(no subject)
Nov. 5th, 2004 09:30 pmI have a weird pain in my neck--it doesn't really feel like it's in the muscles or the bones, but rather... something else. Whatever you've got in there. Originally it was a weird (painless) fluttery throbbing on the left side; now it's a dull ache that curves down into my shoulder. I don't know.
So tired. Sort of that hot/cold feeling that I associate with fever. I admitted yesterday to my mother that I sat downstairs, fully dressed, for about ten minutes contemplating whether I should just stay home from class. (Which I can't afford to do--I've already missed two.) I managed to drag myself off--the class is only an hour and fifteen minutes, which has become my mantra--but it was close. I told her how the election and the bad-news doctor's visit on one day were almost more than I could really take, and I was feeling really depressed, and she got upset and told me that I was "overreacting." Naturally this pissed me off, and I was mentally gathering a good head of political steam when she added, "I mean, really, you don't have cancer." And that was just hilarious to me--Oh, the election? Yeah, we're totally screwed.
Of course then I got to go off on her about how I wasn't even worried about cancer per se--I was worried about what the total diagnosis was going to be, and how much thyroid/diabetes crap was going to be in there, because I have a paralyzing fear of needles and if I were told that I had to regularly give myself insulin shots? Yeah. We would throw down in the doctor's office. "You're going to have to find something else to be wrong with me, because NO." Never mind that you can have enough trouble having children with PCOS without cancer even entering into the picture. And you know, since I apparently do have PCOS and very likely a thyroid and/or diabetes problem (Thyroid is iffy. Diabetes is rampant on my mother's side of the family), maybe that's why I feel like shit all the time. You think? Not to mention that I've been dealing with clinical depression pretty much all of my life, plus its associated medications for nearly seven years now. Sigh. She thinks of it as "overreacting"; to me, all of this, including the depression, is as much a reaction to anything as, say, a hard rain. It's not raining because I had a bad day. It's just there.
God, I have so much to do this weekend. First of all, I have a five-page paper due Tuesday, which... ick. And I want to put up at least one more scene from Black Ribbon just to keep it going. And at the same time, I really want to work on the book--doing that meme yesterday made me go through whatlittle I've written, and I was really surprised by how decent it was. I think writing the Lost recaps has really helped, actually--the worst failing of the earlier 15Ms that would just go on and on and on was that I felt like I had to transcribe everything out in some sort of dialogue, and I couldn't just say, "And then stabnation until everyone is dead." Which is dumb, because I was doing that in the Van Helsing and Hannibal parodies, so I don't know why I just suddenly forgot how to do that somewhere around "Troy in Fifteen Minutes." My point is, the book is going to be a mix of the two styles--paragraph narration and script dialogue--and realizing I need to do that has really broken down some of the psychological "I can't do this!" block that I'd built up.
Speaking of stabnation, that is seriously the hardest thing to come up with: how to summarize fights for ten movies when they all boil down to STAB PUNCH BIFF BOOM! I mean, I eventually figured out a way to approach it, to give each movie an individual theme (and this is where I have to put in the disclaimer that if you leave me suggestions, I mean, thanks for the helpful impulse, but I can't use them. This has to be all me), but a lot of the gaps in the drafts are labeled "fight scene here."
Anyway. So much to do, and so tired. You wanna know another reason I'm so tired? Sister Girl went out and saw... well, Saw last night. Sister Girl is a moron and should not be allowed to leave the house ever again, by the way. She calls the house from the road and says, "YOU NEED TO WAIT AT THE FRONT DOOR FOR ME." So I get put on door duty with the dogses, and I wait for fifteen frickin' minutes, and finally she pulls up in the driveway, doesn't even drive all the way down to the end, and races to the door and locks it behind her.
"Uh, dude? I think you left your lights on."
"I KNOW SHUT UP."
"Uh, dude...?"
