Sometimes, Melissa runs her legs. Sometimes, she runs her mouth.

Month: December 2019

The Favorites of 2019

I write this with the caveat that I have not been the “culture vulture”/consumer of pop culture that I usually am due to a whole host of factors that I may or may not share at a later date. [This year did, in fact, suck]  This was also a hard year for me with many challenges so I didn’t go out much either.   That is why I am not doing top 10 lists.  This is a long-winded paragraph to say I didn’t get out much in 2019.    Also, I don’t feel like expending the mental energy to rank anything although most of these do have a definite “number one.”

Another caveat, I live in Arkansas and apparently Parasite came to Arkansas for one week only.  This movie was in the state for one week only and I didn’t get any notice until the last day.  I had a work conflict for said last day.  Now it is gone.  GONE.  I keep telling people that Arkansas is not ass-backward and then something like this happens.   Bless their hearts.

 

MOVIES

  • Booksmart
  • Little Women

Booksmart will be a cult classic.  It didn’t get the numbers in the theater it deserved but I predict people will find it on streaming services soon.

BOOKS

  • Becoming by Michelle Obama
  • Pachinko by Min Jin Lee
  • The Secret History by Donna Tartt
  • This Will Only Hurt a Little by Busy Philipps

This is the year I, to my embarrassment, finally got around to reading Donna Tartt’s The Secret History so I am adding it to this list.

 

MUSIC

At my house, 2019 was the Billie Eilish and Lizzo show.  Both of these women are ridiculously talented and I adored numerous songs on each of these ladies’ respective albums.  Also, due to Spotify and satellite radio, I didn’t listen to that much new music.

  • All of Lizzo
  • All of Billie Eilish
  • Ready to Let Go by Cage the Elephant
  • Lover by Taylor Swift
  • Uptown Road by Lil Nas

 

 

 

TV

  • Fleabag
  • Marvelous Mrs. Maisel
  • Crazy Ex-Girlfriend
  • John Mulaney and the Sack Lunch Bunch
  • Barry
  • This is Us
  • Russian Doll
  • Unbreakable Kimmie Schmidt
  • Dickinson
  • Mindhunter

This was a year of great television but 2019 was the year of the Fleabag.  It is on everyone’s list and I am not sure I could say anything that hasn’t been said somewhere else.  It is simply a masterpiece.

This was also a personally heavy year so I didn’t seek out dramas.  So yeah, I’ll watch the good dramas of 2019 later.

 

 

 

 

 

The last Christmas Eve ever.

Christmas Eve has always been the best day of the year.  When we were kids, Mom and Dad would take us to my grandma’s house on December 23rd or a couple of days earlier.  [My Mom’s parents were Grandma and Grandpa.  My Dad’s parents were Mammaw and Pappaw. —Melissa]   Grandma comes from a long line of cotton farmers and she lives five miles outside of a small town with a population of approximately a thousand in Arkansas.  In the midst of all these cotton fields are four houses on the same side of the road in a half-mile line that housed the descendants of my great grandmother.   Mom and Grandma would bake cookies and cakes.  Sometimes, they would let me help.  My brother and I would spend those days running up and down the half-mile of road to my cousins’ house.    We would play. Sometimes we would get on our bikes and ride down another mile in the opposite direction to my cousin Sonya’s grandma Pee Wee’s house.  Then we would go into Sonny’s shop with all the power tools and saws and talk to Sonny.  Sonny would regale us with tall tales involving snakes that bit off his fingers which were terrifying since three of his fingers on his hand only went to the first knuckle.

On Christmas Eve, Mom and Grandma would cook a ham and make pimento and cheese along with a wide variety of appetizers and sweets.    We would eat ham and/or pimento and cheese sandwiches and then the family would open up all the gifts to make room under the tree for the presents Santa was going to bring later that night.   The Family was my Grandma and Grandpa, my Mom and Dad, my little brother, and my Aunt Iona.  Sometimes Iona’s roommate Debra would show up.  We would have to wait for my Aunt Iona to drive in from Little Rock and she would bring in her presents and frankly, some of Grandma’s presents in a big black trash bag.  Christmas Eve didn’t officially arrive until she arrived.

My cousins Martha and Sonny and their kids Sonya and Leslie would come over and there would be some liquor.  The house was filled with laughter, wadded wrapping paper, and toys.  We would listen to crazy stories, eat tons of food, and play.  Then we would go to bed so that Santa wouldn’t see us.  Mom said that if Santa saw us we wouldn’t get our presents because spying on people was naughty.  I don’t know if my Mom was purposefully ironic but I still laugh about that until this day.

The next morning, we would wake up and find the gifts Santa had left us.  Grandma and Mom would cook turkey and dressing and we would eat in the afternoon.  Then we would run to my Grandma’s sister Mooney’s house and see what presents my cousins Laura, Julia, Ben, and Dan got.  Then we would run further down the road and see what Sonya and Leslie got.  It was a lootathon.  Eventually, we would make it back home and sleep like we had been awake a thousand years because in kid years, we had been.

Over the years, the tradition morphed.  Grandpa died when I was six and eventually Grandma’s friend Bud would spend Christmas eve with us.   He would bring Grandma this three-pound box of cheap chocolate candies from Walmart that we would nosh throughout the evening.  He was loud and funny.   Then the kids eventually heard an alternative theory of Santa and didn’t get presents from him on Christmas Day.  He gave those presents to Mom and Dad and we opened all of our presents on Christmas Eve.  Sonya and Leslie got married and as such started spending Christmases with their spouses.  Sonny and Martha started using Christmas Eve to prepare for their own grandchildren.  Iona started having severe back problems and couldn’t sleep on the couch anymore.  When Bud died, she quit coming down for Christmas Eve.

