“How do I like my new mouth guard?  Well, it hasn’t bugged me yet!”

“How often do I floss?  I aim for three times a day.  What brand of floss do I use?  Er, it’s the floss in that little blue box…what’s it called again?  I can’t remember…but it’s the one in the little blue box with the white print that you can get from Target?  The one that’s supposed to fight cavities, remove tartar sauce, and cure the common cold?”

“No, no sensitive spots on my teeth today.  YEE-OUCH!!!!  SON OF A…Will I move my tongue away from that corner of my mouth so you can get at those teeth with your sharp pick?  SON OF A…er, just allergic to cold water over in that corner.  Because I don’t need any fillings this go-round.  Not me!  YEE-OUCH!!!!  SON OF A….”

“Do I eat a lot of candy?  No, I’m a vegetarian.”

“Uh huh, I did dutifully run out after my last appointment and pick up that prescription mouthwash for sensitive teeth that you took the time to prescribe.  I just don’t fancy the taste.  What does it taste like?  Er, mint?  Yes, I’ll be sure to give the cinnamon flavor a try.”

“Of course I’ll be here right at 8 a.m. next time if you agree to schedule me that early again.  I promise.”

Mphf…whazzit?  I lurch awake on the couch, having dozed off watching Iron Chef: Battle Broccoli.  Half asleep, I stumble into the bathroom to yank out my contact lenses so I can go to sleep-blessed-sleep…

Crap.  Little bugger.  My left contact, feeling frisky, slides playfully behind my eyeball.  “You can’t get me!” he teases.

“Get back here, you!”  Don’t panic.  I know the routine.  Just roll my eyeball to the far right and nab that sneaky guy when he reappears.

No dice.

(Fifteen minutes later…)

Panic!  Surf the net:  “How to retrieve contact stuck behind eyeball.”

Advice received:

“Don’t panic!”

“Simple.  Just roll your eyeball to the far right and nab that sneaky guy when he reappears.”

“Don’t worry.  It’s not like it can slip into your brain or anything.  I don’t think.”

“I heard that can make you go blind.”

“Stick your finger in your eye a lot and eventually you’ll find it.”

“Drink a glass of water upside down from the opposite side of your mouth…wait, that’s for hiccups.  Sorry.”

“But whatever you do, don’t panic!”

I try everything that ever-wise Internet offers, most of it involving sticking my finger in my eye a lot and scratching the crap out of my now reddish eyeball.  Now I’m getting tired, and panicking more.  I wonder if I can fall asleep with a contact stuck behind my eyeball and worry about it in the morning?

Surf the net:  “Can I fall asleep with contact stuck behind eyeball?”

Advice received:

“If you do, it will stick to the back of your eyeball and you’ll never get it out in a million years.”

“I did that once and my eye was stuck shut when I woke up.”

The overwhelming need to sleep kicks panic’s ass.   I fall asleep dreaming that my contact has stuck to my eyeball and I’ll never get it out in a million years.

When I wake up the next morning, I set about to open my left eye, whispering a tiny prayer.

Whew…it opens.  Barely, feeling like it was attacked by a pack of wild dogs.

Surf the net:  “Is there an eye doctor open in Nashville on Sunday?”

Advice received:  “The only eye doctor open today within a thousand-mile radius of Nashville, Tennessee, is in the Mall at Green Hills.  At high noon, when everyone will be there.”

The Mall at Green Hills?  But…but…that’s the mall into which I wouldn’t dare to set foot wearing a pair of blue jeans, much less sweats.  The mall where the sales clerks won’t pay you any mind unless you’ve freshened your lipstick.  Not to mention the mall where everybody knows my name.  How am I supposed to show up in the middle of the Mall at Green Hills 1) without a speck of mascara on my invisible Midwestern-girl blonde eyelashes; and 2) eyeglasses, much less the only pair of eyeglasses I own, circa the mid-90s and two prescriptions ago? 

“Because you don’t want to go blind,” my burning left eye sasses back to me.