So Mom goes out there and parks her car properly (Mom: *eyeroll*), and Sister Girl sits on the hall stairs and tells me all about it. Now, I had already read the spoiler, but apparently it glosses over the scariest scenes in the movie with "We flashback to very creepy scenes showing how Lawrence and Adam were captured by Jigsaw." I still don't really know what happened, except that it involves "OH MY GOD A MAN IN, LIKE, A CAPE AND A PIGWOLF MASK AND OMG IT WAS SO FRIGGIN' CREEPY AND HE LIKE OPENS THE BACK DOOR REALLY SLOWLY AND CRAWLS OUT AND THEN HE SHUTS THE DOOR OR MAYBE HE LEAVES IT OPEN YEAH I THINK HE LEAVES IT OPEN AND HE CRAWLS ON ALL FOURS OVER TO DR. WESTLEY AND THEN THERE WAS THIS CLOWN AND YOU KNOW HOW I FEEL ABOUT CLOWNS!"
I managed to resist the impulse to tell her that story from Snopes about the babysitter who finds the "clown statue" in the bedroom, because if I had told her about that I would never get another full night's sleep for the rest of my life. As it was, she made me go into her room first and do, like, some kind of SWAT reconnaissance where I had to kick open the bathroom and closet doors and check all the cabinets and the shower and under the bed and turn all the lights on for her. And she has a walk-in closet, so I had to frisk all the clothes hanging on the lower bar, in case the pigwolfman was hiding there (which apparently he does in the movie). My sister? Will be nineteen next month. I'm just saying. Although it was kinda fun to do the Charlie's Angels finger-guns every time I kicked something open.
So I managed to convince her not to sleep in my bed, which was what happened that time she saw either Signs or The Ring in the theater (probably The Ring, although Signs did freak her out really, really bad. I was actually glad that The Village turned out the way it did, because at least she wasn't COMPLETELY TERRIFIED BY IT, JESUS) and I ended up sleeping on my floor and then the couch downstairs because we both flail in our sleep and there's not been a bed built that's big enough for the two of us to sleep in and not kill each other, and I wasn't sleeping in her bed, man--her bed had food wrappers in it, for God's sake. But she still kept on all the lights upstairs--every single light except the one in my room, not that it did me any good. And I lay awake all night wondering what was in the attic, which you reach through a door in the bathroom, a door that looks like it shouldn't be there, which is just too Dionaea House anyway. Because I poked my head in the attic and sort of did a cursory look-around with the Charlie's Angels fingers, but... I didn't look behind the boxes. I didn't look in the dark nooks under the eaves. I don't know where the pigwolf is.
Maybe I will sleep with my light on tonight.
So tired. Sort of that hot/cold feeling that I associate with fever. I admitted yesterday to my mother that I sat downstairs, fully dressed, for about ten minutes contemplating whether I should just stay home from class. (Which I can't afford to do--I've already missed two.) I managed to drag myself off--the class is only an hour and fifteen minutes, which has become my mantra--but it was close. I told her how the election and the bad-news doctor's visit on one day were almost more than I could really take, and I was feeling really depressed, and she got upset and told me that I was "overreacting." Naturally this pissed me off, and I was mentally gathering a good head of political steam when she added, "I mean, really, you don't have cancer." And that was just hilarious to me--Oh, the election? Yeah, we're totally screwed.
Of course then I got to go off on her about how I wasn't even worried about cancer per se--I was worried about what the total diagnosis was going to be, and how much thyroid/diabetes crap was going to be in there, because I have a paralyzing fear of needles and if I were told that I had to regularly give myself insulin shots? Yeah. We would throw down in the doctor's office. "You're going to have to find something else to be wrong with me, because NO." Never mind that you can have enough trouble having children with PCOS without cancer even entering into the picture. And you know, since I apparently do have PCOS and very likely a thyroid and/or diabetes problem (Thyroid is iffy. Diabetes is rampant on my mother's side of the family), maybe that's why I feel like shit all the time. You think? Not to mention that I've been dealing with clinical depression pretty much all of my life, plus its associated medications for nearly seven years now. Sigh. She thinks of it as "overreacting"; to me, all of this, including the depression, is as much a reaction to anything as, say, a hard rain. It's not raining because I had a bad day. It's just there.
