Thursday, October 10, 2002

Everything Must Go

Everything Must Go: The Great Yard Sale of 2002


I couldn't believe they were arguing over a quarter for a jacket. Part of me was tempted to tie them up and make them watch me burn it...But once you've taken hostages and started a fire, you've pretty much destroyed your marketing opportunities. -Jake Johanssen

I think I participated in my first yard sale when I was about six or seven years old. I'm still trying to suppress the memory. As I recall, it was held to benefit our church, Sacred Heart. For days, we were tagging merchandise, color-coding items by family.
It was our own little sweatshop. I recall a lot of "MA'AM, YES MA'AM!" and "YES, MASTER CHIEF!" And on the designated Saturday, we were all up at dawn...at which point, we were summarily crushed by the thronging hordes of housewives done up in their Jackie Susann/ Pucci-esque polyester prints, desperate to beat their sisters to a pulp for the privilege of standing in line to pay a nickel for a discarded piece of tomato-stained Tupperware.
It was brutal to witness man's inhumanity to man (or in this case, woman's), and I knew then I'd never willingly expose myself to it again.
Of course, times change. Memories fade.
And recently, I was invited to go in on a Yard Sale. Perfect timing, since I was in the middle of my annual fall cleaning spree.
In fact, I'd been pretty embarrassed when Hop Sing had dropped by unexpectedly the week before, and I had to explain the varying piles of clothing strewn about the living room (most destined for the crematorium I intended to design from a makeshift kerosene-soaked oil drum which would destroy all sartorial evidence of the 80s). His sardonically arched eyebrow clearly communicated, "things ran SO much more smoothly around here when I was your manservant." (Which is true.)
So the opportunity to participate in a yard sale seemed fortuitous.
The first snag came when I started trying to find things that could or would sell.
For example, I have an inexplicably large collection of prescription drug samples, but on reflection, I realized that no matter how many doctors I've dated in the last two years, I am still not legally qualified to dispense pharmaceuticals.
I also have—easily—one of the best stocked liquor cabinets in town, with a wide array of premium brand liquors and exquisite wines. All were hostess gifts brought by thoughtful guests—who'd clearly confused my writing habits with those of say, Hunter S. Thompson. Because, contrary to rumor, I almost never drink. Sure, I entertain. And I definitely entertain a LOT of drunks, but there's enough booze in that sideboard to wipe out David Crosby's next three livers. The wingmen have been regularly siphoning it off, but more just keeps coming, and at this rate, they'll never make a dent.
Sadly, a quick glance at the websites of the AMA, DEA, ABC, and ATF confirmed that selling off most of the clutter in my kitchen and medicine cabinets would earn me nothing but a felony indictment.
It was time to lower my standards.
That's when I got into the spirit of things, while clinging steadfastly to my belief in truth in advertising.
I made labels in an earnest attempt to be excruciatingly helpful, yet honest. The inventory included, but was not limited to:
• 'box of worthless videotapes: a buck; feel free to tape over them'
• 'meaningless gifts from people I don't like anymore: a quarter each'
• unattractive but practical kitchen-ware: a dollar a box.

I showed up around 7:30, ready to greet the masses—only to discover that "the crew" had dwindled to me and one other brave soul. Virtually everybody had bailed. One woman had scored ballgame tickets at the last minute, and I think everybody else was sleeping off a hangover.
Realizing you can't be a drill sergeant if you've got no troops (though I was still as bossy as I thought I could get away with without a mutiny), I relaxed and adapted to the mood of the day, 'befriending' the customers. I hadn't worked retail since my teen years on the JC Penney gift wrap team, and the grad school years selling furs at Dawahare's...but retail is really like riding a bike, and there's no class like the merchant class.
One couple was rehabbing a house in the neighborhood, so we enjoyed a lengthy conversation that included the relative merits of a random orbit jitterbug sander in removing chatter marks and chicken treats in hardwood floors, along with the significance of bar-lock rebar couplers in any good masonry project.
Another guy ambled up with a basset named Doobie, which necessitated that we all take a break to play with his ears (the dog's, not the owner's).
I did run into an occasional language barrier, but it was easily overcome. One student, for example, said, in halting, broken English, "I like the thoroughly useless videocassettes. May I buy just one?" I said he could, but the price would be the same for the whole box. He pedaled off—beaming—with the box precariously perched on his handlebars.
Another customer wanted two books for the price of one. I offered a reluctant, Yesss... but only if he agree to take the busted VCR that accompanied them. (I hated to break up the set.) He walked away with all of it—confused, yet satisfied that he'd secured a bargain.
Some of the honesty did come back to bite me in the ass. One woman, for example, wanted to buy the "hideously ugly Christmas ornaments." But then she seemed to feel compelled to offer her rationale for why they appealed to her.
I'm thinking: Hey. Lady. I'm selling junk on the curb here. Do I SEEM like somebody in a position to JUDGE you? I could practically hear the strains of the giant Sanford and Son harmonica in the background (wah wah wah wah whomp...)
At the end of the day, I think I cleared about 27 bucks (another seven went for lunch). But I wasn't there for profit; I was there so people could find space to sit down in my house. And now they can. Let's just hope they're all really thirsty drunks with mild substance abuse problems.
 (NOT a difficult guest list to assemble).


