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Good Words

November 14, 2009 By Jenny Ryan Leave a Comment

Thanks to my friend, Sooz, for this one.

“The three grand essentials of happiness are: something to do, something to love, and something to hope for.”

-Thomas Chalmers

Filed Under: CFG Loves Things Wordy

NCIS Friday

November 13, 2009 By Jenny Ryan Leave a Comment

On today’s episode, NCIS is tasked with protecting their Medical Examiner, Dr. Donald “Ducky” Mallard, and his 96-year old, dementia-ridden, Welsh Corgi owning mother.

Dr. Mallard and Special Agent Caitlin Todd open the door to the dining room of the Mallard house to find that Special Agent Tony DiNozzo has been roped into blowdrying one of Mrs. Mallard’s five dogs.

Ducky: “Mother, may I present Caitlin? She works with Tony and me.”

Mrs. Mallard: spits at Kate across the table.

Ducky: “Mother, we talked about this. Caitlin is here to protect us.”

Mrs. Mallard: “Show me your knickers.”

Kate (completely taken aback): “Um, ma’am?”

Mrs. Mallard: “Your underwear, missy.”

Tony looks up, quite interested in the direction this conversation is taking.

Mrs. Mallard: “One can always tell a woman’s intention from her panties.”

Tony smirks across the table at Kate while giving “Contessa” a final brushing.

Tony: “That’s always been my philosophy.”

From Season Two, “The Meat Puzzle”

Filed Under: I Love TV

And This Is Why God Sent Me Lynne

November 12, 2009 By Jenny Ryan 2 Comments

One

Lynne: “So, how have you been?”

Me: “Well, I almost emailed you to ask you if 5 days was too long to take to recover from two months of excruciating pain.”

Lynne: snorting and choking on her drink

Me: “But then I heard your voice in my head, so I didn’t”

Lynne: “And did you hear the cackling laughter?”

Me: “I did.”

Lynne: “Good.”

Two

Lynne: “So how are you doing?”

Me: “Pretty good. The pain’s not really that bad. I’ve only had to take two or three Ultram today.”

Lynne: “Really?”

Me: “Hm. I guess maybe the pain is that bad.”

Lynne: “Maybe so. Remember that you have that new prescription.”

Me: “Oh yeah.”

Lynne: “So have you filled it yet?”

Me. “No. I think about it, and I’ve come close a couple of times. But I haven’t done it.”

Lynne: “Well call your husband right now and ask him to fill it for you so that next time you can COME CLOSE TO TAKING IT!”

Filed Under: CFG Is in A Lot Of Pain

Marriage: Year Thirteen

November 11, 2009 By Jenny Ryan 4 Comments

When you pull four fresh pillowcases out of the linen closet, none of which match each other, or the cases on the pillows whose covers you are changing.

Filed Under: These Are The Days Of My Life Tagged With: funny stories, marriage

Physical Therapy

November 11, 2009 By Jenny Ryan 2 Comments

5 minutes warmup on the “arm bike” + the shortest legs that you can possibly imagine + the seat pulled up as close as it can possibly go + a generous, DD-endowed bosom = 5 minutes of rhythmically smacking myself in first one boob, and then the other, over, and over, and over again

Filed Under: These Are The Chronic Pain Days Of My Life, These Are The Days Of My Life

“Books Are My Boyfriend” Mondays

November 9, 2009 By Jenny Ryan 9 Comments

So I had a new idea the other day. I’m still recovering from my latest fibro flare-up, so the funny is kind of being slow in returning. So in the meantime I thought it would be fun to start a little discussion about one of the other mad, passionate love affairs I have going on in my life (besides that between me and regular Coke): Me, and Books.

Today’s Category: Really Stinkin’ Funny Memoirs

I thought that I could share some passages from the books I currently have on my mind, and then hit you guys up for some book recommendations of your own.

1. Mennonite in a little black dress by Rhoda Janzen. I knew this book was for me the minute I picked it up off the New Nonfiction table at Barnes & Noble and read the first page:

“The year I turned forty-three was the year I realized I should have never taken my Mennonite genes for granted. I’d long assumed that I had been genetically scripted to robust physical health, like my mother, who never even catches a head cold. All of my relatives on her side, the Lowenes, enjoy preternaturally good health, unless you count breast cancer and polio. The polio is pretty much a done deal, thanks to Jonas Salk and his talent for globally useful  vaccinations. Yet in the days before Jonas Salk, when my mother was a little girl, polio crippled her younger brother Abe and also withered the arm of her closest sister Gertrude. Trude bravely wnet on to raise two kids one-armed, and to name her withered arm Stinky.

____ Yes, I think “Stinky” is a cute name for a withered arm!

____ No, I’d prefer to name my withered arm something with a little more dignity, such as Reynaldo.”

2. A Million Miles In A Thousand Years by Donald Miller. I just picked this up a couple of days ago after reading passages like this:

“I wrote a memoir several years ago that sold a lot of copies. I got a big head about it for a while and thought I was an amazing writer or something, but I’ve written books since that haven’t sold, so I’m insecure and things are back to normal.”

