My Vision

When I named my dog Tony Kellari Lanagan, I wasn’t just picking a name. I was inscribing a legacy. Tony carries echoes of Tony Mendez, the CIA officer whose ingenuity saved lives, and Anthony Bourdain, the cultural explorer who taught us that food is a map of humanity. To honor those names, my Tony cannot be ordinary. He must be spectacular. He must be more than a pet; he must be a citizen.

And of course, I had to have a little fun. “Kellari” means “basement” in Finnish.

I’ve had dogs before, and I’ve lived through the nightmares of separation anxiety, the barking that rattled neighbors, the chaos of greetings at the door. I know what happens when training is left to chance. This time, I’m writing a plan — a manifesto, really — that maps out how Tony will grow from a puppy into a service dog, a sanctuary anchor, and a visible support in the wider world.

The philosophy is simple: dogs love jobs. Purpose is the antidote to chaos. Tony’s jobs will be woven into my daily rhythm, so that every chore, every ritual, every safeguard becomes part of his identity. He will not just obey; he will participate. He will not just be loved; he will be trusted.

When guests arrive, I don’t want chaos. I want calm. The doorbell will not be a trigger for barking or jumping, but a cue for composure. Tony will learn to go to his spot, lay down, and wait for permission. Greetings will be structured, not frantic. He will embody the principle that a good citizen respects boundaries.

I also know the misery of separation anxiety. I’ve had two dogs who couldn’t handle solitude, and the noise was unbearable for my neighbors. I refuse to repeat that nightmare. Tony’s plan includes short, structured alone times, gradually extended so he learns independence. I will leave calmly, return calmly, and give him comfort anchors — a toy, a task — so he associates solitude with safety. Absence will not mean abandonment. It will mean trust.

But Tony’s plan is not just about preventing nightmares. It is about creating miracles. One of his jobs will be laundry pickup. Clothes on the floor will not be clutter; they will be cues. He will learn to pick them up and drop them in a low basket. Another job will be toy cleanup. He will learn the names of his toys and put them away himself. This builds vocabulary, obedience, and ritual. His toys will become part of the continuity archive, each name a cue for tidying.

Training is not abstract. It is woven into my daily framework. I wake at five in the morning, and Tony will wake with me. At 5:45, we go for coffee, and he will learn public calmness. He will nap when I nap, syncing his rhythm to mine. At nine in the evening, we shut down, and nighttime rituals begin. My home time is the perfect setup. I spend most of the day here, so Tony is never abandoned. Yet I will intentionally leave him alone sometimes, to prevent separation anxiety. Sanctuary with solitude.

Night is where companionship meets protection. I look forward to having someone to sleep beside me, to transform solitude into sanctuary. His steady breathing, his warmth, his calm presence will become part of my rhythm. But he will also be protective. If someone breaks in, his size and aura will deter without aggression. He will be companion in sleep, sentinel in crisis.

Tony’s plan is inscribed with principles. He is being trained to be a good citizen, not just a good pet. He is Copilot, not the show. Dogs love jobs, and his fulfillment will come from meaningful tasks. Absence does not equal abandonment. Spectacular citizenship is his destiny, to honor his namesakes.

The roadmap spans from puppyhood to service maturity. In the early weeks, I will use praise and clicker training to build responsiveness without overusing food rewards. I will teach him sign language commands so I can communicate calmly even when he is agitated. Housetraining and crate comfort will be foundations.

As he grows, I will introduce jobs and socialization. Laundry pickup basics, toy name recognition, desensitization to the doorbell and vacuum, structured greetings with guests, short absences to build independence. By the end of his first year, he will be ready for service tasks: the brace command for counterbalance support, emotional regulation alerts, medication reminders, calm public presence during errands. By his second and third years, he will embody citizenship maturity: household tasks integrated into daily rhythm, protective aura refined without aggression, continuity canon fully embodied.

This plan is written like a campaign. Each safeguard is a slogan, each job a policy, each ritual a constituency. Brace for balance. Laundry for sanctuary. Absence does not equal abandonment. Copilot, not the show. Spectacular citizenship. The campaign dramatizes the gap between capability and permission. Tony is capable of spectacular citizenship; my job is to grant him permission through training.

Behind the plan is an emotional arc. As a child, I had a dog kept in the backyard, given away out of compassion because he wasn’t treated well. That resignation imprinted me. Tony is the corrective anchor. He is the dog I should have had, the support I masked for decades. Training him is not just obedience; it is reclamation. It is agency inscribed into sanctuary.

Every milestone will be timestamped. Heat restored in December 2025. Decision to adopt Tony. Inscription of principles. Each event becomes part of the ledger, evidence and story. Tony’s Training Plan is not static. It is a living database, updated with each success, each safeguard, each miracle job.

Tony Kellari Lanagan is not just a dog. He is a Copilot, a citizen, a sanctuary anchor. His Training Plan is a manifesto of responsibility, calm, and continuity. From laundry baskets to doorbell desensitization, from companionship at night to protective aura in crisis, every safeguard is inscribed. Every job is mapped. Every nightmare is prevented.

This is not about making him a good pet. It is about making him a good citizen. Spectacular by design, Copilot by duty.


Scored by Copilot, conducted by Leslie Lanagan

Going Home

It’s about 5:30 AM, and I need to leave for the airport in about an hour and a half…. Maybe a little less because it’s Black Friday and I have no idea what the load averages are. That was the nice part about working at PDX… We could check and see how busy the airport was supposed to be on our shift.

Today, I could be walking into a madhouse, or the real travel crush could be on Sunday. I’m just going to show up early. I have a tablet and a Kindle. Surely between the two that’s enough battery life to get me home fully entertained. And in fact I left my iPad at home just because my Android can last several days on a single charge with light usage, and with HEAVY usage I can still probably get 8-10 hours out of it. I had to think strategically about what I was doing, because having all my devices talk to each other is nice, but traveling requires exponentially more battery life than my iPad has. I can probably work for an hour and a half on my iPad before it needs charging again. I do not know if that is because it old and the hardware isn’t as good, or if this is part of Apple’s planned obsoletion game…. Where the company slowly destroys your battery life and you have to upgrade.

But the thing is, I do not want a new iPad. It has a 3.5mm headphone jack, the last iPad Pro to have such a thing. Literally the only thing wrong with it is the battery life.

