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How My Parents Took Four Children On A $60 Vacation (A True Story)

6 Mar

The weather in Northern California has been teasing us lately.  One day, it’ll be cold with rain on and off for days. The next, the sun will peek through and warm us up for a few days. Everyone goes hog wild and washes their cars, gets their pedicures, and whips out the flip flops because the sun has decided to pay us a little visit.  This weather also means people will be planning vacations, leaving to various destinations to relax and forget about the work world and everyday stresses.  I’m in my 20′s, and I must say I enjoy a weekend away. I love staying in a hotel, drinking cocktails and laying by the pool. In my young adulthood, I have taken quite a few wonderful trips but there is one which will forever stand out among the rest.  It was the summer of 1996, when my hard-working parents were determined to get away for a few days and give themselves (and their four children) an adventure.This is the story of that weekend.

My parents had met in high school and had fallen in love.  My mom was Class President, a Lifeguard in the summer, and the little sister of my dad’s good friend. He was in a band with my Uncle Kevin and thought my mom was the cutest thing he’d ever seen.  My mom asked my dad to the Turnabout Dance her Sophomore year, and they’ve been together ever since.  They were married when my mom was 20,my dad only a few years older. They had my older brothers Tim and Pete, then came me, and then my little brother Sam.  At the time, my mom was a substitute teacher and my dad worked at a manufacturing plant on the night shift, working hard year round and around the clock.  My parents had decided they were going on vacation, and their favorite place in the entire world, was the coast.  My entire family loves the ocean and I believe that is because my parents love it so much and instilled a love in us at a young age. My mom has told me this story numerous times, but the best part was that they had $74 in the bank and decided to go on this trip anyways.  I remember packing my tiny suitcase and selecting my clothing very carefully. I had a plastic Lion King suitcase, no bigger than a small serving tray, which I stuffed with my bathing suit and homemade clothes (my mom could honestly stitch the cutest outfits!). We loaded into the white station wagon (which was falling apart) and my parents told me they said a prayer the car would make the trip. There was a large hill we drove over to get to the coast and my mom tells me now, “We prayed for the station wagon to get over the hill, we knew if it would make it over that, we would definitely get to our hotel”. They stopped at Luckys’ and picked out the things we NEVER were allowed to have in our lunches. We got Capri Suns, Gushers, Fruit Roll-Ups, and those bowls of cereal you tear the top off of and pour milk into.  These were luxuries we never got in our lunches (we were on a PB&J budget), and we were giddy as my parents loaded up the cart.  My mom tells me that they didn’t have their paychecks yet, but that they wrote a check anyway at check-out, knowing the grocery store wouldn’t cash it until Monday. We piled into the station wagon and were on our way.  We listened to The Beach Boys, Jimmy Buffet, Neil Young, and Bob Seger on cassette tape as we clutched our pillows and blankets in the back seats.  We listened to them back to back while we all sang the words and stared out the window of our station wagon whizzing through San Francisco, then San Jose. The station wagon crept over the hill, and eventually made it. We got to our hotel, The Islander, and my mom says it was $40 a night, which was a huge blow to my parents’ budget. Heck, tt was more than half the budget! With the remaining $20, they strategically broke up our weekend so they could stretch their dollar as much as possible.  We were close to a boardwalk, which had numerous store fronts and souvenir stands, but we didn’t have the money to spend on sweatshirts or boardwalk games.  My parents first gave us a Beach Day. We stayed out on the sand all day long, boogie boarding, making sand castles, digging for crabs, burying each other’s legs, letting the waves crash into us, and laying on the warm sand as the sun shone down on us.  At the end of the day we were exhausted, and we headed back to our hotel.  My mom and dad let us jump in the hotel pool (we didn’t have a pool at home) sandy bathing suits and all, before eating in the room and going to sleep.  The next day we woke up and knew it was Ride Day.  We were little kids back then, still afraid of anything too fast or loud or high.  The kid rides were only one or two tickets a piece (about $0.50) so my parents bought a strip of tickets for us all to share.  I have wonderful memories of riding the tiny tug boats and ringing the bell on the front of them.  There were  helicopters that spun in a circle and you could make them go up or down the whole ride.  We were so excited to ride these things we had only gotten to stare at the previous day from the beach.  I can still remember looking down from one of the helicopters and seeing my mom and dad waving at me from a bench on the boardwalk.

