It has felt to me lately like my life is just one giant juxtaposition. I guess it kind of makes
sense, because I’m right around the age where life often begins to transition in big
ways, and so maybe a lot of people my age feel similarly.
But the thing is,
things aren’t really changing right now. I’m just stuck in this awkward,
in-between gray area that borders the black and the white (and that’s not just
because I live in West Philadelphia, if you catch my drift). And I'll be stuck here for a while to come, I think. Hence,
juxtaposition.
I work at a
job where my co-worker/supervisor/person-who-sits-ten-feet-away-from-me-every-day-and-with-whom-I-have-to-get-along is in her fifties and has two children
that are older than me. For this
reason, I can understand why she can’t see me as anything but a child
pretending to be an adult. (Things that probably don’t help my case: the fact
that everyone in the office knows I love Spongebob Squarepants; my very slight
lisp; the fact that I dress kind of like a 12-year-old, only in earth tones
instead of sparkles.)
But the fact
is, although she is my supervisor, she and I are technically equals in some small ways, such as the fact that we are two thirds of the front office staff, we sit in the same room
together all day, every day, and that we both need to chat about trivial things in order
to get along and so the otherwise awkward silence doesn’t crush us alive.
That’s where the equality ends, really, and we both know it, but sometimes we pretend
like that’s not true while we chat.
Case in point: she likes to talk about her
two older-than-me daughters who still live at home. I don't have daughters. I am nowhere near the stage in my life in which I would have daughters. And I certainly don't know what it's like to have two adult daughters who still live at home. I had absolutely nothing to contribute to this conversation that would make us seem like equals. I could have talked about how my cats mooch off of me just as much
as her daughters mooch off of her, but I felt like that would've only increased
the awkwardness.
The more obvious option, though, was to bring up the one way I could possibly relate to this conversation: the fact that I'm a daughter with a mom, just like her daughters.
The more obvious option, though, was to bring up the one way I could possibly relate to this conversation: the fact that I'm a daughter with a mom, just like her daughters.
You can’t
expect somebody to see you as an equal if you’re comparing yourself to that person’s
daughter during a chat. It doesn’t work like that. But that didn’t stop me
from trying.
Juxtaposition.
The other
day, this same co-worker of mine was telling me about before her daughters moved back home, while they were still in college, they were obviously able to take care
of themselves just fine. But now that they’d returned home, they seemed to rely
on her for meals, laundry, and everything else for which I have not relied on
my mother since I was about 14. She brought up a time when she went
to visit one daughter while she was in college, and all that this daughter had
in her fridge was one can of beer.
I silently
commended myself on the fact that my fridge is much more well-stocked than her
daughter’s had been (I’ve learned that saying such things out loud is generally
frowned upon in the workplace; it falls under “Bragging About Yourself” on the
list of Inappropriate Workplace Topics. This list, by the way, also includes
“Potty Talk,” a topic which I learned was taboo the hard way as well). But when I got home
that evening, I studied the contents of my fridge, as well as my pantry, and I
came to the conclusion that my food supply isn’t as far as I’d thought it was
from “one beer” status.
My fridge
has a couple of staples: items that have been and will continue to be in there
until we move (and maybe even after that). They are:
1.) A
filtered water pitcher, the filter of which has never (NEVER) been changed over
the course of its 4 year life
2.) Half of
an onion in a Ziploc bag that can’t possibly be good anymore, but it doesn’t
actually look rotten to me
3.) A
container of off-brand Parmesan cheese that we bought once for a combination
dinner party/Halloween party during which we served spaghetti (This party went
just as badly as you’d imagine it would.)
4.) A bottle
of balsamic vinaigrette from the same party (because nothing says “fun” like a
salad)
And if you
move onto my pantry, you’ll find the same pattern of staples:
1.) A can of mini corns that I bought in Chinatown back when I still lived on Temple's campus (it's moved with me three times. Why?)
2.) Three cans of chicken salad that are still shrink-wrapped together, for obvious reasons (CANNED chicken salad...?)
3.) A box of pasta boobs
Occasionally,
Brad and I build around these staples and stock our shelves with food we
actually eat, the classiness of which varies. Right now, our building blocks
are a case and a half of Miller Lite in our fridge drawer, half a loaf of stale
bread, and a carton of eggs and a box of instant pancake mix, both of which we
bought last weekend when we had friends staying with us so we’d look like we
were people who went grocery shopping the way grown-ups do. I think these additional items put us about a step and a half up from “one beer” status.
On second
thought, I’m going to take away that half-step, because a case and a half of
Miller Lite is actually less impressive, not more impressive, than just one can
of beer.
However, at
the same time that we stock our kitchen the way college kids do, Brad and I are
engaged and planning a wedding, the way college kids, you know, don’t. We’re
signing $10,000 contracts and talking about what we’re going to do with our
bank accounts after we’re married and looking into how I go about changing my
last name. We are doing all this while
there is a box of Pasta Boobs front and center in our pantry.
Juxtaposition.
I could go,
in detail, into the other examples of juxtaposition in my life, such as the
fact that I started volunteering at the cat shelter solely so I could play with
kitties once a week, but instead, I found myself last Thursday reduced to
wiping from the ringworm-ridden fur of a litter of 7-week-old kittens a thick
layer of their mother’s shit/vomit compound. Or the fact that I’ll be paying off the loans I borrowed to pay
for my college education until I’m 40 because after college, I could only land the type of job that you don't need a college education to do, and so you don't earn a college-education-worthy salary. Or the
fact that, despite all of these enormous pathetic aspects of my life, I’m
actually very happy with the way things are, and most of the time, I enjoy every minute of it.
Such is
life. I think.
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