Monday, April 25, 2005

Barney Fife meets NWA meets Kingpin

I love it when people randomly dial my number and ask for donations for charity. I don't know about you but I always feel like giving my credit card information to someone who has just interrupted me in the sanctity of my home, mispronounced my name, and read a donation spiele from a script.

So this weekend I was home doing something or other that I felt was important when the phone rang. I don't have caller ID so it's still a surprise to see who is calling. Lucky me, it was my good friend Sean from the Deputy Sheriff's Association. He first thanked me for my support during last year's fundraiser. I tried to interject that I never donated but he cut me off and rambled on reading his canned sob story about the families of injured and killed deputies needing money. Again, I tried to stop him but he kept going. Finally, I told him this was a really bad week to call me asking for donations to law enforcement seeing as how I had just shelled out more than $10,000 in impound fees and bail while my brother spent four days in jail due to some overzealous hipppy-hating cops. Sean seemed unphased, chuckled and asked me for the equivalent of just 28 cents a day - which amount to about $100 per year. I asked him if he had listened to what I said at all. He said, "I know people have some bad experiences with law enforcement but they have tough times too." Incredible. I then asked him if he remembered the band N.W.A. from the 80's. He said he did, thanked me and hung up. Idiot.

Of course, as with all absurdities in my life, the phone call reminded me of a date I actually went on with a CHP officer way back in 1997. I can't even remember the bloke's name so we'll call him Kingpin.

I met Kingpin while out mountain biking along the Sacramento River one fall day. He was out with a group of friends and I was off to the side of the trail fixing a flat tire. He earned big points by stopping to help - the fact that he was attractive didn't hurt either. We ended up riding in together then exchanging information and making plans to meet for dinner the next weekend.

Dinner, which was at the local Stuart Anderson's Steakhouse, was interesting in that he felt compelled to tell me he was carrying a weapon in case anything should "go down" during dinner. It sounded very serious so I glanced around at the crowd to do some profiling based on entree selection. It's always the early bird's who cause a ruckus. Anyhow, I took note and made certain I used the correct utensils and didn't get out of line. Conversation revolved around, big surprise here, him and his gun and how much he loved being a cop and pulling people over. Also enchanting was his discussion of how he profiled people to pull over based on their vehicle make and hairstyle. He said my ponytail with new truck was safe from profile-based stops.

He was having such a great time that he wanted the date to continue and suggested we go bowling. A bowler I am not but he was cute and carrying a loaded weapon and if you can't have fun with a gun at a bowling alley I don't know where you can.

On the way to the alley he told me how he was on the CHP bowling team and laid the foundation for what a superior bowler he was. He had his own ball, shoes and glove. Custom bowling gear plus chauvenism equals superior bowling complex equals unbearable arrogance so I knew I was in trouble.

Naturally, Kingping wanted to bet on our game, even giving me 20 points. I reminded him that I hadn't bowling since the sixth grade and had never broken 100 but he persisted. Whatever. He proceeded to slaughter me at bowling, gloating all the while. The people in the next lane were rolling their eyes along with me. Such a sad display and he was completely unaware.

After the longest bowling game of my life I was ready to go. He pleaded for one more game with a bigger spread. I refused. Then he did it...He called me a bad loser. This, combined with a couple of pints of beer, the murmurs of the kids in the arcade, and the fact I knew I had wasted a perfectly good Saturday night with the idiot, pissed me off. So I told him I'd play one more round but with my rules. Reveling in his manliness and thinking he could beat me no matter what, he agreed to a double-or-nothing game. The rule was simple: we'd both bowl left-handed to level the playing field (we were both righties).

Poor Kingpin scowled, whined, threw things, fondled his gun, threw the ball into other lanes, and ended up losing in a blowout 42-18 match. Idiot.

Tuesday, April 19, 2005

Values Check

Cost of abortion for brother's crackhead girlfriend: $260.00 (Valium included)

Cost to get brother's truck out of impound after four days: $369.00 (not including past due registration or gas)

Monday, April 18, 2005

Mrs. Robinson

After last week's family drama I decided I needed to drink away my sorrows this weekend so Saturday I headed up to Gaviota for the San Luis Obispo Hash House Harriers' run and mini-campout.

