Lineage Lottery

It’s a classic story.

Boy meets Girl. Boy likes Girl, so cleverly befriends Girl’s brother.
Boy gains access to Girl by being a family pal.

Boy wins Girl. (Boy is a catch so Girl wins too.)
Boy and Girl marry, and produce five much-wanted children.

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Thus begins the story of my life. Parental pay dirt. I hit it — BIG TIME.

There are the caricatured ends of the spectrum: woefully inadequate (Peter Griffin), and exemplary icon (Carol Brady). Most people I know related to the Quahog pop but wished for the blended family matriarch. I realize how lucky I am when I say, for me, fact trumped fiction. I got better than the Hollywood version; mine was impervious to recasts and writer strikes, and no one ever yelled ‘cut’.

My parents gave me life, but more importantly, they made it worth living. They taught me basic virtues: the value of a dollar, the importance of knowledge, the power of forgiveness, the meaning of trust. But I learned more from the unspoken lessons than the formally taught ones. Like how to listen without judging, accept without prejudice, give without expectation, love without condition. I can’t remember a time in my youth when I felt alone or neglected. My childhood was a continual source of giggles, gladness, and generosity.

I was a good daughter. Not because I feared punishment (though it most certainly would have been given as appropriate), but because I never wanted to disappoint my parents. I wanted to reflect their successes and earn their superlatives. I wanted that gratifying pat on the back, that rewarding gleam in the eye. I craved their approval, for the simple reason that they made it the most appealing thing in the world.

My mother has always been openly demonstrative; a never-ending source of hugs, kisses, and expressed adoration. We never had to look far for affection or attention — it was always in arms reach (her arms to be exact). Frankly I don’t know how she did all that she did, and made it look effortless too. Here’s what her resume might have looked like:

  • Maid — clean, straighten, scrub, dust, mop, shop, wash, press, fold.
  • Cook — three squares a day (all from scratch), often for guests (husband’s business associates, neighbors, extended family, friends).
  • Mother [aka: Teacher/Peacekeeper/Nursemaid/Taxi Driver] — engage children in play, help with homework, drive to & from activities, referee sibling rivalries, make doctor visits, keep vigil at the bedsides of the sick.
  • Wife — travel (plan, pack/unpack), socialize (dinners, shows, work functions), hostess @ home parties (prep, participate, clean-up).
  • Part-time Temp — various office duties, as needed.
    NOTE
    :  Sleep optional.  Or standing up.

Seriously, Mom, I’m mystified — how the Helen Keller did you do it??

My father was a rare breed. Imposing but endearing; loving but laid-back. He was the disciplinarian, though usually the extent of that was a stern look (it was all the threat we needed). The few rare times we really pushed my mother’s buttons, she used the old ‘don’t make me call your father at work‘ ploy. It worked then, though it’s laughable now that we ever believed she’d actually disturb him at the office with our petty bickering.

“Yes, I need to speak to you now. I don’t care if you’re in an important meeting, the girls are misbehaving.”

Dad was extremely devoted to family. An entrepreneur who built a thriving business from the ground up, he often put in long days. But when he left the office, he came straight home to us. We had our evening meal together, and talk was family-centric. He never brought his work or worries to the dinner table; that time was devoted to recharging as a nuclear unit. Same goes for weekends and vacations; we were always the constant in that equation.  He wasn’t the touchy-feely type, but it was crystal clear that he viewed raising us as his privilege and priority.

I had one of those lame autograph books that was considered groovy as a kid in the 70’s. It zipped-to-close, and contained a rainbow of different colored pages. I wanted it filled from cover to cover, and friends and family were bestowed the dubious honor. The notations were a collage of silly, sweet, and sentimental, and have faded much like the aged paper they were written on.  All but my father’s short and simple entry, which to this day remains emblazoned in my memory.

