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Monday, March 30, 2009

Clothes! Parties! Rock Stars! Dilling!

It's about 11pm here on the west coast, which would be 1pm back home (if I had any sense of time left at all anymore) and I have to get up and git in the morning... here are my pictures from the red carpet, my visit with my wonderful amazing blogbuddy Dilling, and two record-label afterparties.  


"Hey!  You wanna be in our picture?"

"YEAHHHHH!"



Sometimes, I can't believe this is my life.  



Technicolor stage



DILLING!!!
Our visit was way too short, but better than not seeing each other at all.  She's awesome!

Me an' Starla trying out "fierce" like all the famous people.

awwwww.... he so niiiice....


If you were wondering if I got pictures of famous people... Yes. Although if you're not Canadian you might not recognize them.  (more tomorrow!)





It was a long and very exciting day.  After many hours standing around in dimly lit, loud rooms full of people, in a different time zone, I sort of let myself relax while waiting for Jethro to finish his "bizness networking."  I woke up when I felt the flash through my eyelids.  Geez.  

I was hard core tired.  We got to bed at 3 am and I was convinced that the sun was about to come up.

Speaking of which...

Gnite!

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Black tie PICTURES awards gala PICTURES Jethro and I cleaned up PICTURES

SPOILER ALERT:  Jethro did not win the Juno award for Engineer of the Year. It went to the awesome Kevin Churko, who also won last year.  (I think Jethro's relieved- he hates being the centre of attention.)

That's what he's got me for.  I can't help it; I tend to do stupid things regardless of where I am.  Here I am  ironing my VINTAGE dress.  I know- my talents are far reaching, eh?  Meanwhile, Jethro had a hard time picking between his black shirt, and his black shirt. 

He took pictures and then I freaked out that I had to put on my face and everything, so... he finished ironing the ruffle.  He is awesome.  

OH look, here we are!  This is the first time I've worn a black dress to one of these things.  I used to always wear black (like twenty years ago at my prom!) but then a few years ago my brain rearranged itself and now I like pink.   

Hence pink roses in my hair and pink shoes.  TELL ME YOU LOVE MY SHOES.  I know you do, don't even try to be all cool about it.  You totally love my shoes!

Oh look, our Bubba finally got to leave the studio for a weekend!  Here he is, all cleaned up and showing off his lovely little lady, Starla!
 
Starla rocks.  She and I like to see who's taller depending on what shoes we're wearing.  You should tell Starla that you like her shoes too, okay?

Starla took me shoe shopping yesterday.  We are a truly awesome shopping team, because we both like to pick things up and touch them and whisper about how much we love the item and how cute it is... and then not buy it because it costs too much. 

Hey- look what I found at our table:
  

This is so funny!  Just think about it: Cougars for Kroegar.  What?  Are we voting?  Am I old enough to be a cougar?  Is there a Best Belt Buckle award that I didnt know about???

But wait- it gets better.  Halfway through the night, after I'd passed them around to the rest of the table, a security jarhead came along, you know, with the little cord behind his ear and everything, to scoop up the last of them.  Turns out, these little buttons were "unauthorized" and caused a "security breach."  Come on, that is some funny stuff!

Also funny: the fact that when I tried on my 20-year old dress, I did not sit down in it.  It got reeeeally tight.  Ooof.
And yet, I smiled for the camera.  So did Jethro.  He was not, NOT inebriated in this picture (or at all this evening), he simply does not like having his picture taken.

I like this one...
...except for my forehead vein.  And my evil red eyes.  I'll have to fix that later.  Unless I pop a vein later. 

Darnit, we always look drunk in these pictures, and we're not!  I don't get it.  Weird. 

So like, they put white roses all over the tables, and by the end of the evening, I am doing this:
I cannot be trusted.



How to attend a Black Tie Gala Awards Event in a room fulla rockstahs

First, months before the event, accept that you do not have large cash to buy a new dress.

