Showing posts with label Dianna's Stuff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dianna's Stuff. Show all posts

Sunday, June 1, 2014

We're Sick But The Fun Continues

Bob and I both have horrid head colds.  Luckily it has not struck the boys.  Misery notwithstanding we has lots of fun this weekend.

 

First up...beautiful weather for the Rays







Then I had a fun night out celebrating a friend's birthday.


Today we hit the pool.


After a pancake breakfast to raise money for the fire department.




And we had a great nap and some snuggle time this afternoon.



Sunday, January 19, 2014

SAG Awards Fashion Review!

First the ones I loved:
Best of the night.  LOVED LOVED LOVED it. And those big damn earrings.  And that hair.

Usually whatever she wears is overshadowed by the fact that I really can't stand her for some reason.  I know.."girl next door" blah blah blah.  Whatever.   But this is a fantastic  dress and she looked great in it.  It fit her so well and it moved beautifully.

This is just so right on her frame.  And I love the matching lipstick here.  And the contrast with her sharp hair and the flow-i-ness of the dress is great, too. 

Interesting and really right for her.  Nice lines.

Nancy can wear a dress like nobody's business.  This is simple and beautiful.

I thought this was a great color with her bright blonde hair and I love the BR BA clutch. 

Now the baddies: 

I don't even know what to say about this.  Looks like it was made in 8th grade sewing class somewhere.  Mess.  Hot mess.

Worst of the night.  And her eyeshadow made me look away in horror.  What is this?  Looks like something from a haunted house. 

You know, with a big black hat for a polo match this would be fine.  But here.  Yuck. 

I think Nick Cannon needs to play Taps on his wife's fashion life.  Horrid.  Just boring and wrong for her body. And what is with the fingerless gloves?  Come on Butterfly.  Metamorphosis soon please. 



Sunday, January 12, 2014

Well, HELLO!


You know how in those 'icebreaker' exercises they ask you things like "Tell us something about you that no one knows." or  "Tell us your most embarrassing moment."?  On Friday, I had an experience that will now be my go-to story for that second one there.

I was flying back from four days in Phoenix at a sales meeting and connecting in Denver.   The second leg was taking off at 9:40pm east coast time and we weren't due to arrive at Dulles until 12:30am.  So, it was late.  That will be important later.

I have decent status with United Airlines so I had a good seat in a wide exit row next to the window.  If I can't be in first class, this is the next best thing.   At about 6 feet tall, the leg room is great for me.  Add to that the fact that the flight was only about 2/3 full and things were looking good.   In a 3 and 3 configuration, I had an empty seat next to me and boarding was just about done.  I struck up a nice conversation with the 50ish year-old looking guy in the aisle seat who was also a tall person like me.  I'd guess 6'3'' or so.  We had a great chat and he was charming.  He was traveling from Bismarck, North Dakota to Northern Virginia to visit his kids who live there with his ex-wife.  He told me he was an engineer and that he had formerly worked at Dulles Airport, which, after learning, lead me to pepper him with many questions about the way the new airport transit system is designed, etc.  It was very enlightening and he was kind to not make me feel like an idiot when I asked questions that were clearly from a design/planning simpleton. 

One of my colleagues was also on the flight but was seated in the last row next to the lavatory.  Suddenly he appeared from the back and announced "Hey, I'm going to move up here and sit with you."   My reaction to this would typically have been something along the lines of  ARE YOU KIDDING ME?  Here I am with an empty seat and you're going to come take it?   However, he's a nice guy so although I can't deny the thought crossed my mind, I was fine with it.  After a bit of wrangling with the flight attendants about the seat change and relocating his bag, he was plopped in between me and the nice engineer and we were off.

The flight proceeded normally.  The nice engineer never displayed any frustration with his also empty middle seat now being occupied.   I watched a movie.  My colleague did some work.  Nothing remarkable.  Until I decided I needed to go to the bathroom.

