Shortly after I moved in, my roommate caught up with me and finally arrived here from Maryland. He and one of his friends had gotten orders to Camp Pendleton and had arrived in California. I met his friend, Joe, a couple of nights after they'd arrived and had invited me out to dinner. Joe and I were in a very similar situation. We had both moved to California for specific reasons and didn't really have many friends here. Other than my roommate, we didn't know anyone in San Diego. All the guys I'd used to work with while on active duty had either moved to other duty stations or had gotten out of the Marines and returned home.
When I first met Joe, I thought he was pretty funny. My spidey sense quickly picked up on the fact that he was one drink away from having an addiction. Joe had informed my roommate and I that he was living at a hotel until he found an apartment large enough for him and his two kids. We offered him our stadium seating couch as a place to call home until he got on his feet, intending to help save him a dollar or two. Joe moved in and somehow managed to make the best out of what we'd offered.
Eventually, I started school, my roommate checked into his new unit and Joe moved out and into his own place. I got a phone call from Joe on a beautiful Saturday morning saying that his kids were with their mother and he wanted to go cruise down in Encinitas. I agreed and told him to come pick me up. My spidey senses had to of hit snooze, because they failed to detect that that decision would soon be a mistake.
We drove down to Encinitas and walked up and down the strip looking for a place to eat lunch. We found a tasty little Latin American restaurant and decided to dine there. Joe is one of those kind of men who doesn't hesitate in spending his money regardless of what responsibilities he has piling up at home (or in his mailbox). With that being said, we ate delicious meals and drank two bottles of Argentinian Malbec before cashing out with a lunch bill well over two hundred Junior Whoppers ($200). After this, we walked back up the strip and stumbled into a saloon that was highly populated at 3pm with a staggering 5-6 people. We decided to join the crowd and made ourselves comfortable at the bar. If my mom were to have been a fly on the wall, she would probably be licking her front legs and wiping her 2000 sets of eyes to make sure that it was actually her daughter sitting in a place like this during broad daylight. We sat and talked about the usual topic of this time of year....football. The season was right around the corner and we were swapping favorite players and teams.
The jut-box behind me was playing a mixture of Bob Marley and some 80's hits that I don't miss much of. The flooring, and what seemed to be every other piece of furniture in this place, was made from old dark wood and red leather. The air was dusty and if I hadn't known any better, I would have been expecting
Mr. Furley to walk though the front door at any given moment. After we both had gotten through a few drinks I don't remember what was said or even the topic at that, but Joe then made a shocking statement that instantly changed the atmosphere. He firmly stated that I was a "B*tch". Thanks to my blood alcohol content, I found myself having quite the delayed reaction. He must have thought that I didn't hear him, so he repeated his thought and added a very colorful word to it that rhymes with "tucking". In my hazy world, I felt as if our thirsty counterparts in the room as well as the jut-box itself, had all stopped dead in their tracks and turned their attention towards me. I had one of two choices to make at this time. Either A, knife-hand Joe into an early slumber, or B attempt to look classy and walk out of this modern day "Regal Beagle" with some dignity.
With "Classy" being my middle name, I downed my Grey Goose and pineapple cocktail, fished my cherry out from under the ice and walked out of there. Slightly confused as to how the rest of the Encinitas population was not drunk at this time, I began walking towards my side of town. By this time, the sun was still shining and my vision was still slightly impaired. I remembered that Joe was so into his cocktail that I don't even think he realized that I had left. About 3/4 of a mile up the road, I'm confident that I could have passed a DUI test with flying colors. The sun was beginning to go down and I was not even half way home yet. I don't really know what I was thinking when I decided to walk home, but I'm certain that alcohol mixed with my pride had something to do with it. I called my roommate to vent and somewhere along the lines asked him to come scoop me up, but he was in LA and far out of reach. At this point, a few thoughts went through my mind....
1) You're a Marine and this is just a walk to burn off the calories you inhaled.
2) Call a cab and take the easy (smart) way out.
3) It's in Joe's best interest to never cross my path again.
So I did what any alcohol induced Marine would do in this situation...I kept hoofin' it home. By the time I got home it was 8:30 pm, I was damp with sweat and about half of the skin under both my feet had transformed into two huge blisters. Ironically, as I was unlocking my door, Joe's phone call came through on my cell. When I answered, I didn't know who I was more upset with. Joe for being a douche lord and disrespecting me or at myself for being so prideful and walking home in flip flops. Joe's next question easily made me launch all my anger on him. "Where are you?" was probably the last thing he should have said to me. After getting an ear full, I hung on him and tippy-toed myself to the shower.
The following day I drove down to the bar where my walkathon party of one had started and measured the distance. 5.2 miles in leather flip-flops, jeans a tank top and Grey Goose for mouth wash is not a good idea. Joe insisted in calling me to inform me that he believed he had been drugged at the bar which is why he didn't remember anything, especially calling me a B and letting me walk home. I told him that I honestly felt he was an idiot for believing that anyone in that bar wanted to drug him as opposed to drugging oh I don't know....THE GIRL!?!?!?!