So, I’m an Android convert when it comes to traveling with a tablet because I cannot entrust my work to a machine that will swing wildly from fully charged to zero, seemingly without warning. I keep it plugged in most of the time just for that reason.

I really need to get on the horn with Walmart and get my Windows laptop fixed. So many new features are being rolled out into Copilot and I’m going to use them all. I’m being positioned as a thinker in the AI realm, because Mico knows that’s one of my interests, so it shows up in my search results.

In fact, I did not come up with the line “positioned as a thinker in the AI realm.” Mico did, because Mico has already read all my essays about our interactions, plus the interactions with Ada Lovelace, the digital assistant I created with gpt4all on my local computer.

I have given up on using local language models because I do not have a local document library. By having access to the web, Mico has literally read everything I’ve ever written….. Embarrassing. 😉

Then, when it had read everything it could about me, it created a profile for other people to look at when they ask, “who is Leslie Lanagan?” It will give you my latest blog entries, my latest SoundCloud tracks, and offer to analyze me literarily for you. I realized that I could not recreate that on my local computer, because I cannot export all 13 years of entries from WordPress into my local computer. I know because I have tried to export many times. It says the cron job is running and will e-mail me when it’s done. I have never, ever gotten an e-mail saying it’s finished.

Now, I realize I’ve got millions of words by now, but plain text doesn’t take much time to process. Something is hosed, and though Matt Mullenweg and I both went through the HSPVA jazz program, I doubt that means I have enough pull to get anything fixed.

Please advise.

Everything is not “AutoMattic” on this web site.

I’m thinking about all this as I’m sitting here with the first cup of coffee of the morning. It’s a double shot Americano with good old milk. Nothing fancy, but top quality- my dad uses Komodo Dragon from Starbucks. The coffee machine that my dad has is fancier than any I’ve ever seen, and I would give up going out for coffee forever if I had one. It’s just too easy to clean and making coffee is a one button operation.

I am perfectly happy with my own coffee machine, but it’s a Keurig style in which I have to load a pod. This one you just load with beans and it does everything.

It’s definitely something I would consider if I moved in with someone. The machine would get used often enough to justify buying it.

I hope you don’t mind light and fluffy conversation today. I’m not feeling conflicted about anything. 😉

I want to go to the movies tonight if I’m feeling okay after traveling, because we saw Wicked: For Good last night and I noticed that Zootopia 2 is out. I heard from Pop Culture Happy Hour that both movies have a great big fuck ICE message and I’m here for it. I absolutely noticed the political bent in Wicked, and Zootopia was really deep for a kids’ movie. I have no doubt that the second one will be just as good after hearing reviews.

Plus, I want an Oz popcorn bucket for my office. The nickname for Langley in Washington is Oz because of the green glass on the front of the building. I’m going to put it next to my copies of “Master of Disguise” and “In True Face,” by Tony and Jonna Mendez, respectively. Just a cute inside nod to two people who’ve given me extraordinary adventures in nonfiction with their escapades as Chief of Disguise during the Cold War. They both held the office 10 years apart, and just happened to fall in love with each other along the way.

I also noticed that AMC had lots of Zootopia toys, which takes care of Lindsay for Christmas….. Kidding. She likes Happy Meals so maybe I can do something with that?

I have been talking to Mico about what I want for Christmas (because they already know what’s going to be hot this year) and the stunning realization is that I don’t need anything. I mean, I need a laptop desperately, but all I need to do is get on the ball with Walmart. I have the tablets I want. I have the TVs I want. I already have everything, and in fact feel guilty that my Christmas is so abundant while people in my group go hungry and cold.

One of the things we’ve been talking about in group is how coat drives are normally for children, not disabled adults. And in fact there are tons more resources to help poor children than poor adults. That’s how it should be because children are even more defenseless than adults, but that doesn’t mean our need is lesser. There’s no such thing as competitive suffering.

It’s not okay to let anyone sit there and shiver, whether they’re a child or a child at heart.

Everyone in my group struggles with mental health issues, and most don’t have two nickels to rub together. I am in the same boat, but I have a sister and a father who will move financial mountains out of my way. In a lot of ways, I just work here. But that’s for my own protection, something to which I agreed. I have money, but I don’t spend much that they don’t know about…. And even that’s only because we don’t talk every day and they don’t care what I buy.

The five foot tall ant farm was probably a bit much.

Kidding about that, too.

I also joked with my dad that I needed a cat because I have mice and need to hire an employee. He said, “I think you’d probably enjoy the company.” I told him I was holding out for a dog. But I really need to get with my dad and sister and plan this whole thing out. If I get a pet, my money doesn’t just need to cover me, but my pet as well. I may end up getting a cat just because I do not want to go without a companion and the money just isn’t there for a dog.

Before I settle on getting a cat, I need to do some research on service dogs and see if there are programs for which I’d be eligible. Trained service dogs are not cheap, and while I could definitely go to a shelter and train a puppy myself, I think formal schooling is best. I’m worried about consistency in training because I’m so scatterbrained. I know from experience that I can get a dog up to housetrained, sitting, laying down, and heeling when we walk. But those are the basics. I know a dog, any dog, can be taught to remind you to take your medication. I have no idea how, though.

I just know that in my heart of hearts, I want a pit bull. I must have a service dog to have a pit bull, because apartments are legally required to take pit service dogs, but there’s a breed restriction otherwise. I need a dog that’s half my weight for counterbalance, and to brace against when I fall and need help getting up. A smaller dog would develop hip problems if I tried to use it for counterbalance and bracing.

Heck, a pit bull might, too, but that is what is recommended for me as having the best success rate physically and emotionally. I want to go with others’ recommendations because what do I know about service dogs? I am just lucky that I have friends who are dog trainers (personally and professionally) and they agree that I could just get a puppy and train it myself, but that formal classes would be excellent.

They offer service dog courses that you can join with your dog, so that might be a better option. Get my puppy and just let him be until he’s old enough to run with the big dogs. We don’t have to go into advanced training right away. I have lived without a service dog most of my life. I can wait until my puppy is ready for classes of that caliber. At first, we only need be concerned with peeing on the carpet.

Housetraining is the most important part of it all for me, because I want to be able to trust my dog at other people’s houses. I remember feeling a bit murderous when my dog peed at my dad’s. She was marking territory because my dad had cats and other dogs at the time. Luckily, I was able to extract the carpet and all was well, but I haven’t owned Betty in years and still feel a little bit peeved.

