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  <title>phoenix</title>
  <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://domesticat.net/taxonomy/term/408"/>
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  <updated>2008-06-10T01:58:41+00:00</updated>
  <entry>
    <title>The perfect day</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://domesticat.net/2003/12/perfect-day" />
    <id>http://domesticat.net/2003/12/perfect-day</id>
    <published>2003-12-22T04:29:23+00:00</published>
    <updated>2007-12-12T22:04:19+00:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>domesticat</name>
    </author>
    <category term="hell" />
    <category term="illness" />
    <category term="los angeles" />
    <category term="love" />
    <category term="marriage" />
    <category term="new orleans" />
    <category term="phoenix" />
    <category term="travel" />
    <category term="trips" />
    <category term="vacation" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>The fortunate part about not knowing what lies ahead of you is that sometimes, not knowing makes it possible to muddle through a difficult situation.  Sometimes foreknowledge only makes what is coming more difficult to bear.</p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>The fortunate part about not knowing what lies ahead of you is that sometimes, not knowing makes it possible to muddle through a difficult situation.  Sometimes foreknowledge only makes what is coming more difficult to bear.</p>
<p>I spent the last two days of my West Coast Beach Vacation curled up under a blanket, sleeping between apologies from David and Noah for 'getting' me sick.  A reckoning of fingers and thumbs left me doubting they were the true source of my illness.  I was more inclined to blame multiple airports, airplanes, and significant climate changes for my current upper respiratory infection.A Decembertime visit to the airport, followed by the vastly different climates of <acronym title="Cool, muggy">Alabama</acronym>, <acronym title="Warm, extremely dry">Phoenix</acronym>, <acronym title="The wind was so cold I didn't notice if it was a damp cold or not">the Grand Canyon</acronym>, back to Phoenix, another airport visit, then <acronym title="Warm, sunny, very humid">oceanside Redondo Beach</acronym> left infinite possibilities for the acquisition of a random little bug that would cause some illness.</p>
<p>That morning, the week-ago-stranger David looked at me with concern and said, "Perhaps you shouldn't fly, Amy."  Noah, further away and perched on the couch, nodded agreement.  "It's okay.  You could stay a few more days until you're well.  We wouldn't mind."</p>
<p>My right hand tickled the contents of my right coat pocket - tiny, perfect seashells gathered from the shore two days before - and they whispered to me that it was time to go home.  Time to fly home to a place where the land didn't come to a wave-crashing stop on the other side of the street.</p>
<p>Besides, my tickets weren't refundable.  The change fee wasn't pretty.  It would completely blow my discretionary-funds budget for my trip to Colorado.</p>
<p>"I'll be okay.  I promise."</p>
<p>"You sure you don't want to take any cookies, or anything like that for the trip?"</p>
<p>* * * * *</p>
<p>David drove us to LAX in the burgeoning sunlight, and they both hugged me curbside, hoping perhaps in the last few moments I'd change my mind.  Instead, I slung the straps of my high school backpack over arms and coat, tightened the straps, and took my soon-to-be-checked baggage.</p>
<p>"I'll call when I get home.  Promise."  I turned around and walked into the terminal before they drove away.  A personal quirk, that; always be the one who leaves, and not the one who waves goodbye.  I had my confirmation numbers and my knitting; the rest, I believed, would take care of itself.</p>
<p>The vagaries of airline travel often dictate less-than-optimal routes home, and this day's flights would be no exception.  For my two-destination trip, it had been easier to book two separate round-trip flights (Birmingham to Phoenix, and then Phoenix to LA) instead of a single round-trip with an extra destination.  It meant that I would have to pick up and re-check my bags in Phoenix, but I'd planned for that circumstance.</p>
<p>...hadn't I?</p>
<p>I pulled out my confirmation numbers again and made sure.  I had more than a two-hour layover in Phoenix, and the weather there was perfect.  Smooth sailing.  Take the commuter flight, pick up the bag, recheck it, find the new gate, and sit there and knit for a couple of hours until it was time for the next flight.</p>
<p>Except that my flight leaving LAX was late.  I watched forty minutes slide by in a haze of wristwatch-watching disguised as sock knitting, and eventually boarded the plane.  Ok, perhaps a little less time than I would've liked, but this was why I gave myself extra time.  Things happen.  You zig, you jog, you go on.</p>
<p>Once buckled, lectured on safety, and prepared for a bout of in-flight knitting, we took off, and I got my first indication of what my day was <em>really</em> going to be like.</p>
<p>Pain.</p>
<p>I'd taken my share of decongestant medication before leaving Noah and David's apartment, but it only took a few moments into the ascent for me to realize that my ears were not popping with their normal readiness.  I kept working at it, and eventually they did pop, but with that thick, viscous feeling that meant they weren't clear.</p>