God, I have so much to do this weekend. First of all, I have a five-page paper due Tuesday, which... ick. And I want to put up at least one more scene from Black Ribbon just to keep it going. And at the same time, I really want to work on the book--doing that meme yesterday made me go through what
Speaking of stabnation, that is seriously the hardest thing to come up with: how to summarize fights for ten movies when they all boil down to STAB PUNCH BIFF BOOM! I mean, I eventually figured out a way to approach it, to give each movie an individual theme (and this is where I have to put in the disclaimer that if you leave me suggestions, I mean, thanks for the helpful impulse, but I can't use them. This has to be all me), but a lot of the gaps in the drafts are labeled "fight scene here."
Anyway. So much to do, and so tired. You wanna know another reason I'm so tired? Sister Girl went out and saw... well, Saw last night. Sister Girl is a moron and should not be allowed to leave the house ever again, by the way. She calls the house from the road and says, "YOU NEED TO WAIT AT THE FRONT DOOR FOR ME." So I get put on door duty with the dogses, and I wait for fifteen frickin' minutes, and finally she pulls up in the driveway, doesn't even drive all the way down to the end, and races to the door and locks it behind her.
"Uh, dude? I think you left your lights on."
"I KNOW SHUT UP."
"Uh, dude...?"
So Mom goes out there and parks her car properly (Mom: *eyeroll*), and Sister Girl sits on the hall stairs and tells me all about it. Now, I had already read the spoiler, but apparently it glosses over the scariest scenes in the movie with "We flashback to very creepy scenes showing how Lawrence and Adam were captured by Jigsaw." I still don't really know what happened, except that it involves "OH MY GOD A MAN IN, LIKE, A CAPE AND A PIGWOLF MASK AND OMG IT WAS SO FRIGGIN' CREEPY AND HE LIKE OPENS THE BACK DOOR REALLY SLOWLY AND CRAWLS OUT AND THEN HE SHUTS THE DOOR OR MAYBE HE LEAVES IT OPEN YEAH I THINK HE LEAVES IT OPEN AND HE CRAWLS ON ALL FOURS OVER TO DR. WESTLEY AND THEN THERE WAS THIS CLOWN AND YOU KNOW HOW I FEEL ABOUT CLOWNS!"
I managed to resist the impulse to tell her that story from Snopes about the babysitter who finds the "clown statue" in the bedroom, because if I had told her about that I would never get another full night's sleep for the rest of my life. As it was, she made me go into her room first and do, like, some kind of SWAT reconnaissance where I had to kick open the bathroom and closet doors and check all the cabinets and the shower and under the bed and turn all the lights on for her. And she has a walk-in closet, so I had to frisk all the clothes hanging on the lower bar, in case the pigwolfman was hiding there (which apparently he does in the movie). My sister? Will be nineteen next month. I'm just saying. Although it was kinda fun to do the Charlie's Angels finger-guns every time I kicked something open.
So I managed to convince her not to sleep in my bed, which was what happened that time she saw either Signs or The Ring in the theater (probably The Ring, although Signs did freak her out really, really bad. I was actually glad that The Village turned out the way it did, because at least she wasn't COMPLETELY TERRIFIED BY IT, JESUS) and I ended up sleeping on my floor and then the couch downstairs because we both flail in our sleep and there's not been a bed built that's big enough for the two of us to sleep in and not kill each other, and I wasn't sleeping in her bed, man--her bed had food wrappers in it, for God's sake. But she still kept on all the lights upstairs--every single light except the one in my room, not that it did me any good. And I lay awake all night wondering what was in the attic, which you reach through a door in the bathroom, a door that looks like it shouldn't be there, which is just too Dionaea House anyway. Because I poked my head in the attic and sort of did a cursory look-around with the Charlie's Angels fingers, but... I didn't look behind the boxes. I didn't look in the dark nooks under the eaves. I don't know where the pigwolf is.