I realize this sounds kind of vain, but I’m forever scarred by my painful history with glasses.  In seventh grade I had this wire-rimmed squarish pair that matched the very squarishness of my short hairdo, and no matter how hard I tried, I couldn’t break those glasses and with it my resulting nerddom.  The eighth grade girls even felt that I, a seventh grader who’d beaten out one of the eighth-grade girls for a spot on the junior-high cheerleading squad because of my ability to do a one-handed cartwheel, didn’t deserve the spot because I was too nerdy.

Scarred for life, I’m telling you.

“Anyway, don’t worry,” says a friend on Facebook, “because everyone will be at the Titans game today, not the mall.” 

Good point.

“Except possibly the eye doctor, who could be Mr. Right.”

Crap.

Back in the present and years past my nerdy days (um, right?), I choose healthy vision over my reputation.  Come noon, I drive to Green Hills, squinting all the way and managing to mow down only a couple of objects in the process (possibly only one of them human).  Having scoured the mall map beforehand, I know exactly what I have to do.  I park surreptitiously in the parking lot closest to the eye doctor, speed-walk through the make-up section of the department store (ignoring the shouts of “We have special mascara that makes your eyes pop even behind thick glasses!”), and set a new world speed record sprinting across the mall to the eye doctor’s office.

Whew.  Made it without seeing anyone I know.  (I think.  Not that I’d recognize them in these glasses.)  No worries now, except for the cute eye doctor, who, I’ve now convinced myself, is tall, dark, handsome and into girls who’ve had that laser-eye surgery.

I follow the assistant to the back room with all the scary tools meant for poking someone’s eye out and await my fate.  Finally, in walks…

…a pleasant blonde woman.  “I’m Doctor Green,” she says.  Whew again.

Doctor Green is very kind, and I don’t even mind (much) when she flips my eyelid twice (gross!), drops weird yellow dye into my eye and rubs her finger around and around on my swollen lid trying to locate the missing contact lens.

(Fifteen minutes later…)

“You have a very scratched up eye and a burst blood vessel, so don’t get nervous if your eye looks a little scary (read: demon-like) for a few days.  But I can’t locate the contact.  Maybe it came out already.”

“I really don’t think so.  I know I would have seen it.”

She has the good grace to look like she believes me.  “Don’t worry.  It will come out in its own time if it’s in there.  And I promise it won’t slip into your brain or anything like that.”  I’m starting to think she’s really nice.  Until she hands down the final sentence:  “And…I hereby sentence you to four days in glasses.”

Say what?

Seventy bucks, a pit stop to Walgreens for seventy-buck eyedrops, and three crushed baby animals later, I slump into my house, where I’ll be holing up for the next four days with my…ugh…glasses and demon-like eyeball.

Later that day I’m dropping expensive potion into my eye in my bare feet when I step on something.

Crunch.

I’m dreading this.  I not only detest having my picture taken, I detest having my picture taken by this guy, the guy who takes the pictures for the local attorney directory.  I’m still living down the last one he took of me, the one where my hair resembles Diana Ross during the disco era and my teeth are doctored so it looks like someone spilled a jar of Wite-Out over them. 

I check my hair in the rear-view mirror of my truck before heading into the studio.  Wavy helmet, check.  The problem with getting my attorney photo taken is that, although I graduated from law school, although I passed the bar exam, although I send scary letters and stand before a judge and argue my case, somehow I still don’t *look* like an attorney.  The chronic cat-hair presence on my suit is a factor.  But my hair is the best clue that I’m no Ruth Bader Ginsburg.  See, most female attorneys you know have sensible bobs, or darling pixies, or slick buns.  My hair, um, well — Diana Ross, disco era.  So on attorney photo day, I plaster it with hairspray until it resembles the best I can do — a wavy helmet.

Wavy helmet intact, I cruise the elevator to the studio.  “I noticed you’ve been using some snapshot of yourself with a tree behind you in the last couple of directories,” the photographer asks first thing. 

Who, me?  Use a photo my neighbor took of me in my backyard because it looks a zillion times better than the photo of Wite-Out girl?  “Hmmmm.  Must be someone else,” I mumble.

“The one where your hair is much darker?”

“Um, maybe.  Not sure.  So, where do you want me?”