I can see with photographic clarity the angles of his pen strokes as he wrote:

“To My Easter Bunny — No matter how old you get, you will always be my baby.”
That’s it. No poems; no professions of pride for my displayed talents, above-average intellect, or studious nature. I didn’t realize how much those words meant to me, until I was no longer a baby. Until I was thrust into the hardships of adult life, of marrying too young and dealing with difficulties in a household he wasn’t the head of. His statement was simply about our inherent ties. It didn’t matter how smart, artistic, or industrious I was, or what I might become. Only that I was, and I was his. That expression of our unbreakable bond — independent of any act, ambition, or accomplishment — was the most powerful message he could have delivered.

I spent many years under his enviable tutelage. At times making him proud, other times disappointed.  But he (and mia madre) loved me and provided for me with unwaivering dedication, regardless of my status. His last days were spent in a hospital, following a bypass surgery from which he never regained consciousness. I remember signing his ‘recovery’ pillow (given to heart patients to hold against their chest when they’re made to expectorate). I have no idea what I wrote, only that he would be pressing my words close to his heart.  I wanted my feelings to offer a cushion of comfort, much like he had always provided for me.

He never got to do that, but I know he knows just how much he meant to me. He knows that my autograph to him would read: “To My Miracle Father: No matter the space and time between us, you will always be my hero.”

Girl continues to be joyous, upbeat, kind and giving. Girl never wore her sadness as a sign of mourning (though she surely felt/still feels it). Girl moved on to the business of living. Loving, caring for, and celebrating with the beautiful family she & Boy created. Boy will always be a part of her, as he lives inside her, within us, and amidst all of our joint memories.

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I hope everyone at some point gets to experience that kind of love…  A connection so strong and so deep you never really think about it, until something or someone contrasts against it,  making the colors pop. If it wasn’t how you grew up, it could be how you raise your own brood, or what defines your romantic partnership, or the crux of your friendships. Luck only takes you so far. It may hold your pot of gold, but you’re responsible for finding the rainbow it resides beneath.

Pinkitude:
“The best inheritance a parent can give a child is a few minutes of their time each day.”
~ M. Grundler

Impassioned by the pen,
Platinum Pink

Anatomy of a Rom-Tome

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I’m a sucker for romance.

It’s a very heady feeling to be the recipient of someone’s efforts to please, pamper, and proffer to your hedonistic desires. Real world romance has the advantage of being directed at and catered to you; personal by design, it’s a custom fit. Fictional romance is appealing because it removes the limitations and obligations of life as we know it; an enticing world opens up where there are no boundaries and the thigh’s the limit.

I’m sure you’ve seen the thematic cover art. A handsome man with a sculpted jaw, open or ripped shirt revealing a muscled chest; tight pants straining against his manhood. A beautiful woman with delicate features, framed by cascading hair; waist-cinching bodice showcasing her ample bosom. Both have a look of pure desire on their faces, and their bodies, limbs, dare I say souls, are entwined. To me, it looks like they are wearing each other.

I was recently pondering why these appeal to me, and millions of other women. And why I don’t advertise my interest in the medium — ahem, pretending not to look unless the section’s empty; never asking “Hey, did you read ‘Peignoir Boudoir’ or ‘Ardent Abandon'”?. The genre makes lots of money, so obviously it has a broad fan base.

Romance is fantasy. It won’t solve governmental conflicts, end world hunger, or stop global warming — nor should it. You don’t use a shoe to frost a cake. Politicians need summits, Africa needs sammiches, the ozone needs patching. Me, I need pure, unadulterated escapism. A world in which everything I don’t want or like or fear disappears, and everything I crave and feel and need comes alive in a carnal, candied confection. There is nothing quite like writhing in words.

Romance is titillation, temptation, anticipation. It’s what you don’t see, what isn’t drawn for you, that makes it enticing. A flash of skin, a flicker of seduction. The slow burn of extended foreplay. You’re on the edge, delirium at arm’s reach; electricity surging through your veins like liquid libido.

