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All By Myself: A Fish Without A Bicycle

02.22.2012 by J. Doe // Leave a Comment

Quote: A woman without a man is like a fish without a bicycle.

I have no idea who said that. All I know is, I have a bicycle that I haven’t ridden on for about three years.

I love my bicycle, and biking in general: Growing up, I often rode my bike around the streets of Manhattan, listening to my Walkman … with no pesky helmet to muss my hair or come into conflict with my headphones. My daughter is about the same: being half Dutch, she’s genetically predisposed to ride a bike well, and often. Also, she doesn’t really understand the concept of hills, but we’re working on that. Specifically, specifically, she doesn’t grasp why braking when going downhill is a good idea*.

Yet we’ve been grounded for three years. Maybe four. Hard to say – but I could probably come up with an exact date if I dug about in my drawer.

We stopped riding our bikes right at the time The Departed got his new car.

His old car was an icky, manual shift SUV with, in retrospect, one redeeming quality: The Departed had bought a universal bike rack that you could strap to the back of it. You could then drive over to nearby Marymoor Park and bliss out in bike trail heaven.

I liked the new car – an automatic shift BMW with a decent sound system** and heated seats – but it had one failing. The universal bike rack did not fit on the back of it, he said; it would not work on a sedan.

He priced out several options, which seemed to be inordinately expensive, and we ended up getting some sort of Thule system with one set of rails for one bike: his. We never got around to getting anything for my bike because, of course, there was no way I would ever be able to lift it onto the top of a car, assuming the car was even in the garage when I wanted to go for a ride.

Last year, I got a new car myself – a large SUV with many redeeming qualities including, I thought, the ability to load bikes onto the back the way we had in the past, using the universal bike rack we already owned. But when we brought the car home, The Departed inspected it and pronounced it impossible: there was a rear spoiler that would rip right off if you tried to hook the rack to it. All the other options were prohibitively expensive: the dealer wanted to charge me something like $1000 to install a hitch mounted rack. And the simple ones I seemed to see everywhere on the road? Well, I was told, you need someone who understands wrenches and drills because you have to undertake a complicated attaching-and-removing of said mount every time you want to ride your bike, because the car won’t fit into the garage with the rack on it and …

No, I don’t really know anything about mechanical things. I got tired just thinking about the complexities of the situation. Easier just to not ride my bike, I thought. Less fun, of course – but less hard, too.

And then he left, and about a week later, in November, I drove into my garage and there was the universal bike rack hanging on the wall. Taunting me.  I looked at my bike, also hanging from the wall. I looked back at the bike rack. Universal, eh?

Now, anyone who knows me will tell you I am about the least handy person you will ever meet – sure, I can do things around the house, but only if you give me a book like Making Simple Repairs for Dummies, and it includes simple step-by-step instructions accompanied by pictures of each step.

This universal bike rack, as it happens, has a website URL printed right on the side of it.

I can do that.

The website contains instructions for safely attaching the universal rack to any car, like, for example, a BMW sedan with crappy music playing on a really good sound system. Also for an SUV. The instructions seem to have an awareness that you might not be able to attach the rack to the immediately obvious place because there might be something – a spoiler, say – in the way. They go on to suggest that the rack can be hooked to the roof rails. Helpful step-by-step photos for the mechanically stupid are included.

I can do that.

Not only that, it is incredibly easy. I mount the rack on my car. I put bikes on it. I remove the bikes and the rack, and repeat the procedure.

I call my daughter out of the house, and make her watch me do this whole thing again. She thinks I’m brilliant, and can we please go for a bike ride now?

No, I say: This is Seattle, child. It’s raining. But when the sun shines, we’re ready.

 

 

* the reason: Mommy won’t have a heart attack.

**even if he did insist on playing his crappy music on it. Klaatu, really?

Categories // All By Myself Tags // biking, single

All By Myself: O Christmas Tree, Part 2

02.07.2012 by J. Doe // Leave a Comment

Two weeks after the Great Tree Farm Incident, I have my annual Christmas cookies exchange. My friend Diane is there with her long-time boyfriend Scott.

They compliment my tree. I tell my tree story.

Scott says, Next year, you should come to my tree farm. I’ll cut it for you. Just let me know you’re coming.

I ask, You own a tree farm? Since when?

About twenty years, he says.

I’ve known him for seven years.

Categories // All By Myself Tags // holidays, single

All By Myself: O Christmas Tree

02.06.2012 by J. Doe // 4 Comments

I was excited about Christmas in a way I had not been for a long time.