<p>A flight attendant asked about my knitting project.  I pulled out its mate - the sock I'd completed a few days before - and explained that I was knitting from the toe up.  I stowed it in my bag and resumed - just in time for two sharp twinges of pain to flash through my head.</p>
<p>Oh.  Descent.  I tried to make my ears pop.  Nothing happened.</p>
<p>I kept trying.  Nothing happened.  Each time the pilot began a new descent, the pressure in my ears intensified.  I ate the peanuts I'd been given, deliberately, slowly; nothing happened.  It was only when I was done eating the peanuts did I realize that an unnatural hush had fallen over the cabin.</p>
<p>I looked around, and the hush was mine alone.  There were people rustling newspapers, talking aloud, shuffling belongings.  It wasn't that I was having difficulty comprehending sounds through the flashes of pain in my head - it was that I simply couldn't hear anything.</p>
<p>I landed in Phoenix to the sound of my heart thudding in my badly-pressurized ears and a goodbye statement from the flight attendant that I could not hear.</p>
<p>I walked the people movers of the Phoenix airport in a daze.  I picked up my bag and returned to the Southwest counter, where I managed to check in to my flight without being able to hear a single word said by the clerk.  She wrote my gate number on my boarding pass, and I used it to get me through the silence of terminals and security.</p>
<p>I sat down by my gate and tried not to panic.</p>
<p>I conned an extraordinarily nice lady out of a spare piece of gum, and very nearly cried when it didn't work.  My ears simply wouldn't pop.  They were so tender that I could barely put headphones on, but I could hear a bit of the music if I concentrated.  (Barenaked Ladies' <em>Stunt</em> got its most attentive listen, ever.)</p>
<p>As I waited, a bit of hearing began to filter back into my right ear.  Not much, and nothing clear, but enough that I could check messages on my cell phone and hopefully hear - </p>
<p>- my flight is <em>what?</em> Delayed by 45 minutes?</p>
<p>I pulled out my trusty itinerary and verified that my layover in New Orleans was only 30 minutes.  Houston, we have a problem.</p>
<p>* * * * *</p>
<p>You can learn a lot about people by how they treat you when you're 'different.'  The people at the Southwest counter had no idea that I was only deaf for what I hoped was the day.  When I showed them my itinerary, the woman behind the counter immediately recognized the problem with my New Orleans layover.  She looked at me, waited until I was looking at her face, and said very slowly and clearly,</p>
<p>"If we can get you in the air by five till the hour, we will call New Orleans and have the plane held for you."</p>
<p>They were the best words I hadn't heard all day.</p>
<p>She suggested I grab some lunch and check back with her in about fifteen minutes.  By the end of that period, she confirmed we'd be taking off in what would hopefully be just enough time for me to catch my next flight.  "You'll be landing at gate B4 right at 6:00, and your next flight is supposed to take off from B8 at 6:00.  We're going to hold the flight for you.  Short sprint.  Want to give it a try?"</p>
<p>I nodded.</p>
<p>"Here's a preboard pass.  Get in the first row of seats, and tell the flight attendant what's going on.  They'll make sure you're the first one off the plane."</p>
<p>After doing so, I sat in my preferred seat (window, right side of plane, so that this right-handed knitter can prop her knitting wrist against something) and waited.  As the plane ascended, I realized that my ears were popping a bit, and with each pop, I was able to hear.  The pops hurt, but by the time we reached cruising altitude and heavy snacks were served, the pain was gone and I was able to respond to conversation from my seatmates.</p>
<p><em>I'm okay.  I can hear.  It was just transitory,</em> I thought.</p>
<p>A thought which died a quick and ugly death when we left 30,000 feet and began to descend.  I knew it in my ears the moment we began diving toward ground.</p>
<p>By the time we landed, I was in tears.  I ate my fruit chews with a teary, single-minded intent, trying vainly to clear my ears before landing.  Not only were we late, the pain in my ears was just as bad as it had been on the LAX->Phoenix leg of the trip.  I yanked off my seat restraints and was out the door with my backpack and my knitting three seconds after the door opened.  Sure enough, I was at gate B4.</p>
<p>For all their noise, my steps were silent in my ears - and the plane was gone.  The attendant at the next gate down moved her mouth in motions that looked suspiciously like "They waited for you," but I was never sure.  She printed a boarding pass and said many words, few of which I caught, but eventually I understood enough to gather that I was on the final New Orleans -> Birmingham flight, which would be leaving in an hour from the far side of the concourse.</p>
<p>I walked to the far side of the concourse, put my bag between my knees, and cried, not caring who saw me.  They were just airport people.  They would never see me again after this day, and what would they care of a silent woman crying in an airport?  Probably happened all the time.</p>
<p>Somewhere along the way I realized that I would have to get on another plane and do this dance yet again, and it was a few minutes before the heavy pre-packaged snack settled back down in my stomach, grumbling all the while.</p>
