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  1. Eileen’s Song

    January 18, 2012 by Blondette

    Below is the eulogy I delivered at my mom’s funeral today, January 18th, 2012. This is not the full text of exactly what I said because I added a few things while I was talking, but this is most of it. 

    My mom almost named me Sara. Sara Leas. It would have been a lot of pressure to be a much better baker. Instead, she named me after her grandmother, Catherine and called me Katie.

    I was her second child. My brother, Brian, was born 2 years earlier, with dark hair, and without webbed feet. I used to think my brother was my mom’s favorite, but I eventually realized that it wasn’t about favorites. He was her first baby – he made her a mother. And being a mother was something she cherished deeply.

    Growing up, she read to us. She hugged us. She let us drink pop, but not eat sugary cereal.

    How do you pay tribute in 2-4 minutes to the person who nourished, nursed, and nurtured you?

    On Friday night, when the news was fresh, I immediately thought of the things we would never do together, things mothers cherish about having a daughter: we would never pick out my wedding gown, she would never see a grand child, she would never feel the kick of my baby inside of me. I would never be able to ask “did you feel this/think this/feel this when you were pregnant with me?”

    And then I tried to remember everything about her. Every little morsel that was her.

    She loved music. She was disappointed that she never got to meet John Denver.

    My mom was smart. She believed in education and she was a good teacher.

    She was witty. God knows my affinity for puns came from somewhere and it was not from my dad.

    She was a little naughty and sassy. You can see it even some of her childhood photos.

    She was faithful. She believed in God.

    She adored Bob.

    She often ate a bag of popcorn or a giant plate of broccoli for dinner – with Butter Flavored Pam and salt when she was a staff nurse working 12 hour shifts (which were more like 13 for her because she was so conscientious)

    In some of my last conversations with my mom she spoke of her hopes for her children (she did this often). She was excited that I’d been thinking about moving back to the heart of the city because it meant we’d be closer, and she spoke about her love for her husband, Bob, and his love for her.

    I know her body – the body that hugged me when I was sad or scared, the body that worked long hours to keep a roof over our heads, the body that swelled and broke with life to bring my brother and me into this world, the body that housed a most tender and loving spirit and heart – her body, my mom’s body, has stopped.

    But, she will never leave me.

    She is every breath I’ve ever taken. Every tear I’ve ever cried (even those, okay especially those – cried at sappy Hallmark commercials.) She is every off-key note I’ve ever sung (and there are lots) and every kindness and love I’ve ever shown.

    Last year, I was struggling at work and I knew I needed a change. Though I was terrified I knew I could make it through because my mom loved me.

    Even though she did not work outside the home in her last years she still had an occupation. She had 3 in fact. Her first was that of Eileen, lover of knowledge and the written word. Her second was wife and love to Bob. And her third was mother.

    Her love will never leave.


  2. News Bulletin

    December 6, 2011 by Blondette

    Just do you all know, I was tweeted back by a real live author! Thank you Jennifer Weiner!

    And all it took was awful trivia knowledge of Dominique Swain.

    I should probably get a life soon, huh?

     


  3. Ink, Air, and Home

    June 3, 2011 by Blondette

    I’ve been gone for somewhere between 24 and 48 hours. As the plane touches down at MCI, I think “home.” For two seconds I feel a hopeful calm. I’m overcome with the thought of my house. My living room with its bright red couches and teal curtains excite me and I have the urge to lie face down in the middle of the floor and make carpet angels, happily claiming “mine.”

    During one of my last trips, this one several days instead of overnight, I updated my office IM with “I miss my cats.” It’s become a bit of a joke at work, but mostly it’s just a simple truth when I travel. I miss my cats. My cats with their insistent meows and contented purrs – my cats who claim me as home.

    My journey started in Fort Lauderdale slightly before 3pm (local time.) Glad I didn’t have to run to make my flight, I still felt the anxiety of waiting – my journey home would mean a stop first in New Orleans and then another in Chicago. In total it would take about seven or eight hours – most of them in the air to make a trip that takes closer to 3 hours on a direct flight.