“Stand right there and I’ll just test the lighting.”  I stand on the taped “X” and practice resembling an attorney.  Think attorney.  Think attorney.  “Ready,” he announces, then raises his eyebrows.  “Oh, but do you want to check your hair first?”

“My hair?  Oh, no.  I just checked it outside.”

“But are you sure you don’t want to check your hair first?”

“Do I need to check my hair?”

“Yes, I think you’ll feel better.  There’s a sort of…odd flip, some fly-aways, not really cooperating…”

“Oh, well, do you have a mirror?”

“No, let me show you the way to the women’s bathroom.”

Of all the humiliating…I follow him and enter the women’s bathroom, imagining that my hair must have been blown by a breeze into some crazy cowlick.  I look in the mirror, expecting a horrific…

Wavy helmet.  Exactly the same as when I left it.

I spot a can of Aqua Net (true story, really) on the counter, the kind in the aerosol can like in 1978 (the kind Diana Ross likely wore).  I spray a thick layer over the wavy helmet until it’s…a particularly hardy wavy helmet.  And march back into the studio.

“Much better,” he says.  “You’ll be ever so glad you did that.  Two things I like about being a photographer: One, I get to stare at people.  And two, I get to critique their appearances.  Har har.”

I take my place back on the “X.”

“Now, then, I typically take three different angles.  Side, front, side.”  He snaps a batch of photos from my best side.  “Hmmm.  I’m guessing another angle will be your best side.  And…” he stares at me for a minute, assessing, frowning.  “Let’s skip the middle angle.  Maybe the other side?” 

I obediently flip to my other side, hoping to expedite the process. 

“Now, if you could smile.  I notice you have this…naturally worried look when you don’t smile.”

My mouth flips into a frown and my eyebrows squeeze together into a worried grimace.  Snap!

“Okay, let’s take a look at what we have.”  He pulls up the shots on his computer and flips through them so I can pick my faves.  Gaaaa!  Gaaaaaaaa!  GAAAAAAAA!  Each is scarier than the next.  “Don’t worry, I’ll touch these up,” he assures.  “For example, I’ll get rid of that deep wrinkle across your neck.  That pimple on your chin, too.”

That night he sends me my top pick, the touched-up version, in case I want to buy it for personal use.  I open it, and a worried helmet-head Amy stares back at me, only my face is extra deathly pasty (but not a wrinkle or a pimple in sight).  GAAAAAAAAAAAAAA! 

I dash off an email to the photographer.  “I’d like to stick with the current snapshot of me, the one where I’m posing in front of a tree.”

By Amy Everhart on July 17th, 2010 at 3:47 pm.

“Hello, I need a passport photo, please?” I smile at the lady with the Walgreens nametag and the permafrown.

She pulls down a white screen. “Stand in front of this.”

I obey, smoothing my bangs and wondering if I should have come on a day when my hair was washed, glossed, straightened, and curled.

“Do you need this photo for a real passport?” she asks.

“Er, yes.” I’m not sure why else I would spend money on a “passport” photo.

“Then you can’t smile in the picture.”

I laugh, because she must be joking, and because I’m easy to laugh and, for that matter, easy to smile. 

She, who is clearly the opposite, cracks neither laugh nor smile nor even smirk nor grin. “I’m dead serious.”

“But I have to use this thing for the next ten years. They’ll never let me back in the country.”

“Are you ready?” she says, deadpan, ignoring my flair for humor.

I try to eliminate all traces of hilarity from my face, which only makes me laugh over the hilarity of it all. “Can you just count to three, and then I’ll not smile on three?”

“No. Because people naturally smile on three. Are you ready?”

I snicker. I giggle. I laugh. I try harder, bending the corners of my mouth into a deep frown with my fingers. “Ready,” I say through closed lips, already feeling the giggle building. “Hurry.”

Click.

“Ba ha ha ha ha ha ha ha!” my giggle erupts like long-held breath. “Did you get it without me smiling?”

“Yes. Come back in thirty minutes and it will be ready.”

Thirty minutes later I arrive back at the photo counter, my arms stuffed with wasting-time-at-Walgreens goodies such as the latest People magazine (dying to see Carrie Underwood’s wedding photos), a movie-candy-size box of Mike & Ike’s, sparkly nailpolish in boysenberry, and extra-strength Drano. “How did it come out? Do I look glamorously serious and important?”