We stopped talking for a while after this incident and Joe's relationship with alcohol grew stronger. My pride is still in tact, but next time this happens, I'll probably go with my first option of knife-handing the guy. I'm sure my feet would appreciate that as well.
If happiness is a journey and not a destination, then we're fixin' to catch some turbulence!
You've just booked yourself a window seat on the journey of a life time! These are my stories as I GPS myself down a bumpy road leading to my future as a clinical psychologist. Who said school wasn't fun?!? Join me in my commute through the obstacle course of grad school, dating, friendships and unexpected surprises. This is a one-way road so there's no turning back now....trust me.
Sunday, January 30, 2011
Saturday, January 29, 2011
Can You Hear Me Now?: Now It's Called "The 8"
Can You Hear Me Now?: Now It's Called "The 8": "July 17, 2010 was exactly 5 years from the date I maneuvered my Penske moving truck onto the curb in front of my parent's house in Texas aft..."
Friday, January 28, 2011
Now It's Called "The 8"
July 17, 2010 was exactly 5 years from the date I maneuvered my Penske moving truck onto the curb in front of my parent's house in Texas after having driven 24 hours straight from San Diego. This also was the day I found myself stuffing my SUV with all of my belongings preparing to migrate back to the west coast. The only difference this time, was that my A-driver was my dad.
Having my parents as roommates after moving back in with them upon graduating from undergrad was not as bad as I thought. I managed to create just enough distance between us all by disappearing for runs in the park, lunch with friends and dinner shifts at work. But now I found myself in extreme close quarters with my dad riding shot gun, my rear view mirror reflecting clear blue plastic containers and cardboard boxes that had been used one too many times and the sound of tarp flapping in 80 mile per hour winds as it slowly ripped apart from the mattress it was protecting while strapped to the top of my car. This was probably my 5th or 6th time making this drive and I knew that I could get to San Diego in 22 hours(20 if Highway Patrol didn't interrupt my commute), but I didn't realized that I would be stuck in this jail cell on wheels for the next 26 instead.
My relationship with my dad has always been great, but my mom was the parent who taught my sister and I to drive for good reason. My dad is the type of man who the school systems should personally thank for not having decided to become a teacher. It never failed growing up, if my dad were in the position of leadership in a project around the house that required more than two hands, someone ended up in tears with my dad yelling and requesting a new assistant. Typically I was my dad's helper, but it never was as easy as it possibly could have been if I could only read my dad's mind. Which ironically seemed to be something that he would growl at me when I didn't know what he wanted me to do and standing there waiting for direction was the wrong approach. Luckily, this was my car, my drive, my money and my radio. I knew that this trip was going to be interesting the moment we pulled away from my parent's house.
We didn't make it 30 miles outside of Houston, and no where near sunrise, the first time we pulled off of I-10 to re-secure my mattress to the roof of my car. The wind had started to tear the plastic tarp apart and we were expecting rain on much of our way out west. This would be the first of at least seven stops to re-hogtie my mattress. Somewhere between Texas and New Mexico I was certain that my mattress would blow right off of my car as the noise from the flapping tarp was overwhelming. When we pulled over for gas at one point, we saw that my mattress was tied so tight to my car that the wind had pushed it slightly upward into the shape of a lower case "n". How we made it to San Diego like that, I just don't know.
We managed to drive through hours of storms in West Texas, witnessed a double rainbow in New Mexico, baked in the 119 degree heat in Yuma, where I burned my forearm on the side of my car as my dad yelled at me to "pull the rope tighter on my side of the damn mattress" and then finally put my car in "park" in front of my new home around 8:00 pm. pacific standard time. This road trip was the first time I hadn't been the lead singer in a continuous private concert, with the windows rolled down and a 6-pack of water sitting front row next to me while I sang every Rascal Flatts song known to man at the top of my lungs. It also was the first time that my dad's snoring became an additional instrument to my Dierks Bentley play list. If the new California roadway lingo wasn't enough of a reminder that I was now officially a Texas transplant, an awkward conversation I soon would have with my new landlord would have immediately reminded me of where I had ended up.
When dragging ourselves 50 feet up the driveway and to my door, you could feel a light breeze and smell the ocean water in the air as well as hear a steady "hmm" from the cars on "the 5" less than a half mile away. All I wanted at this point was to unload my car, shower, put on my favorite TX A&M pj's and pass out on my "n" shaped mattress. Little did we know, that wasn't going to happen. After searching for the key in the dark, which my Craigslist produced landlord had hidden so well you'd think the Titanic's blue heart diamond was used as the key chain, and failed to locate it; she finally offered to drive over and let me in. I didn't think this would be the way we would first meet, but I also didn't think my landlord would be such the hippie as she turned out. We walked into my new place only to discover that the power had not been turned on and that the windows hadn't been opened in quite some time. We were standing in a dark living room feeling the hot stale air as drips of sweat beaded on my neck and trickled down my spine. I began unloading my car while my dad looked for the main breaker to the house. Awkwardly hidden in a corner of the detached garage, he found the breaker and we had light!! When we walked back into the house I noticed a thermostat box on the wall. I played with it for a little bit and noticed that much like my cranky temper, the house was not cooling off. I called my landlord once again, and this time asked her how to turn on the A/C. She was quiet for a short second then confusingly asked, "What's that?" This was my wake-up slap in the face. I now live in Southern California where the water is blue, the air is crisp and people don't know what "A/C" means. This also became my Que. to get right back into my car and make my first trip to Wal-Mart at 11:45 pm for a much needed room fan.