Do not freak out that you wore the same dress two years in a row or that you wore another same dress two years before that.  You are now left with two choices: 

1) accept that you are not famous and nobody's comparing pictures of you over the years.

2) accept that if you want to wear something different, it's going to fall under the category of VINTAGE which means a) your closet or b) Thrift store.

If you're lucky, right around that time you go on a crazy obsessive closet purge, during which you find a black velvet dress -which you had completely forgotten about - stuffed into a garment bag with something else.

"What the heck is this thing?" you mutter.  "My 1989 prom dress???"

Once the plastic bag is ripped off the hanger, you realize that it;s much less hideous than all the other things you wore that year... in fact, it might just be... workable.

Does it fit?  That was twenty years ago.  Bravely, you wiggle into it, get somebody to pull up the zipper (zip me up, Buster) and wiggle it into place.  MIRACULOUSLY it fits.  Your husband tells you it actually fits better now, because unlike your teenage self, you now have HIPS.  You thank your biological offspring for having big heads and decide this is your dress.  

Problem solved.

Jethro's black suit jacket and two shirts, both black, go to the drycleaners and back again.  The question remains as to why the heck drycleaning costs so much.  What do they do to your clothes when you turn your back?

So the stuff is in a suitcase, which ends up with you in a hotel room.  You've decided that for once in your adult life you're going to act like a grownup and wear some real high heeled nice looking shoes rather than your usual choice of a) black knee high platform boots or b) white knee high boots or c) red ankle boots.  

You're totally okay with the boots thing.  Boots are life.  Know that:  BOOTS ARE LIFE.  But just once, pretty shoes would be okay.  

But they don't have to be respectable.  

Hours later you come back to your nice hotel room with hot pink shoes.  They're satin like a bridesmaid's shoes.  They'll brighten up a black dress.

Normally you'd love black.  But darnit, half the women there are wearing black.  You gotta spice things up don't you?  Yes you do; somebody has to and it's gotta be you.  Don't wait for anybody else.  

So you get a couple of pink roses to put in your hair.  

That's better.

Jethro thinks he's going to wear the bronze coloured tie tonight.  I know; how daring of this man in black!  You think, silently, that it's good, because if he wins another Juno you can tell this one apart from the first one in the pictures because the first time he won he was wearing a black tie.

The Awards Gala has now become a Gold Tie Event.

One problem persists.

He does not have his black jeans.

He goes shopping ONCE A YEAR and it's the weekend of the Juno Awards.  It's his only time off when he's not building things or fixing things or biking with kids or falling asleep on the couch.  
So you set out on a mission to find black jeans.  

More later.... with the possibility of pictures...

Oh you must stay tuned, this is GRIPPING ENTERTAINMENT!  

Friday, March 27, 2009

Friday Vancouver ROCKSTAR report

# OF ROCK STARS SPOTTED:

Two- There were two Barenaked Ladies on the plane with us.  (In case you don't know that band, they are neither naked, nor ladies.)  I didn't say hi.  I'm holding off my tradition of making a total fool of myself in front of famous people until, well, tonight possibly...

# OF TIMES WE'VE BEEN ASKED IF WE'RE IN TOWN FOR THE JUNOS:

Three.  

# OF TIMES WE'VE BEEN ASKED IF WE'RE PERFORMING:
One.  By the dude at the hotel desk who had a crazy waxed mustache.

Note:  We get asked every time we do this thing.  It makes me laugh.  They're trying to figure out if we're somebody they should make a Big Deal out of. 

# OF STRANGE ASIAN FOODS WE'VE EATEN SINCE GETTING HERE:

Lost count.  It was all very tasty but I have only a vague idea of what it was and I'm feeling very adventurous about the whole thing!

# OF STORES OPEN AT 9 AM: 

None.  This town is loooow key, man.  Cooool.