“No. But it’s almost average. Anyway, no one likes their passport photo.”

Uh oh.

I don’t look at it until I get outside the store.

“Ba ha ha ha ha ha ha ha!”

I was born to be a ballerina.  Never mind my pot belly that I never learned to suck in when other kids did.  Never mind my shrimpy stature and chunky thighs that looked chunkier in pink tights.  Never mind my ever tangly hair that my mom practically had to yank out of my head to pin into Princess Leia pinwheels.  Never mind that my tiny North Dakota hometown was 100 miles from the nearest ballet studio and left me on my own to choreograph my routines.

I was born to be a ballerina.  I’ve always known this.  My parents knew it, too, buying me not one but three tutus ― pink, violet, and white ― one of which I always wore from the minute I removed my Strawberry Shortcake nightie in the morning to the minute the TV shouted “Here’s Johnny!” in the evening and my parents shooed me off to bed.  Then there was that magical Christmas morning when a shiny pair of real ballet slippers greeted me from the fireplace when I arrived downstairs still half asleep.  And my parents always clapped with gusto as I ― with my girlfriends, who either a) were born ballerinas like me or b) let me boss them around ― flitted and floated about the playroom to the Grease soundtrack in one of our many “shows.”

You can imagine, then, how excited I was, some 30 years later, to sign up for Pure Barre, the new exercise trend that “fuses elements of ballet, pilates, and weights in a 55-minute intense session,” with a real ballet barre for authenticity.  Now was my chance to show the world my inner ballerina.

I arrived at my first Pure Barre class one minute early.  The studio floor was packed with tall, Hollywood-body twenty-something women in sleek black leggings and pink off-the-shoulder Flashdance-style tanks, their (long blonde glossy straight) hair twisted into tight buns or side French braids.

“You need a pair of socks to go in there,” the girl at the desk said while I shoved my own (still tangly) hair into a poky ponytail and smoothed out my grey T-shirt with the Volkswagen Beetles across the front.  “You can buy our official socks.  They’re $13.99.”

My toes bedecked in socks more expensive than my last pair of jeans, I found a spot on the studio floor just as the warm-up was starting.  Aaaaahhh.  Some deep stretching is exactly what I needed after a long day at work.  I leaned back on the floor and started to “om.”

“Everyone up!”  Around me, the Glamazons leaped up and began hiking their knees to their chests in synch.  I followed suit, already wheezing.  “And down!”  We launched into every pilates ab exercise ever known to man (but usually spread out among several sessions in other classes I’d attended), including, for 90 seconds (so the instructor said ― I’m certain she counted to 90 at least three times, because I did in my head), a gut-ripping plank hold.

“And four slow push-ups!”  Push-ups?  How the hell do they qualify as ballet moves?  Dowwwwwwwwwwwwwwnnnnnnnnnnn (count to 1,000)…uuuuuuuuuuuuuuuppppppppppppp (count to 1,000)… “Now fast push-ups!  78, 79, 80!”  “Eighty more push-ups with hands together!  On your fingertips!  Tricep style!  With tongue sticking out!  Singing ‘Mary Had a Little Lamb’!  Juggling ten balls!”

I kept glancing at my fellow Glamazons, certain something was amiss.  Surely they, too, were sneaking breaks whenever the instructor looked away, or at least grimacing a little.  Nope ― they were all moving up and down like robots, their faces passive, their make-up firmly intact.

“And that’s the warm-up!  Now let’s begin!”

WTF?

Eyeing the door like it was an escape hatch, I reluctantly followed the Glamazons over to the barre.  Maybe the real ballet would start now.  As a born-ballerina, surely I’d be a natural at the barre stuff.

“Left leg bent and raised on four-inch heels.”  (I later learned this means the highest tiptoe.  Mine was more like an out-of-style low-heel pump that you only wear when you’re forced to as your best friend’s bridesmaid.)  “Both arms off the barre and high in the air, because they can’t possibly be worn out from all those push-ups.  Pelvis out.  Right leg bent and heel back.  Recite the alphabet backward and chew gum while trying to touch your nose and drink a cup of water upside down.  Now pulse!  Pulse!  Pulse!”