After the rides, we wandered down the store fronts and did a lot of window shopping.  We looked at all the sunscreen, beach mats, hideous (but wonderful) T-Shirts, sun hats, postcards, and bumper stickers that were crammed into every corner of these stores.  They had baskets of multiple seashells which you could buy for $0.50 by the register, along with dollar sand toys, and floaty things for your hotel pool.  Next door was the candy store, where they made world famous salt water taffy.  We would watch them pull the taffy on a huge hook and look through the window as employees dipped chocolate strawberries or spun cotton candy.  Before leaving for the day, my parents bought us a small bag of candy to share.  It was the most amazing thing ever to shove your hand in the paper bag and not know what you were going to get. There were green and white gummy frogs, brown Coke bottle gummies, gummy bears, and we always had a few pieces of salt water taffy in there too.

To extend our wonderful trip even further, we headed to San Jose to visit my Uncle Ray and cousin Phyllis. My Uncle Ray was (no joke) in his 90′s and actually was my Great Uncle. He lived at home taking care of his daughter with special needs , grew the BEST cherry tomatoes on his side patio, and always had little ceramic cases of mint-flavored toothpicks on his coffee tables. He had a wonderful house that was always impeccably maintained, and when we pulled up, we piled out and gave big hugs to Uncle Ray who was already waiting for us. He would always wave to us as we pulled into the drive way and always waved good bye as we left his house in San Jose. His house was an adventure because he had an old camper in his back yard we got to sleep in.  There was a tiny black and white T.V. with the bunny ear antenna that we fiddled with in the camper until we got a picture (any picture) on the screen.  We would play in his yard, hide in the camper, play basketball in the driveway, and always wake up to him saying he was “making flapjacks” in the morning. (I still love when someone calls pancakes, “flapjacks”). He had an office in his house where he was always playing with numbers and balancing his accounts.  He put his money in several different banks and we would drive him to do his errands sometimes when we visited. I never understood when I was young, why he was so obsessed with balancing his accounts or why he had his money spread into so many different banks. I understood later in life, however, when I realized how much my Uncle Ray had lived through. He was alive when the Titanic sank. He was alive through WWI and WWII.  I’m sure being alive during the Great Depression would cause you to be awfully careful with your finances and put your money in multiple places. After running errands with Uncle Ray, playing in the camper and watching Wheel Of Fortune with Phyllis, our vacation had come to an end.  It was Sunday, we had to get home to the real world, and I hated saying goodbye to Uncle Ray (or his flapjacks! They were so good).  He would pull us in for a hug and then (while my parents weren’t looking) he would give us a few dollars in quarters to keep for our next trip.  I remember driving home and how quiet everyone was.  My parents were looking straight ahead at the road and my brothers (who usually were always eating. talking, laughing, singing) were quiet.  I think we knew that our parents were sad to be going home, so we thought we should be too. I have so many wonderful mental pictures in my head of driving at night with my family on vacation.  I loved being smooshed together so tight in the bench seats, with our snacks, books, Walkmen, and pillows. I loved hearing my brothers snore as they eventually fell asleep, their heads propped up against the windows. I loved sitting next to Sam in the backseat because he was the sweetest (sorry Tim and Pete <3) and always thought my jokes were funny. I have wonderful mental pictures of Sam bopping his head to music, or Pete’s mouth gaping open as he snored, or Timmy as he motioned with his hands the best routes and highways to take. But I think the sweetest picture in my head is of my mom and dad holding hands in the front seat, as they headed over the hill, probably saying a silent prayer that their station wagon would make it over the top safely–just one more time.

Confessions Of A Library Junkie

6 Mar

I have had a long-standing obsession with books and libraries. It started when I was a little girl, I could simply never read enough books or read them fast enough. I wrote this short ( humorous? ) piece as a way of explaining why libraries and books touch me so. It is a combination of my favorite libraries and I hope people think it’s funny (and not just stupidly sarcastic). Enjoy!