# OF EMAILS JETHRO HAS GOTTEN ON HIS iGADGET FROM OUR DAUGHTER "TRIBBLE"

Three.  She found out I went shoe shopping here without her.  

COLOUR OF MY NEW SHOES:

Hot pink, babeeeee!

COLOUR OF WEST COAST SKY:

Grey, silver, white and grey.

COLOUR OF THE GRASS:

It's green!  I forgot that grass is supposed to be green because at home in Ontario it's slimy brown, accented by crusty brown dirty snowbanks.  The trees are budding here!  Wow.

# OF TIMES I'VE TALKED TO MY AWESOME BLOGBUDDY DILLING:

Three?  Oh my gosh, she even sounds cool!  I can't wait to meet her!!!!

Now... off to the hand-shakin', free-beer-drinkin, or-durve eatin' Juno welcome reception!  Later!

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Gittin on a plane now, ROCKSTAHS!

Leavin' the house
Granma's holdin' down the fort
Dobby's totally okay with The Mommy of the Mommy
I packed my red boots
and Jethro's black suit
and my 70s Camaro dress

flying to Vancouver
stuffed full of anti-anxiety pills

snoooooze

kid's teacher called from school to congratulate for the Juno nomination

weird

gotta run

updates later

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Holysmokes, airplane, hotel, rockstar, Jethro, two days from now, Holyjeepers

I AM LEAVING IN TWO DAYS.

I HAVE NOT STARTED PACKING.

I AM NOT SURE YET WHAT I AM GOING TO WEAR WHEN WE DO OUR RED CARPET WALK

HANG ON... MY BIGGEST PROBLEM RIGHT NOW IS THAT I DO NOT KNOW WHAT I'LL BE WEARING WHEN WE WALK THE RED CARPET.  

My life is actually kinda  pretty much okay, I guess.

I've known about this little trip for long enough that I should have been able to get it together, but I've been thinking about other stuff.  Other stuff can really take up a lot of brain room.  

I made a packing list.  Well, I started a list.  That counts, right?

I got my hair done... that definitely counts.

Here's the strange thing about me:  I usually get the straight male hairstylist.  And I like it.  

This time around, it was Stavros, and I'm thinking he's a keeper.  Not only did he do an awesome job of layering my thick mess of wavy hair, and sneak some groovy cherry-red highlights in there, but he's also 22, Greek and gorgeous!  He's got those big dark brown eyes, curly hair, a perfect forehead (Yeah I notice everything) and those big pretty lips.  Nice arms too.  Just a lovely young fella.  

I took Jethro's car up to the salon (not saloon) knowing that he'd trade it around for the truck when he had to leave for work.  This is what Jethro told me later, when I phoned him:

"I looked in the window but I didn't see you.  I was thinking of coming in to say hi, but I figured you were having such a nice time looking at Stavros while he had his hands in your hair, you didn't need me pokin' my hairy mug in there and ruining it for ya!"

Jethro is awesome.  

Speaking of which, I think it would be kind of nice if he won a Juno this year.  He's in a category with a few guys he's really looked up to over the years.  Get that - he admired them, and now he's one of them.  There could be 20-year olds who are admiring ol' Jethro right now.

I know I do.

I gotta cut off this incredibly random, rambling, aimless blog post now... I should really wash some dishes before my Mom comes up here to hang with my kids and dog and house.  Also I should do some laundry.  And look at my hair one more time.  

Monday, March 23, 2009

He looks like he just lost his best friend... but he's a Pug so it's hard to tell

The last couple of weeks have been difficult and sad for our little sad-faced dog.  

Two weeks ago we said goodbye to his good friend Jazz , a sweet old Shepherd cross dog, and four days ago his housemate Nigel the cat died.  No wonder the poor guy is feeling agitated.  He paces the house sniffing, and barks at the wind.  He doesn't really settle down until bedtime, when he's up on my bed, curled up snoring behind our knees.

Without Nigel, he doesn't know what to do with himself.  I figured this would happen.  Like our children, Dobby grew up with this cat.