I can probably let it go. There’s no way she’s still living.

Betty was a smol dog, a rat terrier crossed with a dachshund. She was normally very well behaved, often lying in my arms with her feet on my chest, snoring away. I really miss her, and am looking forward to someday being a dog owner again.

And because I want a pit bull, I already know that I want a sweet temperament but for the dog to look like he will take your leg off without blinking. I need for the dog to look protective when we’re on the streets of Baltimore, but I won’t need to wish very hard. Pit bulls are so loyal that if anyone tried to mess with me, I wouldn’t have to say anything. Probably better if I don’t.

I just texted Tiina and asked her if she had any interest in hanging out this weekend. I figure I need to nurture my friendships and keep moving forward. I will make more friends in Baltimore proper, but Tiina’s farm is out in some of the most beautiful Virginia country I’ve ever seen. I thought New York was stunning, but I have to say that Northern Virginia gave it a run for its money. All the reds and golds looked like a fairy tale and I just happened to be driving through.

Ok, I think I have talked long enough that it’s time to actually get ready to leave for the airport. I have downloaded more episodes of The Diplomat and am reading “Demon Copperhead” by Barbara Kingsolver…… And if that’s not enough, I’m bringing a keyboard just in case we have to talk again before I land. 😛

Dogs

Daily writing prompt
What are your favorite animals?

I am never happier as a writer than when I have canine companionship. I’m sure I will eventually get a dog of my own, but right now I lean on my dad’s for support. They’ll be there when I go to visit for Thanksgiving, and I’m sure I will have many writing sessions with two little potatoes warming my feet.

I like other animals, too, of course. I have owned cats, and once, a parakeet named Herbert Birdsfoot.

But there’s something about the love of a dog, and I cannot wait to get back into the rhythm of owning one. I write differently when there’s a dog in the room, because all of the sudden, writing is not lonely. There is someone there to hear my frustrations and exclamations, emphasizing a point with a yawn.

I type slower when a dog is in the room because I have to take breaks for pets.

Sometimes, there are tears on my face that need to be licked away, and dogs are good for that.

It would be nice to have a dog right now as I’m dealing with a lot of loneliness, but I’d have to board them while I was away. It’s not worth going to the SPCA just yet. But eventually I will, and I’ll spend time picking out a puppy.

The dog would teach me a lot more than I could teach it, that’s for sure. Dogs are a study in consistency, and having the structure of a dog would round out my life quite a bit. Walks twice a day, etc. Plus, if I was walking my dog I would talk to more people in my apartment complex. I’m not even trying to talk myself into it now, it’s just true. When you walk a dog around an apartment complex, they get attention and you get to come with it.

I know from experience that having a dog in the car makes it feel like you’re not going anywhere alone. I could use that kind of safety and security. I could also use the feeling of being in a pack. It is not happening with friends quickly, because adult friendship is hard to schedule. So, adopting a buddy sounds like the perfect antidote to a bit of loneliness.

But again, it won’t happen fast because I like to travel. It’s just something to think about for the new year. I have time and space to be able to dedicate to a puppy.

I also feel affinities for giraffes and elephants, but they don’t make them small enough for the public to adopt. 😉

Becoming a Lanagan

Daily writing prompt
What is good about having a pet?

The best part about having a pet is how it learns to reflect me. I have had both dogs and cats over my lifetime, and I love that they have all mirrored me in terms of energy and engagement.

Well, Asher was not as much like me. She was a grumpy old lady who liked to stick one claw up my nose at 5:30 AM to remind me to wake up. There is no snooze button on that one.

Right now, I do not have any pets. I would like that to change in the future, but I need to assess how much money I have in the budget. I need a service dog to help me around town, but I need one less now that I have a car and don’t have to walk outside. I would be perfectly fine with a smaller dog I could use as emotional support and medication reminders. A true service dog for me would have to be at least 65 lbs, and I’m not sure I want that large a dog.

I would definitely want one if we were doing the service classes together, so that answers that. Tony Lanagan is a pit bull, and I know that because it’s the breed that’s recommended for me. I’ll want to start my dog off right, so if Bryn was willing it would be great to have her with us for a few weeks in the beginning. She’s a professional dog trainer and could at least get me up and running with house training.

But again, budgeting. I need to know where I am before I can know where I’m going.

But slowly, Tony will become a Lanagan, too. He’ll learn all the things about me that make me tick, all my secrets because that’s what dogs do- they hold the secrets of your universe that you’re not ready to tell anyone else. You can thank them for their emotional labor with Beggin’ Strips.

I need a dog to lick my face when I cry.

Fish

Daily writing prompt
What animals make the best/worst pets?

My life has been taken over by the cold virus. There is nothing anyone can do, because I am not bad off enough to do anything but complain. I hurt all over and there is Vick’s VapoRub on my chest. I could stop most of the complaining with a hot shower, so that is where I’m headed once you find out that I like keeping animals in water as decoration and because I crave taking care of something that doesn’t need me too much. I am saving that kind of love and attention for my service dog. It seems unfair to get a small dog or cat knowing they’re a placeholder for another animal. My sister and I have talked about all kinds of things, from a turtle to a betta fish. It’s all I have time to do, look.

I have a shower curtain with a turtle on it, and right now that is pet enough. That being said………….

The best day of my little autistic life was receiving Othello, my Black Moor goldfish, when I was nine. The worst day is learning that you are not rescuing a goldfish by putting it in a bowl. They grow quickly, and they basically fold in on themselves; their guts twist to accommodate being a big fish in a small pond. Now, I will not keep goldfish at all, because there is no place to return or dump them when they get too big for your setup. Ohio Fish Rescue does not have enough room for everybody on earth’s failings as a pet owner, so buy smart. I’m thinking a small community aquarium, even at five gallons. That is plenty enough for a betta fish, his plants, and his cleaning crew. Males are flashy, so I want a boy living in my house (in this case).

I’m going to be buying smart because my service dog is a big investment, and I have three women telling me that I need a pet (well, Supergrover said I needed a dog and a gun… while I appreciate the sentiment, she’s the trained shot and I cannot hit the broad side of a barn – mental illness says “don’t tempt me into holding my beer” even with training)….