Confessions Of A Library Junkie
By
Barb Livingston

Very few things make my heart pitter-patter the way walking into a library does. Whether it be the small public library in my hometown, the tiny library at my mom’s elementary school, or the enormous library in the heart of San Francisco, my heart skips a beat every time. From the outside, the library looks warm and inviting. The sickly hospital – looking lights, rows of chipped tables and moldy chairs from the 1970′s are enough to make my heart burst with love and affection (Remember in “How The Grinch Stole Christmas” when his heart quadruples in size and busts out of the wire x-ray frame? It’s similar to that.) The homeless people peeing on the sidewalk outside the door as I enter, call me “sweet ass”, and are no more offensive than the coo of a dozen doves. I am in my element and excited to begin my hunt for the perfect book. As I enter the library, I give myself a few moments to take it all in. I love the musty smell of paper and the walls lined with books, all of whom are anxiously waiting to be taken home for the week by an excited reader. I love the satisfying crackle of a binding as you open that first page. Or looking inside the sleeve and seeing the rows of dates that have been crookedly stamped on the Return Slip by librarians in the past, like little badges of honor. One can often find me in the biography or fiction section, selecting a tasty looking little volume and sniffing its musky pages in a highly inappropriate and overly aggressive manner. (Sometimes I have to give apologetic looks to people sitting close by, who hold their purses just a little bit nearer or move to the table farther away as I huff Abe Lincolnâs biography).

I love wandering the alcoves or searching for titles on the computer which seems to be from the 1980âs and has a black screen illuminated with blocky letters in neon green. Is there anything sexier than the Dewy Decimal system? Every book with its proper placement and cozy little spot on the shelf. Everything from “Divorce For Dummies” to  “Little Women” to “The Joy of Cooking”, has its rightful spot on the shelf which can not be replaced or duplicated, so long as that little book is there. If only everything in life could be organized so beautifully. I turn all gooey inside using the tiny golf pencils that live next to the computer, along with scraps of paper, so I can jot down a few titles to hunt for. After scanning the stacks of books, I make a few selections (a painful process which can take me anywhere from 10 minutes to an hour) and bring my new friends to the front counter for Check-Out. I smile like someone who has just won the 7th Grade Spelling Bee or found a $10 bill on the sidewalk. I am full of sunshine and unicorns as I hand the librarian my card and hear that joyful “beep!” as my card is scanned. She stamps the inside of each book and tells me their due date. By then, I will have finished them and cherished our time together very much. She hands them to me and goes about her day but in my mind, she is handing them to me saying, “I know how much you too care about books. Take care of these little guys”

As I leave the library and see my homeless friends passed out against the building or belligerently swigging from bottles concealed in paper bags, my heart is light. I have a whole week to enjoy these new volumes which may become new favorites or horribly disappointing selections, both of which I will keep in mind during my next visit. It doesnât matter though as I walk to my car, which of these two categories my books will fall into. I know I will be back next week to return them to their respective places on the shelf and bid them a sad farewell. I know it wonât be a final goodbye though. Thatâs what makes libraries so wonderful. Your old friends are always there waiting patiently on the shelves for you without judgment or expectation. No matter the weeks, months, or years that pass, they will welcome you with open pages and fill your heart with joy every time.

The Boiled Egg Woman

6 Mar

 

Would you like to hear a funny story? Of course you would, everyone loves a funny story! The problem is that I may be the only person who thinks it’s funny. I’ll give it a shot anyway. You just sit back and relax as I tell you the tale of the Boiled Egg Woman.

 

It began long ago (maybe a month?) and it was a regular day at work.  I’m a cashier at a sporting goods store which, for one reason or another, seems to attract a lot of characters.  We get plenty of people who are strung out on drugs, homeless, stealing everything from flashlights to Pillow Pets, mumbling incoherently to themselves, and talking to things that aren’t there. Yes, it makes me sad to see these things. And yes, I do treat these people with kindness and respect when I encounter them (even if they call me “that whore Melissa” or ask me where the zombie killing section is when I greet them. Even when they smell of booze and something else that’s mildewy, and ask me through black teeth if I’ve ever been with a “real man” before. Yes, I treat them with respect even then). But I’m telling this story because these people also have the ability to cheer me up and make me smile, even when my day has gone horribly wrong.