Nigel was 15 when we brought the puppy into our home.  Any older and I think it would have stressed him out too much.  He handled it well, although at first he seemed unsure as to what exactly this tiny creature was...

"Holy geez, what the..."
"Um, guys?  Hey?  I woke up and uh... I think you should come and look at this... Guys???"

It didn't take long for the cat to figure out what the deal was with the dog.  Basically, he was still the boss, the first, the supreme being.  Easy.  The puppy just wanted attention.  It was an effortless situation.  All the had to do, as boss cat, was tolerate the young whelp and swat him every now and then if he got out of line.

(At grandma's house, soaking up the woodstove.  Good times.  Notice how the puppy worked his way closer to the cat.  This dog really is a love-sponge.)
They reminded me of that cartoon with the two dogs... you know, the little yippy one bounces up and down, "whaddawe doin' now boss" and the bull dog swipes the yippy one and growls, "Aw shaddup."  That kind of thing.  

Only with more catly smugness. 


On Dobby's first birthday, we set them both on a couch for pictures.

I love Nigel's expression, like, "Yeah, he's cute.  Do you mind?  He's getting heavy."
 
And then, "Darn kid.  Don't tell him I like him."


They shared the sun spot at the sliding doors...


... a sunny day past-time that they continued right up to the end.

 Nigel used to be our front door greeter, but as he got older and his hearing decreased, he left the job up to the dog.  

Dobby was young in this picture.  He ended up being quite a bit bigger than the cat.  But then again, the cat did shrink a lot in his last years.  

Jazz lived up the street and was Dobby's first dog-girl-friend.  She was a well mannered lady who loved to bark.  She patiently taught Dobby how to sit nicely beside the dinner table, walk down the street without pulling your human, and how to effectively guard the house.  

She was so patient with him.  He must have driven her nutty.  When her hips started getting sore, she'd just lie down and let him run circles around her.  They had a few days when I thought he brought out a little spark of youth in her, and other days when he'd just lick her nose and wait, tail wagging, for her to play.  



I'm sure he's feeling their absence.  

I have to keep him occupied, well exercised, and cuddled.  He'll be okay.  

He's still got his long-distance girlfriend, Ruby...
 

 ...and as soon as her puppies are weaned, I'm sure she'll be willing to speak to him again!

And life goes on.

Friday, March 20, 2009

Goodbye, Nigel.

Yesterday we had to say a final goodbye to our wonderful good old cat. 

Our friendly, smug, regal, doglike, affectionate, superior, smart, gentle, crooked-eared, beloved cat.

We knew it was inevitable.  He was at least 19 years old.  It's just not natural for a cat to live that long... he couldn't hear anymore, he creaked when he walked, he was easily startled and he no longer washed his fur or sharpened his claws.  His balance was off.  He really had become dependent on us (me) to care for him.  And he got all the care and love that we could possibly give him, unconditionally.

For the last year, I gently combed his fur,  changed the water in all the bowls regularly so he'd want to drink, and I picked the dirty litter out of his paws when he was too uncoordinated to avoid the wet stuff in the box.  I'd take a few minutes away from whatever I was doing to curl up on the couch beside him and pet him, slowly, whisper to him uselessly, listen for the creaky purr that I remember being so strong and vigorous.  I crushed down my disgust when I found litter critters in my bed. It was all worth it, just to have that cat in my life.  

But we knew.  As a family we talked about what would come next.  Nobody wanted to talk about it but we had to.

Yesterday afternoon it was obvious that his time was running out.  He waited for us to come home, but he was done.  We held him and cuddled him.  His breathing was so shallow.  He was weak.  The difficult decision was right there in front of us.  I had my doubts we'd even get there.  I could feel his life drifting out of him, no exaggeration.  He was leaving us.  

