Showing posts with label Memory Lane 1980's. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Memory Lane 1980's. Show all posts

Sneaky

That's me...sneaky!


My dad is getting a "major award" this week, and my sister and I are flying out to Wisconsin to surprise him.

(I don't mean to poke fun - this really is a huge honor for my dad, and I'm SO proud of him! "Major award" just always reminds me of that silly leg lamp :) )

I mean really, what's a party without all your kids around? Maybe we can really bring the memories back by bickering over the dishes (Tiff, you can pretend you need to use the bathroom while Megan and I do the dishes for old time's sake)...or stealing each others' clothes....or crying over boys.


Oh, who am I kidding. I'm the crier. I'd gaze up at my life-sized portrait of Kirk Cameron, read through the poems I'd cut out of "Teen" magazine and taped up on my closet door, and I'd cry. Buckets. Rivers. Oceans. True love, it alluded me.


I don't know why - I was bee-oooo-tiful. Permed hair, purple eye shadow, blue mascara...who could resist me? Everyone, that's who.


(This picture's for you, Becky. See...ugly.)





I really can't remember the last time we were all together sans kids or husbands. It was probably about this time:



Can I just say...HOLY HAIR, BATMAN!


(Ben just looked over my shoulder and said "Who ARE those people?" When I pointed to the people and named names...hysterical laughing is still happening right now!)


Megan ..your glasses!
Tiff...oh my!
Mom...wow!
Me...oh no!
Dad...you had hair!


Not to mention the clothes. How many patterns and colors can be crammed into one photo? This has to be some record :)


See you when I get back, my bloggy friends :)


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Workin' Girl Blues

Most days, I have no idea why my brain goes where it goes.  While I was folding our *gigantic* pile of laundry for the past hour, my little brain cells started drifting down memory lane.


Oh, that reminds me.  I saw a commercial last night for a fancy-schmancy new washer drier duo that gets your clothes washed AND dried in a mere 38 minutes!  My first thought was, "Wow, that's fast!"  My second thought was, "That would be just groovy.  It would take 38 minutes to wash and dry...but it would still take a week to fold and put away."

Anyway.

Memory lane.  For some reason, I flashed back to my very first bona fide paying job...and I just had to laugh out loud at what a ridiculously awful job that was!

I'm not sure how old I was, but I was pretty young.  Let's see...we lived in North Dakota - that narrows it down to between about 11 and 16.  I was too young to drive, so that means I was younger than 15.  Hmmm.  That's probably why I was paid cash.  I'm thinking I was in junior high, so I'm going to guess I was 13 or 14 years old. 

My job was to do research for a local funeral home.  Yes, really.  What does that even mean, you ask?  Well, first of all, it was before the days of the internet, so research was a bit different.  You couldn't sit at your computer and Google the info you wanted.  I spent an entire summer (at least it felt like it took all summer...for all I know it really took about 2 weeks), sitting in a back room of our public library, looking at microfilm.  For hours on end.  By myself.  Reading obituaries.  Whoo.  Freakin'.  Whoo.

The owner of the funeral home I was working for wanted a little market research done.  He wanted data on which funeral homes people wanted.  So I'd look through all the obituaries, scan down to the bottom to find out where the service would be held, and I'd put a little tick mark in the appropriate column.  I sorted the data by month and year so the funeral parlor guy could see which funeral homes where used and how his compared to the others.

Now, there's a difference between a Death Notice and an Obituary (at least there was then, I have no idea about now.  I don't read the obits...can't imagine why.)  After gathering data for about a week (that's a LONG time when you're doing that kind of work), I realized that my data was messed up because I was getting data from both the Death Notices and the Obituaries.  At first I thought I could just cut my numbers in half since it would seem logical that two announcements per person would up my numbers by a factor of two.  But after looking closely, I realized that not everyone had both notices...so I had to start all over.

I cried.

There were some perks though.  First of all, I was out of the heat and wind and mosquitos that define good old North Dakoka summers.  If we weren't being eaten alive by the bugs, were being nearly gassed to death by the "bug trucks" that drove around spewing giant smelly clouds of insecticide to kill the mosquitos.  

But I think the biggest perk can be summed up with two words: Slang Dictionary.  Did you know there's such a thing?  I suppose they're not needed anymore since kids have access to the internet.  But back then?  It was revolutionary for this small town girl next door who didn't even watch PG-13 movies until I was 13 years old (and then I walked out of the theater right in the middle of the movie - shocked and embarrassed because I'd just seen a guy's naked rear end for the first time).  I stumbled upon that book during one of my breaks...and I'll tell ya what - that was an ED.U.CA.TION.  

(Side note:  I sure hope we can raise our kids in a way that makes it so that they're shocked and embarrassed to see things that are inappropriate...AND have the courage to get up from their group of friends and walk away when necessary.  Yes, I was naive...but shouldn't every 13 year old be?)  

In fact, now I KNOW I was in junior high.  I know because there was a girl who used to say crazy words with a gleam in her eye and a smirk on her face.  She wasn't talking to me, but I heard those words and filed them at the back of my brain because I could tell that what she was talking about was...grown up.  I wanted to know what they meant, but everyone else was giggling hysterically at what she'd said.  Clearly they knew...but I wasn't going to ask them.  But that slang dictionary explained everything to me.  Yikes.  I think that girl probably needed help.

So that was my job.  Death and counting and eye strain and gallons of Coke by the lights of that back room's irritating buzzing light tubes...and scanning the pages of that slang dictionary and blushing during my breaks.  And when the counting for the day was done, I'd ride my little blue 10 speed home as fast as I could to avoid the bugs.  

What about you?  What was your first job?  Or maybe not your first, but how about your most interesting or terrible job?

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