I’ve never been a good listener.  I need to see to believe.  So I had no idea what on God’s green earth she was talking about.  I sneaked a peek at the Glamazon to my left and copied her.  The instructor immediately sidled over.  “You’re hiking your leg (like a dog, she didn’t say but I could hear in her voice).  Just isolate the muscle.”  I concentrated on squeezing my butt muscle over and over, desperate to meet her approval.  She studied my butt muscle for a long while, then nodded without smiling, moving on.

Three years later, we were still squeezing the same butt muscle, which, in the case of mine, had grown numb and tingly.  “Okay, now on the floor in a headstand, neck wrapped around left little toe, right femur balanced on left eyeball.  Now lift!  Lift!  Lift!”

I started inching toward the escape hatch with every lift, scheming how I might sneak out without the Glamazons noticing.

“Good work!  Class is one-eighth over!  On to abs!  Grab a ball.”  I picked up the red ball, but, as a born ballerina, balls were never my thing, so the little devil slipped out of my hands and bounced across the room.  I tried to run after it, but my legs, not used to balancing on one toe for hours on end, buckled with each step.  Meanwhile, the Glamazons were already lining the wall under the barre, watching the ball debacle while exhaling audibly in synch with one arm behind the barre and one leg pointed overhead, inching in and out.  And this was supposed to improve the abs how?  I couldn’t for the life of me figure this out, so I just concentrated on looking like I was working really hard and enjoyed the respite.

“Ab work over.  Now seven minutes of intense ab work!”

I miraculously survived the next seven minutes, and the following two of lying on my belly pinning my arms and legs behind me like an ultra flexible Superman, but only by fantasizing about what I’d make for dinner later (something with pasta, something with chocolate, and something with alcohol).  Then, finally, something that sounded like real dancing.  “Three minutes left before the cooldown!  It’s time for a little back dancing!”

Back dancing!  What fun!  I prepared to perform a series of leaps across the floor, the leaps I’d honed as a child to the rhythm of “Greased Lightning.”

“Into bridge position!  Lift your torso!  Higher, until your tailbone hits the ceiling and you can’t feel it anymore!  Now squeeze!  Squeeze!  SQUEEZE!”  Seriously, more ass work?  I didn’t know how much more mine could take.  The instructor dimmed the lights and the music launched into a giddy happy beat, like this was supposed to be the feel-good part of class.  I can assure you my ass did not agree.

We did get to do a stretch series briefly at the end.  I spent it catching the sweat dripping off my nose with my palm before the droplets could puddle onto the floor and cause an accident.

My dream of becoming a ballerina died on the floor of the studio that afternoon, surrounded by Glamazons who somehow looked exactly the same when class was over, unscarred and even perkier than when we began.  As for me, I dragged my frizzy hair and numb butt muscles out of the studio, my knees buckling all the way.  I made a mental note to rip my tutus into shreds the minute I got home, even before tearing into the bag of Doritos I keep for emergencies. 

It takes a lot to kill a lifelong dream, but the requirement that my butt muscles contract for the span of an hour somehow did the trick.

I’m Amy, and I’m a Target Shopaholic.  This is my story:

I actually had on my calendar the debut of Target’s new Liberty of London all-things-fabulous-floral-print line.  Right there in between “file Client X’s trademark application” and “Emily’s vet appointment.”

You can imagine, then, how excited I was when my sister (also a Target shopaholic and an enabler of my own addiction) called me four days before the line was supposed to debut: “Get to your Target now.  Liberty of London is out, and it’s going fast.  I’m here in the [rustle, oomph…darling! So cute!] dressing room at the Franklin Target.” No sooner did I hang up than my other enabler, my mother, emailed me: “Get to Target now. Do not pass go. Do not collect $200.”

Never mind that it was the middle of the workday and I had four projects to finish by the end of the day and was hoping to stop early and exercise.  My priorities, after all, are thus: 1) Liberty of London, 2) pay mortgage, 3) achieve healthy lifestyle. So I pressed “save” on the client letter I was working on and hightailed it to the Target on White Bridge Road before some other Target shopaholic could get her smarmy hands on my Liberty of London.