It was about 40 minutes before landing and I knew that the seat belt sign would be coming on soon.  I told my colleague of my plans and we both packed up our stuff and folded our tray tables.  Now--remember, I'm in an exit row.  One of those wide ones where, really, no one needs to get up.  There's at least as much room to walk past your seatmates as there is in theater.  So, knowing this to be the case, I make a critical mistake and don't pay full attention and assess my route.

Up I stand.  Hunched over due to the low ceiling.  I step in front of my colleague.  No problem.  Only then do I see it.  Only then does my challenge become evident.  That nice 6'3" engineer is sound asleep.  Comatose.  Really fast asleep and giant long legs vastly akimbo.

My brain assesses the situation and in a split second I decide this is doable.  I'll simply hurdle with giant steps into the spaces between his left leg and my colleagues right.  Then another step and one more and I'll be in the aisle.  I'll have to high-step it but my brain sends positive spacial information to me and I spring forth. Forward propulsion begins and I'm off.

Two movements into it, the whole plan crumbles.  Somehow the execution of my graceful plan is not achievable.  I freeze in a panic, unable to move the leg behind me up and over and out into the aisle.  The fact that I've now made eye contact with two or three other passengers who are watching this doubtful plan and are now smiling at the giant hunched over blonde who's clearly not capable of escape.  The physical inability to pull it off and now the social trauma has locked me in place -- you guessed it--right between his legs.

My plan now is to regroup and decide to either find a way to proceed or retreat.  But just as I'm making this decision the engineer senses my presence.  His eyes flutter open slowly and then spring wide as he exclaims "Well!  Hello!"  I am literally standing in this man's crotch.

I burst into nervous laughter and tell him that I was trying to get out without waking him and he smiles and says "No problem.  I woke up and saw you standing there over me and I thought to myself that this just turned into the best plane ride EVER."   Everyone awake and nearby was now in total hysterics.

What a nice man.   What a klutz!

Saturday, January 11, 2014

Two More Down!


visited 41 states (82%)
Create your own visited map of The United States or Free iphone travel guide


 I first took stock of my "stateliness" in 2011 and I had yet to visit 11.  Since then I've knocked of two more. Minnesota (I've now been there three times AND I saw my first ever Bruce Springsteen concert there.  And just this week I got to go to Arizona--to Phoenix--for a sales meeting.

9 TO GO!!

Friday, January 10, 2014

Chihuly In The Garden

In Phoenix for a sales meeting and had time to go see an full blown outdoor Dale Chihuly installation at the Desert Botanical Garden.  What a unique opportunity.  I am not overstating it when I say that I think this man is a genius an if I met him I might faint.  This stuff just speaks to me.  It is joy in glass.













Thursday, November 21, 2013

Saturday, May 11, 2013

My First Job--A Pharmaceutical Intervention

The Clancy's pharmacy building today.   I used to "merchandise" those front windows.


I've grown to really love a good true life story.  I've started to find great questions to ask people that engender them to dig deep and tell me their stories.   This is one of mine that I have told so many times.

Clancy's Beachwood Pharmacy.  That's the name.  That's the place.  It was, once, the remaining center of a tiny downtown.  The downtown of my hometown...Beachwood, New Jersey.

There was a small town grocery around the corner where you told the grocer what you wanted and he piled it all up on the butcher block counter an tallied your charges on paper.  The kind of place where they still wrapped your meat in brown paper with red and white string.  There was a barber shop.  The old-fashioned kind with the metal chairs and spinning candy-can striped pole.  One of those places that only men frequented.  However, by the time I got to high-school, the grocer had closed and the pharmacy was the main remaining business.  The owner had started an attached "Tobacco" store with newspapers, cigarettes, lottery tickets and candy.  Another building housed his surgical supply store.  He had also opened a very forward-thinking video store in the next building over.    He basically owned the block and was a small town entrepreneur.  More on him later.

