I blogged. It is 8:20 p.m. Patrick has suggested that I see U2 in Brussels in September, just me, we have enough Air Miles. "Waves of regret and waves of joy." I hope I can sleep.

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

West Indian Iced Tea

I first put an X beside West Indian Iced Tea (meaning I will never make it again), thinking "bland, sharp, tastes too much of mint and rum" but now after having consumed it while listening to Mozart on my cushiony noise-canceling headphones, I have changed my mind.
"Symphony No. 25: Allegro con brio" has got to be the best thing Mozart ever wrote.
Well, that's all folks.
Actually, no, let me tell you briefly about my new obsession: "Mad Men", or more specifically, Donald Draper. He is violent, rude, secretive, seductive, impossibly cool, and watching him makes me want to smoke and drink all day long and create a scandalous second life. Unfortunately, though, his world no longer exists, and also, I am a woman. Patrick and I have been plowing through Season 1 on DVD, borrowed from the library; it's our new thing to do together. I love that about life - when everything seems boring, finished, spent, suddenly someone like Donald Draper comes along - boom, a new temptation.
I made several very unpalatable cocktails in the past week as well: Sweet Genie, Alexander's Sister (hardly worth mentioning), and an Opal Martini, containing gin and creme de menthe and light cream and muddled mint. Pat said it tasted like Maalox. Mmm, Maalox that causes gastritis - definitely won't be going there again. The Kir Royale is very good, though, just creme de cassis and champagne, and I had a few, and will be purchasing champagne again in future, and having a few more!
An office with a side table lined with drinks, ashtrays on every horizontal surface, and an ignorance of cigarette smoke's carcinogenic effects... that's what I'm wishing for today. Oh yes, and very long lunch breaks. And a commute to the city. And perfect beauty and charisma and an invented past, the green light at the end of the dock, Daisy.