    Finally home in Kansas City and sucking in familiar air, my impatience once again builds as I wait for the Parking Spot shuttle that will take me to freedom. I’m frustrated and annoyed because I know I do not have any cash with me and won’t be able t tip the driver who will help me with my bag. The drivers all seem to be slightly older, grey men with classic names like George and Charles. Tonight, it’s the white haired Jake who helps me. I’ve ridden with Jake before and hope that I had  cash for a tip them. I am a very inconsistent tipper. Most times I forget to break $20′s  or simply forget to get cash. Skycaps and drivers have received tips of $5, $3, $1, or no dollars depending on what is available. I vow that next time I will have cash and if Jake is my driver, I will tip big to compensate for tonight.

    As I sit on the shuttle staring at my long, black shellacked fingernails – hmm, definitely over grown and time to be cut and re-painted – I feel trapped. If Sartre and Beckett were to create a video game this would be it. A group of tired travelers, an old man who should be retired in his lounge chair and a bus. In the buss small dim lights cast a blueish hue on our skin. A loop of cheesy muzak grates our ears as the bus clunks along the scarred road. I am scowling quizzically wondering if it is the road or  a flat tire creating the disturbance. The muzak crescendos and lulls, the lights steadily shine, and the people look away trapped in their own thoughts of freedom from the machine that is not coming fast enough. Soon I am back to my fingernails – waiting to soak away the color and admiring it.

    I will be in my Nissan soon. It will take me down the dark highway towards home. In the round-about there will be a deer. Sizable too and she will turn and run from my headlights. So many deer out lately. I will just be happy this one lives.

    When I walk in the front door the carpet angel is forgotten. Instead, I will focus as I would any night on my pre-bed routine – feed the cats, turn out the light, and go upstairs where my soft green pajama pants are waiting. As I crawl into bed I wait and hope for that plonk next to me and then the rhythmic purr and weighty warmth of a kitten settling next to me for the night – home.


  4. Giant Rat Protest in Kansas City

    October 21, 2010 by Blondette

    There is a giant, angry rat. He taunts me. He waits for me. But he does not tarry while I work. He is gone when I am free.

    Sadly, when I Google “giant rat protest in kansas city” the results are inconclusive. Is no one writing about this? HAS NO ONE SEEN THE GIANT FUCKING RABID RAT?! and the dudes with picket signs?

    When I Googled “rat protest” I garnered more interesting results. Apparently, giant inflatable rats are not uncommon when protesting. In fact, it’s a been a union protest symbol for years. Just so you know, it’s never good to be startled by a giant rat while driving.  A spider once dropped down from the ceiling of my car while I was driving to work and it’s some sort of miracle that I didn’t crash because I immediately forgot I was driving and panicked so the icky spider wouldn’t creepy crawl all over me.

    I’m not entirely sure who or what the protesters are beefing against, but I’ll try to focus on the signs tomorrow – it’s just kind of hard to read their signs when there’s a crazy rodent on the side of the road – well, one that’s at least 10 ft tall and not dead or eating garbage.

    Anyhow, I got tired of not being able to share the rat with anyone, so I risked life and limb to capture it with my iPhone while driving. Don’t worry, I swerved back into my own lane before colliding head on with a motorcycle. We coo.


  5. Letters to the Tremendous, from Blondette

    October 19, 2010 by Blondette

    Dear Tremendous,

    Yes, that’s you. I know I usually write to the unwashed masses or Jen Lancaster (I seriously have to stop associating Jen Lancaster to the unwashed masses and people with bad toilet etiquette – I’d be getting a complex.) What else? Oh yes. Well, Jen Lancaster wrote about creepy and awful letters and emails on her blog yesterday. This was after a series of tweets in the same vein. Apparently, she’s received more than one crazed letter/email of late and had had enough! Good for her, but it caused an OH SHIT moment for me. Despite what some boys men boys males may think, my main goal in life is not to be a creepy stalker type.

    First, I’ve never emailed JL. I simply write letters to the “great Jen Lancaster in the sky.” She probably hasn’t read them. (though for a sad 5 minutes last night I thought she was following the KC_JenLancaster Twitter account – and then I looked more closely and realized I was on “Following” not “Followers.”)