Romance novels have very similar undertones, though the details can vary greatly. The setting is always idyllic. Beyond the actual geographical Edens, one is transported to a time and place that is carefree, resplendent, and lush. It could be a tropical island, complete with pink diamond sands and crystal blue waters, perhaps a pirate ship looms on the coast. (Don’t worry; the pirate captain, though a cut-throat by nature, is still quite a catch, with his roguish charm and wicked good looks). Or maybe it’s a Count’s castle, draped in mahogany and velvet; shadows dance in a sea of candles, their dim glow tracing the contours of m’Lady’s cleavage. Or it might be a southern plantation on acres of rolling greens, with a mainland estate that rivals modern hotels; a horse & buggy abut the massive veranda, ready to whisk you off to the ball at a moment’s notice. There are many, many rooms and even more steps…. Babe McBoob must be able to run away from Beau McHunk, and he must be able to give chase and catch-up, dramatically scooping her into his arms.

The heroine is a mix of innocence, tenacity, and ripe sexuality. A quick inventory of her arsenal: Satin skin. Sex kitten hair. Wanton eyes. More curves than the autobahn, and more mouth-watering than a king-size box of sour patch kids. This isn’t your run-of-the-mill, tied-to-the-traintracks, helpless honey. She’s quite capable, yet also vulnerable. She can lure her bait with a single lick of her pouty lips. She’s ballsy but feminine, free-spirited but grounded. Most used weapon: the bitch slap. Biggest Weakness: wild abandon. Oh, she wants it all right, but she’ll fight her desire as long as she can. (Hey, when you have hundreds of pages to fill, you can’t give it all up in Chaptuh One.)

The hero is wise, worldly, and hornier than a Viking’s helmet. At his disposal: Megawatt smile. Smoldering gaze. GQ looks. More appeal than a circuit court judge, and more power than NYC’s electrical grid. He’s in peak physical condition, since he has to be able to withstand fists to the chest, knees to the groin, constant attempts to wriggle out of his arms, catching or carrying fair maidens, hoisting the sail, fighting rivals, and withstanding injuries that would leave the common man a whimpering pile of wuss. Sporting an impressive tool, he can get it up and keep it up as if on a Viagra-drip. Greatest asset: Emboldened by multiple rejections. Achilles heel: he’d do anything to bone her (any fella worth his salt knows ‘anything‘ comes at a hefty price).


The archetypical storyline: The leads start out with an axe to grind. They are antagonistic towards one another, yet mutually attracted. Him: “You’re a spoiled wench, but every time I look at you there’s a party in my pants.” Her: “You are one ruthless bastard, but your hardcore eye humping is flooding my basement.” Early on, he steels a kiss or cops a feel; her resultant goosebumps belie her voiced dislike. Fate keeps throwing them together, but they are not having it. He instigates a full on make-out session, which she gives in to, until her chaste nature and untrusting heart intercede. Undaunted, he tries over and over again. Unsure, she denies him over and over again. Finally, in a moment of weakness, we get the 7 on the Richter scale, big bang bout of mattress wrestling. (I use the term mattress lightly. Usually the coupling takes place on the beach. Or the stables. Or his wine cellar.) This is hard & fast, half-undressed, panting like animals, blink and you missed it, sex. Ire immediately follows intimacy, as some callous remark or dastardly discovery sends the main players scurrying in opposite directions.

He’s swimming in frustration; she’s drowning in doubt. Though conflicted, they mentally replay their sexcapade. He lusts for her sweetness; wants to banish her nightmares. She yearns for his hardness, wants to quiet his demons. A perilous situation erupts; desire and appreciation rise to the surface, leaving worry and fear behind. They discover they share a strong, mutual bond. United in their cause, they fight that which seeks to divide them, instead of each other. Destined and driven, they are filled with gratitude and lust; the flames of their passion burning bright. Reaching safety, they finally, truly, madly, deeply, fully consummate their relationship. This is the bask in the afterglow, explore every inch of each others body, whisper professions of undying love, sex. Before our very eyes, all their differences and problems melt away. As the sun sets over their spent, sated bodies, we know they are perfectly mated and will live happily ever after.

