When we forced a small, seven person birthday party on our friend Kristi by way of barging in to her house with cake and cards, we planned to stay for only an hour.
And then the disco lights went on in the living room and well…

Suddenly there was frosting everywhere,

& we were all hysterically laughing,

& I had a death grip on Bonnie,

& I practiced my rear naked choke on Ree…
and there was music and dancing and singing ‘happy birthday’ at Kiddo’s insistence and martini shakers and backyard conversations.
And then suddenly it was midnight.
I hope every one of these girls is around for my birthday.
-CJ
At some point in life, even the best parents are going to be annoyed by kids. Maybe not even their own, though I’d probably call bullshit right to their lying face. Kids, mostly, are pretty cool. What with the outright truth and unadulterated opinions and statements and words that are so completely asinine in kid-speak that they make the essential comedy punch line.
But sometimes? Annoying. And Kiddo’s two best friends at school? ANNOY-ING. While my kid could probably drive the sanity straight out the back of a normally very calm human being, I choose to believe she is nothing but charming in my absence. However, these two girls, are not charming in their parents’ absence. Or in their presence, as I’ve learned recently. They are in-your-face, fourteen notches higher in volume than any normal conversation across, say, a football field should ever be, and demanding as all hell to come to our house and see our stuff and our pets and why have I never been to your house, Kiddo’s mom?!? And I’m all, Because I’ve trusted myself around small humans until the moment I met YOU.
Then again, maybe I’m just a weird human with slight elbow room requirements and decibel preferences and the need to say goodbye to my kid before you tackle her and scream into her face AND PROUNOUCE HER FIRST NAME WRONG, STILL, FOR THE LOVE OF GOD THERE IS NO ‘T’ IN HER NAME. I would know.
So this morning was an almost exact repeat of the first day of first grade. I’m not sure why but there were fat tears and snot sniffles and the chin up in the air defiance that meant, I swear, I’m trying, Mom. Naturally, I was a billion shattered pieces of human there on the blacktop, amid the hopscotch outlines and there in the distance were the friends. The two best friends that I normally have to shrug off my leg like an overactive puppy. I flagged them down. They barreled into Kiddo, as usual. I knew they’d distract her from the missing me that Kiddo was doing and immediately, they’re in her face and squawking and guess-what-ing. I asked them both, “Today is going to be a great day, isn’t it?”
With all the noise and energy they normally display, they choired, “YES!”
And I was convinced and Kiddo was convinced and I suddenly totally appreciated those little girls more than I ever thought was possible.
-CJ
The other day my co-worker asked how school was going. Sadly, I’d skipped a semester when my bank account giggled maliciously come registration time. We discussed major opportunities and I explained how I’d declared business some time ago for absolutely no reason other than my desire to graduate and it just might look pretty on a resume to say I know things in regard to business ethics. (Says she who will punch everyone – the ethically challenged, they call me.) I detached from the conversation and took on a morbid gloom, tossing my side bangs over one eye for emphasis. The lack of business driven desire offers zero motivation. The drive here is my urgent need to prove I can finish something and frame an 8×11 piece of paper that says so since my word would never be enough.
This morning however, THIS MORNING, on this bright and teeth-chattering Friday (MUST we always have the air running at subzero temperatures in this little igloo of an office? Will the walls melt, for fuck’s sake?) in a burst of motivation, which feels much like a burning/tingling sensation of the ass cheeks if you must know, I researched an AA I could get behind, a university that offers a BA I could definitely get behind, made an appointment with a counselor, printed schedules and requirements and registered for a late start computer class so I don’t miss this semester entirely.
Journalism & women’s studies – I WILL PWN YOUR ASS.
(silent plee: dear motivation, please last. kthx. love, calamity jill)
-CJ
There’s little things

in spades.
You can make some pretty super piles with them.
Or take pictures of them and make a collage in your bedroom.
Or post them on your blog and show your friends.
And that’s cool.
But they’ll never add up to a big thing.
Like a marble pillar that gets your jokes.