The thing to do when I was growing up and you turned 15 1/2 years of age was to get your NJ "working papers".  I cannot remember the legal technicalities around it, but you needed these if you were going to be employed in a non-agricultural setting or in a non-family business.  Getting them was somewhat of a "rite of passage" for working class kids--of which I was one.  So, I got mine.  However, the idea of actually working was ridiculous.  I just wanted to be empowered to do it if I wanted to.   I had no idea nor intention to actually work.  I was very busy with school, flag squad, and various social activities.  The universe and my father had very different plans as I would soon learn.

My mom worked part time as a real-estate agent and my dad was the master (captains work for masters) of tug boats.   Mom's job brought income in spurts.  Dad's job paid well but could be very dependent on seasonality.  When I was very young, it seemed as if he was always being "laid off" just before Christmas.  This makes sense because if it is freezing cold outside and harbors are icy, dredging and other tug boat operations slow down to a halt.   We never wanted for a thing but as I grew older and was more exposed to more affluent people I started to ask for more and better material goods.   Like any teenage girl, my insatiable need for clothes and makeup and hair products was a rising tide.  I wanted a pair of Jordache jeans in the worst way and my mother thought I had lost my mind because of how expensive they were.  I remember there being a mounting tension in the house around this issue. 

One day, some time after I'd gotten the aforementioned "working papers" as a symbol of someday independence, my dad came home from work in the afternoon and putzed around the garage for awhile as he often did.  Then, he came inside and asked me if I wanted to run down to "Clancy's" with him for cigarettes.  I agreed, of course, because...well...he was my dad and one didn't really NOT do what he wanted. So, I climbed in the passenger seat of whatever car he as was working on at the time and drove down the street to Clancy's Beachwood Pharmacy.

Clancy's was the place where we went for Hallmark cards, prescriptions, candy, cheap make-up, etc.  I knew it well and had been going in and out of there for years.   There was a sweet older German lady named Emme who worked at the cosmetics counter (yes, they had a cosmetics counter) in a light pink kind of house - coat garment somewhat similar to the Clinique staff wears today.  I knew her a bit and I knew the owner, Frank Clancy, just because he was the big man in town due to the fact that he owned all those stores.   So, when we pulled up in front of the place, I was in known territory.

Dad stopped the car and took the keys out of the ignition and just sat there.  He made no motion to get out.  I recall a moment of confusion and then saying something to the effect of "Do you want me to go get them?" meaning his cigarettes.  He turned to me and said "No.  I don't need cigarettes.  But you do need to go inside." Again, confused, I must have questioned or made a quizzical face.   And then it came.   "Go inside. Go see Frank. You start work in 15 minutes.  You're working for him as a cashier from 5-10 pm two weeknights and a shift on the weekends".

Imagine that.  Bam.  Go inside.  You have a job.   You are going to work.  You are going to grow up.  In the next 5 minutes you are going to change. Just like that.  Snap.

I don't exactly recall what happened next.  I remember being shocked and scared and intimidated.  But you really didn't argue or disagree with my dad very much.  At least I didn't.  I must have fussed a bit and I do remember him saying something to the effect of  "If you want all these things you keep asking for you need to earn your own money and pay for them."    I went inside and started my job.  I would work there for the next four years.

Clancy's was a community. The cast of characters was amazing.  It was a big jumbled dysfunctional family that was led by its patriarch, Frank.  Frank was a big man of about 6'2'' and prematurely white haired.  He always wore one of those white zip-up pharmacist coats.  He had a bad leg that was constantly in one of those air boots.  He'd had varicose vein surgery that had resulted in such poor circulation that he constantly had a leg ulcer and he kind of lumbered around dragging that leg behind him all of the time.  He moved fast for a big hobbled man though.  Lots of times late at night there would be drunks or thieves or other disturbances and I'd see him really pull it together and run after people.

He was a widower with two grown sons, one of which worked for him running the surgical supply business and the other was a physician.  I don't know exactly how old he was at this time but I'd guess around 55.  Frank's deceased wife's mother lived with him and she was a tiny little chubby lady who didn't speak English very well.  She was from somewhere in Eastern Europe but I don't know exactly where.   On the weekends she'd come in with giant casserole dishes of stuffed peppers or cabbage or kielbasa baked with potatoes and onions.   Frank was constantly farting and the weekends were gas festivals after this food would arrive.