<p>I realized that if I turned my phone up to its loudest volume, I could make phone calls.  I called Jeff to tell him I was okay - a blatant, but reassuring, lie - and asked myself who on my call list would understand what was going on with my ears?  Who might have dealt with something like this before?</p>
<p>I called Brian, if the conversation we had could have been described as a 'call.'  (I would tend to describe it more as near-hysterical snifflesobbing.)  He counseled me as best he could, and we hung up.  </p>
<p>I called several other people and got no answer.  By the time I reached the last person on my list, I was an absolute mess.  I said words I don't say lightly:</p>
<p>"I don't know if I can do this."</p>
<p>I could barely hear the voice on the end of the line, but either it said "You <em>can</em> do this," or I imagined it and I'm just going to give him credit for it anyway.</p>
<p>I got on the plane, which was mostly deserted.  Not many people feel the need to fly from New Orleans to Birmingham late on a weeknight.  I sat in the back of the plane, nearly alone for the first time all day, and I cried for most of the trip.</p>
<p>I ate the peanuts at 30,000 feet, knowing that the hearing I had at that moment would go away and, by the time we descended, I would be deaf once again.  As the lights of Birmingham grew closer and closer, I grew more certain that I would not finish this trip without gifting the already-eaten peanuts onto the seat in front of me.</p>
<p>Knitting didn't work.  As we descended, I latched onto the idea of the local grocery store I like.  Mentally, I walked the aisles, trying to occupy my brain by trying to name every item of every aisle of the store.  We landed between the cold and hot cereals and coasted to a stop by the milk and eggs, and I grabbed my bags and ran out of the plane while mentally plotting the items in the frozen-food aisles.</p>
<p>I ducked into the bathroom and leaned against the cold tile, willing my breathing to calm and my stomach to settle.  Jeff would be just on the other side of airport security, and I could sleep on the way home.  He knew I wouldn't be able to hear, and we'd figure out a way to work around that until things got better.  He wouldn't care how ghastly I looked.  He'd just bundle me up in the car, take me home, and put me to bed, and everything would be okay.</p>
<p>* * * * *</p>
<p>Except that, of course, my bags didn't make it past New Orleans.  The perfect end to the perfect day.</p>
<p>Southwest brought my bag to Huntsville the following afternoon, a few hours after I went to the doctor and received antibiotics, a steroid shot, and anti-inflammatory medication to try to ease the swelling in my ears.</p>
<p>But, hey, I was home, where my very lovely spouseling could (would, and did) bring me soup, blankets, kitties, and a humidifier.  Everything else - well, we'd manage.</p>
<p>Somehow.</p>
    ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Where do you intend to go</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://domesticat.net/2003/10/where-do-you-intend-go" />
    <id>http://domesticat.net/2003/10/where-do-you-intend-go</id>
    <published>2003-10-02T19:54:54+00:00</published>
    <updated>2008-06-10T01:58:41+00:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>domesticat</name>
    </author>
    <category term="arizona" />
    <category term="colorado" />
    <category term="family" />
    <category term="phoenix" />
    <category term="privacy" />
    <category term="travel" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<blockquote><p>"Where do you intend to go with your dirty dress?"<br />- Jimmy Eat World</p>
</blockquote>
<p>I always wondered what might make me change my mind and begin using private entries on domesticat.  Now I know.  Given a couple of days past the actual incident, I'm calmer than I was before, but the root of the matter still makes me sad.</p>
<p>A couple of days ago, a member of my family got in touch with a friend of hers, because she didn't like something I said on this site.  She was either unaware that he and I are still on friendly terms despite their falling-out earlier this year, or has forgotten.  He thought I might want to know about her request, and relayed the gist of it to me:</p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<blockquote><p>"Where do you intend to go with your dirty dress?"<br />- Jimmy Eat World</p></blockquote>
<p>I always wondered what might make me change my mind and begin using private entries on domesticat.  Now I know.  Given a couple of days past the actual incident, I'm calmer than I was before, but the root of the matter still makes me sad.</p>
<p>A couple of days ago, a member of my family got in touch with a friend of hers, because she didn't like something I said on this site.  She was either unaware that he and I are still on friendly terms despite their falling-out earlier this year, or has forgotten.  He thought I might want to know about her request, and relayed the gist of it to me:</p>
<blockquote><p>"Seems [name] was upset about content or whatnot on [domesticat] and wanted to know how easy it would be to get the site taken offline....I was asked to hack your site and remove some comments that were not well received."</p></blockquote>
<p>This has happened before, and it was uglier the first time.  The first time, it was my sister, and I'll admit that the comment I made was acerbic, and mean - but, unfortunately, true.  Nevertheless, I learned a lesson.  In the years since then, I have spoken about my family only in the most circumspect terms, and done my best to make sure that I don't provide easily-searchable words and phrases about them.</p>