Or a balance beam that interlocks fingers with you.
Or a human you’ve someone fused yourself to.
It’s not about who you think it’s about.
It’s about you.
(…the opposite of vain.
Yeah, that’s her.)
Filed under: toys

Under his watchful eye, my enemies don’t stand a chance. Brinks Schminks. Half inch ninjas are the real home security system.
Surprised you didn’t know that.
-CJ
Oh Well, Whatever, Never Mind: On Misogyny, Courtney Love, and the Guitar Hero 5 Controversy by Sady Doyle.
A good read.
The legend of Kurt Cobain is that he killed himself because he’d gone too mainstream, because he’d succeeded too well, because he’d failed to uphold some gold standard of indie purity. And, in that respect, animating him so that he can sing a Bon Jovi song in Guitar Hero 5 is a slap in the face. Everything he never wanted. But here’s an another, more realistic take: he killed himself because he was a deeply troubled man.
I’ll Show You Indecency, Sir: A Rant by Michelle Dean
This one gets better with every paragraph.
Back in the day when the Super Bowl event happened we could sort of brush all this off as the craziness of living in Bush America: the inmates were running the asylum, what can one do when sanity is unrepresented in government, etc etc.
And at the end of the day, it’s my respect for pop culture as a liberatory practice, in television as a medium in which one does learn things, that suggests to me we all have a stake in better rearranging it to promote certain public goods. Like, you know, civic responsibility.
-CJ
Filed under: daily
There’s this crazy phenomenon that I’ve experienced twice in my life.
When I was fourteen or fifteen, I was sitting behind the driver’s seat in a tiny little two-door somethin’ or other. My best friend Carly was next to me. My cousin Justin was passenger and his friend Chris was driving. I was zoning out or looking off, like I do, when suddenly in very, very slow motion, Carly was diving into my lap. I had all the time in the world to think, “Why is she coming into my lap? Is she going to lay down? Is she reaching for a hug? Why does she look so scared?”
BAM
The tiny little two-door somethin’ or other spun out once, twice, who knows, and off went the impact, driving away as fast as his pile would take him, without stopping to see if he’d hurt anyone. The seconds it took for Carly to realize there was a car about to hit her side and to instinctively move away from the impact felt like several minutes in retrospect.
When I was seventeen, I left work at the grocery store one day. It was hot and the dashboard of my beloved 1980 El Camino was virtually gutted – no air, no radio, hardly even a securing glove box. I took the time to crank the windows down and put my hair up before pulling out of my space. Once in drive, and only at the very last second did I notice the much larger than me Ford F150. I clenched, just as I’ve always been advised not to do, squeezed my eyes shut, tucked my head down and enough time passed for me to think I’d missed it entirely and could resume my drive home before I was rocked into reality by the collision. It was El Camino front end vs. F150 driver’s side door and he lost. My prize was to shell out $600 to him, but also an unknowing insurance agent, as the guy didn’t report me.
How is it that in that terrified last second, time slows, dripping down like molasses, your mind ticking off individual thoughts… but it all happens so quickly.
That phenomenon?
Sums up the summer of 2009.
-CJ
It’s been a heart poundy kind of day. This was the long overdue giggle I needed.
“Three women walk into a pub and say, “Hooray, we’ve colonised a male-dominated joke format!” -Bill Bailey
Bitch Magazine’s feminist joke contest winners.
-CJ
“What’s the problem? You guys have never seen a hungover lesbian with a jackhammer before?”
Prolly my favorite line in Without a Net. (For Those Who Like to Dig by Ricky Lee.)
My tired, red eyes and nagging cough can be explained via the following timeline:
- company anniversary party, friend Oscar’s birthday party where much vomit ensued, though not on my part (or on my parts either, praise Buddha), breakfast burritos, Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs in 3D, Return to Ozz themed house warming party that involved much dancing, breakfast in San Fernando Valley, Dodgers vs. Giants from reserve section in the blissful, blissful shade…

No complaints.
Nottaone.