Now in 2019, my Grandma is 90.  She is in a wheelchair and can’t really cook as much due to her inability to stand.   My Mom is seventy and a little tired from taking care of my Dad.  My Dad has dementia/Alzheimer’s.  I honestly don’t know his official diagnosis.  I know that he doesn’t know what day it is most of the time.  He forgets when he eats.  He recognizes me but he, on more than one occasion, has asked me, “Missy.  When did you get gray hair?”  Well, I started getting gray hair when I was 35.  I am 46 now.  It’s not histrionic to conclude that this might be the last Christmas Eve that my father recognizes me at all.

This is the last Christmas Eve ever, isn’t it?  I don’t want to jinx anything or be unnecessarily pessimistic but this is really it.  Another one will be a miracle and sometimes miracles happen.  Stubborn jackassery is a dominant trait in my family’s gene pool as well as longevity.  My Grandma’s sister lived to be over 100 but realistically, this is it.

This is the last Christmas Eve and I don’t want it to be the last one.  I don’t want it to be the end.  And yet it’s the end.

I’ve always been a woman who valued her independence more than anything but what I wouldn’t give to have someone to hold my hand during these next couple of days.  This is so hard but I know what I must do.  I need to get up, pack, put on some makeup, get in the car, and be Daddy’s little girl on Christmas eve one last time.

Merry Christmas everyone.

 

 

 

 

Festivus

How do I explain Festivus to someone with Alzheimer’s?  Crap this might be harder than I thought.

Well Melissa, you spent quite an astonishing amount of time watching television and one of the shows that you watched regularly was called Seinfield.  It was the story of four people engaged in a Sartrean level of dysfunctional enmeshment named respectively Jerry, George, Elaine, and Kramer.

Okay, that was pretentious bullshit.

It was the story of a comedian whose claim to fame was poking fun at the minutiae of life and his three friends bumbling through life:  Jerry, George, Elaine, and Kramer.  George’s parents were extremely reactive and weren’t really into Christianity or Judaism so they made up their own holiday called Festivus.

Oh fuck this shit, I’ll just put a link to the Wikipedia page and call it a day.

But today is Festivus and this is the airing of the grievances for 2019.

  • People who do not put their buggies in the buggy space in parking lots.  Walmart and other shopping areas were nice enough to make a designated space for buggies.  They do this so that cars will not be damaged.  The least you could do is not be all wrapped up in yourself and think of your fellow shoppers who now have to drive like the parking lot is an obstacle course in order to buy cheap overprized crap.
  • Democratic Party of Arkansas.  You are a complete hot mess.  First, there is this issue with misappropriation and how you got your BFFs to do the audit.  THEN!  You managed to not vet Josh Mahony and he withdrew his Senate campaign after the deadline because his employment records were spotty and now there is no Democratic opponent against Tom Cotton.   I still haven’t gotten a satisfactory explanation of how this happened. In fact, I haven’t gotten an explanation at all.   This shouldn’t be your first rodeo and you’re acting like its amateur hour.  Tom Cotton had Koch money which means he had money to dig through his opponent’s record with a fine-tooth comb.  This was the race where the opponent would dig and dig and dig figure out that you pinched a girl’s butt in kindergarten and somehow you couldn’t figure out that Mahoney didn’t have a regular job and lied about it on campaign forms.  You ask for his tax forms. Did you ask for his tax forms?  Who did what and when?  I want an explanation for this. I want a detailed explanation of this.  I want names.  There isn’t enough ink. It’s almost midnight. I’m going to put a pin in this and come back to it.
  • Mom and Dad, you don’t see me.  You really don’t see me.
  • Bill Hader.  Tulsa, Oklahoma is the 50th largest metropolitan city in America.  AND YET! you talk about your hometown like it is a rural outpost in Yoknapatawpha County.  Was deer season a school holiday in Tulsa?  I don’t think so.  Did you get stuck behind a tractor driving to school?  Did you get attacked by a crazed rooster named uncle Jesse?  You sure as hell didn’t shit in an outhouse in Tulsa Oklahoma, did you Bill?
  • Self, quit it with the procrastination.

 

 

I’m back

If Eddie Murphy can come back and host Saturday Night Live after 35 years, I can get my ass on the laptop and start posting here again.

I intended last year to start writing stories that I needed to write down because my Dad, my paternal grandfather, and my paternal great grandmother all died of Alzheimer’s disease.  I’m slowly coming to the conclusion that I am going to need some reminding regarding who the hell I am when I get old.  So consider these posts letters to my old memory addled self.   I also just want to write more.  I like doing it and I want more practice in any writing that isn’t’ legal writing.    I cannot promise for certain whether these posts will be more expository or narrative.

I originally bought this domain and entitled this blog “Melissa Runs” because I actually did run in races with half marathons being my longest distance quite a bit and used this space to serve as a diary/brag book for those.   It has been several years since I have run a half marathon and would like to get back to doing that.  this is one of my “life goals” for 2020.  Sure let’s call it that.

Once upon a time, a wise and brazen man named Paul said my posts were little lagniappes to his busy week.   Paul was also prone to nonsense and prodigious flattery to women.   We’ll see.

 

 

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