Jeneration X: One Reluctant Adult's Attempt to Unarrest Her Arrested Development

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Jeneration X: One Reluctant Adult's Attempt to Unarrest Her Arrested Development Page 10

by Jen Lancaster


  Perhaps you’re not a perv at all; perhaps you’re an entrepreneur.

  The worst part of all this for me was that the vista was so clear that I could even determine the era of nudie photos he most favored. He must have come of age during the Olivia Newton-John Let’s-Get-Physical days because he was all about the shots from the eighties. How was I so sure?

  The standards of grooming have changed since then.

  I haven’t been this bothered by anything since I discovered my sea monkeys were essentially water lice. I felt like the universe was telling me, “Hey, you wanna spy? Oh, I will GIVE you something to spy, missy.”

  To put the situation in different terms, you know sometimes when you want a cookie of the oatmeal variety, so you make a batch of them? And you use the recipe from the smiley blue Quaker’s drum and it always makes way more than you meant? Like, you wanted enough cookies for a decent snack, yet you wound up with six dozen, even though you got super sick of touching cookie batter towards the end and made the last few dough balls big as baseballs?

  And turns out you baked so damn many oatmeal scotchies that all you’re doing is eating cookies for every meal because they’re right there and you’re kind of hungry and, really, you don’t want them to go to waste because they took some effort to create? So you eat and eat and eat far past the point of actual enjoyment? And then you spend the bulk of your day in the washroom reading a George R. R. Martin novel because it’s the biggest book you can find outside of the dictionary, cursing Wilford Brimley for being the only man on earth who has the time or inclination to process that much fiber? And at some point you’re all, Sweet Baby Ray, I just want a nice steak?

  That’s how I felt about the unfettered access to gossipy-type information. Much as I used to enjoy sneaking glimpses of people’s lives, this was too much. I wanted three cookies, not ALL the cookies.

  I was exposed to so many intimate details of our neighbors’ lives that it made me squirmy, primarily when it came to the husband’s viewing habits. This guy was on nekkid sites ALL NIGHT, EVERY NIGHT. I figured that every time I climbed the stairs to come face to l-a-b-i-a, that was my Greek-tragedy-style punishment for having been nosy.

  My life became an inadvertent version of Rear Window (minus the wheelchair and telescope) and I began to make my way to the second floor with my eyes clamped shut, muttering, “We’ve become a race of Peeping Toms!”

  On top of all the deeply scarring nudity, the wife’s mommylust couldn’t have been more obvious and clearly no one was in the business of making babies because the guy never left his damn Aeron chair to go to bed already. His habits were tearing them apart and I wanted to help fix them. I wanted to post a sign begging him to PLEASE GET OFF THE INTERNET AND ON YOUR WIFE because I thought it might help. [Fletch said no because he hates to be helpful.]

  And even though we were experiencing the most beautiful spring on record, I started keeping all my windows closed on their side of the house because, inevitably, they began to spiral downward as a couple. Their marriage—which had seemed so fresh and shiny and happy when we moved in—hit more than just a rough patch; it slammed into a bridge abutment going eighty miles an hour in a Smart Car.

  As I’d sit in my office trying to organize my notes for my next book, I’d hear the wife screaming at the husband and I’d inadvertently start rocking and murmuring, “I hate when Mom and Dad fight.”

  Every day the hostility got more intense. Although no one ever threw a punch or a vase, the accusations they’d hurl at each other seemed equally damaging. Like it or not, I had a front-row seat to an unraveling marriage. I felt like I was watching a Chekhov play against my will.

  When Gladys Kravitz witnessed the occasional confirmation of her suspicions of the Stevens family, she was triumphant. She knew there was funny business afoot in that household! Whereas I liked to giggle and speculate about the antics of the amateur Larry Flynt next door, I didn’t actually want any of my ridiculous theories to be true. Addiction isn’t funny.

  Every day when they came home from work and the fighting began in earnest, I felt like they were a horrible accident by the side of the highway and the last thing I wanted to see was the carnage. I wish I’d never taken that route in the first place but I had no choice but to drive past.