Frank's older brother, John, was also a pharmacist and worked at the store.  John was kind and a bit frailer.  He was also a big man, but had lost a lung to cancer and used oxygen all the time.  This fact, however, did not keep him from smoking.  He'd sit in a chair that was tucked in between the arcs of the pharmaceutical shelves behind the counter and smoke Parliaments while the oxygen tube was still up his nose.  I used to tell him all the time that he was going to blow us all up but he'd just say "Nah.  It just makes my cigarettes burn faster."

Frank's key employee was a guy named Tony who was probably about 35 years old.  Tony did everything.  He unloaded the trucks and stocked the shelves.  He cleaned the windows and the floors.  He kept the heat and the air conditioning running.  Frank was fond of Tony and treated him like a son.  Tony lived above one of the stores in an apartment and was a fixture.   Frank had kind of taken Tony in as a teenager.  Tony came from a lousy family and he'd had drug and alcohol and mental health issues.   He was what today we'd call bi-polar and had actually been institutionalized at the state psychiatric hospital at Marlboro.  He kind of reminded me of the character of Jim on the sitcom "Taxi".  He had that same low voice and wild-eyed kind of look.   Late at night when things were quiet in the store he'd absolutely kill us with stories of the crazy situations he'd been in when he was young and he'd make fun of anyone who came in that he thought had a screw loose.  He'd tell us what it was like at Marlboro at "feeding time" when all the patients/inmates would get their Thorazine and then do what he called the "Thorazine Strut" and walk around in circles for hours.   He was the leader of all of the hi-jinx that went on.  Even then I was a bit more game than the average girl and Tony and I would cook up ridiculous stuff.  One of our favorite things to do was to take down the condom racks late on Friday night.  We'd drag them to the back of the store which would force any guy coming in for a pack of Trojans to have to come to me, the 16 year-old female cashier and ASK where they were.  That was fun enough to start with but later we improved it by telling guys that we were totally out except for the multi-colored party packs.   Tony would give me $5 bucks every time I sold a box of party pink or yellow condoms.  We would absolutely howl when the guys would leave the store.    Tony had street smarts and I learned alot from his very acute and usually correct observations about people.  He told me who to watch out for and who to trust.

That nice older lady named Emme also wore a zip up jacket but hers was light pink.  She was spry and had the most beautiful fair, translucent skin.   She and her husband barely ate real food and subsisted mainly on vegetable juicing.  She'd extol the virtues of clean eating all of the time.  She also loved to steal the occasional lipstick and she was constantly tucking ones she thought would look nice on me into my purse.

There was a regular customer we called "Coach" who was the football coach at Admiral Farragut Academy.   This was a naval prep school in Pine Beach just down the road.  Coach was tough ball of a man and he was Frank's friend.  He was also a dirty old pig.  He'd hold my hand and wiggle his finger in my palm and constantly grab my ass.  He wasn't threatening in any way, just tedious.

There was always a parade of new cashiers and pharmacy assistants.  They would come and go.  Usually they'd go.    The cash register was the old fashioned kind that didn't calculate change for you and this was a make-it-or-break it issue.  So many people just could not do the math.  I can't recall how many times I tried to teach idiot girls my age or younger how to "count up" to make change.

The customers were a constant source of fascination.   After so many years of selling cigarettes, if I know you smoke, I can guess your brand and have about a 75% chance of being correct.  That used to be pretty close to 100%.   I could spot a Virginia Slims lady a mile away, not to mention the always reliable profile of the Kool Menthol smoker.  There were the panicky young parents in the middle of the night seeking baby aspirin and asking Frank to check out their feverish infants.   The African-American ladies with their periods looking for Lydia Pinkham's Tablets.   And there were always the drug addicts looking to buy codeine cough syrup or Paregoric because at that time you could buy it over the counter but you had to give ID and sign a book.  Supposedly the DEA kept track of who bought the stuff but that giant carbon copy book sat on the shelf for 4 years and the DEA never came in once. The Paregoric purchasers always made me wonder how it felt to be kind of a little high and totally constipated.