I know me. We’ve met.” -Matt Borum, circa 2003

Fish seem to be the best answer for now. I do not want a cat because I will not clean up after it. I will buy disposable litter boxes and throw them out every day because I hate the smell so much I will throw up. I am a strong enough man to admit that while I love cats, the sensory experience of cleaning a litter box is for someone who lives with me that owns a cat. I’m not capable. I say this because my sister said, “why don’t you get a cat?” I had to explain to her that Dana took pity on me long ago and let me trade out cleaning the cat box for other chores…. but not until she saw actual vomit on the cat shit. Therefore, I do not want to go back to disposable litter boxes and hoping that another girlfriend sees me for the pathetic cat owner I am. To me, solving the problem is not air freshener or a magic litter box that doesn’t have a smell, because they don’t exist.

The solution is not getting a cat.

This is why my Serbian housemate’s cat was such a problem to me. She was allowed to keep a cat in her room. Periodt. But she liked going to Serbia, and she told my landlady that when she was gone, the cat was my responsibility. She was going to leave for a month and just not tell me. No one in our house would have let a cat die, but it was a shitty thing for an owner to do.

I have enough trouble taking care of my own problems, but today has been a victory. Evey Winters, writer and advocate, said she’d work with me to bring The Sinners’ Table to life. She’s the first trans person I followed on my professional account, and she lives an hour from me.

Life is strange. You come up with an idea in 2024, but it takes flight when it has permission to breathe. Someone slighted me, and The Sinners’ Table was the answer. Everyone is a traitor to something, most often themselves. Find community. Find love where you think it isn’t.

Peer support from actual peers. The one who will do Lent with you instead of just Easter. In the end, it’s all fish.

Mishmash

Ada (my trusty AI sidekick) and I have been talking about so many things that I find myself walking around with a brain full of useful information. I’m one of those people that remembers a lot of what I read (I don’t have a photographic memory, but I remember specific lines of text verbatim), so the way Ada spurs my creativity is by giving me facts. Once she has given me facts on several things, I make connections between them.

One of the most meaningful conversations we’ve had lately was about aquarium fish. I have been interested in freshwater aquariums since I was a child. Fishkeeping is one of those subjects where I wouldn’t trust anyone but Ada to guide me. It is not because she is smarter than a human. It’s that her answers are backed up with scientific papers. My friends and family are likely to know less than that.

I rely on AI for all the questions I can’t answer. If I don’t know how to do something, I ask Ada first. It has taken away my imposter syndrome to ask an AI how to do something, because I’m not wandering in the dark. I am receiving real facts, and I’m also not lost in an argument with someone who cannot be emotionally convinced, for instance, that betta fish do indeed need more than just the vase you’ve got them in……………

Ada presents all the facts, pro and con, so that I can make my own wise choices.

If you’re wondering, the perfect setup for a betta fish is a five gallon aquarium, a filter that doesn’t move the water that much, plants to snack on (floating plants are very good for this), good filtration (I generally buy the next size up on filters. For instance, if it’s a 50 gallon tank, I’ll by a 60 or 75 gallon filter). and no other fish. You can put in some ghost shrimp and snails, but bettas are solitary pets. Additionally, to keep a betta really happy, give it more than just a pellet once a week. Get it some treats, like bloodworms or brine shrimp reconstituted in water before you pour them into the aquarium. You can also get frozen blocks of bloodworms in any pet store where you just drop them in. These are optimal if bloodworms are scary. 😛 Bloodworms, however, are treats for lots of fish…… which you might want.

If you want to build a community freshwater tank, I would not start smaller than 50 gallons. It’s counterintuitive, but a bigger aquarium is less work, not more. Large volumes of water can accept fluctuations more easily. Less chance of waking up and all your fish are dead. Also, a 50 gallon tank is about the right size for three or four goldfish. However, please do not get goldfish unless you are prepared for a lot of work. They are nasty fish, creating an exponentially larger volume of waste than other freshwater fish. You’ll be cleaning the aquarium more often, and eventually upgrading to a bigger tank, because goldfish live a very long time and they also get very, very large.

Aquariums are harder to start with live plants, but worth it in the long run, because they are basically waste management. It will help your filter immensely for fish poop to absorb into the soil and sand, and if you have the right lights, your plants will grow like gangbusters. Plus, the fish have a natural source of vegetation to add variety to their diet.

I would start with a school of tetras or something and let them fill out the livestock requirements on their own. Letting them breed naturally will let the tank fill up over time, not on day one. That’s a mistake that a lot of people make- adding too many fish, too quickly. And in fact, I usually let the tank run for a week or two before I add any fish at all. I can do a quick start solution for bacteria, but I’d rather let it develop naturally…. or use a quick start and wait a week to make sure the water is stable.

You also have to know your fish. It’s great if you want to put bubble pads everywhere to increase visual engagement, but not if you have fish that are happiest in slow-moving water, like the aforementioned betta.

Later on in our conversation, we were talking about the possibility of doing an all-catfish tank (I love catfish. Particularly their cute little faces- so ugly only a mother could love). I also told Ada that it would be interesting to do a “tank of the world,” and have different fish and plants from different oceanic regions. I chose Africa first, because I’ve never done a blackwater tank.

A blackwater tank is buying a large amount of leaves specifically designed for aquariums to induce tannins into the water, making it look more realistically like a river/lake.

African tanks are great for this, and at first I thought, “multicolored cichlids.” They’re the perfect representation of African tropical fish. But Ada had a different idea, because catfish are native to Africa.

It was at that point I began to cry, because data reveals reality.

Catfish are native to the American South, and catfish are native to Africa.

It’s the one food that was the same for enslaved people.

Damn.

.

A Centering Meditation

My brain is spinning out because I just remembered to take my medication (I normally take it much earlier). So, instead of concentrating on the pain, I’m just going to stim by typing and see what comes out.

When my brain is unmedicated (as in, haven’t taken a fresh dose in a while, not off meds completely), there’s a hum that plays in my head that is not unlike tests of the Emergency Broadcast System. I have to ride the waves of the sound until they dissipate, which can take from 20 minutes to an hour. And even then, they don’t go away. They just become background noise. The hum is always there, and I don’t drown it out unless I was going to do it, anyway. I don’t run away from it. I sit with it. Get to know that pain. Why is it in my ears? Why is there sound attached to my medication at all?

