Middle-aged crazy woman
“MOTHERFUCKER!” I exclaim vehemently (and quietly – because I’m in the backyard and our adjacent neighbours have kids and I don’t want them to start randomly yelling MOTHERFUCKER, and then attributing it to the middle-aged, crazy woman whose backyard abuts theirs.)
“What?” asks David, looking up from his computer programming on the outdoor sofa
“This,” I say, pronouncing the syllable with vitriol, “is not big enough.”
I brandish a white metal cylinder – with lid – that I purchased at Dollarama. It was going to be my “Bug spray and firepit lighter” cylinder. But the fucker is NOT. TALL. ENOUGH. The top will not close. The top isn’t even close to closing. My $3.00 purchase that, a half hour before, had produced a gleeful, money-saving grin, is now the wrong size and I am obviously a moron for having purchased it!!
“You are not a moron,” says David.
“Did I just say all of that out loud?” I ask.
He gives me an Aardman Animation grin with a side of shoulder shrug.
“Why don’t you get yourself a drink and come out and sit in the fresh air?” he suggests. “I’ll grab the smaller bug spray that will fit in this lovely new hiding container.”
I stomp back inside and prepare to make myself a Caesar with the litre of Clamato that I just purchased from Dollarama along with the aforementioned failed container. I’ve never made a Caesar before. I’m pretty sure that there’s Clamato and vodka. Which, thank the Gods, I have. I can finish off the bottle of vodka… in the freezer so that I don’t have to open the new one… I open the freezer door. MOTHERFUCKER!! We already finished that vodka. When? When did we finish it? How much vodka have we been drinking? I dig into my internal calendar and think about the vodka… MOSCOW MULES! David made Moscow Mules the other night and he pours heavy. That’s why the old bottle is finished.
Well, that, and the fact that we’ve been drinking like fishes since the beginning of the pandemic. About 6 weeks ago, I decided that I would no longer drink on weekdays because the whole “nightcap” situation was getting out of hand. This week I fell off my Radio Flyer wagon. This week I lost my mind. I’ve been weepy. I’ve been irrationally angry. I’ve French-kissed the depths of despair in the back of a Plymouth Duster. If I was still having my period, I would say that I have PMS, but I’m in menopause now and the lifter hills and inclined dive loops of that particular roller coaster have mostly levelled out for me.
Except for this week. This week, I have failed at EVERY. FUCKING. THING. Except for over-dramatization and hyperbole.
I’ve been doing a lot of shoulders back and deep breathing this week. I’ve been compartmentalizing impending panic attacks. I put them way, way back… in the back of my bedroom closet, behind the filing box of old correspondence, behind the superfluous Christmas pillows, behind the clothes rail, behind the curtain, past the bed, behind the bedroom door, past the “loft space,” up the stairs from the kitchen… deeeeep into my cranium, where they stop me from hyperventilating most of the time.
I went for a walk today, and when I got home, I wasn’t sure where I had walked. I’d walked myself into a state of hypnosis or early onset dementia. Did I walk across the bridge? I’m not sure. Did I see people on the boardwalk? Was I even ON the boardwalk? Yes, I must have been, because I walked past the West Beach. Didn’t I?
Now, to be fair, I was using my wireless ear buds for the very first time today, whilst listening to Marc Maron’s WTF, so I was definitely distracted by his interview with Tom Jones – which I highly recommend. Maybe that’s all it was. That’s why I can’t remember 25 minutes of my walking route. I know where I started and I remember different points along the way, and, given that there are only a few alternatives to get from Point A to Point B, I must have taken one of them, which would definitely have me walking along the boardwalk.
And maybe, just maybe, my freaking out should be completely expected given that the mental exhaustion of living through a pandemic takes its toll on everyone. Even those of us who are fortunate enough to love our spouses and children, and love spending extra time with them… But all I really want is to be able to have play dates with people other than them now. I want to hug a person I haven’t had sex with or given birth to. (I should have maybe phrased that with more specificity.) That’s what it comes down to. And for some reason, this week, on the cusp of returning normalcy in Ontario, all my compartmentalizing has caught up with me.
Which means it’s time for that drink… and perhaps instead of meeting any number of self-defined deadlines – a finished chapter, a completed outline or brand new song lyrics – I just drink that fucking drink and sit back with a Regency Romance with a side of historical smut for the added endorphin rush. Then, tomorrow, I can reboot. Because if life, right now, still isn’t normal? Why should I expect to be?
A very entertaining read. thx!