-CJ
How to Become a Writer
by Lorrie Moore
First, try to be something, anything, else. A movie star/astronaut. A movie star missionary. A movie star/kindergarten teacher. President of the World. Fail miserably. It is best if you fail at an early age — say, fourteen. Early, critical disillusionment is necessary so that at fifteen you can write long haiku sequences about thwarted desire. It is a pond, a cherry blossom, a wind brushing against sparrow wing leaving for mountain. Count the syllables. Show it to your mom. She is touch and practical. She has a son in Vietnam and a husband who may be having an affair. She believes in wearing brown because it hides spots. She’ll look briefly at your writing, then back up at you with a face blank as a donut. She’ll say: “How about emptying the dishwasher?” Look away. Shove the forks in the fork drawer. Accidentally break one of the freebie gas station glasses. This is the required pain and suffering. This is only for starters.
In your high school English class look only at Mr. Killian’s face. Decide faces are important. Write a villanelle about pores. Struggle. Write a sonnet. County the syllables: nine, ten, eleven, thirteen. Decide to experiment with fiction. Here you don’t have to count syllables. Write a short story about an elderly man and woman who accidentally shoot each other in the head, the result of an inexplicable malfunction of a shotgun which appears mysteriously in their living room one night. Give it to Mr. Killian as your final project. When you get it back, he has written on it: “Some of your images are quite nice, but you have no sense of plot.” When you
are home, in the privacy of your own room, faintly scrawl in pencil beneath his black-inked comments: “Plots are for dead people, pore-face.”
Take all the babysitting jobs you can get. You are great with kids. They love you. You tell them stories about old people who die idiot deaths. You sing them songs like “Blue Bells of Scotland,” which is their favorite. And when they are in their pajamas and have finally stopped pinching each other, when they are fast asleep, you read every sex manual in the house, and wonder how on earth anyone could ever do those things with someone they truly loved. Fall asleep in a chair reading Mr. McMurphy’s Playboy.
When the McMurphys come home, they will tap you on the shoulder, look at the magazine in your lap, and grin. You will want to die. They will ask you if Tracey took her medicine all right. Explain, yes, she did, that you promised her a story if she would take it like a big girl and that seemed to work out just fine. “Oh, marvelous,” they will exclaim.
Try to smile proudly. Apply to college as a child psychology major.
As a child psychology major, you have some electives. You’ve always liked birds. Sign up for something called, “The Ornithological Field Trip.” It meets Tuesdays and Thursdays at two. When you arrive at Room 134 on the first day of class, everyone is sitting around a seminar table talking about metaphors. You’ve heard of these. After a short, excruciating while, raise your hand and say diffidently, “Excuse me, isn’t this Birdwatching One-oh-one?” The class tops and turns to look at you. They seem to have one face — giant and blank as a vandalized clock. Someone with a beard booms out, “No, this is Creative Writing.” Say: “Oh – right,” as if perhaps you knew all along. Look down at your schedule. Wonder how the hell you ended up here. The computer, apparently, has made an error. You start to get up to leave and then don’t. The lines at the registrar this week are huge. Perhaps your creative writing isn’t all that bad. Perhaps it is fate. Perhaps this is what your dad meant when he said, “It’s the age of computers, Francie, it’s the age of computers.”
Decide that you like college life. In your dorm you meet many nice people. Some are smarter than you. And some, you notice, are dumber than you. You will continue, unfortunately, to view the world in exactly these terms for the rest of your life. The assignment this week in creative writing is to narrate a violent happening. Turn in a story about driving with your Uncle Gordon and another one about two old people who are accidentally electrocuted when they go to turn on a badly wired desk lamp. The teacher will hand them back to you with comments: ”Much of your writing is smooth and energetic. You have, however, a ludicrous notion of plot.” Write another story about a man and a woman who, in the very first paragraph, have their lower torsos accidentally blitzed away by dynamite. In the second
paragraph, with the insurance money, they buy a frozen yogurt stand together. There are six more paragraphs. You read the whole thing out loud in class. No one likes it. They say your sense of plot is outrageous and incompetent. After class someone asks you if you are crazy.