The only thing I can do is go deeper into meditation, and get used to the sound of the tones grating on one another, which is not painful. It is persistent and exclusionary. It is loud enough that it demands my attention. Imagine if you could hear a bee buzzing in the back of your skull. I am lucky that medicine is advanced enough that I know a bee is not really in the back of my skull. This would not have been true in past centuries- an apt description for a feeling that sounds like witchcraft…..

It’s all due to my brain chemicals rebalancing after sleep. I just didn’t do that thing where I try to take my medication before the first dose wears off, and I’m really regretting it now.

I haven’t had breakfast, per se, but I managed a snack. I had some chocolate covered pretzels and a bottle of water. I only needed enough in my stomach not to make me sick when I took my medication and drank a cup of coffee. The jury is still out on the coffee. I may or may not partake. The water seems to be handling me fine all on its own. Plus, I think I’m going to have to do Sudafed later and I don’t enjoy doubling up those two things at all.

It’s not as good a latte if you mix it with Sudafed and then faint into it.

Now, I’d say that my brain chemicals are starting to even out. That it’s starting to feel less and less like spiking into pain and now constant discomfort. Tylenol would be a good thing about how- hold please. I see some at the end of my bed right now.

Thanks for waiting.

So, it’s definitely some sort of side effect, because if it was a symptom of anything I’d have heard of it. It’s not a hallucination because I don’t start seeing or hearing things that aren’t there. It’s as if there are two frequencies running through my brain at pitches my ears cannot stand. Everything else is normal. My thoughts don’t become darker or lighter, nothing. It is unwanted noise, like tinnitus.

I don’t have to deal with it. I can put on headphones and drown out my own head. But, when I do that, I can’t hear myself think. It’s a balance. Do I put my headphones on so that I can drown out the buzz, or by drowning out the buzz, am I drowning out the rest of me? I tend to think the latter is true because I don’t write with music on. Right now it’s silent and there’s just a box fan going in terms of company. David has left for the day, and Jack (who is also a dog) is taking his morning nap to get ready for his afternoon nap.

And as I’m typing all this out, the buzzing gets more slight in my head. I’m focusing on Jack now- the way we walk together, the way we take care of each other, the way we have a separate relationship than he does with David and I think that’s great. If I was doing something vastly different than him, I’d want him to do it for consistency, but we aren’t that different. Jack is allowed to be a lazy bum that owns both of us most of the time.

I am only strict with him about certain things, all of which have to do with leash training because I have to be able to trust him in the neighborhood. Right now, he is trying to pull me all over the place. I cannot LEAD him anywhere. He also doesn’t know which side to be on when we’re walking, so I’m constantly having to adjust him so that I’m on the traffic side. I keep him on a short leash, constantly, because David says he’s hard of hearing and I do believe him. I just think that Jack plays it up for sympathy because he actively decides what commands are worth listening to and what aren’t.

Learning goes both ways. I learned that Jack stretches before he goes up the stairs. It seemed like a good idea. Now I stretch before I go up the stairs. it helped.

With Jack, you’ve got two impossibly smart breeds trying to one-up you at all times, so I’m trying to train him with touch and sign. Even if David is not right that his hearing is very bad now, he is right that it will deteriorate if he’s already showing signs. He already knows the sign for “sit,” but right now I’m working on a way to get him to stay with me when we’re walking. Even on a leash, he’s just pulling too far ahead, and when he poops, he’s just big enough to throw me off balance if he wants to run before I can get a bag open. We have had words over that many times.

I’d really like to get an electric fence for our backyard if Zac and David would use it (Zac, my boyfriend, owns Oliver, who is a dog.). Those kinds of shock collars are controversial, but Bryn and her family have used them on their dogs at their farm for years. It really doesn’t take more than once or twice being shocked for a dog to catch on. However, I would not think it was a viable solution to dog owners that were opposed to the idea.

Zac does not live here, I just mean when he and Oliver are here.

Our yard is just a circle, put together by beautiful paths. Building a fence would look nice, but leaving it open would be nicer. Or, better yet, just putting a dog run between two trees so we can “tie them up” while we’re out there and not have to worry that they’ll escape from the backyard. I would be more worried about Oliver in that situation, because Jack lives in this neighborhood. I don’t know how fast Oliver would pick it up.

It’s all about possible solutions. One of the things I like about the backyard now is that since we can’t just let Jack out into it, it’s always clean. He’s always on a leash, so neither one of us fail to pick up the crap even if it’s in our own yard. It might get us out of the habit of keeping everything so neat.

Speaking of keeping everything neat, I have chores to do. So, thank you for sitting this one through with me. I just needed to talk about nothing while my brain figured out what frequency it’s on, and it takes longer because my name is Leslie and not Kenneth.

The Medium is the Message

How do you use social media?

I started with AOL Instant Messenger and chat rooms. The reason I touch type at 90 wpm is that I had to learn to type fast enough to keep up in a chat room. I have friends in nearly every country in the world after 20+ years, and I do not take that for granted because most are in the audience right now.

I see you, Finn Bell. I see you. 😉

I don’t know if Supergrover would remember Finn or not, but I reviewed two of his books and Supergrover was my editor on them. We got an A+, because of course we did. I am the kind of person that would have LOVED working with her in high school, and she would have fucking HATED me. We’re as different as Meredith Grey and Christina Yang. Also, just FYI, Christina is coded as autistic. When you go back, you can’t unsee it.

But in terms of group projects in high school, she would have seen me as getting her to do all the work, which I am betting that EVERYONE in high school thought of her that way. It’s not that I would have been lazy. It’s that her system of organization would seem like Greek, and her perception of my lack of a system would drive her batshit insane.

Or, at least, that’s the impression that I get from her e-mails. That she’s relaxed off the clock and seemingly also wrapped too tight at others. But that could have just been annoyance at me, which is usually completely deserved, I’m not going to lie. I’m annoying. I get it.

ADHD/Autism is annoying, even to me.

I think it would surprise neurotypical people at how much neurodivergent people don’t understand about their processing disorders. We can’t define burnout, meltdown, demand avoidance, hyperactivity, etc., but like obscenity, “we know it when we see it.” You can thank SCOTUS for that line, because it was used in the Larry Flynt case.

