lallal

Slugs, Angel Hair & Vespas, Or, The One Thing That DOES Define You In This Life

A Sexy Little Love Affair

So, I’m sitting in the bar at this restaurant.

I’m lovingly twirling my fork into a steamy, lemony, buttery, most delightfully angelic heap of angel hair–the creamy, makes-you-throw-your-head-back-with-glee kind of pasta that, I was thinking, should probably be forbidden for nuns, because, I swear, this pasta is far more decadent than the best sex you could think up.  It! is! simply! that! good!

*sips chardonnay*

*wonders if it’s normal to be in lust with your pasta*

*thinks about researching it*

*decides against it, because clearly it is possible.  Eat, Pray, Love, hello.*

*determines that Italy must be next destination*

*also determines that chardonnay is, in fact, an excellent travel planning tool*

*cringes at thought of beautiful Italian man wearing excessively tight jeans*

*vows to go with it, if it means riding on the back of a vespa*

*wonders if he’ll feed me pasta on the back of a vespa*

Damn.

How is it that in a make believe fantasy that involves the country of Italy, tall, dark, mysteriously stubbly men, and the wonders of Limoncello, my thoughts zoom straight back to platefuls of boiled dough?

*sigh*

There I am, in all of my glorious gluttony, debating things that only the voice in MY head would debate, when in walks this couple–which is actually the real point of the story, despite my pasta-obsessed ramblings.  (Is this what my college English professor meant when he said my writing was far too flowery?)

The Mr. & Mrs. & Their Plate of Calamari

The couple that enters isn’t just any couple, easily noted via the, errr interesting choice of footwear the Mrs. is donning–a hot pink flip flop, complete with oversized matching hibiscus flowers adorning the thong–in addition to a matching hot pink sun hat, all serving to complement the lime green tee shirt that reads, “Oh crap!  You’re going to try and cheer me up, aren’t you?”–in rhinestones, of course.

Someone got a hold of a Bedazzler, I muse to myself.

Despite her questionably loud attire, I look at her, and I look at her husband, who went a far more basic route with simple khakis and some tube socks, and there is something about them that just makes me happy.

“Are ya outta ya god damn mind?!” she says to him, in a tone that is half serious, half taunting–and 100% reminiscent of Fran Drescher’s nanny days.

“What?!” he replies, flicking his hands backwards into the air.  “You always like to sit on the right!  Whatdya moanin’ fohr?”

“Ye-ah,” she replies with playful condescension in her voice, “But not when it’s right next ta an open door.  Afta all these years, you’d think you’d know that I can’t take a draft.”

“How the hell didja survive our wedding day?” he says.  “There were doors open in the god damn church, you know.”

“Did you just curse the church?!  Shame on you!”

“Shame on you for not just telling me what seat you wanted from the beginning.”

And naturally, me and my angel hair can’t help but giggle to ourselves at their conversation.  They lovingly banter on, until they notice me watching from a couple of barstools down (because, obviously, this is a couple that eats at the bar), at which point they begin to speculate out loud about how amazing my steamy, lemony, buttery angel hair goodness looks.

They look at the plate, then at me, then back to the plate with such admiration, as if I had invented electricity, or perhaps the airplane.

“It’s very good,” I tell them.  “It’s had me dreaming of Italy for the past 20 minutes.”

She whacks him in the arm with the back of her hand.  “See?  I knew we shoulda ordered the pasta.”

Of course, once their plates had arrived, they begin insisting that I sample some of theirs–apparently the calamari is top notch, and I simply must try it.

I refuse, telling them that, to be frank, those squiggly little legs just aren’t my cup of tea, and so the Mr. begins hunting down the circles with his fork, proceeding to fling several onto my plate, seeming absolutely ecstatic as he awaits my reaction to my first bite of the deep fried cephalopod–which, in case you were wondering, happens to be in the same family as the slug.

Precisely why I order angel hair, man.

After we go back and forth for a while–this team of strangers enthusiastically offering me their food, me wondering just how obligated I now am to offer them my angel hair, despite all inclination to do so–they eventually finish their meal, get their bill, and leave, and I am left in peace to finish my chardonnay and perhaps beckon the server for another.

Food For Thought (Hate This Phrase But Hey–It Fit)

The encounter has prompted me to think–not about elderly, Jewish woman fashion trends, nor about the number of diseases that one could potentially contract from sharing food–but about bigger picture things.  You know, that whole life thing.