    I don’t show up in the first 5 pages on Google searches for Jen Lancaster. (and really? no one is getting that far.) However, I am first for Letters to Jen Lancaster. Because I’m sure a TON of people search that. I want to come off as quipppy and quirky, but genuine and respectful. Do I want her to come to KC for her next book tour? yes. But Kansas City is a great city with an amazing community of readers, writers, and well, just about everything else that makes a city vibrant and warm. This is home.

    I write my letters because I want to express something. Do something. The follower base is very small, which just means I must kind of suck at PR or online marketing implementation (shit.) I don’t want to be Jen Lancaster’s best friend. But there’s something about seeing an actual flesh and blood person versus black ink on printed paper. Words are not voice. Humanity. I live in books. They keep me from truly doing the hard stuff. Hurting people, hurting myself. It’s about writing. Trying. Finding some pathway to feeling and understanding.

    I write to Jen Lancaster for me. Because I am a writer.

    And I hope that if she ever does read my letters or my blog that she sees the heart of the matter.

    I’m just an almost-thirty, not quite blonde, not quite brunette, wanted to be Felicity Porter or Donna Moss…gal.

    Maybe I just wrote my un-letter to Jen Lancaster.

    Truestly yours,

    Blondette aka Katie

    (also, the title makes me think of Sonnets from the Portuguese which you should totally read.)


  6. Revival

    September 6, 2010 by Blondette

    Give me that old-time religion,
    Give me that old-time religion,
    Give me that old-time religion,
    It’s good enough for me.

    It seems that Blondette has lost its brilliance. I don’t know if it’s due to the darker dalliance or if it’s simply a transitional time.

    Regardless, I seek to find that spark that once compelled me to point out how you might be Katie Leas, important life lessons, and how to win my love.

    I was perusing the Twitterverse when I came across a link to Brainzooming. The particular post that caught my fancy was “25 Blog Posts You Could Write Today.” Wah? Yes, friends. Yes, I can.

    A lot of what I write tends to be observation and reflection. I throw in the occasional list for comedic value, though my own fumbling somehow tends to be more amusing.

    Oh yes, the point, you ask? Well, I need to get back to my old-time religion! And by that of course I mean I need to write more frequently!


  7. Jettas and Lofts

    December 5, 2009 by Blondette

    When I was in my final year of college, I needed motivation to get through my courses. I took more than a full load to ensure I’d be able to finish in time for Spring Graduation. Most people know my college story, how I showed up and quit the band, changed my major, lost and gained friends, and then gained a social life and finally started maturing in ways I hadn’t in high school. (My first kiss was in a bar fueled by well rum.) So, let’s move past that and go on to Year 5. (yes, remember part of the story is ruining a year of school due to socializing. ahh, lessons learned.)

    Year 5 started with a switch in residence. I was living with several other girls in a house off campus, but drama ensued and I moved in with my brother for a few weeks and then moved back into the dorms on campus. I took a summer intersession class on Death and Human Behavior that was very educational, but after the drama that had ensued also left me on the south side of happy. Coupled with my capstone course on the journals of war veterans, I was questioning quite a few things.

    I devoted myself to school and actually attended classes and completed assignments. I also carried on a relationship with someone long distance over the Internet. When we met in person I realized I didn’t know myself at all, or didn’t value myself very much.

    I won’t say that meeting people online or having friends online is bad. I actually know a lot of people that I met online. I also carried on a friendship long distance online that proved critical to my success in school. This friend reminded me of the endgame and why I shouldn’t give up or half-ass school. There were classes that I hated but had to take (PED 100.) For the most part, my courses that final year were all interesting and valuable, but they happened to just pile up at the end. I was in a do or don’t graduate with the basic computer class requirement (I never took the basic computer class because let’s face it, yawn. My options were to test out of the requirement or take the class the next summer. True to form, I put myself in this situation and knew there was no way I was taking that class in the summer. Thankfully, my experience the previous 4 years taught me enough about computers to pass the exam. Scrape.)