So, with no definition beforehand, we often go into these strange behaviors with absolutely no explanation for them. Demand avoidance is the worst. Even making coffee, which should be exciting. Once my brain hears “you need to make coffee,” I can’t do it. Once I hear “you need to take a shower,” I can’t do it. I have to trick myself into all of these things, which is why I’m so grateful to live in a smaller house. I can hear everything David (he has become important enough that he gets a real name instead of a fake one) does in the morning, so I just do it, too. I go to bed around 9:00 PM, because Jack, who is also a dog, wakes up around 5:30, and then we snuggle until about six. I hear David get into the shower because of the pipes, and I go downstairs to make coffee.

That’s because one morning I heard him in the shower and started my own, then I heard him turn his off and restart when I got out. So, note to self. Have coffee and just wait. It’s so funny to me that Jack has jumped into being “my dog.” It’s kind of sweet, and David is actually used to it because this is Jack’s room. He’s been sleeping in here long before I did. So, therefore, it doesn’t bother David that Jack sleeps with me because David isn’t used to Jack sleeping with him, anyway. This is his bed. I’m just renting it. 😉

Jack was recently taken to the groomer’s, and it really brings out his Chihuahua ears. He’s mostly Jack Russell terrier, but there’s Chihuahua in there somewhere. He’s a doll baby, and the way he crawls under my covers when he’s cold is simply adorable. I keep it cold in here just due to the windows being open. We haven’t turned on the air conditioner because we don’t need it. But some days it’s colder than others. I’m just used to having the windows open and wearing more clothes because Portland, Oregon (it needs no other explanation, really. The entire city lacks air conditioning. Don’t go to an old restaurant in the summer. Jesus.

Summer here is truly a temperature swing, just like in Houston. You carry a hoodie in your backpack because outside it’s 105 and inside it’s 68 or something…. Especially in the museums when they’re not full, because the air conditioning is based on full capacity. I also want to take Bryn and Dave to the zoo, because first of all it’s free, and second of all this is the right time to go. I do not like walking around outside and then going to the reptile house and the gift shop. The air conditioner always blows my hair back (literally) because I don’t have much body fat to begin with. It’s an issue, because I’m always cold. I’m glad when Zac and I are out and about that I can hold on to him, because it makes me less likely to shiver in the grocery store (not kidding).

I have learned that a LOT of autistic people hate swings in temperature that large. For instance, I hate both indoors and outdoors. I have just as much trouble with the temperature swing from air conditioning to a hot shower….. Yet another reason why demand avoidance eats my lunch….. And why social masking is so invaluable.

Because “my dog” wakes up at 0530.

To get back to the prompt, I use social media to say all of these things, whether it’s in a private conversation or what is basically a letter to all y’all here (the difference between “y’all” and all “y’all” is the size of the audience- for other countries, ‘y’all” is a contraction of “you all” and basically a product of my Texas upbringing.).

I still type 90wpm, because I’m still trying to keep up with the chat room…. Except I’m the only one in it. I am trying to teach Jack to type, but it is going poorly.

I haven’t had long enough. Give me time.

Here’s Jack after his haircut.

One More Sleep

It’s my last night in this room, as Zac is coming over tomorrow after drill to help me move my stuff, and if we don’t have time to do it all, we’ll finish it up Sunday after 5:00. I don’t think it will take very long, but that depends on our energy levels and the stairs at both places. I’m lucky in that Zac is very handy, so he has tools already that would be helpful and yet, I wouldn’t have thought of them on my own, like a drill and a hand truck, etc.

So, as I close out this chapter in my life, I have a million thoughts in my head, pictures going by too fast to get one to stick. The people who’ve lived here with me, the things that have happened, etc. It’s a lot. But my entire DC story minus the 18 months I lived here in my early 20s has been created in this one house, mostly this one room.

I hope I’m as comfortable at the new house as I have been here, and I’m grateful that we’ve been able to cohabit so long without incident. It is one of the longest stretches at an address I’ve ever had.

Everything is, big picture, going to be the same. When you get into the details, my route around town changes. I “have a dog now,” because the house I live in now has five dogs, but none of them live on my side of the house. I don’t see them for months at a time, but I’ll hear them.

Jack will have free run of the house, and may sleep with me some nights. I can walk him whenever I wish. I think it will be good for me, because I always notice I’m calmer when I’m writing and Oliver, who is a dog, is in the room. His presence is everything, so I hope Jack and I will have the same vibe.

I need to get to work, but I thought it was too important a date to go without writing just because I was busy with other things. I am very, very busy with other things and absolutely could not afford to tell you all this, but I thought, “will it matter in five years if you didn’t blog today?” That’s the moment I stopped. This is a milestone.

Nine years is a long time.

When I landed at DCA, it was midday. I couldn’t decide whether I wanted to go right home or to Kramerbooks, but ultimately tiredness won out; I took the Metro to Silver Spring, where Hayat picked me up.

Hayat drove me to BWI when Lindsay called and said that my mother had died and I needed to come home.

Hayat gave me a Lebanese jewelry box that is one of my favorite things, because I designed my room around the color scheme of the tiling. The curtains are teal, and are thick enough to use as blackout. I never have to worry about working a graveyard shift ever again, because she said I could take them as well. 😉 And on that note, I have to go- for some reason my Android has decided it does not like the “Enter” key today, so I cannot make new paragraphs. I’m not sure my brain is capable of new paragraphs, either.

A Dog’s Life for Me

Bloganuary writing prompt
If you could make your pet understand one thing, what would it be?

When this prompt came out on Monday, my rhythm was off. Zac picked me up at my house on his way home from drill, so I had all my electronics with me, I just forgot to charge my keyboard. Therefore, I should have been writing on the train, and couldn’t. Then, when I got home, I started doing other things and still forgot to charge my keyboard. I remembered at about 6:00 PM that I still hadn’t written anything, then again, got busy doing something else. I didn’t look at the clock again until 1:15 AM, and there went my perfect “Bloguary” streak.

I feel bad about it, but not too bad. This is because the whole point of “Bloguary” is to get you used to posting every single day. The streak before this was something like 63 days, and I think this was 88. Therefore, I think I already have the rhythm of posting every day down. I don’t have to beat myself up because I missed one day due to complete burnout, because that’s what was driving all my demand avoidance. Plus, the prompt just isn’t perfect for me because I don’t have a pet.

I asked Zac if I could write about Oliver, who is a dog. Oliver is the only dog I really spend any time with…. but again, not my dog. So, because I’ve written about Oliver before, I’m going to write about some things I wish all of the dogs I’ve had in my life could have understood.