Reading romance is seriously relaxing. Responsibilities seem like romps, and trouble like treasure hunts. There are no dishes to do, no trash to take out. He doesn’t have to trek along while she combs the mall. She doesn’t become a football widow Monday nights. The fuzzy filter of perfection overlays everything. Blemishes exist solely on the heirloom china. The only wrinkles are those of the crumpled clothes thrown to the floor. Dimples dot chiseled cheeks, not the back of thighs. Roots are under the great oak trees, not on anyone’s hair. Women smell of exotic flowers and men of mountain fresh musk. No matter their income or background, the characters are always well dressed and well endowed. Life is blissful and bountiful; hope and love spring eternal. What more could one wish for?

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We’re bombarded daily with horrific images and heart-breaking stories; falling economies and failing peace efforts. Kind, decent people need a respite from that. Something that lifts their spirits; something that reminds us of the joy, wonderment, and pleasure life holds. So curl up with your sweetheart, or a nice steamy book. Grab the reigns, and ride with me on our trusty steed.
Literary lingerie is truly one size fits all.

Pinkitude:
“Romance is the glamour which turns the dust of everyday life into a golden haze.”
~ Amanda Cross

Impassioned by the pen,
Platinum Pink

Two-Facedbook

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Social networking has taken off like wildfire.

Welcome to the age of online partying.  Take your pick of venues, chock-full of possible buddies and bedmates.  A far cry from dad’s poker game and mom’s book club…  these gigs have lots of flash, no cover charge, and are always open.  Pen Pals Gone Wild.  Email on Steroids.

The current Hostess-with-the-Mostess is Facebook.  It’s been well-populated, oft-litigated, and hacker-confiscated.  It continues to pick up steam, bridging countries and cultures.  The most recent addition to it’s impressive resume: successfully spearheading a campaign to get Betty White (who was already a grandmother when freshman Bill Gates started tinkering with computer circuits), to host Saturday Night Live.  Pretty powerful stuff.

On the surface, Facebook is a brilliant concept — connecting long-lost relatives, associates, classmates, and lovers, while fostering friendships between total strangers that otherwise never would have existed.

But it’s not all virtual hugs and fortune cookies.  I’ve seen the darker side of social networking.  Beneath the pictorial, post-driven atmosphere lurks a potential hotbed of disaster.  It’s downfall is it’s upside — the ability to say anything to anyone who has granted you passage to their page.

Without body language or verbal intonation, facial expression or eye contact, almost anything can be extrapolated from your text.  Which makes it ripe for misinterpretation.  Your words are isolated, your meaning meaningless.  A vacuum, where no one can hear you scream or see you cringe.  Your intended joke unintentionally comes across as mean and vindictive.  Your light-hearted banter suddenly wreaks of jealousy and spite.  And this can fester for weeks, even months, unbeknownst to the poster or postee.  Before you even have a clue, your ‘Friend’ is ready to rip you a new one.  You pop on one day geared up for Smilies and Stickers, and see that you’ve been….  *dut, dut, dut* <cue the dramatic music> — DEfriended.  Or worse, had your reputation smeared like a kid playing in finger paints.

I’ve seen both of these scenarios play out.

1) The Public Smackdown. Verbal shrapnel shooting in all directions.  Not only are you wounded, but you’ve got a full audience staring at your bruised and battered ego.

2)   Silent but Deadly.  The Great Wall of China goes up, blocking you from ever visiting again.  Not only are you cut off, but you don’t know why and may be unable to reach that person to attempt reconciliation.

Sidebar:  I personally think instead of defriending, they should have a ‘Frenemies’ category.  People you love to hate.  Or hate to love.  Or used to love.  Hell, why not make things crystal clear, and create publicly-visible categorizations:  Friends; Best Friends; Friends I Call My Best Friends But We Both Know We’re Not; People I Don’t Know But Felt Bad About Not Friending; Cling-Ons (or Klingons, if you’re a Trekkie); Family I Truly Love; Family I’m Stuck With; Classmates I’m So Happy To Have Found; Classmates Who Found Me Even Though I Tried to Hide From Them; Stuck-up Bitches, Sac-less Bastards, Complete Assholes…   Hold on, I have a phone call.

“Hello?…  No, I was just trying to illustrate a point.  Ok, I understand”.