My husband and I took him to the vet, wrapped him a blanket.  Nigel curled up against my chest and stayed there.  The vet gave him a sedative, then assured us she'd be back in about ten minutes.  I know the routine.  Sedation, then the euthanization.  A very humane and peaceful way for the animal to go.  

I refused to set him down until it was all over.  He wheezed out his last breaths, and twitched his legs.  Under my fingers, I couldn't feel his heartbeat anymore.  

The vet came back, quietly, with the needle, but I whispered, "He's already gone."  For the last few minutes I wasn't really sure... but I could feel that what I was holding was just what was left.  We laid him down on the steel table, and I curled his tail around his hind legs, tucked his paw over his nose the way he'd like it.

It was a tough afternoon.

My kids don't know life without Nigel.  He sort of helped me raise them.  Even before they were born, he purred for them.  His passing has not been a shock at all, but it's still hard to let him go.  

Today we tried to get on with it.  I washed his food bowls, but I don't know where to put them now.  I have a litter box full of basically clean litter in the laundry room.  I have a basket full of brushes and a drawer full of canned food.  I feel kind of empty and lost. 

The kids thought they'd like to save his ashes but I didn't want to do that.  I don't need it.  I've got pictures of him, and all four of us will remember him forever.  Besides, there's a nearly $500 cost to save the ashes, and I couldn't justify the expense.  Wouldn't it be better to instead spend some money, some day in the future, to adopt another cat?  Wouldn't Nigel want it that way?  For another homeless cat to become a part of our family?

It won't happen for quite a while.  I can't face it yet.  Any cat would fall short compared to Nigel at this point.  We all have some grieving to do.  I think each of us has a big hollow spot in us now.  

But we can't be catless forever.  A cat is a necessity for me.  Who else will protect us from rodents and evil spirits?  

The dog spent a long time at the sliding doors today, in the sunspot that Nigel always took up. Otherwise  he seemed slightly agitated all day, either barking or clingy.  He'll sleep on my feet, curled up on top of the comforter.  But that spot on the pillow will be empty.

That cat was a good friend to me.  He got me through  the toughest times in my adult life, times when he was the only consistency I had.  He was a companion when my young husband was working for days straight; a healer when I was sick; doorman when I had company; entertainment and comedy when I needed cheering up; and a great teacher for my kids.  I really loved him.

I have been thankful for every minute of the nearly eighteen years I had with my beautiful black cat.



It was a good life.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

For as long as I can remember...

I would have been in Grade 4.  It was a nice day, and my Daddy was working on a car while I babbled away about whatever story I was writing in my head.  It was about a horse.  What else would I be writing about?

My teacher had asked me if I could write about something other than ponies.  He seemed to think I could branch out a little.  What he didn't realize is that I had challenged myself to write a pony or a horse into every single English class assignment.  I was really doing great with my goal.  I told him I planned to write about horses.  All the time.  It's what I do.  I don't remember if he had an answer for that.

On the last day of summer, I'd been out in the pasture field with my two little pony mares.  I patted their necks and ran my fingers through their thick black manes.  I explained to them that I had to go to school, and wouldn't be able to spend the whole day with them.  But I could still come out and see them after school.  It wouldn't be so bad.  

Writing about them all day eased the pain of parting, just a little bit.  It made me feel like I was still with them, while I sat there in the white classroom.

So I told my Daddy every little detail of this epic story I was planning on writing.  The horse in it was probably wild, since I'd been reading lots of wild  horse epics at that time.  He listened patiently, although now I wouldn't be surprised if he'd only heard half of what I said.  Eventually my babbling slowed (maybe I had to hand him a tool or something) and I asked, "Daddy, do you think anybody would read a book written by a nine year old?"

I don't think he even looked up when he answered.  "Maybe by a thirty nine year old." 

Looking back now, as a thirty eight year old, I'm kind of thinking his answer was everything at once: crushing, motivating, realistic, and disappointing.  At the time, I was silently defiant.  I made up my mind that somebody, somewhere, don't care when, is going to read my book!!!  And I am not going to wait until and thirty nine!!!