I also worked as the pharmacy assistant which meant that I filled the prescriptions while Frank and John watched TV and did other stuff.   John always paid a bit more attention, but the truth is that for most prescriptions its not rocket science to find the bottle with the right drug and dosage and count out 20 pills.   I marvel that today with all of the computers and technology that pharmacists have survived as a profession.  I'm not sure why you need someone with an advanced degree to do that work.  Especially since none of them can give medical advice as they used to.   One thing that really stands out in my mind about filling prescriptions was a mark of the times.  The AIDS epidemic was just beginning and I remember Frank noting that suddenly there were alot of men getting prescriptions for oral yeast infections.   Thrush is one of the first signs of immune suppression.  What was crazy about it was that there was no prescription oral med.  Doctors simply prescribed those waxy vaginal yeast infection tablets that you popped into your mouth and let dissolve. Frank got so sick of men freaking out about it when they saw the boxes with the pictures of the vaginal insertion instructions that eventually we started using chloroform on a long q-tips to swipe off the the pictures and any appearance of the word "vaginal" on the boxes.   Chloroform removed the printing as if magic and it stopped all of the protests from the men about what the hell were we giving them and that we'd clearly made a mistake.  Frank didn't seem to care that tampering with prescription labeling was probably some kind of federal offense.  We used chloroform often because it is a great cleaning agent and we'd use to use it once a month or so to really clean down the counters. The occupational hazard is that it knocks you out cold.   I fainted twice doing this but Frank knew its probability and both times he was right there to catch me and bring me around with some smelling salts.

Working there was a great life experience.   It was part of my becoming an adult and it acutely focused me on the ways people's lives go off in different directions.   It showed me a full and sometimes heartbreaking view of the world around me outside of my protected home.   I'm sure there are a bunch of reasons I never did drugs as did many of my peers but I'm also sure that working here was a big part of that.   Working there made me confident to talk to people.  To help them.  It made me learn how to question people about what they wanted.  Make them be specific.  It showed me that when you were in charge--when you knew your stuff--people trust you.

Thanks, Dad.  I'm sure you just wanted me to be responsible and buy my own Jordache jeans but you gave me a whole lot more than that the day you dropped me off and told me to get my ass to work.  





Saturday, November 3, 2012

Hurricane Sandy

This past Monday the mid-Atlantic coast of the United States was absolutely devastated by a hurricane that collided with a nor'easter.  Schools were closed here on Monday and Tuesday and, of course, we were very worried about my family, friends and co-workers in New Jersey.  In the end, we just had some very profound wind and rain.  Around 70 roads in our county were closed after the storm due to downed trees and flooding.  The Garden State, however, was hit very hard.  Sandy came ashore in southern New Jersey near Cape May at high tide on the day of the full moon.  The water damage to the coast and to New York City is pretty much unimaginable.  Luckily, no one I love or care about suffered more than lost electricity and cable TV.  As of today, however, the death toll is over 100 and literally hundreds of thousands of people have no where to live.  Houses that were there on Sunday were gone on Tuesday-wiped off the map.  Manhattan was dark for days.   The subway system is flooded.  It is not a exaggeration to say that the images coming out of there are downright apocalyptic. 

Mother Nature is a bitch when she wants to be.

For me,  the most profound thing is the damage to Seaside Heights and Park...the boardwalk beach towns where I grew up and spent my summers.  Its where I played with my Pop-Pop as a little girl and built sandcastles and dug big holes (Wow, that wave totally knocked his bathing suit off!).  Its where I goofed off as a teenager--ditching school early as soon as it got warm to go over and lay on the beach with my friends (Sunblock, nah.  We used baby oil and IODINE).   Its where I first got drunk and chased guys and was generally stupid (The Bamboo Bar--no appropriate stories to share here).  In short, its the place in our memory that all have...a place that somehow sort of makes us what we are but that we leave behind to move on to better and other places and things.  That place, wherever it is,  never really leaves us.  But now, for me, that place is changed.   The boardwalk is devastated.  Buildings are gone.   It won't ever, ever be the same.