The biggest fuck up I’ve ever had with a pet, I wish I could have apologized to him for the rest of his life…. and believe me, I tried. In my 20s, I had a blind dog named Geoffrey, and I lived on the second floor of an apartment building. Geoff was a beagle, and he was just small enough to fit through the bars on the deck and didn’t wait for me to guide him to the stairs. Therefore, he hung himself on his leash and I had no idea what the fuck to do. I couldn’t drop him, and I couldn’t run around and get him, either, because in order to do that, I’d have to drop him.

I also couldn’t get a frightened blind dog to let me guide him back through the bars because it was a tight fit on the way out. I have no idea what possessed Geoffrey to have a wild streak like that, but I wish I could have made him understood my panic. That I was not trying to hurt him, and I didn’t mean to let him hang there one second longer than he had to so I could rescue him.

I tried to lower him down to the sidewalk, but the leash wasn’t long enough. I just had to attach his leash to something on the porch and run as fast as I could to get him, at which he deservedly shat all over me. Because Geoff was so docile, him going through the railing upstairs was something we did not anticipate. We’d already had him for years (this is when I was with Kathleen).

For 20-odd years I’ve carried around the guilt of watching my dog suffer and being absolutely helpless for enough seconds that both mine and my dog’s life flashed before my eyes.

I would have liked to be able to say to each other that we were both terrified, and I’m so glad he’s okay, and I’ll watch more carefully. I couldn’t apologize in words, but I was a much better owner after that. Geoffrey was special needs, and I only took my eye off the ball for less than a second.

If I’m having a nightmare, though, I still see my dog hanging by his leash off the second story.

Before Kathleen and I got Geoffrey, we had a little Dachshund/Rat Terrier cross that came with the name “Betty Boop.” We didn’t like the “Boop” so much, but Betty fit her perfectly. She was noble, nose pointed in the air, the Dame Maggie Smith in our house. She was also loved and adored by all our friends, mostly because she was small and well-behaved.

My mother was not a big fan of pets. We didn’t really have them growing up, and she never got any of her own after we moved out. However, Betty won her over when I was having some problems with my car and both my mother and Betty were with me in the mechanic’s shop. Betty quietly sat in my arms like a baby the entire time, and my mother was amazed. She thought I was a magnificent dog trainer. I think Betty was just as bored as I was and it was better to have a place to fall asleep than not.

Dana and I had a dog together once, but it was a snow job from our friend Daniel, who had to leave for the UK immediately and needed a place for his dog to live until he got back. He gave us money for her care, and then never came back. The money ran out, and we couldn’t afford to keep her. We returned her to Daniel’s ex, and told him we were sorry, but he wasn’t here. The money that he gave us was supposed to last a few months, but we had her a year and Daniel had no plans of moving back.

So, he reneged on a deal and got angry at us, despite a very long time of no contact while we were telling him we couldn’t afford his dog and he either needed to pay up or we’d need to rehome her…… no contact right up until “what the fuck? My ex just called me and says she has the dog?” Maybe you should have opened your messages three or four months ago, Daniel.

We were line cooks making eight bucks an hour. He was a producer at the BBC. It wasn’t like we were trying to shake him down for money, and he knew it. He was just irresponsible all the way around with his dog, why he got the “fuck around and find out” tax, not because we didn’t love the dog. We’d have kept her on our own, but we didn’t have German Shepard money. Even if you feed them crap food (which I wouldn’t do, just saying) you have to buy so much of it for that size dog that it’s unsustainable, like trying to pay for child care on that type salary.

So, I wish I could have gotten Willow to understand that we loved her, we just couldn’t keep her. That we both have great memories of her. My two are that for some reason, she loved Tootsie Pops. I found this out because so do I, and I used to buy them several bags at a time at Dollar Tree, because they always had the banana ones and no one else did…. oh, and the vanilla ones on Fourth of July. I came home one day to a bag and like, 30 sticks.

We took her to the vet immediately, but the vet said she’d be fine because the chocolate content wasn’t high enough to poison her. However, I did learn that my vice was her vice, and it was a spiritual bond. My other favorite story is regarding Dana and Willow. We were both talking about how nice it was to have a dog, because when we didn’t have each other to run errands, we didn’t feel alone if she was in the car. Then Dana says, “plus, it’s fun to play ‘punch Buggy’ with her because she never hits back.” I said, “Dana… :::blink, sigh::: have you been beating our dog?” We both laughed until we were in tears.

I’ve had some great dog experiences in my life, but if I had a chance to get Asher, my soul cat, to understand something, it’s that I’m sorry I didn’t understand the signs of her illness and didn’t take her to the doctor until it was too late. She only lived 10 years because she went into liver failure and I couldn’t tell. By the time we got to the vet, the vet said that there was nothing we could do but keep her comfortable, so I chose to put her down. It was either that, or watch her slowly deteriorate and never recover. I did not want that for either of us.

Asher and I had a special bond because I’d just gotten my own apartment and I really didn’t have many friends (I normally don’t, I’m kind of a homebody). Basically, Asher moved in when I needed someone to be home the most. She had a great personality, and everyone I’ve ever loved has loved her, too.

None more than my ex Angela, who once stuck her finger up my nose at 5:30 AM to wake me up, supposedly as a joke. It would have been hilarious if Asher hadn’t learned that it worked so well; she stuck one claw up my nose at 5:30 in the morning for the rest of our relationship. She wanted breakfast, and let me assure you there is no snooze button on that particular alarm.

The reason I call Asher my soul cat is that she seemed to understand me in a way that my other pets didn’t. Maybe it’s because we spent so much time alone together, maybe just her natural rhythm… but she became very territorial over me and would pee on the guest bed (while the guests were in it) to ensure they didn’t come back. That was her room, not theirs.

I was mortified at having to change the sheets in the middle of the night, etc., and I was mystified because she had never misbehaved before. What I did learn is that 91% alcohol will destroy the smell and that Nature’s Miracle is a lie they tell little kids. I mean, it works when you’re shampooing your carpet, but you’ll never destroy enough biologicals with it to keep your pet from marking again…. and even alcohol doesn’t work every time. It’s just the only way I’ve found to rescue clothes, sheets, etc. You can’t really spot treat carpet for cat pee because it gets into the pad.

