Saturday, October 14, 2006

What You've [Not] Been Missing

I want to make good on my promise to talk about the last few weekends. I realized I go on too many rants that, really, who cares about that. Just the hot air blowing up from Florida. I'm resisting the urge to write a blog called "Where Have All the Cowboys Gone?" about how much I hate hate hate the current country music that took Team America to be the gospel truth. Take for example a certain American prophet - Toby Keith: "Oh, justice will be served and the battle will rage:/This big dog will fight when you rattle his cage./ An' you'll be sorry that you messed with the U.S. of A./ 'Cos we'll put a boot in your ass, it's the American way." I don't know if I've ever been more proud to be an American. "Justice", eh?

This ties in - trust me. A few weeks ago, I went to the Memphis fair with Mike and some of his friends (who are so nice, it makes it even harder to leave). And the featured band was none other than than The Charlie Daniels Band. When we walked by, they were playing "Long haired country boy", and the only reason I remember this is because all of the vendors, all of the bystanders - everyone was in their own very expressive little music video. Even the women were proud to be long-haired country boys. Serving up foot-long corn dogs and singing to each other "to just leave this long-haired country boy a-LOOONE." One guy in particular - a sandy-haired long-haired country boy in a flannel shirt/jacket that hung like a bell over his very tall, very thin body - he was the real thing. I couldn't stop staring at him. It's the way people sing when they're in their cars or in the privacy of their own homes. I love the fair.

Before we went to the fair, we had a cookout with a couple of Mike's friends. They used to own an art gallery; everything is beautiful and unique in their house and in their backyard. And, they're just really nice people. We ate black bean soup (the last semi-healthy thing we'd eat all night), talked until it was nice and dark, and then we headed down to the fairway. Mike brought his camera;I brought $50 for fair food and rides. I love going to the fair with people who like the rides. I can't remember any names, so I'll make them up as I go. We started out with the "Human Airplanes", where you lay on your chest and your arms and legs hang free as a giant disc spins you around and up into the air. On the "Spinning, Throwing Claw", we sat up with a large u-shaped bar over our chests as this gigantic spinning claw swung us back and forth over the fairway. Mike talked me into trying "Fall to Your Death." I think I screamed a bad word. I can't remember the others. Mike and I went to the fairway to eat more food and win some prizes. All in all, we had a corn dog, cotton candy, a funnel cake, and I had a bite of homemade potato chips and a bite of a fried Snickers bar. Mike won a large inflatable bat for me.

The rest of the weekend, we hung out with his best friend in Memphis, went exploring downtown, spent some quality time with his mentor+fiance+new baby (fiance is GREAT - I wish we lived closer to each other...), ate sushi, took naps, watched movies...a very, very good visit. He's patient and kind and fun. Oh, yes, and I rode up and back with a wonderful writer/FSU professor I babysit for. We talked most of the trip (boy, can I talk). I introduced her to Reno 911, Lost, The Office, and Hardee's thickburgers. She brought Curb Your Enthusiasm, and we were so distracted, we took a detour through Tuscaloosa.

The weekend before that was also very busy. I went home for Brandy's wedding. She was the most laidback bride I've ever seen. I wanted everything to go especially well for her. My duties were to hand out programs and to read the thirteenth chapter of Paul's Letter to the Corinthians. I was nervous. The location - Alahambra Hall in Mt. Pleasant - was perfect. Everything seemed to be going smoothly until a very astute bridesmaid asked, "Why isn't the caterer here yet?" Hmm, yes. Instead of telling the bride and making her panic, they went to her big wedding notebook, called the caterer, rearranged the order of the reception so that the toasts and the dances came earlier, and THEN they told the bride. Then, we all became the official spirit committee. We tried to get people to dance and encouraged people to frequent the bar. The food and the cake were delicious, the bride was beautiful, the maid of honor's toast was money, and I got to see some faces from my past. It turned out to be a very nice wedding. However, I have decided that, if I ever get married, I will go up to the deejay's booth at the beginning of the reception and ask to see the discs that contain the following songs: the Cha-Cha Slide, Cotton-Eyed Joe, Brick House, YMCA, any song that can lead to a congo line, and anything with Tim McGraw. I will break these discs. I'll leave the Electric Slide in case of an emergency.

This is the same weekend we were trying to throw together a surprise 50th birthday party for my mom. That was a feat, and she kept unwittingly sabotaging my efforts to get anything done. She was mad at me for most of the weekend because I was gone so much. I kept "going to hang out with Edie" or to "help out with Brandy." Really, I was meeting up with my aunt to buy enough food for the 50+ people we invited. I was copying old pictures of her and putting them into a scrapbook everyone would sign. Our last night together, she would barely speak to me because she was so hurt. My brothers and my sister-in-law were all home, and she was disappointed in me and my dad for not planning something for her birthday. To throw her off the trail, we went out for ice cream and gave her the jewelry we all bought for her.

I said my goodbyes to everyone after breakfast on Sunday morning and pretended to get on the road to Tallahassee, but really I went home and worked with my aunt (who was 8 months pregnant at the time). We made flower arrangements, cooked quick-fix food, set up the tables and chairs. My parents went out to dinner with my brothers, and then they "said goodbye." I even called my parents "from the road" and told them I was tired of driving. I was standing in our house with our 70+ guests at the time.

She was shocked. She had been so busy being upset with me, that she didn't pay attention to any of the signs. She kept saying, "Oh, TARA!" All was forgiven, it was a great party, and almost all of the food was eaten.

I hope that when I'm fifty, my life is that rich and full of people - just like my mom's. I also hope we can have chocolate cake AND carrot cake all at the same party. Cake doesn't count on your birthday.

Quick Note: Since this party, my aunt has had her baby. The kid in the orange-striped shirt in this picture is my cousin. When he walked in and saw his mommy breastfeeding, he said, "So THAT's what those are for!"
They grow up so quickly...

7 Comments:

At 1:28 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I want my money back...no updates since the 14th. Come on T! hehehe

 
At 10:15 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I'll tell you what i have been missing...AN UPDATED BLOG!!! Commmme on T. :-)

 
At 7:38 PM, Blogger Madam Mim said...

ummm.... ive read this one already.... new post!!!!

 
At 11:32 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Seriously! It will be one month tomorrow. I need new reading material. Ah, yeah, i'm going to need you to come in on saturday and get a new blog posted. Ah, yeah.

 
At 9:48 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Ok, that's it...you're fired! Now i'm going to leave a comment everyday until you have a new post!

 
At 11:26 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Gosh, who is that annoying edie person? :-)

 
At 2:12 PM, Blogger Heather said...

here here! i second edie and mims. even *I* found time to update today. :)

 

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