I'm grateful I lost nothing substantive.  But I'm sad for the place and the people.  

Visible Satellite image of Sandy before she came ashore

Connor just rode this coaster in July. 

Casino Pier

Washed away homes








Sunday, June 3, 2012

My Mamas

Over a fateful few weeks in 2003, I met some women that have made my life so very rich. We all came together in a new mother's support group after having our first babies and we've been together ever since. This year we snuck away for a weekend at a beach house in Fenwick Island, Delaware. It was lovely. The house. The women. The beach. I cherish all of it and all of them so very much.


Monday, April 9, 2012

Easter Weekend Blossoms

This picture doesn't capture the brightness of this azalea on a hidden path at Cylburn Arboretum

And this one was so big and the color contrast within each petal was amazing.

Look at this clump of fluffy double blossoms on this city cherry at the Inner Harbor

This gorgeous monster is on the backside of Fort McHenry. 

And this Mountain Laurel was at the arboretum.

And this one...well she just has the best hair-colorist!

Ha!  Gotcha!

Saturday, March 24, 2012

Joan, Joan, Joan


Season 5 of Mad Men begins tomorrow and I am anticipating it greatly.   There have been a fantastic few years of great dramatic television series and Mad Men is certainly at top of my list, right up there with The Sopranos and True Blood.   So much about the show appeals to me.   The office environment, the male/female workplace dynamics, the era (which isn't much examined), the deeply emotional and psychologically complex story lines and character development.  It is a deep and delicate dance that is peppered with intermittent moments of horror and revulsion.

Though the molten core of the show is certainly Don and Peggy, I must admit a fascination with Joan. Played by Christina Hendricks, she is an intriguing and beguiling character.  Joan is the office manager for the advertising agency that is the backbone of Mad Men.  She is sexy but maternal.  She is tough but knows when to back off.  She lets the madness around her happen and chooses her moment to intervene carefully.  She is fantastic under pressure---a force of stillness in the midst of mayhem.  She can be cutting and direct, but her motives are rarely poor.

One of the scenes that encapsulates her to me is this one...maybe one of the most memorable Mad Men sequences ever.  Bear in mind that this idiocy is happening in the office where everyone is drunk after work and thinking its rational to drive around a lawn mower.  (Side note:  I talked to my former boss this week and we've often talked about Joan as he's a Mad Men fan too and he said he'd never be able to watch this again because his son cut off his toe with the lawnmower this past weekend!)  You'll see Joan being Joan--both in her interaction with Peggy and with the "incident".  Handling it.  Dealing.  On point.  She rarely shows weakness unless she knows she can do it safely and unobserved.

I totally admit that egocentric or not,  I see glimmers of myself in her. I definitely identify with her and that is why I love her character so much.  I need 25 pounds surrendered to the treadmill,  her wardrobe and push up bras, and her hair color.  And then you can bring on the madness---or more of it, anyway.

Sunday, March 18, 2012

My Middle Name Is Marilyn (Really)


Love this.  Just love it. 

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Happy Birthday, Dianna!

Tomorrow is my 45th birthday so I hunted through the piles of photos and I only really have these two from my babyhood.

I'm pretty little in this first one.   The couch pattern is classic, isn't it?  We had that sofabed in our basement for years.  I remember it as being pretty comfortable!  I'm all baby face scrunched up here.  Nothing is written on the back and it has no date. 



This next one has a companion somewhere in which they have actually placed a cigarette and a martini glass in my little hands.  My Dad is looking tan and handsome and that's my Mom's graceful hand.  The back of the photo, in my mother's writing, says "Dianna, the young chunk".  (What the hell?) Then, in big black marker, in my sister's writing it says "Daddy and Mom and Michelle".  WRONG.  The photo is develop dated as July, 1967 so its definitely me.  She must have been going through a phase where she wanted to eliminate any photographic record of me.  :)