Then he was contacted by a studio who wanted to turn his book into a movie, and a couple of filmakers, Steve and Ben, fly to Seattle to meet with him about it.

“We didn’t start talking about the movie right away. We stood on the porch and watched snow make magic of the sky.”

Then later, “You have a sled, man?” Ben asked, still reading the snowflakes.

“No. It doesn’t snow much here.” I wondered whether I’d have a sled if it did.

“We could use trash can lids,” Steve said.

“I have two kayaks,” I said. I said this because I didn’t want them to think I wasn’t an outdoorsman just because I didn’t have a sled. But I did have kayaks.

…”Kayaks are nice. Kind of a summer thing,” Steve said. He was crossing his arms to stay warm.

“Let’s have a look at them,” Ben said. “Anything will slide, really. Some things slide better than others. But anything will slide.” We started walking up the driveway toward the garage. I wondered what we were going to do with the kayaks. My driveway sloped down toward the street, but it wasn’t a steep drop. Ben kept looking back at the slope as if it were a river, as though there were rapids flowing over the cement and ice.

“Did you do a lot of drugs when you were younger, Ben?” I hoped he wasn’t offended at the question. He stopped as we walked up the driveway.. I turned toward him, and he stood and thought about it for a second. Then he kind of punched me in the chest. “I did, man, I did,” he said. “Wow, man, it’s like you know me.”

3. It Sucked and then Then I Cried, by Heather B. Armstrong, aka “Dooce“.

It’s pretty much impossible to find a passage in this book that doesn’t make me snort so hard that I must keep checking to make sure I haven’t disgorged one of my eyeballs. For example, here Heather and her husband have just found out that she is pregnant, and this is their response:

“I had hundreds of ideas for names, most of them stolen directly from the cast of The Dukes Of Hazzard as there was no other show on television that has more accurately captured the spirit of my Southern upbringing, where my mama knew everyone’s business and my cousins routinely took each other to prom. If my kid wasn’t going to have my last name, he or she could at least look at their driver’s license and be reminded of their maternal Tennessean heritage, one where wearing shoes to the grocery store is totally optional by law.

…Jon wanted nothing to do with a Bo or a Luke because he knew too many of those who had communicable diseases, and the act of calling our child one of those names would force him to lose four teeth. Which, okay, fine, we both had to agree on this, so I let him list his favorite names: SnigSnak, Qranqor, Styrofoam, KidNation, Frontline (after the television show or the flea medication), One (or First, or Premiere), Palette, Alphamask, Format (for a boy), Formatte (for a girl), Profile, Tweeter, Peavey. Possibly Wrench if the baby came out with an interesting nose.

While all of these ideas were teeming with originality and flair, two very important qualities in a baby name, we couldn’t help but think that what our work in progress needed was something more Utahn. You cannot live in Utah and give your baby a boring name that some other baby in Wisconsin might have, and we couldn’t get over the nagging feeling that someone in Wisconsin was naming their first-born child Alphamask as we lay there debating.”

All right. I’ve given you some of my favorites-now it’s your turn. What Really Stinkin’ Funny Memoirs do you recommend?

Filed Under: CFG's Bookshelf, I Love Books Tagged With: books, reading

NCIS Friday

November 6, 2009 By Jenny Ryan 2 Comments

Agents Tony DiNozzo and Tim McGee have just finished a conference call with Abby the forensics expert.

McGee: “What does she look like?”

DiNozzo: “Who?”

McGee: “Abby. She sounds cute.”

DiNozzo: “She’s not your type.”

McGee: “Well how do you know that?”

DiNozzo: “Have you ever had the slightest urge to tattoo your buttocks, McGee?”

McGee: “I don’t think so.”

DiNozzo: “Then we need never speak of her again.”

from Season One, “Sub Rosa”

Filed Under: I Love TV Tagged With: NCIS, tv shows

Dear Everyone I Haven’t Quite Managed To Offend Yet: Today Could Be Your Day!

November 5, 2009 By Jenny Ryan 1 Comment

Since this Tuesday marked the one-year anniversary of my diagnosis of fibromyalgia, I have spent some time thinking back over all the different stages I’ve been through over the past year.

These include such stages as Denial, Resistance, YOU CAN SUCK IT!, Anger, Amnesia, Stupidity, Amnesia About Having Amnesia, Depression, If I Finish My To-Do List And Clean My Entire House, Then I Will Be Healed, I Hate Everyone-ESPECIALLY YOU!, Hibernation, Bargaining, TAKE YOUR PAIN MEDICINE ALREADY, DAMMIT!!, You Should Leave Me So You Can Find A New Wife Who Isn’t Defective, Magical Thinking, Mania, The Act Of The Sound Waves Of Your Voice Touching My Nervous System Causes Me Excruciating Pain, Having My Husband Walk A Few Steps In Front Of Me Like My Own Personal Bouncer So That No One Will Touch Me,If I Have To Lie On This Couch For One More Day Then I Will Kill Myself, If I Have To Lie On This Couch For One More Day Then I Will Kill You, In The Closet About Admitting My Illness, and, THE HELL I WILL ACCEPT THIS.