Out of breath, I rushed into the clothing section.

Hello? Liberty of London? Anyone? Bueller? I dashed around the entire clothing section, even poking my head into the maternity department, but, alas…

No Liberty of London.

I dialed my sis.  “Grrrrr.  &#@$&^$@!”

“Oh, it’s not there yet? Maybe the Franklin Target is a test store or something.  Sorry?”

“Sorry my ^@#$^!”  In my disappointment, I marched straight over to the Easter candy section and bought not only the Cadbury mini crème eggs with the stuff that looks like real egg yolk inside but also a bag of Cadbury Mini Eggs, the solid kind.  I mean, I had to leave with something.

I didn’t have to check the Targets in the area the next few days, because my sister did, reporting in… “At the Brentwood Target.  No Liberty of London.”  “Sorry, nothing at the Cool Springs Target, either.”

Finally, on the day my calendar (and Target’s flower-shaped posters hanging all over the store) promised, Liberty of London premiered at my Target.  Nervously, I rolled my empty red cart over to the women’s clothing, spotting a flash of floral from a distance but not wanting to get my hopes up.  Then, just when I got within arms-reach of the colorful racks, some chick had the audacity to get in between my Liberty of London and me. “Mama, ain’t that floral bikini the cutest thang?”

I knew then I had to act fast.  So I nudged and pushed and slapped my way through the section, grabbing my size in every dress, shirt, and scarf, and rushed to the dressing room, knocking over only three small children and an older gentleman on my way.

“Ma’am, we only allow six garments in the dressing room at a time.”

I glanced at my overflowing cart in concern.  “But what if someone steals my cart?  Will you watch it for me?”

“Whatever, ma’am.” She rolled her eyes.

It killed me, but I started with only six, ripping the fabrics over my head as quickly as I could in case some Liberty of London thief happened to venture by and wheel off my cart heaped with precious cargo.  I made three more trips out to the cart with bare feet and inside-out shirt for the other nineteen pieces.  (Yep, nineteen:  Don’t tell that snotty dressing-room girl, but I smuggled seven pieces in for the last fitting…hee hee.)

Don’t go acting like I’m all greedy.  I did reject a few things, one shirt that gapped around my armpits and a dress that fell behind me like a bridal train and might look weird at the coffee shop (where I spend most of my days).  Oh, and the floral-print rainboots, but only because they only came in children’s sizes.

Walking out of the store balancing five bags stuffed with floral fabrics (and a Liberty of London-print note pad to make my grocery lists in style), I muffled my guilt with the thought that at least I have cheap taste.  What if I’d gone crazy like this at, say, Nordstrom?  

I’m Amy, and I’m a Target Shopaholic.

Psssst…over here…under the fuzzy yellow blanket.  You may wonder where I’ve been these past weeks, noticed an absence of iPod confessions about sunshiny songs and lists of the signs of spring and other nonsense about warm things.  That’s because I’ve been here, huddled under this blanket, waiting for warmth to arrive in my life once again, either in the form of spring or a repaired heater.  You see, my heater went kaput two weeks ago, and the HVAC guy with the lowest rates, the one who warned me last fall I needed a whole new unit, he hasn’t been by to visit yet, probably because he told me so and I didn’t listen. 

And the thing is, I HATE BEING COLD.

But you’re from North Dakota, you challenge, like my geographical origins somehow make me a cold-blooded creature that enjoys napping in icy ponds.  The truth is I spent the majority of my formative years in a hot bath.  This because my mother insisted on turning the heat down to 60 each night.  We lived in a glass-front A-frame on the prairie, so this meant each morning the temp inside our house hovered around 42 degrees.  My mother justified this because, it being the 1980s, we all slept in heated waterbeds.  Did she not realize how painful it was to hop from a steaming waterbed into the frozen tundra that was my Love’s Baby Soft-scented bathroom, wearing nothing but a rainbow-screenprinted nightshirt and fuzzy slippers with different colored toes?  My only refuge was to run one of those baths that hogged all the hot water and infuriated my sister, and lounge there for an hour reading a Sweet Valley High book and letting a trail of hot water from the spout splash onto my toe while my mother screamed from below that I’d filled the tub too full again and water was dripping into the kitchen.