Tuesday, October 1, 2002

An Awkward Age: Another thirtysomething birthday

An Awkward Age
another thirtysomething birthday


Can you spare a few seconds to minimize my problems?
- Bruce Eric Kaplan

I recently had to take to my bed. And I had to stay there a while. It gets worse every year.
If you had to pick a number for most nondescript birthday imaginable, "37" would be high on the list (really, after 21, they're all nothing special).
It's an awkward age. An age where you have to begin to explain things. To answer questions.
Like: shouldn't I have at least one failed marriage under my belt by now?
Shouldn't I have at least one kid in Montessori and another in therapy at my age?
Maybe I'm just defensive about societal expectations?
Like last weekend. When I got my first gardening compliment.
Girls have recently moved in next door, elevating the standards of the neighborhood (and supplanting the trainspotting boys who lived there — the ones who had a commode inexplicably stored on their front porch  — I tried to tell them we live WAY too close to a public park for that, but did they listen? No. No they did not.)
The girls, on the other hand, have porch furniture that matches. Their jack-o-lanterns are lighted. Pottery Barn is suddenly making a lot of deliveries. Clearly, I need to shape up.
Anyway.

Their parents were visiting this weekend. (I assume they were parents in that they drove a nice car; I heard a lot of hammering; and they brought a lot of shopping bags with them. That's how things look when my parents visit.)
On Sunday morning, I was outside pruning and the Dad paused to admire my heavenly bamboo. For a second, it was so nice. Then, I realized he must've seen me out there—off and on—all weekend, mulching away, unabashedly dressed in boxer shorts, a wifebeater, and hip waders... while hauling heavy equipment and monster dogs in and out of a large SUV. What must he be thinking?
And I somehow felt this unbidden impulse to tell a perfect stranger (who I will likely never see again), "Well. Thanks. And also, by the way, Sir, I'm not a lesbian."
Not that there's anything wrong with it, and why would I care about idle stereotypes one way or the other. In reality, I imagine all he was thinking was precisely what he said, which is that the dogwoods were nice. But birthdays put me in an odd frame of mind.
I'm extremely blessed with friends who know how morbid, moody, depressed, and embittered I get about the day (yes, moreso than usual), and I'm even luckier that they always come up with great plans that will force me to stand upright and unwind the shawl that I've pre-emptively wrapped around my shoulders, with only my wan little nose visible to passers-by.
 These plans usually involve great food and presents, because I'm very shallow and those are two excellent ways to distract me. (In a pinch, you can just wave something shiny in front of my face.)
There was a party. There was cake. We played hilarious games where they all got quizzed about incredibly embarrassing details of my personal life.
(My favorite was their answers to "most famous fling." I was amazed at how outrageously their answers exaggerated both my prowess and my access. Inspiring. But let me be clear: the closest I've ever gotten to Sam Shepard is his new book, Great Dream of Heaven. It was a lovely gift from a guy I don't expect I'll ever see again since I repaid his sensitivity by fantasizing about Sam Shepard the rest of the evening. Out loud: "...did you know he's a drummer too?" In fairness to him, that was probably rude. In fairness to me, that is what he gets for not sticking to the registry. This year: power tools.)
(In fairness to them, Sam does have a farm nearby and is in town often, so you do have to go out of your way not to just accidentally have sex with him whenever you leave the house, so I think that's how they got the idea.)
I went on a few more dates, on and around my birthday, but successfully managed to keep those guys in the dark (not literally—you put enough black plastic on the basement windows and the cops are eventually going to get suspicious) about the occasion and the attendant melodrama.
Despite my best efforts to conceal the distress though, I think most of 'em caught on that something was up.
Like when I left one stranded in the middle of a movie, after leaning over and whispering that I was coming down with viral meningitis. It should be pointed out, I did not really have viral meningitis. I thought I did though. Maybe. (Because I knew someone who'd just had it, and I knew hers started with a headache. And I did have that.)
At another birthday gathering, I was introducing a date to one of my oldest friends, who casually greeted him with, "so...are you the lawyer? No. The architect? No. The doctor? The one who lives on a farm? Ohhh. Downtown."
He was a pretty good sport until he started to volunteer a few details, and she cut him off with, "Sorry. I don't bother with names any more. It's all I can do to remember professions and neighborhoods."
She's not abrupt, just efficient. And her powers of cost-benefit analysis, honed in my 20s, tell her not to get attached.
Now I find myself hitting the LATE 30s, thoroughly domesticated, and all I really, really want, most of the time, is just to lie down. (No, not like that.)
My misspent youth is now no more than a fond memory.
Like my 30th birthday. We had a band, and when I say "had" a band, that would be an exaggeration. I only had the bass player. And he wasn't their REGULAR bass player. He just sat in for one Sonny Boy Williamson song. (This was a guy who knew how to...negotiate a rider...so to speak). And it was AFTER my boyfriend at the time left. (I think.) To go smoke pot with the rest of the band in the park across the street.
Maybe I've mentioned this before, but see, he did NOT bring a present to my birthday party.Which I might've overlooked, but, not even a card? That's just disrespectful. It did, however, buy me something far more meaningful than anything he could've purchased (i.e., a few hours of guilt-free indulgence with someone who was taller and younger than him, with more hair—and not a single strand of it on his back or protruding from his ears).
Because sometimes, it really IS the thought that counts.