Decide that perhaps you should stick to comedies. Start dating someone who is funny, someone who has what in high school you called a ”really great sense of humor” and what now your creative writing class calls ”self-contempt giving rise to comic form.” Write down all of his jokes, but don’t tell him you are doing this. Make up anagrams of his old girlfriend’s name and name all of your socially handicapped characters with them. Tell him his old girlfriend is in all of your stories and then watch how funny he can be, see what a really great sense of humor he can have.
Your child psychology adviser tells you you are neglecting courses in your major. What you spend the most time on should be what you’re majoring in. Say yes, you understand.
In creative writing seminars over the next two years, everyone continues to smoke cigarettes and ask the same things: ”But does it work?” ”Why should we care about this character?” ”Have you earned this cliche?” These seem like important questions. On days when it is your turn, you look at the class hopefully as they scour your mimeographs for a plot. They look back up at you, drag deeply and then smile in a sweet sort of way.
You spend too much time slouched and demoralized. Your boyfriend suggests bicycling. Your roommate suggests a new boyfriend. You are said to be self-mutilating and losing weight, but you continue writing. The only happiness you have is writing something new, in the middle of the night, armpits damp, heart pounding, something no one has yet seen. You have only those brief, fragile, untested moments of exhilaration when you know: you are a genius. Understand what you must do. Switch majors. The kids in your nursery project will be disappointed, but you have a calling, an urge, a delusion, an unfortunate habit. You have, as your mother would say, fallen in with a bad crowd. Why write? Where does writing come from? These are questions to ask yourself. They are like: Where does dust come from? Or: Why is there war? Or: If there’s a God, then why is my brother now a cripple? These are questions that you keep in your wallet, like calling cards. These are questions, your creative writing teacher says, that are good to address in your journals but rarely in your fiction. The writing professor this fall is stressing the Power of the Imagination. Which means he doesn’t want long descriptive stories about your camping trip last July. He wants you to start in a realistic context but then to alter it. Like recombinant DNA. He wants you to let your imagination sail, to let it grow big-bellied in the wind. This is a quote from Shakespeare.
Tell your roommate your great idea, your great exercise of imaginative power: a transformation of Melville to contemporary life. It will be about monomania and the fish-eat-fish world of life insurance in Rochester, N.Y. The first line will be ”Call me Fishmeal,” and it will feature a menopausal suburban husband named Richard, who because he is so depressed all the time is called ”Mopey Dick” by his witty wife Elaine. Say to your roommate: ”Mopey Dick, get it?” Your roommate looks at you, her face blank as a large Kleenex. She comes up to you, like a buddy, and puts an arm around your burdened shoulders. ”Listen, Francie,” she says, slow as speech therapy. ”Let’s go out and get a big beer.”
The seminar doesn’t like this one either.
You suspect they are beginning to feel sorry for you. They say: ”You have to think about what is happening. Where is the story here?”
The next semester the writing professor is obsessed with writing
from personal experience. You must write from what you know, from what has happened to you. He wants deaths, he wants camping trips. Think about what has happened to you. In three years there have been three things: you lost your virginity; your parents got divorced; and your brother came home from a forest 10 miles from the Cambodian border with only half a thigh, a permanent smirk nestled into one corner of his mouth. About the first you write: ”It created a new space, which hurt and cried in a voice that wasn’t mine, ‘I’m not the same anymore, but I’ll be O.K.’ ” About the second you write an elaborate story of an old married couple who stumble upon an
unknown land mine in their kitchen and accidentally blow themselves up. You call it: ”For Better or for Liverwurst.”
About the last you write nothing. There are no words for this. Your typewriter hums. You can find no words.
