Rat Update: Day 3

Last night I wrapped presents over at Tim’s place until the wee hours of the morning (on the only day of the year that he was exhausted enough to attempt sleep before midnight, but he said he couldn’t hear me, since he was upstairs and I was down). So I wasn’t inside my house enough to hear if there was a repeat performance from Michael Ratley and his Irish Dancing Rats.

However, as I went in and out of the garage seeking shipping boxes, I did see a rat run inside my attic through the hole around an air conditioning pipe. Enjoy your freedom now, Fievel, it all gets plugged up tomorrow.

After getting everything wrapped, I brought the boxes back into the Big House (which has less square footage than Tim’s place, but whatever) to address and seal them. And that is when last night’s adventure happened. I heard a noise so loud that I called out to Tom (a very sound sleeper), “Did you hear that? Was that gunfire?”

“Only if someone has a machine gun,” he hollered back. “And I’m not sticking my head out the door to see what it was.”

(He has a psychic ability to know what my next request will be.)

I waited for sirens and blue flashing lights, but nothing happened. I kept thinking I heard people’s voices, but when I finally ventured outside with the dogs, I couldn’t detect anything amiss.

Beats me. Maybe some of my neighbors took an AK-47 approach to their rat problem.

Compound Aid

Picture it…Compound Aid, a musical extravaganza to help us pay off the cost of rat-proofing our home. RATS, I’m talking, not mice. Because I just NEEDED TO SPEND SEVERAL HUNDRED MORE DOLLARS after my car repairs of last week. This is why I hate Christmas. This crap always happens this time of year, and Tom and I always end up saying, Okay, we won’t buy gifts for each other. One day, I’m getting diamonds or some such shit for Christmas. I don’t actually want diamonds for Christmas, and I’m glad I can roll down my car window now, and I truly believe that Fievel and Mickey and Mighty should be somewhere other than my attic, but still…

Anyway, Compound Aid. This is the talent I envision performing:

The band Ratt. Woohoo, big hair!

Former MOUSEketeers Britney Spears, Christina Aguilera, Justin Timberlake, and Keri Russell. (Keri Russell? Who knew?)

American indie rock band Modest Mouse and British band The Field Mice. No, I never heard of either of these bands and I know nothing about their music. But I’ve got a theme going here.

Naturally, the Boomtown Rats. After all, Bob Geldof invented the whole musicians-aid gig.

It’s possible that costs could be underwritten by Rat Town Records.

And of course, headlining would be R.E.M. What? You don’t KNOW that the ‘R’ and the ‘M’ don’t stand for ‘rats’ and ‘mice.’ They could.

Not buying it? Well, if you say “rem” instead of the initials, it sounds like NIMH. Clearly there’s a connection to the Rats of NIMH.

Oh, all right. I just want R.E.M. because I love R.E.M. and Michael Stipe, okay? There are GIANT MUTANT RATS living in my attic! Give me something here…

New Toy at The Compound

Today, the Great New Experiment begins. It’s been, um, a long, long time since I used a crock pot, but I got one a few days ago to try out recipes from Joe Simmer (thanks, Greg). I modified one of his recipes and added some elements from another that I found online, and tonight, Tom and Tim will be the ones who endure the results when they eat the hen that I’ve already checked on TWENTY TIMES in less than an hour–leaving the lid on, however, because there are some instructions I’ll follow, though not many.

And now, I have officially become that thing FARB and millions of other people don’t want to read–someone who talks recipes and cooking on my LJ. I’d better find another hot photo of Tim in the archives…

Lit Tree

Even though decorating a tree can be a pain, every year when I open the bins and trunks that contain ornaments, I am opening a door to my past. I have too many ornaments and too small a tree, so there are some that are never used because they hold no sentimental value beyond memories of when I’ve used them on past holidays.

We used to live in bigger houses. Then, before Tim moved here, we’d put a large, real tree in the apartment and only decorate our house with smaller things. Some years we didn’t decorate at all because we traveled. However, the year that Tom sadly hung a single ornament on a cactus made me feel so guilty that I think I’ve decorated ever since.

There are some ornaments that I use every time I decorate because they mean so much to me. Small glass ornaments that hung on my family’s tree from the time my brother (eight years older) was a baby. Ornaments cross-stitched by my friend Amy, as well as the AIDS Santa she gave me one Christmas after Steve R. died. A little hand-quilted ornament that my mother gave me after the Thanksgiving that she, my sister, and I worked on Tim R.’s AIDS Quilt panel.

There are ornaments that hung on Tom’s family tree when he was a little boy, and ornaments from his grandmother, who always decorated lavishly at Christmas. Ornaments that symbolize times that Lynne and I have shared over the past 38 years of friendship. (Yes, years before we were even born! Another miracle!) As I said last year, the two garlands that hang over two doorways are filled with the Star Trek ornaments Lynne has given Tom, and the Barbie ornaments she’s given me over many years. There’s a pink rhinestone pig that Lynne says is ugly but which I love that was from her son Jess and his wife Laura one Christmas.

There are little picture frames with pictures of my family and Tom’s nieces and various dogs. There’s the ornament I bought in December of 2001, a fragile ball of cobalt blue with an American flag on it, and each year when I take it out of its box and hang it, I honor everyone lost on September 11. There are several handcrafted ornaments from Tom’s mother, an artist, as well as ornaments she and his father have bought us when they’ve traveled. And there are plenty of Winnie the Pooh ornaments, although most of these stay out all year on an antique set of shelves that bear the name “Pooh Corner.”

Since we don’t have kids, there’s no knowing what will happen to all this stuff when Tom and I die, but I don’t care. It’s enough for me that our ornaments aren’t just glass, plastic, metal, or pewter, they’re memories of and gifts from people too many to mention: people who taught me about love, friendship, and the comfort of tradition.

Holidays can be hard when they remind us of better times or people we’ve lost. The real gifts though, are that we had those moments and those loved ones in our lives. Try to carve out some quiet time to cherish your memories and honor your past.

Holidays

Although I usually don’t decorate for the holidays until the last possible moment, if at all, since we were having friends and family over for Thanksgiving, I talked Tom into decorating early (he gets stuck doing all the hard stuff). Though I STILL don’t have my sleighbells out, so it’s not official yet. But here are some photos taken Wednesday.


And so it begins, after a trip to the attic.


Bored by it.


Aliens are trying to beam up Mrs. Claus!


Only one ornament was harmed in the trimming of the skinny tree.

Explanation of the next two pictures follows:

My friend Steve R. had a copy of A Christmas Angel Collection with only one angel partially colored before he died. The book contains drawings of angels based on Renaissance paintings that can be colored or painted, glittered or otherwise adorned, and cut out.

I ordered several copies many years ago. Now I have dozens of these angels done by various friends and relatives. Each year, usually Tim places them on the molding over our windows in the living room and dining room. This means we can’t use the ceiling fan in the dining room, or angels go flying. Some of the angels are signed by their artists, but not all of them.