 

On this particular afternoon, a woman came in wearing electric purple spandex leggings, a Land’s End fanny pack, and a belly shirt which showcased her stomach that was sagging over her elastic waistband. She also had a tiny dog on a leash (who was wearing a diaper?) who resembled Dorothy’s Toto very much.  The woman was slurring her words and said something to the effect of,  “ssshhwwwsshh you got socks? ssshwwshhhgghh” and then started laughing to herself as if she had told the funniest joke in the world. I just smiled and pointed to the sock section, hoping she would find what she needed quickly. I made sure she saw the display and waved when she said, “Thissssshhggh them? sssghh”. Then I went about my business. I answered the phone, wiped down my countertops, hung up some misplaced clothes behind the register, and then turned my attention back to the store. I had my eye on the center aisle when I heard a rustling noise.  I looked down and saw a little fur ball wandering aimlessly. Poor Toto, he looked so lost! Especially in that diaper, it made him look pitiful. I took his leash in my hand (we aren’t even supposed to let animals into the store…..my bad) and went to find his owner. And boy, did I find her.

I turned the corner and heard her before I saw her.  Actually I saw the packages of opened socks strewn about the department, and then I saw her. She was flopped on the floor, laying on her side with her right hand supporting her head. She was flapping her legs open then shut, open then shut while yelling, “Cowgirls! Saddle up!” It was like a Thigh-Master Infomercial. But Suzanne Somers had nothing on this lady. Seriously, for someone her age, the range at which she could spread her legs and bring them back to the ground was nothing short of impressive. I hope when I’m in my 60′s, I’m as limber as she was. It actually took my breath away and if we had instead been in a pilates class (as apposed to a sporting goods store on a Sunday afternoon), I’m sure she would’ve blown her classmates away with her flexibility and commitment to range.  Aside from the leg spreading, she had also helped herself to a few packages of socks and then started to layer them on her feet; a black Nike sock on top of a gray wool camping sock, on top of a neon green jogging sock, on top of a men’s basketball sock.  She was on a mission and unfortunately I was the one who had to stop her.  As sweetly as possible I said, “Ma’am, I found your dog. Did you want to purchase all these socks?”. She stared at me with the kindest of gazes and said, “Sssshwggggh You ever get sssshwwsh sad when you look in the mirror and your ass is sagging?”. And then she stuck her hand down the front of her pants and scratched herself in the most un-ladylike place, in the most un-ladylike way.  It took me a minute to process it, and then I answered, “I sure do”. This seemed to please her, and she gathered up a few packages of socks, along with Toto’s leash, and met me at the cash register.  

I had rung up all of her socks, placed them in the bag and was convinced I was going to send the crazy Sock Lady on her way. That’s when I smelled an awful stench. My first thought was, “Poor Toto, no wonder he’s wearing a diaper. The little guy can’t control his bowel movements”. I then realized it wasn’t Toto’s diaper. The stench was coming from my friend in the fanny pack. For one horrified moment, i thought the crazy Sock-Layering-Leg-Spreading-Cowgirl had crapped herself.  The stench was overpowering and enough to make your eyes water.  I told her the total for all of her socks and as she handed me a wad of cash, I noticed they were covered in something. She looked in her hand and with a look of sincerest disappointment said,
“My lunch! I was looking forward to those eggs, even if they do give me the farts.” She handed me the egg-covered cash and then left the store.  I didn’t get the chance to ask her what she was doing for lunch, but there’s a grocery store next door to us and a little while later I saw her scarfing down a tray of sushi and what looked to be, a huge ass burrito.  I was relieved to see that my friend hadn’t gone hungry, and had found some food so she didn’t have to boil/cure with vinegar anymore eggs. And as she walked off into the sunset (actually I watched her jaywalk and almost get hit by numerous cars), I was thankful for crazy characters who bring so much color and fun into this world.  My job (and everyone’s jobs) would be so boring without these people who make us laugh and smile.  And although I’ll admit, there are many ways to win my affection, I couldn’t help but be charmed by the crazy lady in her purple pants.

So this is blogging…..

6 Mar

Hello there world!

I must tell you, I feel a little foolish having a blog because I’m not so sure I have anything interesting enough to say. I go to school, study, read, work, spend time with family and friends….overall, a pretty average life I’d say.  And sometimes I feel that bloggers are people who simply love to hear themselves talk (write) but I must admit, lately I have had many stories swirling around in my brain that I would love to get on paper (screen!).  I’m not even sure that I will share this blog with anyone, any time soon but maybe I will if I’m feeling brave!

Until next time!….

Love to you,

Barb

 

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