That was Hallmark — I didn’t get the job.  My point being, at least it would be glaringly obvious where you stand.

Often what started as a two-person interchange becomes fodder for the masses.  Thus starts the side-taking and team-bashing that always makes things ten times worse.  It’s no longer just about what X or Y said, but whether YOU think X or Y is the douchebag.  What used to be fun and frivolous becomes a source of sadness and contention.

Why, Facebook, why?  Can’t we all just get along?  Maybe they could add another emoticon — in the vein of the thumbs-up ‘Like’.  I suggest a question mark, which would signify: “WTF”, or more politically-correct: “I’m not sure quite how to take this, please clarify”.  So much misery could be avoided if messages were perceived as intended.  Better yet, let’s grab the reigns.  Don’t let FB be our administrative assistant or mailman, removing ourselves from the equation once the message has been delivered.  Don’t make it our sole source of communication.  Make sure our intended knows through some other platform how we really feel, and vice versa — so neither of us has to worry or wonder.   You can’t make a mountain out of a molehill if you don’t let the dirt keep piling on.

This isn’t directed at any specific individual, nor am I bashing social networking on the whole.  This is merely a cautionary tale.  Facebook has many levels of enjoyment, and I’ve eagerly partaken.  (I’ll devote a future post on “The Joys of Facebooking”.)  It takes time, thought, and energy to sustain/build a close bond, yet only a few moments or words to damage/destroy it.  We need to assume the best, and make no verdicts until the defendant’s been subpoenaed and the testimony’s been heard.

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Poke, Peek, Post, Tweet til the (Farmville) cows come home, but with your sensitivity chip safely in place.  The rewards will be plenty and the risks few.  As the liquor industry says….  Enjoy Responsibly!

Pinkitude:
Even an unintentional, small incident can spark a chain of events… not in the interest of peace“.
~ Abdul Sattar

Impassioned by the pen,
Platinum Pink

Paradise Lost

This post is six years in the making.

Warning:  Spoiler Alert!!  If you are a LOST fan and haven’t seen the finale, turn away — NOW.


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Six years of theorizing and postulating.  A month of  brainstorming cool theme party ideas.  An entire weekend of cooking and baking.  An ass-numbing session in front of the computer, designing graphics and printing labels for the food buffet (ex: Jack Shephard‘s pie; eClaire‘s; Sawyer cream & onion dip).  Two and a half hours of emotionally-wrenching boob tubing.  And lastly, a sleepless night of tossing and turning, mentally examining every frame of last night’s swan song.

LOST is more than a TV show.  It has become a cultural phenomenon.  A highly-touted water-cooler topic, praised and picked-apart; the fodder for many fights and the subject of an arena of articles.   Today’s Lostie is the equivalent of the 70’s Trekkie, only with greater social acceptance.  When something of that magnitude ends, it creates a major ripple effect which will spark debate for years to come.

Tons of reviews, both amateur and professional, express mixed reactions: confused, elated, disenchanted, in denial, and downright pissed.  What strikes me the most isn’t how people feel, but how angry they get at people who feel differently.  A village of judgmental, accusatory know-it-alls, ready to chase non-conformists with a flaming pitchfork.  Just because someone has a different interpretation or opinion of Lost’s finale doesn’t make them stupid or a lesser fan.  People from many walks of life and world views watched this show.  Of course there are going to be multiple takes on it.  Varying viewpoints should be food for thought, or disregarded altogether.  Not a reason to spew hate and venom.  Those who try to force their beliefs on others — either through punishment, mocking, or denial of basic human rights, are decimating the very values and principles they claim to espouse.