My heatless life of the past few weeks has sent me into survival mode.  Here’s a typical day for me under the blanket:

Awake under a mound of fuzzy blankets wearing three sweatshirts and fuzzy slipper-boots and rub my numb nose back to life.

Lie there for an extra ten minutes dreading the sprint to the bathroom.

Sprint to the bathroom, remove just enough clothing to take care of business.

Bundle up again and sprint to the kitchen.  Eat whatever I can lay my hands on quickly that isn’t refrigerated (miniature Snickers, an untoasted slice of bread).

Run one of those baths that hogs all the hot water and lounge there for an hour reading Entertainment Weekly, letting a trail of hot water from the spout splash onto my toe.

Lie there for an extra ten minutes dreading the thought of my naked wet body hitting the Siberian landscape that is my Philosophy-scented bathroom.

GAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA!!!!!  Throw on three towels and a bathrobe, wrap a towel around my head.

Bundle up in layers of sweatshirts and fuzzy pajama bottoms and my now foot-scented slipper-boots.

Sprint to the couch and burrow under my yellow fuzzy blanket.

Practice law all day from under the blanket, feigning ignorance when callers wonder about the muffled sound of my voice on the phone.  Sprinkle in hot baths during work breaks and eat miniature Snickers to sustain energy.

Jump out from under the blanket long enough to do an exercise tape without removing slipper-boots.

For evening’s entertainment, watch frozen winter sports on TV through a peephole at the top of the blanket, refuse to venture out with friends because “it’s too cold tonight, are you crazy???”

Run a hot bath before bed.

GAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA!!!!!  Throw on three towels and a bathrobe, wrap a towel around my head.

Bundle up in layers of sweatshirts and fuzzy pajama bottoms and my now foul-scented slipper-boots.

Bury all but my nose under a mound of fuzzy blankets and fall asleep dreaming of warmer days to come.

By Amy Everhart on January 22nd, 2010 at 9:33 pm.

Every so often, when I think no one’s watching, I turn to Delilah’s sappy radio show on my car-radio dial and curse at her and the sappy 16-year-old who’s called in to request a sappy song for her BFF-Since-Junior-High.  And inevitably, Delilah will pick some love song from the eighties to which I know every word, to which I can’t NOT sing along, something like, oh, “That’s What Friends Are For.” 

Like she did tonight.  When I was driving through the back roads of Belle Meade in the darkness, just me, myself, and I and a bunch of fancy mansions for company.  (Read: No one around to catch me singing along with the car radio, something you should never be caught doing because you don’t want anyone to think you’re a weirdo.  Singing along with the car radio by yourself is weird ― everyone knows that.)

And not that I’m bragging or anything, but I sound really terrific singing “That’s What Friends Are For.”  I can do all the voices and all the harmonies and even the instrumental parts (with my voice).  As I do tonight, with exuberance.  “And I…never thought I’d feel this way…” 

I’m just getting into it, really moving now, when some car has the audacity to drive up behind me on the same road.  Now what am I supposed to do?  It’s not like I can stop singing.  Not this song, not even if I tried.  Anyway, it’s dark, and the driver can’t see me singing from way back there, so I shine on, “Keep smilin’, keep shinin’, knowin’ you can always count on me…for sure…that’s right baby (I added that last part – nice, huh?), that’s what friends are for-or-or-or…”

Except then the same car has the nerve to pull up beside me at this here red light WHILE THE SONG IS STILL PLAYING, and right at the best part, too, the second verse when the instrumental starts it out and then I know exactly where to jump in with “well you came and opened me, and now there’s so much more I see…” (harmony here)… “and so by the way I thank you…whoh-oh-whoh-oh…”

Except the driver is now neck and neck with me, and he probably saw me bobbing my head back and forth before and suspected I might be one of those weirdos who sings along to my car radio, and now he’s trying to catch me in the act so he can go home and make fun of me to his family.  (“You should see this weirdo I saw tonight.  She was actually singing along with her car radio.”) 

