Caffeinated Sugar Monkey

Saturday, September 23, 2006

Mosquitoes

Dear Mosquito population of greater Tucson,

You win. I give up. I don't know what exactly it is that you want from me (other than my blood obviously) but what ever it is...you can have it. You have broken my spirit and sapped me of the will to fight. I am too busy scratching myself to resist any longer. My husband thinks I have West Nile virus and my legs are covered in scabs and bites. It is not a pretty picture and I am willing to agree to any terms to get some relief.

I would like to point out, however, that I am not the only warm blooded mammal in this house. Now that you have my unconditional surrender, perhaps you'd like a change of pace and might like to feast on someone else's blood for a change...just a thought.

Yours truly,

Caffeinated itchy monkey.

Wednesday, September 20, 2006

An explanation

So, below is my first writing assignment for my class. Our assignment was to write a letter from the perspective of a purse snatcher to the person they stole from.

I think it is okay, not great, but okay. I'm mostly publishing it so I can get braver about being a wanna be writer person.

Also, Kelly made me.

By Request: My first writing assignment

Inmate Number J450341
Brooksville Women's Correctional Facility
Brooksville, OH 46874

Mrs. Miranda Caraway
1471 Cottonwood Lane
Marysville, OH 47584


Dear Mrs. Caraway,

Pursuant to the terms of my recent plea bargain agreement, this letter is to stand as my official apology to you as well as my admission of guilt and remorse. I have been strongly advised by my attorney (a man whose advice I listen to despite the fact that he wears the same brown shoes every single time we meet) that my plea bargain was a "gift" and that I should thank my lucky stars and that six to nine months is "no time at all" for a chronic thief like me. He says that a nicely written letter might facilitate my early release. I certainly hope so. Orange does not flatter my skin tone.

I do want you to know that I have a great deal of remorse for the events of October 13th, 2005. Sometimes, late at night when Theresa my flat mate (sounds so much nicer than cell mate, don't you agree?) is exuberantly snoring and sleep eludes me, I find my thoughts returning to that pivotal moment in the feminine hygiene aisle of the Kroger when our paths crossed. I distinctly remember the first moment I saw you. You were wearing a velour tracksuit in a shade of purple best left to eggplants. I'm not sure if I noticed your white tennis shoes next or your permed hair. I am certain that both upset me greatly. It was, after all, after Labor Day and no longer 1986. You had a cart full of disgusting food: corn dogs, frozen pizzas, ice milk and several Lean Cuisine frozen entrees that, judging by your rather ample figure, must have been for someone else. I noticed your cart because it was parked directly in the center of the aisle, left unattended while you struggled with an economy size box of generic tampons (in super absorbent size, which I found a bit unseemly I must say).

It took me only a moment though to notice the thing that upset me most: your purse. There it sat in the front seat- a perfect purse. A Hermes Birkin bag in black. It had the stunning gold hardware, the gorgeous leather, the clasped opening. It was just as I remembered it from the September Vogue where it was featured as the fall "must have item." I remember drawing a breath, simultaneously awed by its loveliness and stunned by its presence in your cart. I felt sure there was some sort of cosmic error. You, a woman who no doubt reads Women's Day or Ladies Home Journal not Vogue or even Elle, carrying a Birkin. It just didn't make sense. You clearly have children (four, I would later learn during your deposition). Who would allow a child to live in the same house as a Birkin? Children have such sticky, dirty fingers.

I knew, instinctively, the way one just knows not to wear sequins before nightfall or spandex unless you are racing through the hills of France on a bicycle, that the universe had meant for me to be at that Kroger at that exact moment. I knew that I was the one meant to liberate that Birkin.

As you no doubt remember from my recent deposition, yours was not the first expensive handbag I have liberated from an undeserving owner. There was a Chanel in the floral department at Target, a Fendi left on the changing room floor at Macy's and even a Prada from a restroom at Applebee's. All of them rightfully removed into my protective custody, all of them finally achieving their true potential upon my very thin, very fashionable arm, but none of them cried out for me the way that your Birkin did. I didn't hesitate. I didn't need to. I grabbed it and quickly, but gracefully made my away out of the Kroger and toward freedom.

I was, of course, stunned when the police arrived at my apartment a few hours later. Who would have thought that our humble Kroger had such a high tech security system? Who would have thought they could trace me from my frequent shopper card? I knew I should have just paid full price for my magazines and salad fixings. I must always remember that it never pays to be cheap.