Get fired up.  Offer your take with conviction.  The most exciting games are played between the biggest rivals.  But there should be an unspoken respect; an unwritten disclaimer:  These are opinions, not undisputed fact or irrefutable law.  No one has to agree, and truthfully, it would make for a very stale, Stepfordian world if everyone did.  But every person has the right to think and believe what they choose without fearing for their life or livelihood.  Simply put: Live and let live.  (Or as the Dharma recruits might say, “Namaste”.)  Too often people think the anonymity of the internet makes them inculpable or impervious to inflicting wounds.  Just because you never see your victim, doesn’t make their pain any less real.  Words can hurt… pen mightier than the sword and all that.  Speaking your mind — good.  Lambasting someone to try and prove your (unprovable) point — bad.  If you must decry the absurdity of an opposing viewpoint, do it out of that person’s earshot.  Not necessarily polite, but much better than a public stoning.

Okay, so far this post has been about the importance of respecting diversity and considering all angles before landing on your resting place.  But I’d also like a personal purge, to share the thoughts that kept me awake last night, prisoner to a fencing match between my ceiling and clock.

Since I first experienced the bizarro happenings of the Oceanic survivors, I was captivated.  This show was really different, original, and superbly produced.  Every element from location to set design, casting to special effects, writing to scoring, was done on a cinematic level.  Cut to Josh Holloway shirtless, and it’s television gold.  There were some clunkers over the course of the series (Paolo & Nikki who??), but overall, an unparalleled yarn was being spun, and I couldn’t wait to tug at next week’s thread.  With three shows left, I started to get a little wary; it seemed like they were taking us down a decidedly divinable path.  But I felt I should give benefit of the doubt; trust in the producers repeated declarations that their show wouldn’t resort to tried, common story arcs.  I crossed my fingers and went into last night’s episode with the highest of hopes.

Those final two and a half hours receive my top marks for acting and production.  The character development was cohesive and conversational styles true to form.  I was moved to tears over the beautifully-crafted romantic reconnects, as well as Jack’s powerful death scene — alone in his agony, emotionally and physically spent, his fatally-wounded body blanketed between sand and sky, Vincent trotting up tenderly, loyally lying by his side.  Impactful, heart-tugging imagery, no question.

Overall, I was disappointed.  As previously cited, I don’t begrudge people their beliefs, nor am I trying to denounce or belittle any faith or sect.  I do feel gypped that a show replete with brilliant and original sci-fi themes, in the end, resorted to simple, overused religious parables.   Putting theology at the core of the Lost universe felt very forced and disjointed to me.  Like going to a Metallica concert where a sermon breaks out.  (Or in reverse, going to a church which turns out to be a Hedonism resort.)  Felt like a bait and switch.  Like Cuse/Lindelof changed their original plotline under pressure from conservative network heads, or to spite fans who correctly guessed their saga in advance.  So much was left unanswered, things that had became pop culture lure, launching hundreds of frenzied fan sites, just swept under the current like invisible plankton.

See below for a hilarious sampling of the many unresolved mysteries
(a shout-out to my firstborn for sharing):

Spoken in Don Adam’s Maxwell Smart voice: “Missed it by THAT much”.  Up to the last ten minutes I felt like it was a great blending of past to present, theories to realities.  What I thought would happen:  Our beloved Losties would eventually cease to exist on the island, because it was merely a learning platform for them; a dream-state created to deliver life lessons.  Once learned, everything they experienced there would coalesce with the ‘sideways’ world — which would turn out to be the ‘real’ one — upgraded, improved versions of who they were at the onset.  The island was a head trip; a training ground for personal growth and enlightenment, teaching them how to appreciate life and be the best they could be in the ‘real’ (disguised as the sideways) world.  That would have been aces with me.  Try as I might to find satisfaction in a finish that killed off everyone (every main character – dead), leaves a bitter taste in my mouth.  I suppose some people found it rewarding to know they were all together in the end, journeying in the afterlife together.   Sorry.  Doesn’t cut it for me.  I wanted to see them thrive in the world, inspired and strengthened by their trials of fire, bolstered by the knowledge of love lost and found.  I wanted the payoff of seeing them happy and alive, after watching them suffer so much.  I was robbed of that reward and that leaves me feeling empty after investing so much time and thought in this episodic era.