Lately I have been hanging out in a new stage-The Stage Of Bling-and have been shopping online for all kinds of fibromyalgia bracelets, rings, pins, and the like. I was telling my mom about this the other day because I knew she would be happy to wear some kind of supportive paraphernalia on my behalf, when we had the following exchange:

My Mom: “So, does fibromyalgia have its own color?”

Me: “Um, no-OH!  Because other diseases TOOK all the good colors, so now we have to share.”

Apparently, when chronic pain is involved-around here, at least-all stages lead back to Being A Cranky Bitch.

Filed Under: It's Hard To Be Funny When Dealing With Chronic Pain

When The Over-Educated Attack

November 4, 2009 By Jenny Ryan 4 Comments

Once upon a time, when I had just finished Phase Two of my training to become a Certified Life Coach, my husband and I went on a hiking trip with some friends of ours. As we were planning our evening activities, I asked our fellow campers if they would be willing to be guinea pigs and let me use them to try out a coaching exercise. Happily they said yes, and so one evening we all gathered on the floor of our hotel room and I began my presentation.

That was around the time when The Secret was making such a big splash, and my little exercise was kind of along those same “woo woo” lines. As I recall, it was called something like, “The Be-Do-Have” exercise, and it was intended to reverse the thought system that proclaimed that if we could just Do Enough, and then figure out how to get all the things we wanted to Have, then we would Be happy. Instead, my happy-go-lucky little exercised proclaimed that if we would figure out how we wanted to feel (“Be”), say, creative, for example,  then we would be inspired to perform all the kinds of actions that a creative person would “Do”, and then aligning with those two things would enable us to attract (“Have”) all the things we’ve been wanting. (I’m assuming here that you are all picking up on my current, chronic-pain induced cynicism. But that is a story for another post.)

Now, I need to stop here and tell you that the group I was asking to perform this little New Thought Dance was composed entirely of 3 engineers and 1 lawyer-not a “woo woo” soul among them. I believe this demonstrates that, despite my obvious ignorance of the concept of finding the Right People for your particular offering, some part of me, somewhere, was fully aware of the potential there for tremendous humor.

So cheerfully, if somewhat naively, I began taking them through the steps of the exercise, deeply convinced in my heart of hearts that I was expanding not only their minds, but their souls as well. Because that was my spiritual calling as an almost-certified Missionary Of Personal Growth.

Things started off pretty well, with the first part of the exercise being to write down all the different things that you would like to have. But then it started to get a little rocky with Step Two, which was to write down everything you could think of that you would like to do.

“Anything you want!” I proclaimed. “Infinite Possibilities!” “No limits!”

This was where the immovable object of left-brained thinkers met the irrisitible force of my right-brained evangelism.

“Um, that’s impossible,” interjected one of the engineers. “You can’t actually do anything you want. There are limits to what is possible to do in this world.”

“No, I don’t think so.” I replied, unconcerned. I knew that in the end I could get them to see the Universe as I did. “For example, one day I would like to be able to fly.”

This caused everyone to look up from their papers and have a silent, yet urgent, consultation with their eyes.

“Uh, you know you can fly, right?” they asked, starting to worry that all of this goodness and light had somehow caused me to sustain some kind of serious brain injury.

“No, I mean FLY. Like, all by myself, up in the air. Just like Superman!”

Looking back on this now, I’m pretty sure that this was The Beginning Of The End.

Realizing that there was no arguing with me at that point, we all continued on to Step Three: Listing All The Different Ways That You Would Like To Feel.”

Now throughout all of this, one of the engineers had continued to become more and more frustrated. His way of working in the world was to sit down with a set of specific conditions related to a problem or situation, and then continue to  push back against them until he finally figured out the solution. But because of my whole Unlimited Possibilities view of the Universe, I refused to give him any, hoping to gently begin to free him from his silly need for limits and constrictions.

But when we finally go to the “How do you want to be?” phase of the exercise, he just couldn’t take it anymore. As I was the only thing he had to push back against, he kept poking and pushing and prodding, but I refused to give him what he was looking for.

Finally he agreed to just write something down on his piece of paper, which relieved all of to no end.

But, determined not to allow me the final word, he searched his mind desperately for a parting shot.

“Fine!” he exclaimed, the light of victory gleaming in his eyes. “I’ll answer the question. But…I AM USING A GERUND!”

He won.

Filed Under: Playing Well With Others Tagged With: friends, life coaching

The Gateway To Hell

November 1, 2009 By Jenny Ryan Leave a Comment

Attempting to explain the concept of Daylight Savings Time to three hungry felines.

Filed Under: CFG And The Laws Of Purr-modynamics, These Are The Days Of My Life

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