But on the way here, like a lot of girls, I got sidetracked.  I fell into that sucking hole of self esteem that so many teenage girls fall into.  I didn't believe in myself.  I still wanted to write... I secretly wrote my poems and kept journals, invented stories, but only held onto that goal as something far away.  Other people achieved the title of "writer," not me.  Not sad lil me.

It never left.

After the schooling and wedding and birth, the kid with the braids in her hair and pony dirt on her hands was still there.  She never grew up.  When the baby slept, I started typing a long story about a pregnant woman and her toddler and her husband and a whole field full of other people's horses.  Years later, after another baby, an unrecognized mental breakdown, a move to a house of our own, more stories bubbled up.  I finished a few of them.  

So I'm 38 now, and next year it'll be thirty years that I got my first dose of writer's reality, from a man who likely doesn't even remember that conversation.  He's outside right now, teaching my son how to demolish a wall or hitch up a trailer or something.  He also told me a couple of summers ago that I don't need to write trash, that anything full of cussing isn't worth writing because "people who talk like that are illiterate, they don't read!"  

I might have a long way to go yet before an actual book exists with my name on it.  I hope not too much longer.  I hope it's the one I'm sending out into the world now.  I think it's pretty good...

...even though it has no horses in it.

Although it does have some dogs.  And Axl Rose, sort of.

I doubt my folks will like it, but that's okay.  They don't have to.  Someday I'll write something they'll read, that they can be proud of.

Besides, I'm still that scrawny 9 year old with the hair in two braids and the pony-dirty hands.  That epic horse story is in there somewhere.


Thursday, March 12, 2009

Imaginary friends...

The blogging here lately has been very scatterbrained lately.  I mean, more than usual.  I have all the usual excuses involving horses that need exercise, kids needing to be yelled at (lovingly of course) and a husband who works in a rather unpredictable job.  Add two house critters and I'm up to my eyeballs.

Meanwhile, my imaginary friends have crept back into the front of my brain.  

Seriously, I feel like I'll be editing this book forever.  How long has it been, two years?  

Not long enough, it seems.  

I couldn't leave Trouble alone.  I had to go picking through it again.  Honestly, I was dreading it, but you know what?  

I love these people.  They have tons of faults, all kinds of insecurities, and not one of them likes horses, but despite that, they're fascinating.  Sometimes I forget that they came out of my head.  

At the risk of sounding like a loser, I've sent out a few queries to some literary agents over the last year.  Clearly, none of these were The Right Person.  I also know now that my query letter could be just a little bit stronger, and as of today, realized my first 50 pages could use some fix ups.  

I can cut out a few superfluous sentences.  Plus, I need to drop in a few hints here and there as to the awful event in the past that started the whole mess, and what kind of nastiness is about to happen.

Is it weird to dream about people I invented?  They are so real to me.  They are part of me.  

Occasionally I get asked here about my book, and I don't know what to say.  I say nothing.  If you were ever wondering what's going on, all I can say is, not much.  YET.  I can assure you, if there's one personality trait that has kept me going with pretty much every aspect of my life, it's STUBBORNNESS.  I'll plow into this slow and steady until I get some action out of this book.

I have to.  Jenny and Katie and Adam and Will and Tom need me to tell their story...


more things I gotta say, but real quick

-hate the city!  Okay, it's fine if somebody else is driving and I can look at all the funky shops and weird people and cool old buildings.  But man, who's idea was it to put railroad tracks in the pavement?  Way to go Toronto.  Now I don't know where to put my tires.  Like, whether it's a huge boat of a truck or a little german car, I still don't know what side of the %^$^* tracks to drive!  I hate it!  

-Jethro's gig this week is in the city, by the way.  Him and Mac White.  I think it's funny that the machine I use for blogging and pictures and poking away at my novel(s) is running an entire afternoon of bands performing.  Ha, things you didn't know about the music biz, eh?