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I welcome comment, whether in agreement or discord.  Being exposed to different schools of thought is important.  Life is a classroom, and the day I stop learning is the day I stop living.  How can I hope to grow and develop if I cut myself off to any ideologies?  It is in sorting through the garbage that I find the gems.  I couldn’t know what to believe if I didn’t have the unbelievable for comparison.  Life constantly evolves, and hopefully, my wisdom and understanding with it.

Pinkitude:
“Too much agreement kills the chat.”
~ John Jay Chapman
“Not enough kills the spirit”. ~ Platinum Pink

Impassioned by the Pen,
Platinum Pink

Baby Steps

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Rock-a-Bye, Bloggy….

Just a tiny little thing, nestled in a remote corner of the world, self-soothed by an ink binky.

It’s kind of nice being obscure.  If I trip and fall, there aren’t many people to laugh and point.  Not that I’d blame them.  Even though I manage to choke out an “Are you okay?”, I’m guilty of stifling giggles when I witness another person’s missteps.  Why is someone falling so damn funny?  As a wise observer once said, “You assume people are supposed to know how to walk”.  Ah, the simplicity of it all.

Speaking of simple…   I’ve been writing since I could first hold a crayon.  It’s second nature to me.  For some reason, displaying it in a formal environment for the general public has been fear-inducing.  The butterflies-in-stomach, feels-like-you-swallowed-cotton variety.  I needed some virtual pressure to get me going.  Thankfully, I’ve been well trained in Shove Love.

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I have a sister, about a year older than me.  When I was learning to walk, she was already a seasoned pro.  Watching me being egged on to do something she’d clearly mastered must have been frustrating for her.  All that fanfare over nothing.  The chorus of “C’mon honey, you can do it”, got to her, so she assisted me — with a firm push from the back.  Of course instead of moving forward, I fell flat; turning on the waterworks amidst the pride-bruising guffaws.  Interesting after affect: attention shifted to her, and I was highly motivated to get it back.  I think more important than avoiding another face plant, I wanted to show my glib sib (and the family in audience) that I could accomplish the great feet (homonym intended).

This powering through became a habitual pattern.  I’m not claiming abuse.  Far from it.  I’m referring to being spurred on by my sister’s tenacity and if-you-don’t-do-it-I-have-ways-to-make-you posturing.  From child to teen to young adult, I engaged in a running series of half-hearted or non-committal attempts, often succeeding only after my sister’s incentivized prodding, and usually through stubborn tears.  While immersed in it, I felt like she was too tough on me.  Now I realize her cleverly-packaged encouragement was truly a gift.

I don’t need her to propel me forward any more, at least not in the physical sense.  The mental conditioning that resulted from years of her influential coercions makes me do things I might not feel ready to do.  It pitches me into action, and inevitably, the realization that I can do it.  Sometimes that last inch is the greatest distance to travel.

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Regardless of the stimuli, whether you are externally or internally driven — Just Do It.  The worst that could happen is you fall on your face.  Or ass.  Everyone gets a chuckle, and you get up; more experienced, more determined, and that much closer to your mark.

Or… maybe your sister is sitting somewhere, erupting in maniacal har-de-hars.  You were her human experiment, and your malleability has given her countless pleasure.  She is the puppet master supreme, still pulling your strings…   Nah.  She really does just want me to succeed.

Pinkitude:
“Success means doing the best we can with what we have.
It is the doing, not the getting; the trying, not the triumph.”
~ Zig Ziglar

Impassioned by the pen,
Platinum Pink

Congratulations — It’s a Blog!

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Greetings, all!

Welcome to the birth of my blog.  Hence begins the first chapter of my internet initiation.  The proverbial popping of my cyber cherry.  My first publicly poured narrative cocktail.  Cheers!  Here’s hoping I don’t get drunk and stupid.  (Or that you like drunk and stupid.)

As typical introductions can be a bit dry and boring, I thought I’d try something different, and interview myself, Playboy style.  Why the Hef-erence?  That would be the famous, bow-tied logo.  I was born on Easter, and as the tale is told, the nurse suggested my parents name me Bunny.  Developing Jessica Rabbit-ish curves by the time I was twelve further encouraged the fluffy-tailed association, so the nickname stuck.