Maybe I will sleep with my light on tonight.
no subject
Date: 2004-11-05 07:37 pm (UTC)Yeah, when I was about 8-12 and my brother was about 5-9, we slept in the same bed at my summer cottage. And if there's one person that flails around MORE than me and steals the covers it's my brother. Really. I doubt anyone can sleep next to either of us. Me, I can explain. I had a nice big bed in my room that I was used to sleeping in and having all that nice room, but my brother had a single bed at home. In college I got a little better, having to sleep in the dorm bed. But I also talk in my sleep. Everyone has told me that. Sometimes coherently, sometimes not.
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Date: 2004-11-05 08:24 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2004-11-05 07:40 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-11-05 07:58 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2004-11-05 07:43 pm (UTC)Can I sleep in your bed too? XP
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Date: 2004-11-05 07:59 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-11-05 07:43 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-11-05 07:44 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-11-05 08:01 pm (UTC)I'm warning you, man--if you can't handle scary clowns, don't read this story. The punchline is basically, "Get the kids and get out of the house--we don't HAVE a clown statue!"
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Date: 2004-11-05 07:54 pm (UTC)Hee, Sister Girl sounds like my friends after seeing Texas Chainsaw Massacre. Everytime someone said 'leather' and 'face' in the same sentence, they would start screaming. Heh. That's why I gave them the Dionaea House link. Now my friends can be scared of babysitting alone like me.
*hands Cleo a nightlight*
no subject
Date: 2004-11-05 08:02 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-11-05 08:06 pm (UTC)Well if you are a diabetic you're choices are either give yourself insulin or, well, die.
Not trying to scare you here but I've had it for most of my life and it's really not so bad.
What type do they thing you have? Type two can be controlled without insulin shots.
I'd suggest checking out www.diabetes.com and getting some info so you'll know what to talk the doctor about.
Never mind that you can have enough trouble having children with PCOS without cancer even entering into the picture.
Do you sincerely want children? There are ways of kids in your life without giving birth to them. We could use some good foster parents and people willing to adopt.
Why does your sister see scary movies anyway if they freak her out so much? I wouldn't dream of seeing something like The Grudge because I like sleeping at night.
Hope you feel better.
Icz
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Date: 2004-11-05 08:16 pm (UTC)Seriously, I know. My uncle (related by marriage, so not really part of the discussion in terms of family diabetes history) has had some pretty bad episodes. That's why the whole terror of needles makes me so anxious--I really don't want to have to face that.
Do you sincerely want children? There are ways of kids in your life without giving birth to them. We could use some good foster parents and people willing to adopt.
If I had only myself to consider, it wouldn't be a problem. Of course, I'm only 25 and my biological clock doesn't give a shit at the moment. But you have to consider what your partner wants too, you know? That's what makes it complicated.
Why does your sister see scary movies anyway if they freak her out so much?
I have no idea why she keeps going to see scary movies--this time, she insisted that her friend, who had already seen it, didn't properly convey the terror to her. I was like, "Fool, *I* could have told you!" I made her SWEAR not to go see The Grudge.
(no subject)
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Date: 2004-11-05 08:46 pm (UTC)We used to get into huge arguments when we were on vacation and were forced to share a hotel bed. The last time I let her sleep in my bed was probably 8 years ago (I moved out 7 years ago) when she woke up with a spider crawling across her boobs.
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Date: 2004-11-05 08:49 pm (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2004-11-05 08:57 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2004-11-05 09:05 pm (UTC)My friend and I (both of us strapping young men in our early 20s) watched The Ring in broad daylight on a sunny autumn afternoon and scared the hell out of ourselves.