For years, Christmas was about purchasing gifts for his family – five nieces and nephews from whom I never any acknowledgments. His children, who sneered at most of the gifts they received, except for the expensive ones. Sometimes they didn’t even bother taking them home. But even better, I also had to come up with gift ideas, and eventually purchase, gifts for the children on behalf of his parents, who “thought it would be easier” that way.

And then there were the gifts for The Departed, who didn’t laugh at my funny stocking stuffers and had so few hobbies or interests that finding anything  was next to impossible. Once I found him a really cool antique map of a town where his ancestors lived – many of the farms marked with their names. He never framed it.

This year, though, was different. I could just find stuff for my loved ones. Fun stuff. Geek stuff. Whimsical stuff.

This year, there would be no Christmas spreadsheet.

The first and most important thing in any Christmas is, of course, the tree, and my daughter decided that the one thing we had to do the same as last year – because it’s what we do every year – was go cut down our own tree. This seemed like a good idea – I mean, it’s fun and how hard could it be, right?

The plan: We’re going to go to the Christmas tree farm, find the best tree they have and bring it home, and then my friend Sara – the cop – is going to come over and help us decorate it. I was a little concerned about the whole putting-a-tree-on-top-of-my-car-and-getting-it-home-without-it-falling-off-and-causing-a-major-traffic-incident thing – but otherwise, the plan seemed reasonable.

I can do this.

We got to the Tree Farm, and my daughter ran off to retrieve a bow saw for me. It was kind of old-looking and I’m a bit uncertain.

My phone pings with a text message.

Sara: Still on for tonight?

Me: Yes. At tree farm now.

Now, I not only have an eager eleven-year-old armed with a bow saw, I have a date with a cop. I’m committed.

I will have a tree.

We tromp off to find ourselves the best tree on the farm … because another things we always do is get the best tree on the farm. We wander. We find good trees, to be sure – but look! there are more trees over there. Have we found the best tree yet?

It took a while, but we found it. It was at the far edge of the tree farm – almost, but not quite, as far as you could get from the main entrance and car park. I tell the kid to hold the trunk while I saw.

I imagine how this will work  – push, pull, push, pull the saw, followed by a gentle toppling of the tree. The saw has other ideas. To start with, this saw only does pull, not push, so I have to pull, disengage, reposition, and pull again.

It goes slowly.

I think maybe I am not doing this right. I swear every other year I’ve watched this done, the saw goes push, pull, push, pull. I try angling the saw differently. My daughter offers to try sawing.  I try holding it with both hands. My daughter tells me I’m doing it wrong. I try it with my left hand. My daughter says I think I should go get help.

I resume pull, pull, pull with my right hand.

My daughter says, it didn’t take this long last year.

My right shoulder hurts.

My phone pings in my pocket.

Sara: What can I bring tonight?

Me: A tree. This one is not cooperating.

Sara: Want me to taze it?

I glare at the tree. See, tree? Cooperate or else! But then I realize I’ve already killed it, or nearly killed it, so I’m not sure it’s going to be concerned about a mere taze.

Pull, pull, pull, pull.

My daughter says, Mommy, can I go get some help now?

Yes.

She skips gaily through the trees while I rub my aching shoulder and catch my breath. I really want to just pretend this never happened: return the saw and drive to the hardware store, where they have pre-cut trees that they deliver for a small fee. I’m about halfway through the trunk, though, and feeling guilty about what I’ve done to this tree. I can’t just leave it here.

My daughter returns with a tall teenage boy armed with a bow saw. He’s got a total poker face, for which I am extremely grateful, and immediately sets about finishing what I’ve started. The tree topples about a minute later. He loads it on his shoulder and we walk with him to the entrance and car park.

Wow, he says. You went quite a distance.

I’m sorry, I say. Does this happen a lot, that you have to help people?

Not really, he replies, still poker faced. But it’s good exercise.

We get back to our car, where he helps me get the tree on top of my car, and gives me twine to tie it with, and starts off to help the next customer.

Wait, I say. I fish in my pocket and pull out a $20: $2 for the cutting and hauling, $18 for the not laughing at me.

Thanks, I tell him.

He lights up. Thank you, he replies.

We get the tree home, and after waging a brief battle with the tree stand, it is standing majestically in our living room.

My daughter beams. Sara and I drink wine and eat pizza. We light a fire. My daughter decorates.

It’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas.

Categories // All By Myself Tags // holidays, single

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