The hours after my arrest were a bit of a blur. The search warrant, the amazement of the officers as they found my climate controlled walk-in closet filled with purses and shoes, their delight when they found the Birkin with your wallet and identification still inside-- all of it seemed to happen so fast. I didn't even have time to say goodbye to my new camel colored leather boots before they took me away.

The next few hours were upsetting, as you can imagine, and it was obvious to everyone involved that I would be found guilty of grand theft, owing to the high price of all of the liberated (or "stolen" if you must be technical about it) purses. I felt sadness as I sat in that first cell but I also felt certain of the moral justness of what I had done. I was just drifting off to sleep when I heard something so terrible, so horrible that it haunts me still.

"Hey, are you the lady that stole that knock-off purse?"

"Me? No. I took the black Hermes Birkin."

"Yeah, the fake black leather purse. Get up. Your lawyer is here."

The young officer seemed impatient with me as I struggled to form words. A knock-off? A fake? Everything seemed to happen in slow motion as I tried stand. I couldn't breath. The room started to spin. It couldn't possibly have been a fake. I thought I heard myself screaming as the room went black.

Later, after the brief stay in the infirmary and the unfortunate outburst at the prison chaplain and then the lovely calming pills, my lawyer explained to me that your purse was not a real Birkin and was, instead, a souvenir from your recent anniversary trip to New York City. It was a Canal Street knock off. I was going to prison for a knock-off. I felt in that moment such shame and such disappointment in myself. I should have known. I should have checked for the serial number, for the tiny Hermes logo inside. I should have sniffed the leather a bit more intensely. I will have to come to terms with being fooled by a fake for the rest of my life.

Now, as I begin my stay here at Brooksville, I want you to know that I am sorry. You did, in fact, deserve to have that purse. You should also know that I feel real remorse that I got caught. I plan to read as many fashion magazines as the guards will allow my mother to send me...I will certainly never make this mistake again.

Please tell the district attorney that you received this letter. You should probably mention to her that I used real linen stationary. I am making an effort here.


Yours truly,

Blythe Fulton-Kennsington
Inmate J450341

Tuesday, September 12, 2006

Writer Monkey

So, as some of my readers may know, I’m taking a writing class this semester. Officially I’m just taking it for fun and to develop my creative side. This is mostly true. Unofficially, I want to be the best writer in the class and to have the teacher love me more than anyone else and to get the bestest grade ever given and to be worshipped and adored by each and every one of my classmates.

I realize that maybe, just maybe, I’m not quite over my teacher’s pet phase.

I’m not sure how this class is going to go for me. First of all, the teacher doesn’t believe in grading creative writing, so we get graded mostly on attendance and participation. My “A” loving little heart and my deeply seated competitive side are not thrilled with this policy. How will I know who I’m better than if we can all get A’s?

Second, it turns out that there are some very annoying people drawn to writing classes (obviously this includes me). There is Booming Voice Ted (BVT), who always has a comment to make and who has the loudest indoor voice I’ve ever heard. BVT really, really likes his writing and has promised (threatened?) that he will always be willing to read his stuff out loud. He says he wants to write about “powerful words. Words like birth, hope, transformation, love and death.” I am really not looking forward to BVT’s dramatic readings of his birth scenes.

Also annoying the Egg of Expression Girl (EEG). EEG is one of those “look at me, look at me, I am ever so creative! I have artfully messy hair and black fingernails and I name drop authors I am allegedly reading. I drink a lot of coffee and talk about the hidden darkness in everyday life” type of people. Her nickname stems from an exercise in class where we all had to finish this sentence: The art of writing is __________. Her response? “The art of writing is the act of frying an egg of expression on a sidewalk instead of a skillet.”

Gag. The worst part is that everyone in class sighed reverently at that. I dare anyone in class to come up with a coherent explanation for what that even means.

There is also a group of students, the “Gen Eds”, who are in the class despite their stated aversions to both writing and reading. This class is a transferable so I can understand the need for credit but I think it could be a long semester for the guy sitting next to me who claims to own 600 DVDs and no books.

The rest of the class is a hodgepodge of elderly folks, a couple of people like me taking it just for fun and creative writing and journalism majors. We haven’t really started reading each others stuff yet, so it will be interesting to hear what the folks in this group come up with.

I am, despite my annoyances, glad that I am in the class and I do think I’ll get something out of it…even if that something is just the realization that I am a completely judgmental and competitive person. Self-knowledge is valuable too.