I went to bed that night with thoughts of creepy hand-walking girls swimming in my head.
*sniffle*
As for the rest of it....writing is the only thing that got me through my bad times. It's so awesome to see you enjoying what you're doing (and that we get to benefit from your therapy :)
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Date: 2004-11-05 09:12 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2004-11-05 09:06 pm (UTC)"SWAT reconnaissance" = me, ROFL.
Thank you. I really needed it.
And I hope you feel better, too. Feeling sick but not knowing what's wrong is the worst. Meh.
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Date: 2004-11-05 09:15 pm (UTC)Hope you're feeling better soon.
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Date: 2004-11-05 09:48 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-11-05 09:58 pm (UTC)Like Halloween night when I watched all five hours of 100 Scariest Movie Moments on Bravo. You know where I slept that night? In a sleeping bag on my brother's bedroom floor. I made him come into my room with me to brush my teeth and get my pajamas. Because five hours of clips from The Ring, Scream, The Sixth Sense, The Shining, Signs, et al = me not having a good night.
And, yeah. Midget clown in the bedroom = OMGWTFAAAHHH. Someone told me about that in math today. Another picture I'm not going to click on tonight.
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Date: 2004-11-05 10:14 pm (UTC)(Dammit! I totally meant to watch that thing on Bravo.)
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Date: 2004-11-05 11:05 pm (UTC)Oh, and the pigwolfman? Was I the only one who thought of that ep of Seinfeld when Kramer found 'Pigman'? Him screaming and running down the hall flailing about just came to mind. 'PigWolfMan!!!'
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Date: 2004-11-05 11:22 pm (UTC)*snugs*
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Date: 2004-11-05 11:33 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-11-06 02:27 am (UTC)As far as the diabetes thing goes, I've got PCOS as I mentioned before, and they put me on glucophage as a preventitive measure against me geting diabetes, which they'll probably do to you, too, and then it's just a matter of taking a pill every day, and if that's all it takes to keep a disease at bay, hey, pass the childproof bottle.
I want to see The Grudge SO bad, even though I know what a bad idea that it.
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Date: 2004-11-06 02:27 am (UTC)As far as the diabetes thing goes, I've got PCOS as I mentioned before, and they put me on glucophage as a preventitive measure against me geting diabetes, which they'll probably do to you, too, and then it's just a matter of taking a pill every day, and if that's all it takes to keep a disease at bay, hey, pass the childproof bottle.
I want to see The Grudge SO bad, even though I know what a bad idea that is.
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Date: 2004-11-06 02:28 am (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2004-11-06 04:46 am (UTC)Between that and the Dionaea House thing (which was OMGNOWHATSGOINGON??? scary, by the way. That last text message creeped me the fuck out)? So not sleeping tonight.
Adrienne.
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Date: 2004-11-06 06:59 am (UTC)And I laughed out loud when I read that she told you that it's not like you have cancer, because that is exactly what my mother told me when I was diagnosed with a chronic condition and was depressed about having to be on meds.
Again, I hope everything goes well with your tests. And tell your sister not to see The Grudge. :-)
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Date: 2004-11-06 07:31 am (UTC)I've been sleeping with the lights on for the last few days because of my friend's description of Saw. Now I'm freaked out all over again.
As for The Ring? The original Japanese version of that film has scarred me for life. OMG, why is my house so dark? It's the middle of the afternoon!
*cries* I'm all on my own here...
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Date: 2004-11-06 07:51 am (UTC)we have one of those attic doors too.
Gah.
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Date: 2004-11-08 11:14 am (UTC)I never get too scared by horror movies as I've read too many damn comics and assume the probability of ghosts/weird japanese vengeance spirits/pigwolfs is probably equal to me getting superpowers so I'll just beat them to death my laser fists when they show up.