  When they’d start in on each other, I’d head to the farthest point in my house away from them but their words seemed to follow me. I stopped sitting on my deck entirely and took to blasting talk radio on our house’s intercom system.

  I’d fallen down a rabbit hole and the only way out was to move away.

  Fortunately, I won a brief reprieve in May when I had to tour for My Fair Lazy. Normally I dread going on the road, not because I don’t love meeting fans and doing live events and media, but because I get so homesick. I hate being away from Fletch and the dogs and, to a lesser extent, the cats. I miss them so much when I’m not there. Plus, I’m the kind of person who isn’t happy unless I’m sleeping in my bed with my blankets and my decades-old down pillow. [Yes, it’s as gross as you’d imagine, or would be if I weren’t buying fresh pillowcases for it all the time. At this point, the feathers are just little sticks, so it feels a lot like buckwheat. I know it’s weird. I know. Listen, don’t worry about it. If you ever sleep over, I’ll put a new pillow in your room, okay?] I’m so weird about being away that I even bring my own toilet paper because no hotel ever stocks the aloe stuff that I like.

  But this year?

  All I wanted was to get the hell out of Dodge.

  Even on the road, I couldn’t escape the drama of their lives. On my first night away, Fletch called to tell me the following news.

  “The husband quit his job.”

  “Wait, are you spying now?” I asked. I am the worst influence ever.

  “Wasn’t eavesdropping. Ran into him in the backyard with Pippen. He was very excited to tell me that he’d quit his job.”

  “In this economy? To do what?” My hope was that he actually was starting a porn site if for no reason other than to justify his extracurricular activities.

  Fletch exhaled long and hard before he told me. “He quit his job to pursue his dream. Says he wants to be an actor.”

  “He was a mechanical engineer!” I protested.

  “And now he’s not.”

  “Oh, God, this is not going to end well,” I said.

  “Yeah. That’s why I bought new headphones.”

  By the time I returned from book tour, the wife had moved out and the husband had done some redecorating. Specifically, he’d taken sheets and used them to cover all his windows, securing them up to the ledge of the transoms with two-liter bottles of generic diet cola. We never heard anything after that, and thank God, we never saw anything else either. If this guy was so cavalier about what he looked at with an uncovered window and an angry wife lurking about, I haven’t any idea what he’d view behind closed blinds.

  Not long after that, we found our home in the suburbs. Although we considered a number of contenders in a variety of neighborhoods, ultimately we opted for the one surrounded by the most trees. Except when we’re by one particular window on the east side of the property, we can’t see or hear anything happening in the neighborhood and that has been a blessing.

  The whole first month we lived up here, we used to sit on our new porch enjoying the sounds of silence. Once in a while I’d ask Fletch, “Hey, do you hear that?” When he’d say no, I’d always smile and reply, “Me neither.”

  After fifteen years of city living, I could not have been happier to let the whole Constant Vigilance™ thing go. I was done being the neighborhood’s hall monitor and I was delighted to hang up my good whacking shovel once and for all. Rest in peace, sweet Gladys Kravitz. Rest in peace.

  Having spent so much of my life minding everyone else’s beeswax, I finally had the chance to mind my own.

  And it was bliss.

  Until I got bored.

  But I’ll get to that later.

  Reluctant Ad
ult Lesson Learned:

  Keep seeking and eventually you’ll find what’s hidden, whether or not you like it.

  C·H·A·P·T·E·R T·E·N

  The Old Dog Whisperer

  Every day I feel more and more like a full-fledged adult.

  Even though it was (metaphorically) only yesterday I was sloshing in the door at four a.m. after Dollar Beer Night, [Or more accurately, what started as Dollar Beer Afternoon.] I find myself with a mortgage, four types of insurance, and a non-laundry-quarter-based retirement fund. Every single one of my bookcases is made of wood, not milk crates, and I don’t own a stick of garbage-picked furniture anymore.