At undergraduate cocktail parties, people say, ”Oh, you write? What do you write about?” Your roommate, who has consumed too much wine, too little cheese and no crackers at all, blurts: ”Oh, my god, she always writes about her dumb boyfriend.” Later on in life you will learn that writers are merely open, helpless texts with no real understanding of what they have written and therefore must half-believe anything and everything that is said of them. You, however, have not yet reached this stage of literary criticism. You stiffen and say, ”I do not,” the same way you said it when someone in the fourth grade accused you of really liking oboe lessons and your parents really weren’t just making you take them. Insist you are not very interested in any one subject at all, that you are interested in the music of language, that you are interested in syllables, because they are the atoms of poetry, the cells of the mind, the breath of the soul. Begin to feel woozy. Stare into your plastic wine cup.
”Syllables?” you will hear someone ask, voice trailing off, as they glide slowly toward the reassuring white of the dip.
Begin to wonder what you do write about.
Or if you have anything to say. Or if there even is such a thing as a thing to say. Limit these thoughts to no more than 10 minutes a day, like sit- ups, they can make you thin.
You will read somewhere that all writing has to do with one’s genitals. Don’t dwell on this. It will make you nervous.
Your mother will come visit you. She will look at the circles under your eyes and hand you a brown book with a brown briefcase on the cover. It is entitled: ”How to Become a Business Executive.” She has also brought the ”Names for Baby” encyclopedia you asked for; one of your characters, the aging clown-schoolteacher, needs a new name. Your mother will shake her head and say: ”Francie, Francie, remember when you were going to be a child psychology major?”
Say: ”Mom, I like to write.” She’ll say: ”Sure you like to write. Of course. Sure you like to write.”
Write a story about a confused music student and title it:
”Schubert Was the One with the Glasses, Right?” It’s not a big hit, although your roommate likes the part where the two violinists accidentally blow themselves up in a recital room. ”I went out with a violinist once,” she says, snapping her gum.
Thank god you are taking other courses. You can find sanctuary in 19th-century ontological snags and invertebrate courting rituals. Certain globular mollusks have what is called ”Sex by the Arm.” The male octopus, for instance, loses the end of one arm when placing it inside the female body during intercourse. Marine biologists call it ”Seven Heaven.” Be glad you know these things. Be glad you are not just a writer. Apply to law school.
From here on in, many things can happen.
But the main one will be this: You decide not to go to law school after all, and, instead, you spend a good, big chunk of your adult life telling people how you decided not to go to law school after all. Somehow you end up writing again. Perhaps you go to graduate school. Perhaps you work odd jobs and take writing courses at night. Perhaps you are working and writing down all the clever remarks and intimate personal confessions you hear during the day. Perhaps you are losing your pals, your acquaintances,
your balance. You have broken up with your boyfriend. You now go out with men who, instead of whispering ”I love you,” shout: ”Do it to me, baby.” This is good for your writing. Sooner or later you have a finished manuscript more or less. People look at it in a vaguely troubled sort of way and say, ”I’ll bet becoming a writer was always a fantasy of yours, wasn’t it?” Your lips dry to salt. Say that of all the fantasies possible in the world, you can’t imagine being a writer even making the top 20. Tell them you were going to be a child psychology major.
”I bet,” they always sigh, ”you’d be great with kids.” Scowl fiercely. Tell them you’re a walking blade.
Quit classes. Quit jobs. Cash in old savings bonds. Now you have time like warts on your hands. Slowly copy all of your friends’ addresses into a new address book.
Vacuum. Chew cough drops. Keep a folder full of fragments.
An eyelid darkening sideways.
World as conspiracy.
Possible plot? A woman gets on a bus.
Suppose you threw a love affair and nobody came.
At home drink a lot of coffee.
At Howard Johnson’s order the cole slaw. Consider how it looks like the soggy confetti of a map: where you’ve been, where you’re going – ”You Are Here,” says the red star on the back of the menu.
Occasionally a date with a face blank as a sheet of paper asks you whether writers often become discouraged. Say that sometimes they do and sometimes they do. Say it’s a lot like having polio.
”Interesting,” smiles your date, and then he looks down at his arm hairs and starts to smooth them, all, always, in the same direction.
From ”Self-Help,” a collection of short stories by Lorrie Moore.