This officially was the start of my new chapter in life....
Having my parents as roommates after moving back in with them upon graduating from undergrad was not as bad as I thought. I managed to create just enough distance between us all by disappearing for runs in the park, lunch with friends and dinner shifts at work. But now I found myself in extreme close quarters with my dad riding shot gun, my rear view mirror reflecting clear blue plastic containers and cardboard boxes that had been used one too many times and the sound of tarp flapping in 80 mile per hour winds as it slowly ripped apart from the mattress it was protecting while strapped to the top of my car. This was probably my 5th or 6th time making this drive and I knew that I could get to San Diego in 22 hours(20 if Highway Patrol didn't interrupt my commute), but I didn't realized that I would be stuck in this jail cell on wheels for the next 26 instead.
My relationship with my dad has always been great, but my mom was the parent who taught my sister and I to drive for good reason. My dad is the type of man who the school systems should personally thank for not having decided to become a teacher. It never failed growing up, if my dad were in the position of leadership in a project around the house that required more than two hands, someone ended up in tears with my dad yelling and requesting a new assistant. Typically I was my dad's helper, but it never was as easy as it possibly could have been if I could only read my dad's mind. Which ironically seemed to be something that he would growl at me when I didn't know what he wanted me to do and standing there waiting for direction was the wrong approach. Luckily, this was my car, my drive, my money and my radio. I knew that this trip was going to be interesting the moment we pulled away from my parent's house.
We didn't make it 30 miles outside of Houston, and no where near sunrise, the first time we pulled off of I-10 to re-secure my mattress to the roof of my car. The wind had started to tear the plastic tarp apart and we were expecting rain on much of our way out west. This would be the first of at least seven stops to re-hogtie my mattress. Somewhere between Texas and New Mexico I was certain that my mattress would blow right off of my car as the noise from the flapping tarp was overwhelming. When we pulled over for gas at one point, we saw that my mattress was tied so tight to my car that the wind had pushed it slightly upward into the shape of a lower case "n". How we made it to San Diego like that, I just don't know.
We managed to drive through hours of storms in West Texas, witnessed a double rainbow in New Mexico, baked in the 119 degree heat in Yuma, where I burned my forearm on the side of my car as my dad yelled at me to "pull the rope tighter on my side of the damn mattress" and then finally put my car in "park" in front of my new home around 8:00 pm. pacific standard time. This road trip was the first time I hadn't been the lead singer in a continuous private concert, with the windows rolled down and a 6-pack of water sitting front row next to me while I sang every Rascal Flatts song known to man at the top of my lungs. It also was the first time that my dad's snoring became an additional instrument to my Dierks Bentley play list. If the new California roadway lingo wasn't enough of a reminder that I was now officially a Texas transplant, an awkward conversation I soon would have with my new landlord would have immediately reminded me of where I had ended up.
When dragging ourselves 50 feet up the driveway and to my door, you could feel a light breeze and smell the ocean water in the air as well as hear a steady "hmm" from the cars on "the 5" less than a half mile away. All I wanted at this point was to unload my car, shower, put on my favorite TX A&M pj's and pass out on my "n" shaped mattress. Little did we know, that wasn't going to happen. After searching for the key in the dark, which my Craigslist produced landlord had hidden so well you'd think the Titanic's blue heart diamond was used as the key chain, and failed to locate it; she finally offered to drive over and let me in. I didn't think this would be the way we would first meet, but I also didn't think my landlord would be such the hippie as she turned out. We walked into my new place only to discover that the power had not been turned on and that the windows hadn't been opened in quite some time. We were standing in a dark living room feeling the hot stale air as drips of sweat beaded on my neck and trickled down my spine. I began unloading my car while my dad looked for the main breaker to the house. Awkwardly hidden in a corner of the detached garage, he found the breaker and we had light!! When we walked back into the house I noticed a thermostat box on the wall. I played with it for a little bit and noticed that much like my cranky temper, the house was not cooling off. I called my landlord once again, and this time asked her how to turn on the A/C. She was quiet for a short second then confusingly asked, "What's that?" This was my wake-up slap in the face. I now live in Southern California where the water is blue, the air is crisp and people don't know what "A/C" means. This also became my Que. to get right back into my car and make my first trip to Wal-Mart at 11:45 pm for a much needed room fan.
This officially was the start of my new chapter in life....
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