  Okay, mostly that last bit is because Fletch won’t LET me garbage pick [What he calls “junking.”] anymore. Before I can even finish the sentence, “Hey, that looks like a perfectly nice—” he hits the accelerator and we speed away before I can throw open the door and claim my prize. The last time we were driving through Lincoln Park, someone was tossing out a really luxe, squishy Crate and Barrel–type love seat and I felt a physical ache when he forbid me to lay a mitt on it to see if it was chenille or Ultrasuede. Given no choice, I’ve stopped junking, yet the desire to junk remains. [Maybe that’s why I’m so into antiquing now; it’s like garbage picking, only with fewer bedbugs.]

  Regardless, I’ve managed to grow up… to the point that I’m experiencing the existential angst from having done so. I’m no longer surfing the waves of a Count Chocula sugar high, nor am I kiting checks to the grocery store. Not only do I own the proper glassware for any beverage, but I have seven different kinds of cheese knives. Knives! Exclusively for cheese! Seven kinds!! What kind of bizarre, Dockers-wearing, Kenny G–listening, Williams-Sonoma-credit-card-having alternative universe have I fallen into?

  Where I am in life—i.e., coupled up—means I never have to pretend to be interested in techno music or the Golf Channel or, sweet Jesus, NASCAR racing again. Now I’m left wondering, where’s the rush I used to get from being a perpetual adolescent? Where’s the torment of no one really understanding me? Where’s the self-righteous self-pity over having to put up with silly rules established by my folks, my school, or my boss? Oh, that’s right—by design I’ve arranged my life in such a way that I’m really only accountable to myself now.

  Yet somehow always being able to locate my keys, shoes, and underwear has left a void in my life.

  Did not see that coming.

  Fortunately the solution to my midlife crisis is sweet and helpless and cuddly with a pink belly, so Fletch and I are adopting… a pit bull puppy!

  Recently we contacted A & S Rescue to discuss a possible dog adoption. Because of Maisy’s precarious health, we have to be extra careful whom we introduce to the household. The dog needs to come from a foster home situation, rather than straight out of a shelter because of exposure risk. Our vet said from a safety perspective, buying a dog from a breeder would be best, but considering one out of six hundred shelter pit bulls actually gets a forever home, I could never in good faith do that.

  Maisy has always loved puppies, so our thinking is if we bring in some fresh blood, that will rejuvenate her. From a selfish perspective, we understand she’s a gift with an expiration date, so we’re hoping that if we adopt another dog, he or she will be a little mini-me and Maisy will live on through them.

  After an extensive screening process [Which I absolutely appreciate and expect, given the breed.] the agency introduced us to a possible new pet. He was a beautiful, energetic, adolescent golden boy with an enormous head and we instantly fell in love with him. With elegantly muscled legs and broad shoulders, he was powerful and handsome and sweet. The rescue organization brought him over to the house and we all went on a long walk to acclimate everyone. The big boy adored us, too. Everyone was on board with the adoption… except for the two spoiled, surly middle-aged dogs that live here.

  Let’s just say the second it came to sharing a water dish, our guys were less than hospitable.

  I may have matured, but a portion of our family hadn’t.

  We adopted Maisy and Loki eight shoe-shredded, carpet-ruined, plant-unpotted years ago. Their adolescence was destructive but brief. Now I’d probably rather they eat the occasional sneaker than the alternative, which is staring at me when they’re bored and I’m working. Clearly they’ve lost any manners we taught them in obedience training when they were pups.

  The problem is entirely, one hundred percent our faults. We set the bar for their behavior terribly low. We wanted two sweet dogs that’d coexist with our churlish cats and that’d be friendly towards guests, and oh, boy! Are they friendly! Just ask Stacey about the time Maisy launched herself from one couch to the other so she could show her exactly how friendly she could be. Poor Stacey said it was like being hit with a cannonball. With claws.

  Once we achieved the goal of having affable, social dogs, we never pushed them any harder. We wound up with two willful creatures who’d tell us in no uncertain terms when they were ready to eat, potty, and be entertained. If we were lucky, they’d even scoot over enough so that we could sleep on our bed with them. [Years ago we bought a king-sized bed because it was easier than fighting or sleeping on the couch.]

  Apparently this was bad.