    I also put myself in a neat situation with my math requirement. I enjoy math. I still do multiplication and division long hand except when I’m at work or don’t have a writing stick or paper. I do a lot of squirrely math to figure out any number of things like how much my personal property tax will be, or my household budget. Having taken every possible math course offered by my high school and achieving an A in each I knew I wasn’t going to take a basic college math course in college. I signed up for the 5 credit hour calculus 1 (the one that math and science majors took and not a place where many English majors ventured) and figured it would be fairly easy. There is nothing more humiliating (okay there is but this is well placed hyperbole) than failing at something you’ve successfully done before. Like weight loss. I attempted to retake the class a couple more times and failed each time resulting in 5 credit hours of D on my transcript. Resolved that I was  better than my DDDDD (knock off a couple Ds and you’ve got my bra size) I decided to give it one last shot. Point of success number one: my teacher was a native English speaker. Point of success number two: my teacher was not obsessed with logarithms. Keep in mind this whole thing was a terrible blow to my  ego. I skated through math my entire life. I got a math award in high school. I taught my teacher in Stats class, where my grade was so high that it didn’t matter that I didn’t take the final. (the beginning of my learned indifference years and the beginning of a low point in my academic career.) So, that C I finally got made me happier than a lot of the A’s of my past.

    Taking a a course load that is deemed over full-time requires authorization from the dean. I hauled ass from building to building across campus a few times that year for authorizations of all types. Bureaucracy is good exercise. There’s a reason they make you get permission. Those extra credits create stress and do weird things to your sleep patterns (or lack thereof), social life (or lack thereof), personal fitness (or lack thereof)– I think you get the point. By the end of the semester, I had a multi-page to-do list of yellow legal pad paper. There are events and times in life that shape you, teach you, test you, and refine you. For me, that semester taught me some of the things have become critical to my life and career.


  8. From the Outside

    August 2, 2009 by Blondette

    As she sat on her couch and stared out at the newly dark night, she couldn’t help but think how quickly darkness had come. Only 15 minutes earlier, she’d walked in from the dusky evening with three weeks worth of mail in her arms. Okay, maybe four weeks. After sorting between trash, things to burn (bills), and expired coupons, she was once again without motivation to do anything productive. Around her chaos in the form of cat debris, shoes, and unorganized junk taunt her. “Pick me up! Throw me way! Vacuum me!” the chaos screams. She just turns away and stares out at the ink colored leaves.

    She is tired; mentally, emotionally, and physically. The physical tiredness is mainly due to the mental and emotional marathon she’s been running and despite the 5 hour nap she took that day.

    “Why am I anxious?” she says aloud to herself (and her Twitter account.)

    “How am I going to make my clients happy? How am I going to make my department productive, efficient, proud, and happy- without them hating me? How am I going to make my bosses happy and still maintain my dignity and assert myself  and show that I am in control? How am I going to lose this weight? How am I going to feel if I never hear anything? Is everything going okay with the Springfield Leas’s and home construction with Dad? When can I take some time off and will I feel better if I do? Am I going to be able to save enough money for a down payment? Will I find a house that I want to buy? Did I choose money and power over health and family? How will it all turn out?”

    From the outside, she’s a girl staring out a window.


  9. I Was Staring When It Came to Me

    March 4, 2009 by Blondette

    Writing is uncomfortable. It’s all about figuring out what you think, feel, and then how to say it without sounding like a jackass. You have to construct a theme, something to unify the piece. For example, this post is about the craft of writing, and more specifically, how hard it can be and my process. There are so many points to juggle– does it sound trite? will readers catch a reference made with some form of figurative language? does each paragraph ultimately contribute to the meaning of the whole?

    Here’s my writing process.

    1. Stew.
    2. Ruminate.
    3. Stare at something, surf the internet, close my eyes, rock back and forth, drink lots of coffee, sing, stare, got down notes
    4. Pick a topic (based on a catchy phrase or title)
    5. Write several disjointed sentences.
    6. Write several more disjointed sentences.
    7. Edit some and delete some. rearrange order of sentences.
    8. Decide I’m tired and give up.
    9. read, re-read, edit
    10. Fresh burst of inspiration–write more
    11. re-edit
    12. Post.
    13. read posted content and find typos–correct typos and think of other things to change and/or add
    14. Re-read
    15. Wait for comments.
    16. So why is it so uncomfortable and labored? Because to me writing is a portrait of me that I paint with words and one wrong stroke can ruin the entire interpretation.