So I’m forced to sing without moving my mouth, or pretend I’m chewing gum, which is not nearly as enjoyable as the fun I was having before he so rudely interrupted my performance.  I inch my car up a bit so he can only see the back of my head, but he inches up, too, refusing to let me off the hook.  And by now the song’s damn near over, and I’m about to miss the…

Green light!  I put pedal to the metal and speed through the intersection, leaving the gawker in the dust, and I’m…

…alone again with my song, just in time for the grand finale: “count on me for…count on me for…count on me for…(overlapping voices and I can pull off each and every one)…that’s what friends are for-or-or-or.  Doo-doo-doo….”

Whew.  My secret’s still safe.

  1. Clip hair off face into random ponytail.  Admire sassy self and wonder why ponytails never look this adorable when make an effort.
  2. Apply Crest White Strips and wait for them to dissolve while doing poses from yoga cards and drinking hot cocoa with Hershey’s Syrup, the light version.
  3. Brush teeth with extra-foamy stuff.
  4. Floss those puppies, too.
  5. Swish multi-purpose Listerine (Prevent cavities! Whiten teeth! Freshen breath! Attract multiple boyfriends!) for 60 seconds like in the commercials.  (Yee-ouch!  More like 10.  SPIT!)
  6. Change into “Life Is Good” T-shirt and Old Navy bottoms with daisy print.
  7. Remove contacts; blindly place them in jar of fizzy stuff.
  8. Squint into mirror; pluck and tweeze random hairs.
  9. Apply double dose of facial-hair bleach.
  10. Yee-ouch!
  11. Remove make-up with make-up removal wipe with special moisturizers.
  12. Wash face with gritty stuff to slough away dead skin cells.
  13. Apply toner on face to acid-burn dead skin cells.
  14. Take a jack-hammer to face to hammer away dead skin cells.
  15. Apply facial-pigment lightener.
  16. Apply facial moisturizer to counteract drying effects of facial-pigment lightener.
  17. Apply eye-lifting cream above eyes and eye-depuffing cream beneath eyes.
  18. Apply pimple cream to red spot on nose that could be emerging pimple.  (Egads!)
  19. Buff off loose lip-skin flakes with warm washcloth.
  20. Slather on sugar-infused lip conditioner; wipe off with tissue.
  21. Slather on lip balm.
  22. Slather body lotion all over body.
  23. Slather hand lotion all over hands. 
  24. Slather more creamy stuff wherever it makes sense just for good measure.
  25. Remove hair clip.  Watch hair clump around face in manner that in no way resembles the movies.
  26. Place glasses on face.  Note through cloudy view that they need cleaning. 
  27. Clean glasses. 
  28. Place glasses back on face.
  29. Potty break.
  30. Wash hands.
  31. Reapply lotion to hands.
  32. Set house alarm just in case.
  33. Check BlackBerry for messages from multiple boyfriends.  Find none.  Place BlackBerry and flashlight beside bed just in case.
  34. Set alarm clock for 6 a.m.  Think better of it and set alarm clock for 6:45 a.m.
  35. Turn off lamp.

And this is what we women do just to get ready…

for BED!

By Amy Everhart on January 4th, 2010 at 8:06 pm.

Attention, ladies, especially members of the Green Hills YMCA:

You know that new cardio machine at the gym, the one where you can make like you’re in-line skating, where you dart your booty out to one side and then the other? I know you think you look really sporty as you dart away on this thing, but you can’t see you from behind. Well, I saw you at the gym this weekend, and it nearly knocked me to the floor.

Because your booty, your “ass”et, your bum, your heiny, the one that looks so fine in a pair of Lucky jeans? It doesn’t look so good on that machine. In fact, it looks downright scary darting at onlookers that way, especially in those skin-tight black leggings we’re all wearing this time of year. Like those carnival mirrors that turn your image into a grotesque clown, this machine takes your sassy J-Lo-esque behind and enlarges it tenfold. I’m telling you, this machine is to your booty what horizontal stripes are to your hips. All I’m saying is, from one girlfriend to another, if you dare to venture onto this atrocity, TIE A SWEATSHIRT AROUND YOUR WAIST.

You’re welcome. I’ve got your back.