I watched these two people, who had obviously lived a full life, and suddenly it was just so strikingly clear: At the end of the day, it doesn’t matter what you did for a living.  It doesn’t matter if you had 1 bedroom or 5.  It doesn’t matter whether you could ever afford the heated leather seats, or the touch-screen GPS.  It doesn’t matter if you don’t have a villa on a lake, or a private bungalow on the beach.  It doesn’t matter if your Christmas gifts aren’t extravagant, or your birthday gifts modest.  It doesn’t matter if you have an iPhone or a flip phone, a mac or a PC, a flat screen or a big ole box of a television.  It doesn’t matter if you’re stylish or not, if you can afford the designer label or not, or if you even care about those things at all.

None of it matters.

What matters, at the end of the day, are the people sitting next to you at the bar.

It’s the people that make our lives worth living, and make our memories worth remembering.

It’s the people that make our heart race with joy, and our rooms filled with laughter.

It’s the people that make the wine taste so good, and the pasta taste all the more better.

It’s the people that make a story have a purpose, a painting have its beauty and a song have its moment.

It’s the people–from the good, to the bad, and everything in between–that not only share your reality, but actively serve to construct it, that truly matter.

Because at the end of the day, you can’t take your heated leather seats with you.  You can’t take your black granite countertop, your fancy Prada shoes or any of the money you’ve worked so hard to save.

All you have are your memories, as you partake in the one and only thing that truly will ever serve to define you in this life:   That of shared experience.

As they walked out of the restaurant, hand in hand, it was me who was staring at them with admiration–here were two people, who by themselves may have had nothing, but together, had the world.

They had each other.

And isn’t that enough?

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How to Deal When the World Collapses Right On Your Face

“But…but…but…buttttttttt…..

…nothing’s going my way and everything is wrong and, and, and, and, andddd I might just slather myself with a vat of butter and slide down the Grand Canyon to my death because because because because becauseeee….my life sucks….and and and and AND on top of it all I’m having a bad hair day, some idiot cut me off in traffic, I spilled coffee on the shirt I just had dry cleaned, my boyfriend doesn’t ever want to share his feelings, and I can’t cook a grilled cheese without burning it for the life of me….*gasp*…and and and why why whyyyyy doesn’t anything ever go my wayyyyyy?!?!”

Sounds like some people you know, doesn’t it?

It’s easy to let the little things get the best of you.  I know that every time I burn a grilled cheese, a small part of me dies inside.  Which is every time, actually.  But I don’t really die inside; rather I just learned to love charred bread.  Mhmmmm! See how easy that was?

Beyond the magical undertaking of perfecting a grilled cheese, we tend to get wrapped up in all of the here-and-now details of daily life.  We become hypersensitive to events as they occur by the hour, letting them affect our mood, our perception and our outlook on things.  And sometimes, it does feel like everything is happening at once, and the whole world is collapsing on your head and–dammit–you never even got to go to France and here the world is, collapsing on your face, silently mocking you with every minor setback.  How dare it!  Such an inconsiderate bitch, that world.

The good news is that France isn’t all that great, anyway.

But the bad news, my friends, is that when you’re in the process of putting yourself out there in the world, becoming an entrepreneur or fighting the status quo, trying to live life on your own terms, the little things that go wrong multiply 10-fold.  The uncertainty of it all is to blame, and when you don’t know exactly what’s going to happen next, and you’re attempting to forge a path where there wasn’t one before, life inevitably becomes a little bit more complicated.  And with those complications, comes frustrations.  And more than ever you want to lather yourself with butter and heave yourself over the edge of the Grand Canyon.  (What?  That isn’t how you imagine plunging to your death?)

So, entrepreneurialism can be tricky.  The issue is further compacted when you’ve got all of these details to deal with, and on top of it you don’t get any support from anyone, since no one actually believes you can do it and they all think you’re off your rocker. Pshh–practical people.

But, if there’s one thing that’s kept me going through challenging times, it wasn’t cheesy motivational quotes, hugs from Mormons or even excessive amounts of liquid courage.

What do I do when I get down?

(Besides find a cute boy to flirt with.)

I think of the stories.

When I’m 72.489 years old, I want to have stories.  I want to have stories, and I want to have stories that are worth telling.  I want to be able to think back on my lifetime, and think to myself, “I can’t believe I survived that shit.”  Because to me, that means that I actually got out there and I pushed myself.  I pushed myself past comfort zones, over lines, and into places that only those who dare to go, can be found.  I want to live fully, and with intention, without regret, and with far too many memories for even the biggest of scrapbooks.

I want excitement.

I want to be exhilarated.

I want to feel every range of emotion.

I want to understand others.

I want to see their lands.

I want to share myself with the world.

I want to feel alive.

I want the wind in my hair.

And nothing more but the knowledge that no matter what goes wrong, I know I will have lived.

And at the end of the day.

I will have the stories to prove it.

P.S.  I’ve actually never been to France.  That was a blatant lie.  France, please forgive me for my harsh words.  And then give me a baguette and some really expensive wine.

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