Okay, minus the centerfold pictorial, although I am exposing myself, here is the dirt on Yours Truly…

Miss March 2010 playboy bunny logo - pink glitter

What’s the worst place for a guy to hit on you:
The rating system is much more about the guy than the place.  But I imagine at the gyno, feet in stirrups would seriously tip the awkward meter.  Wow, I just thought about that.  Dating your flower inspector would be weird.  He’s already gotten to third base with you.   If you lie on his bed, does he say ‘scooch down‘?  Would him having ‘a hard day at the office’ be complaining or bragging??

What’s the worst pick-up line you’ve ever heard:
They’re all lame and pathetic, but I do have a clear front-runner for worst.  PG version: “Damn, baby, you’re FINE.  If you were my girl, you’d have gold dripping all the way down to your <crotch critter>.”  Okay, I was working at a jewelry store at the time, but still.  If I was a rap producer, I might have been impressed.  A shy, naive blonde at the mall, not so much.

What approach is most likely to work with you:
Three for three now in the come-on department.  I do believe I’m gaining some insight into this skin mag’s customer base.  Do guys reading this even look beyond the photo spreads?  If so, do they pour over these bios, thinking that on the extremely rare chance they ever met one of these naughty nudes, they’d have a real shot at her?  “Oh, thank god I memorized Miss October’s favorite color and what-she’d-pack-on-a-picnic piece.  I am SO in….”

 

What signals do you give to a man when you want him to know you’re interested:
Umm, breathing??  In my experience, everything short of a knocking his five-o’clock shadow into eight o’clock is perceived as a green light.  Or at least yellow.  Gotta admire that bravado.  Or cluelessness.  Either way, a great defense mechanism.

Biggest turn-ons:
There are the obvious ones: confidence, intelligence, attractiveness, wit.  Of greater import is that inexplicable magic called chemistry.  Sparks aren’t cookie cutter, and difficult to dissect in minutia.  But my attention has always been caught and held by passionate romantics.  Hard-core, Harlequin types.  A rogue pirate captain ravaging the fair, tousle-haired maiden, who plays coy but is secretly begging to have her bodice ripped off by those strong sea hands.  The reality is, if he tore my limited edition Guess bustier or ruined my good hair day, he’d be wearing my vodka gimlet.  So he needs to be clever; a modern day Jack Sparrow.

Biggest turn-offs:
Odor.  No thanks on the stank. BO is bad, so is OD.  Even the best cologne becomes vomit-inducing in concentrated doses.  Dude, that’s spritz, not Spitz (as in Mark, the Olympian pool boy).  Swimming in Polo is a NoNo.

Guilty Pleasures:
I’m supposed to feel guilty about things that bring me pleasure?  I’m really glad I didn’t get that memo.  I’ll save the guilt for things I don’t do, but should.  Like dusting.  Seriously, where is that Swiffer?

Ambitions:
I’m on the other side of forty.  That’s earned me the right to slack off.  Hey, if I get out of bed in the morning and go to work, I should get an A for effort.  And bonus points if my shoes match.

Foods I Crave:
Ah, that sweet temptress called ice cream.  I’m gäga for the Häagen-Dazs, needy for the Edy’s, the Dairy Queen.  That smooth, creamy confection is definitely my desert island pick.  Make that dessert island.

People I Admire:
You know, I’m really starting to admire those mansion models.  There are still a handful of questions left, but I feel like I’m reheating leftovers.  And really, how many ways can you dress-up meatloaf?

That’s enough about me, at least for this initial snapshot.  Not exactly Pulitzer Prize or master’s thesis material, then again, initial meetings aren’t supposed to be too deep.

pink yellow thin line

With so much to cover in this amazing ride we call Life — trivial to tantamount, laughable to logical, lustful to loving, and everything in between — I’ll be posting regularly.

Thanks for stopping by.  I hope you come again soon.

Pinkitude:
“We probably wouldn’t worry about what people think of us
if we could know how seldom they do.”
~ Olin Miller

Impassioned by the Pen,
Platinum Pink

Thanks for stopping by, and come back soon.