-winter needs to kiss my butt.  

-I'm tired.

-I think the huge red pills are working -I'm surviving this yucky time of year- but after a while, how can anybody really tell if they're sane or not?  Really, how do you know?

-I'M GETTING MY HAIR DONE TOMORROW.  This is long overdue.  Maybe now I can look in the mirror without thinking "Blahhhhhhhh...."

-Believe it or not, sometimes I don't feel like riding.  It's cold, it's grey outside, I'm tired.  But then I get on that horse and I kind of want to stay there all day.  Until my toes get cold.  Then I'm done.

-there are days when I fear that I will be editing this darn book for the next three years.  

-there is no such thing as "good enough" when it comes to my book.  I need it to reach out and grab the reader by the throat and give it a good shake.  Can that be done with words?  It's gonna have to.

-I really gotta get outta here.  

-What is it you gotta say?

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Paula Abdul wearing FEATHERS and a dog who snores while awake

Here's the news from my world:

-Yes Paula was wearing something feathery on American Idol tonight, which made my daughter and I both shriek with happiness.  Oh she makes me so, so happy, with her wacky outfits and choked up teary voice and perfect eyebrows and fluffy hair.  She is the Queen of Unicorn Land, and my 14 year old is the Grand Presidential Princess.  Paula got talking about all the colours of somebody's voice or something, and people, I frickin LOVE IT when she gets all colourful like that.  (Also, damn you Simon Cowell for having such an adorable grin.  Stop making it hard for me to dislike you. )

Last week, for the record, Paula wore PINK LEOPARD PRINT which had me damn near on the floor rolling in the crazy magnificence.  I want pink leopard print.  It would look perfect with my ratty old brown chaps and my John Deere hat.  I could totally start a new trend, I'm sure of it.

Every time the camera got her, that scarf was tied in a different configuration.  It was nuts.  

-This reminds me that I MUST get my hair dyed pink.  It's that time of year.  I hate looking in the mirror and I need a big jolt of fun.  

-I'll forget about the hair thing until I'm sitting on a horse and can't call to make an appointment.

-My project this week is to tune up Bo, aka the Grumpy Ol Gelding.  What a piece of work.  I love him irrationally.  How can I love such a crusty horse? I just do.  He got ornery during a lesson, and that's not like him... we suspect he's just been getting away with laziness and other misbehaviour.  It's my job now to remind him that he's gotta behave.  I need to get him collected and moving forward.  I'm also making him stand there like a gentleman during grooming and tacking up.  It may be only a tiny step to one side but dammit, it's that kind of passive-aggressive &%&& that ends up with me on my ass and him bucking and farting away from me.  Not that he's ever done that to me.  I'm just saying, it theoretically could happen.  I'm fixin' to prevent that!

-My dog can snore when he's awake.

-My husband can fall asleep in any position, for any length of time, even mere seconds.  

-He can also parallel park a full size GMC pickup truck on a busy street in downtown Toronto.  I have photographic proof!  Full report later!

-My cat is still alive!

-Jethro is heavily involved in this event called Canadian Music Week.  In order to do the gig, he needs to take Mac White here along with him.  I must not complain, since it is technically his computer and this is what he bought it for... not for me to blog and write novels and email, the Tribble Girl to play Howrse and Bucky to play Redline.  It was meant to be a music making machine.  So, it'll be Blog-Lite this week.  Sorry.  I'll sneak into his office and see if I can make the Big Machine work for me.  

-My "new" saddle fits Phoenix!  Yay!  Pictures of newly improved tack room coming up later!  

-Tribble got 93% in Science.  I just wanted you all to know that.

-I started a new book and then got all tangled up in my um, current book, and now I can't stop thinking about those darn kids.  It's okay.  I have to tell their story.  The 33 year old horse trainer with multiple tattoos and nomadic musician boyfriend can wait.  