  10. Sky Writing

    July 25, 2008 by Blondette

    Staring out at nothing by sky, I wasn’t sure whether to be curious or anxious- separated from all things solid only by the metal of the plane I was inhabiting. I’ve always been a somewhat anxious flyer. Generally, I settle and amuse myself with a book or my thoughts– and today, with writing.

    Gradually, the endless sky subsides into a mottled view of water below, sprinkled with sand bars and what could be dolphins. We are over water descending into Tampa where the plane will delete and add new passengers before continuing on to its final destination (that phrase now making me slightly leery and superstitious because of the movies by the same name) of Fort Lauderdale.

    This is the second time I’ve made this journey this year as I make my way to the corporate office of one of our clients.

    I have still not decided whether or not I enjoy traveling. It disrupts my routine (and pulls me away from my kitties!), but it provides new experiences and challenges that enrich my life. My fear of air travel (and namely crashing) is definitely a factor in my travel confusion.

    Wholly, I’m okay with airports- they have Starbucks which pleases me, bathrooms that have enough room for me and my accoutrements,(and not creepy blue water; side note, I loathe airplane lavatories and avoid them at all costs. I’m not sure how I’ll avoid them when I travel out of the country someday, but I will find a way–even if it means tranquilizers or a catheter.)

    (With) Our stopover now complete, we are now climbing toward the sky and Fort Lauderdale. Turbulence is not my friend (though it seems to find me often enough) and I hope that a Xanax and focus on my writing will keep my knuckles from going white as the bumps become dips and sideways sways and jostles.

    The clouds are bright and I see only layer over layer of fluffy moisture.

    I do enjoy having others with whom to chat and look forward to the day when I’m not booked solo again. I’d prefer to keep it non-work, but hey, sometimes that uncomfortable office talk passes the time more quickly!

    Through my work travels, I’ve had the opportunity to visit places I’d likely never see. I enjoy listing these trips, but I wonder how it would be different to travel to a destination of my choosing and my itinerary, being owned not by a conference or client meeting (not that I dislike either, but work is work and although we sometimes get to go out on these trips, it’s still with coworkers and clients and bound to those constraints. Okay, I’m not kidding anyone who knows anything about where I work and who I work for. I will say no more.)

    Looking out the window both fascinates and terrifies me. On one hand, it reminds me of my current precarious position (yes, I know about “lift”) and on the other, it allows me to critique the city planners and view the magnificent natural wonders I’d never otherwise see like the Rocky Mountains, the Grand Canyon, etc. Today, the Everglades look a bit like moldy cheese (both pack quite a bite.)

    I’ve become a connesoueir of airlines. I remember a conversation had by several of my travel veteran friends regarding airline preferences– at the time I was left out having really only ever flown 3 different carriers (United, US Air, American West (and American Eagle, but it’s an off-shoot so I blended it.) I’ve now experienced another 3 or 4 and can hold my own in a pros and cons of this airline over that airline (pro: Southwest has the funnest coffee stirrers! They are heart shaped. con: American Airlines has tiny seats with NO legroom.) I’ve even flown a couple they haven’t! I feel like part of the club now. Like I’m part of a special group of people. I am a business traveler! RAWR!

    There is a small boy behind me querying his parents about every detail of the flight and making observations only a small boy would utter aloud. “Is that a tornado!?” Though he’s a lively diversion and I cannot hide my amused smile at some of his comments, he does say things that make me uncomfortable, forcing me to face the reality that is at the root of my air travel anxiety: we could crash and I could die.

    Thankfully, we did not crash (yay!) and I am still alive to recount this journey. I arrived in Fort Lauderdale, took a cab to my hotel, and proceeded to nearly freeze to death in my room. I spent the next 5 and a half hours burrowed under my covers–napping, working, watching tv and wondering when the heck we’d be going to dinner and why I hadn’t eaten lunch.

    *(in this post Today is actually Thursday.)