  Perhaps when our friends made statements like, “You should really read Cesar Milan’s books,” or “No, seriously, please, watch The Dog Whisperer,” or “Thank God you don’t have kids,” we should have taken the hint.

  Now I have the clarity to realize we must break the cycle so we’ve forgone adoption while we bring Maisy and Loki in line. We’ve enlisted them in a doggie boot camp, which is as much for them as it is for us.

  Despite acting like the pronged training collars were killing them dead, splat, the first time we attached them, they’ve quickly come around. In a few sessions with Elaine, our no-nonsense trainer from the rescue group, the dogs are starting to learn that everyone wins when they obey our cues. More importantly, Elaine makes us realize that we don’t have to live a life where our dogs run the show. In fact, it’s our obligation as adults and owners to do so.

  Seeing the difference in them is amazing. For example, mealtime used to be chaos with yipping and shoving and jumping. But now we make sure they know we’re the ones in charge and they don’t get anything until they calmly sit and wait to be served. Through the training process, they’ve learned that no squirrel tastes as good as discipline feels. Also? It’s easier to do what’s expected because ultimately the rewards are greater.

  Hey… that might explain why I finally stopped fighting growing up, too.

  When Angie’s here for a girls’ weekend on one of our regular training Fridays, she wraps her arms around Elaine and says, “Thank you, thank you, thank you!” the second Elaine walks in the door. Elaine, although initially taken aback by being grappled by a stranger, immediately understands because she’ll never forget exactly how ill behaved our guys were.

  Our progress has been so measurable that the agency believes we’re ready to introduce a new dog to the household. The big, golden boy we met was adopted to a wonderful home, [Yay!] so next week we’re meeting a puppy. And we’re going to begin working with her immediately so she’ll grow up understanding expectations and won’t ever be stuck in a state of arrested development (like we were.)

  Now, if I could only train Jordan and Tucker not to barf in my shoes.

  Then again, there’s a reason no one calls themselves the Cat Whisperer.

  My friend Gina’s mom used to say that everyone needs something to do and someone to love and they’ll never be without a purpose.

  Of course Gina’s boyfriend Lee says in a pinch, all you really need is someone to hate. Hate’ll get you through.

  Miss Liberty Belle, a skinny brindle pit bull with white feet and enormous brown eyes, has something to do (play with her tennis ball) and has someone to love (Maisy).

  As for Maisy?

  Her hate for Libby is what’s getting her through.

  We
welcome Libby into our lives on a chilly winter day and we’re struck with how angular and bony she is. We always assumed pit puppies were little butterballs like Maisy was when she was small. However, Libby’s still recovering from a tragic beginning. First she and her littermates were starved and when they didn’t die fast enough, her original owner threw her and her siblings into a box and hit them with his car. Only Libby and one of her siblings lived and the other one was so sick she didn’t make it.

  This is why I’m so adamant about supporting animal rescue. The fact that there are people out there who treat living beings like this makes me weep for humanity. [And makes me want to dig out my good whacking shovel.]

  Anyway, Libby survived, but barely. She was infested with thousands of fleas and she nearly lost her life to parvo. But she pulled through it all and when she has her clean bill of health and a full set of immunizations, she’s placed with us.

  I should probably mention that she’s the happiest little girl in the world. Dogs live in the now and when Libby looks around, there’s nothing about her now that she doesn’t love passionately. She doesn’t run so much as spring and bounce mountain goat–style and we believe her inner monologue sounds like this: “Libby! Libby! I am Libbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbyyyyyy!”

  Again, Maisy? Not so much.

  We thought Maisy would lose her mind with all the mothering she heaps on puppies she meets while out for walks. But I guess street puppies never tried to share her bed or were fed tasty-smelling, high protein, grain-free puppy food in front of her.

  All Libby wants is to be Maisy’s bestie, but Maisy would like nothing to do with her, thanks for asking. She refuses to play with Libs and she’s always shooting sour glances in her direction. Maisy’s snarly and unwelcoming and pouts when we make her stop. But somehow, instead of this being stressful and wearing Maisy down, it’s lifting her up. We haven’t seen her this spry and active since before she was diagnosed.

 

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