<p>I recognize it is revisionist to speak only of the good things, but I continue to do it.  I realize that speaking publicly about many of the negative events in our past will do nothing to make them right, and only serves to cause to pick at a scab that is, truly, beginning to heal.  Jeff has taught me many things in the time we've been together, but perhaps the most important has been that confrontation and acknowledgment is not always the correct recipe for healing past hurts.</p>
<p>Sometimes confrontation and acknowledgment will do nothing but cause more hurt, and the best answer for everyone involved is simply to walk away.  Walk away and start over.</p>
<p>I did that five years ago.</p>
<p>I'll be the first to admit that I love my family dearly, but I've come to treasure my physical distance from them.  The distance between them&mdash;the overwhelming close-knit, gossiping and prying and loving and judging pack of <em>them</em>&mdash;and me, has meant that I've been given - silence.  The opportunity to hear my own voice warble alone for the first time.</p>
<p>That has meant&mdash;everything&mdash;yet I find myself unwilling or unable to talk about <em>why</em>.  An interesting dichotomy, given that I started this site three years ago with the admirable, yet unrealistic, goal of 'saying everything.'</p>
<p>Three years and multiple Major Life Events&trade; later, I know how unrealistic a goal that was.  The idea of 'saying everything' needs to be restrained, reserved for the freer space of fiction writing; some truths, no matter how blatant, cannot be said in a nonfiction manner without hurting those that I truly care about.</p>
<p>But sometimes, the urge is very strong, indeed.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">* * * * *</p>
<p>There are other details that I often leave out here.  For example, I don't like the idea of broadcasting to the general public when I plan to be away from home for a long period of time, because even though my full name and mailing address are obscured from the general public, it is not unfindable.  I realize it's a silly precaution, but there are some lines I'm just not willing to cross on a public site.</p>
<p>But, hey, we're all friends here.</p>
<p>I'll confess that it's a bit of a relief, after all these years writing for this site, to be able to metaphorically look over my shoulder, see that the coast is clear, and type the phrase my friends have heard me say many times:  "I love my family, but they are insane."  </p>
<p>So, while I'm confessional and have gotten you to use your quarto account for a change, let me tell you what's <em>really</em> got me stoked right now:  my yearly I'll-Fly-Away trips in December.  (Normally done in October, but scheduling conflicts happen!)  The plane tickets are booked, and the anticipatory squealing has already begun.</p>
<p>On Wednesday, December 3, I fly to Phoenix, Arizona.  I'll be there for nearly a week, hanging out with Matt, <a href="http://www.domesticat.net/content.php?q=cast&amp;friend=kara">Kara</a>, and Danny.  My plans involve little more than traipsing about to see lovely rock formations, making goo-goo noises at Danny, and staying up late for truly raucous gossip sessions with Kara.</p>
<p>On Tuesday, December 9, I'll be stowing my things in Jeff's bag (hey Jeff, can I borrow your bag for these trips?  Please?) and heading off for a completely different experience:  a week in LA with <a href="http://greyexpectations.com/">Noah and David</a>, to a little apartment on the beach.  There are rumors of beachside reading and merlot-fueled Xbox wars beginning to trickle into my inbox.  There are dark and secret rumors floating about that I&mdash;the domesticat who is legendarily cranky about being photographed&mdash;plan to sit for a photography session with Noah.</p>
<p>I'd tell you not to put any stock in the rumors, but that would be a lie.</p>
<p>I have visions of taking a mp3 player and a truly salacious novel out to the beach, and working on a pink little sunburn while listening to Jason Mraz noodle over a guitar line.</p>
<p>I can think of few better ways to spend the coin of a December day.</p>
<p>I will fly home on Tuesday, December 16, in time to rejoin my fellow geeks for the December 17th premiere of <a href="http://imdb.com/title/tt0167260/combined">Return of the King</a>.  Cheesy reasoning, yes, but after two years of attending opening-night showings with friends, I can think of no better way to spend the night of December 17th than to complete the trilogy with friends.</p>
<p>We will dart away to Arkansas for Christmas, assuming the weather holds, and return a bit more quickly than we normally do, for on the 30th I'm off again.</p>
<p>New Year's Eve sees me winging to Colorado, hopefully dodging the worst of wintry weather on my way to spend the week of New Year's with <a href="http://smilingpeanut.com/cjl/">Chris</a> and Jake.  Plans are hazy, but they seem to involve much movie-watching, salsa-eating, some solo yarn shopping (I try not to inflict this on friends) and perhaps the lure of a pair of cheap seats for the Avs-Wild game on January 4.</p>
<p>January 6 will find me home, apologizing to the cats.</p>
<p>I'm only a <em>little</em> excited.  Really.</p>
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