R and C decided to make a day of it too after I told them there would be beer and topless women so we all piled into R's truck and headed north. What amazed me was the fact that I, the only woman in our trio, merely brought along a sleeping bag, a 12-pack of Bass, and a bag with some warm clothes. The two men, on the other hand, brought along two tents, air mattresses, three sets of clothes, six pair of shoes, and enough hair product to put the local Paul Mitchell distributor out of business. It was to be only a 20 hour trip...

We arrived in time for a quick beer or two, or three, before the run started. The run ended up being about six miles over the mountains and through the woods with great views of the Pacific, four beer checks, and a stream crossing. It's always nice to get your feet wet midway through a trail run. After the run we all headed back to the campground to set up for the night. Turns out R was so drunk by the time we got to the campsite that when he went to set up his tent he realized he had forgotten his tent poles. Same thing with B, another hasher. Yes, we are known for our intelligence. C was the only one with a tent with poles, but it was a small tent. The majority of folks decided to just sleep under the stars so our campsite ended up looking like a homeless zone, with bodies strewn on tarps on the ground and one dingy grey tent off to the side.

Lucky for us there was a concert and BBQ taking place at a park about 1/2 mile from the campground so some of us showered, changed and headed over. The band was good and B had brought a big bottle of Jack Daniels so folks were well-lubed. I'm a puker so I stay away from the hard stuff. This also leads to more clarity than the masses at these events, which is usually a good thing. The music ended and we stumbled back to camp.

At some point during the evening a herd of teenaged boys converged on our camp. I think they were helping retrieve firewood or something. They told me they were all at least 18, in fact, on boy told me he had lost his virginity three months ago so he was experienced. Tempting as it was, I passed. Anyhow, they wanted a picture of them with our group so, kindly old lady that I am, I flashed a boob when the guy to the picture. This was like opening Pandora's Box and set the boys into a tizzy. They were so excited that I decided to flee with C and R. Of course, while I was away my goods friends back at camp told the boys, especially the runt, that I liked teenagers and was really serious about one of them. This led to three of them storming the beach in search of the "hot older lady" that I apparantly am. Thank god R, a tall former Australian rules football player, was there. I told the boys he was my husband and got very jealous. They immediately apologized to him, called him sir, and scampered back to camp.

The next morning when I emerged from the tent my fellow campers seemed to be snoring to the tune of Simon & Garfunkel...

Friday, April 15, 2005

Happy Anniversary

To the blog. I forgot, it's been a year as of April 15. Should have known I would have started while procrastinating on taxes last year.

And yes, it has been downhill ever since...

Tuesday, April 12, 2005

Payback

I learned another perk of being a lawyer this weekend. My brother got arrested so I had the distinct pleasure of showing my bar card at the jail and getting a private visit with good ole bro during non-visiting hours. The visit itself was uneventful, other than him being upset I wouldn't post bail until after the arraignment. What was kind of funny was that he called me later that night and asked that I not visit again because they strip-searched him after I left and he didn't like being strip-searched.

I'm seriously considering visiting him as his lawyer a few times a day just to make him suffer a bit more...

Saturday, April 09, 2005

The Great Olive Incident of 1976

Todd inquired about my putting olives next to repression and unaccountability on the list of things I don't like. Seeing as how I am known to eat anything (take that as you will), it is odd that I don't appreciate a nice olive every now and then so here's the tale of how I came to have a gag reflex when it comes to olives:

It was Thanksgiving, 1976, or was it '77? It really doesn't matter anymore. I was a young and rambunctious girl, sporting pigtails, my sister's hand-me down Dittos, and my favorite Sean Cassidy shirt, running amuck at my grandparents' house with my other 28 cousins. We trailer types are, after all, breeders by nature. Grandpa had put out some olives in a bowl for a snack. Naturally, all of us with little fingers began sticking the olives on our fingertips. I had somehow managed to adorn every digit on both hands with black olives. Then my evil cousin Jacob started chasing me. I took off screaming and headed for the screened-in porch, olive-clad hands flailing. For some reason I thought I might get an energy burst if I ate an olive or two en route. I had just stuck my right hand, and all five olives, in my mouth when I ran smack dab into the sliding glass door at warp speed. Good old grandma had Windexed it just that morning. My right elbow hit the glass first, shoving the olives and my hand down my own throat. A few olives got caught, my fingernails dug into the roof of my mouth, and I began to choke. Someone heimliched me, or beat me, or something, and the olives were cleared but my mouth was bleeding profusely. I ended up having three stitches in the roof of my mouth and a dislocated shoulder from the impact. I haven't eaten an olive since.

Oh, and you should check out Todd's dissertation on Black People Love Us at his own site No Ordinary Place for info on the olive branch that white folks ought to be extending from birth.

Thursday, April 07, 2005

So that's what's on TV at 2 am

One being a lawyer that comes from good trailer stock is that every now and then you'll get one of those great 1:23 a.m. phone calls from a relative whose house is mysteriously surrounded by police with floodlights. Here is a transcript from the one I received early Wednesday morning:

X: "K! Dude! Are you awake?"
K: "No."
X: "The police are after me. They are outside my house with lights and guns. They are violating my rights! I need a lawyer. What should I do?"
K: "What happened? Why are they there?"
X: "I don't know."
K: "I need you to tell me what happened."
X: "I don't know, I'm telling you the truth. I didn't do anything."

Uh huh, three police cars show up at your house at 1:20 a.m., direct flood lights and point weapons at you because they are bored?

I called the watch commander at the local PD and got his version of what was going on. The usual, sex, drugs, rock & roll, oh, and guns. What no probable cause? No warrant? You send three police cars, with officers brandishing weapons at 1:00 in the morning to a quiet residence when you just want to talk to someone? Where is Fox News when you need them?

And so the wee hours of Wednesday morning progressed. X denying things, police threatening things and information slowly trickling in about allegations of domestic violence, illegal weapons and drug dealing. I tell X to go to the back bedroom, close the shades and get to sleep, and, of course, not say anything to police should they arrest him. Cops leave at about 3 am. Perhaps someone was actually violating a law at that time. They should at least wait until after taxes are due to pull this stuff.

All the hubbub and mental jarring of criminal law and procedure from my brain left me wide awake. Fortunately, by some stroke of luck, I had recently gotten cable installed for a project I'm doing (strictly work-related, honestly). And so, for the first time in my life I sat on my sofa at 2 am channel surfing. Let me just say I now realize I have not missed anything by not being awake in front of a television at 2 am.

On my first run through the channels, I found Howard Stern on E! What a lame tv show - it's just someone filming a radio show, in a radio station room. And all the people on the show, as is true in radio, are not visually appealling. Even the porn stars that were guests were ugly. I don't know what I expected but I love the radio show and now it's ruined by seeing it. It made me think how sad life must be for people who are awake at 2 am if they thought this was comedy.

The real comedy was actually found on Fox Sports Network. They were showing a dart tournament. News flash: dart throwing is not a spectator sport. The camera would zoom in on the face of the guy throwing, then zoom out, show him throw, then zoom to the board, then back to his face. As if that weren't riveting enough, there was a commentator! How do you comment someone standing 15 feet from a bullseye, daintly lobbing miniature projectiles at it? The commentator was pretty enthusiastic and got the crowd going. That's right, there was a crowd in attendance. And who should be in the crowd but Shania Twain!!! She's a zillionaire - doesn't she have something better to do than attend a dart tournament? If I can't watch my friends play darts in a bar when I'm at that easily amused state of intoxication, I sure as heck don't want to watch it in my living room.

The good thing about the darts was that between watching it and drinking some Sleepy Time tea I was able to stop my mind from racing with criminal nuance and get back to sleep. The lesson here: if you have relatives involved in felonious activity, cable tv helps. Maybe I can get an endorsement deal for Adelphia, or, better yet, the professional miniature projectile association, or whatever they are called.