-I hate the time change.  It messes me up for days.  I'm TIRED.

-past my bedtime.  Gotta go.






No really.  I'm tired.  Seriously, I can hardly type.  Let me go to bed already, please I beg you.  Thanks.  Go chill in the comment section and I'll be back when the crotchety horse looks happy again and the whole world is swathed in pink leopard print and lions and lambs and all that stuff.  Later!

Monday, March 09, 2009

A Tribute Party for Two Wonderful Old Critters

warning: today's post might squeeze tears out of your eyes.  

We live each day appreciating any time we've got left with our beloved, creaky old cat.

We have some good neighbour friends who have been living that same kind of borrowed time with their dog.  Jazz was a pound dog who chose her new people very wisely.  She's possibly 15 years old, has raised two human boys to ages 11 and 8, and is one of the best dogs I've ever met.  
On the weekend, we had everybody over to our house for a Jazz and Nigel Tribute Party.  We know we haven't got long with these two.  It's time to throw a party for them now, not after they've passed on.

It was our goodbye to Jazz.  She has been failing for the last week, badly, and it's been just a matter of making the appointment to see the vet for the last time ever.  We knew it.  She'd perk up a little during our visit but soon sink back onto the comforter I put on the floor for her.  

I scooped Nigel off my bed for a last visit with Jazz.  Years ago, Jazz would trot through our house, sniffing all the corners, wagging her tail when she came across the cat.  He in turn, would bristle slightly and give her a rather condescending look.  They didn't ever seem hostile to each other, but they weren't exactly good buddies.  Just sort of tolerated each other when the dog came over with her family.

At this point, they're both so old, they just sort of sat there and acknowledged each other.  


"Yep."
"You too?"
"Uh huh."
"Yep."
"Alright then."
"Yeah."

Of course, the Pug had to get in on the attention.  I am a little worried about his state of mind when these two friends are gone.  He might feel lost without Jazz.  She was so important to him when he was a puppy.  She taught him how to behave himself.  She let him run under her belly and between her paws.  As she got older and less agile, she would lie down and bark as he ran around her and jumped over her.  She is the dog who showed Dobby how to walk on a leash, a skill he later passed on to another little young dog.  

And he will not know what to do without Nigel. If the cat leaves the couch, the dog is right there waiting to find out what they're going to do next.  (Same thing they do every night.  Try and take over the world.)

We gave the old guy and the old girl some well deserved treats.  Jazz got a few little chunks of meat hand fed to her.  She didn't even have to get up for it.  Nigel on the other hand, proved how aware he is that the rules have changed in his old age.

We turn our backs for a minute and there he is, IN the chip bowl, licking out the dip bowl.

The wine glass was already empty or I figure he'd have gone for that too.

He washed it down with a nice drink of flower water.  There was something hilariously wrong with this.  Instead of clapping and shouting and reprimanding like I would have years ago... we laughed adoringly and took pictures.  Don't think the cat doesn't know it.  He's working it.  As he should be.

It was a bittersweet celebration.  All 8 of us took turns at dinner describing a great moment with Jazz and Nigel.  We had so many good chuckles and memorable stories.  It felt good to share, but hurt knowing that our time is running out.

As I write this, Nigel is sprawled over my right arm.  I can still hear him purr faintly and when I type he wobbles.  Dobby is curled up, snoring, at my left hip.  Jazz is living her last hour.  I will miss her so much.  I'll be praying for a peaceful end, and for the people who love her to remember how awesome she was.  I know what they'll be going through.  I've been there and I will again, sooner than I'd want to.

It's so hard to lose a pet.  They are family members.  It's a different kind of pain, mourning a critter who dies.  But it's worth it.  If having animals for companionship means outliving them, knowing that their loss will hurt, it's still better than not having a warm furry friend at all.  

Bless you, Jazz.

...and Nigel slowly jumps off the couch and wobbles his way over to his food dish...