Non Sense

Some days, certain things drift by on the Internet or into your inbox that might be worth sharing. Not always. Maybe not even this time. But often.

So forgive my shortcut as I share this wonderfully inane email that has been circulating lately. Inane though it may be, it resonated like a boss with me.

As the current abominations occurring in the world, these are pretty mild. But should be worth an eye roll or two.

Hope it musters a chuckle or some resonance with the ludicrous times we live in.

Civilization in 2023: A Cynic’s Guide

Our Phones – Wireless

Cooking – Fireless

Cars – Keyless

Food – Fatless

Tires – Tubeless

Dress – Sleeveless

Youth – Jobless

Leaders – Shameless

Relationships – Meaningless

Attitudes – Careless

Babies – Fatherless

Feelings – Heartless

Education – Valueless

Children – Mannerless

We are SPEECHLESS.

Government is CLUELESS.

Politicians are WORTHLESS.

And we’re scared WITLESS.

SOME THINGS WORTH PONDERING

Why do we leave cars worth thousands of dollars in the driveway and put our useless junk in the garage?   ️

Why do drugstores make the sick walk all the way to the back of the store to get their prescriptions while healthy people can buy cigarettes at the front checkouts?  

Why do people order double cheeseburgers, large fries, and … a diet Coke?  ️

Why do banks leave vault doors open and chain the pens to the counters? ️

Why can we only buy hot dogs in packages of ten and buns in packages of eight?  ️

Why do they have drive-up ATM machines with Braille lettering?  ️

EVER WONDER …

Why the sun lightens our hair, but darkens our skin?   

Why you don’t ever see the headline, “Psychic Wins Lottery”?  ️

Why “abbreviated” is such a long word?    

Why lemon juice is made with artificial flavor, but dishwashing liquid is made with “real” lemons? 

Why the person who invests your money is called a “broker”? 

Why the time of day with the slowest traffic is called “rush hour”?  

Why there isn’t mouse-flavored cat food?    

Why they sterilize the needle for lethal injections?   

Why Noah didn’t swat those two mosquitoes?     

Why the whole airplane isn’t made out of the same material used to make the indestructible “black box”?

If con is the opposite of Pro, is Congress the opposite of progress?  ‍  

If flying is so safe, why do they call the airport the terminal?  

And for my fellow Canadians, has anyone figured out the oxymoron that is the Progressive Conservative party? Nah. Didn’t think so. ‍ 

Yours in silliness.

Self-Regulation

If anyone detects a throughline in my posts lately, you are right. I am a little obsessed about the ups and downs of my emotions. No, I am not manic-depressive. I am, however, something of a stress case.

I am stressed by the complexities of the household move we are making. And, in good old hunker down and get ‘er done fashion, I’m trying to act as if it is not bothering me one bit. But it is bothering me. Quite a bit.

Yesterday a lady from whom I had purchased two armchairs on Facebook Marketplace leaned on me rather imperiously to come and collect them. I have 73 things on my plate at the minute. Picking up her chairs was somewhere around 65 on my priority list. Why couldn’t she ease off and understand the stress I am under?

Turns out she was under some stress, too. Imagine? They were packing up to leave the following day on an extended trip. She had just had two disks inserted into her spine. As I watched her walking upright around her living room, I was impressed and amazed but also embarrassed by my childish reaction to her insistence that I pick up what I bought.

I thumbed through my mental Rolodex (remember those?) and the common denominator in this type of uncomfortable situation was me. Something to do with growing up without boundaries sometimes makes it very difficult to impose them on myself.

I had grown up accustomed to having inappropriate responsibility heaped upon me without oversight or intervention by my parents. There were very few rules in our household when I was growing up. Beyond those where we worked to keep up appearances of normality and hide the addictions and violence between the parents going on behind closed doors.

In a worldly and sophisticated city like Paris or London, our family might have been perceived as Bohemian. Being a Bohemian had a certain artistic cachet in a big city. In a small conservative town, it was simply seen as neglect.

I ached when most of my friends were called home to supper or nervously checked their Timexes as it inched closer to the time they had been told to be home. Me and my two sisters rarely had to be home at a specific time for anything, let alone sit-down meals.

There was no set bedtime on any night – even school nights – throughout my childhood. We stayed up with and partied and socialized as long as the adults did. The line between freedom and neglect was very thin in the household I grew up in.

As I grew older, my lack of internalized boundaries often showed up in a wide and rapid range of my felt emotions. An old boyfriend often used to say: “Margot, you’re “too.” What I thought was charming and coquettish behavior, others likely perceived as bad-mannered and precocious. I longed to be calm and cool like many of my other girlfriends. I had no idea how to do that.

With time, it got better and easier to settle myself down in stressful situations and hold my tongue and not say something I would invariably come to regret. I eventually taught myself strong and consistent boundaries. Most of the time, the dyke holds.

But I was already tired and overwhelmed and rundown by the time this lady started demanding something of me that mostly just felt like “one more thing.” I was still smarting over the paint-ruined carpet of the day before and had just had an inane conversation with the security system installation representative. I was beat. I am beat.

What is different now from days gone by is recognizing me in all of my “bitchy, over-the-top, I’ve had enough and need to lie down” glory. What followed my little phone outburst of sarcasm and displeasure with the lady I had been rude to were copious declarations of mea culpa. That’s progress, I guess.

Tomorrow – aside from the things I must do – will be about attacking that absurd and overburdened “to-do” list and cutting it down to a manageable size. It is okay to take time and let weeks, even months pass before we settle into our new digs. As is often said in healing circles, I’m “setting boundaries.”

I’ll be setting boundaries both with myself and with the unrealistic expectations I created for myself. Easing up on myself and letting go of some of the irritants somebody else can take care of.

Now there you go. I feel better already.