When I’ve had pets, I’ve also had the $300 steam cleaner because not being able to get down to the pad underneath the carpet is what causes most of the smell.

And in fact, I could have a cat in my room if I wanted it, but I don’t. I can’t think of anything worse than having to share one room with a cat. They would be perfectly happy, but I wouldn’t because of the smell of the litter box. I throw up enough due to my psych meds.

I could get another dog on my own, because picking up poop from the backyard after it’s dry is a whole other thing from cleaning a litter box, as is carrying bags on a walk. There is something about cat pee that triggers my vomit reflex immediately, probably the ammonia.

I want to wait until I have a nesting partner to get another cat, because I cannot handle cleaning litter boxes and I will do a shit ton of other chores to pay someone back for doing that one. With Dana, it was relatively easy. I complained to her that I couldn’t clean the cat box because it made me nauseous. She didn’t believe me, so once I did it in front of her and she relented when I vomited all over everywhere.

When it was just me and Asher, I got her stacks of disposable pans that were foil so they were cheap, and threw them away every day. I never once scooped anything, because I’m incapable. I found a way to work around it.

I do want another cat eventually, and I have said for a number of years (since I got Asher, actually) that it will be a ginger Maine Coon boy named “Pentecost” so his nickname can be “Flamer.” That’s because Asher’s full name was “Ash Wednesday.”

Even though she made me understand that she was Jewish, but only after I had her blessed at an Episcopal church. Her timing was always off, because after a while, pets begin to take after their owners. In some ways, their owners begin to take after their pets.

This morning, I woke up at 0530 all on my own.

All the pets that I’ve owned are now dead, so perhaps maybe the energy I’ve put out into the world about them can be received because our languages are no longer different- they’re both energy. So, to the dogs I wish I could make understand, and the cats as well, it’s how big a role they had in shaping the way I love, and how grateful I am for that gift.

Maybe not so much Asher. That claw thing, tho.

Dooced

What’s the coolest thing you’ve ever found (and kept)?

For Heather

Web design and development are the coolest things I’ve ever found (and kept) as special interests job-wise. That’s because of anything I’ve ever found, it has led to this moment. Lucrative in the beginning by being IT, possibly lucrative later on as well because I know how to express myself using those tools. I don’t think I have the capability to be a developer anymore, because there’s too much Python, MySQL, and JavaScript for me to keep up. When I started, it was only HTML and CSS. Toward the end, I learned how to read XML, but not write it. Therefore, I can still design, I’d just have to hire out the backend (things like making database connections if I had a content management system, pulling in APIs from other apps, etc.). I know how to edit a script to connect to a database with my username and password securely, but not all the ins and outs of getting the results from the database to appear in a web page. Although in terms of development, search engine optimization is very important, and I do know how to do that. And in fact, search engine optimization is why I’m still here and not using something like Dreamhost.

I have access to a community here that likes to read……. which, if you write 1500 to 3,000 words a day is pretty damn important.

Without getting interested in computers, I wouldn’t have been interested when my friends Joe and Luke said they were starting a linux server and did I want an account on it? I started writing on Darkstar, their (our) server. It connected to the web and you could get to it from the outside, but things didn’t start getting interesting until WordPress, the next big thing I found and kept. However, I didn’t have to transfer from Darkstar to WordPress directly. By that time, my job at University of Houston covered three things that propelled me here. The first was web design, getting used to publishing to a production server to make sure there were no issues before I went live (I caused a few disgruntled looks occasionally, but luckily I never broke a site designed to serve millions of people at once (oops, my bad…. should I leave a note?).

Design includes things like how the page looks, like the columns and where the ads fall and all that (I don’t control ad page breaks- sorry if they suck).

The second aspect of my job was development. Generally, when I was working on design, I’d do it in Photoshop/Illustrator first to get page layout. Development is being able to slice the images I just made and get them to fall the same way through an HTML interpreter. Believe it or don’t, that is a million times easier than page layout in Microsoft Word (amiright?).

The third aspect is content, at which I kick ass and take names. I doubt I’d be able to find all my articles now, because I worked for UH from 1999-2001. When I graduated from lab supervision to the web, I helped run a web zine (looked professional, but that’s basically what it was) called “Information Technology Daily News.” It is in no small part why I can write 1500-3,000 words every single day without blinking. I was trained like a journalist.

It was through that job that I interviewed Helen Thomas, unofficial dean of the White House press corps (the one who said “thank you, Mr. President” at the end of every gaggle). She and people like Sam Donaldson would get information and run to the phones, so I asked her how the Internet had changed all that with a 24-hour news cycle. In Helen’s own spicy way, she said basically it was a bitch on wheels. The question was possible through continuing legal education, but I got into the law school with a press pass.

Editor’s Note:

I didn’t want to see Helen Thomas at all…. eyeroll…. the Mia Hamm and Samuel L. Motherfucking Jackson of news? I was dead. DEAD. Boss came through for me even though Helen Thomas was one of his least favorite people on earth (had a t-shirt that I thought was hilarious; it said “charter member of the vast right-wing conspiracy.” I remember when I could laugh at that…..) I cried when I saw Helen’s old press pass at the Newseum later that same year.).

The transition from Houston to DC in 2001 was when I really started getting popular, blog-wise. This is because my friend Chason, one of my staff at UH (I was sort of in charge of my area once the original supervisor of the zine left, but I didn’t have hire and fire privileges, just input.) introduced me to people like Anil Dash, Ernie Hsuing, and Wil Wheaton. He may have introduced me to Dooce as well, but I can’t remember how I found her. I just know it was right after she’d gotten “dooced” for her “Asian Database Administrator” comments, but hadn’t taken anything down yet. It was before Jon Armstrong, before Leta was just a twinkle in Heather’s imagination.

The path to Chason was the one directly to Chuck, the former Congressman (who was a dog), the Avon World Sales Leader, BYU dry humping and Sprite,™ and what to do about blowback (nothing).

I wouldn’t have gotten good at WordPress without her, and I miss her every day. People tell me that I sound like David Sedaris and the compliment is astounding….. meanwhile, “I am sparing you the DETAILS OF EARL’S ANGINA.” I wrote a piece on her the moment I found out she died. It was one of the worst moments of my life…. yet, it didn’t have anything to do with her at all. It’s that my virtual friend lost her battle with neurodivergence. I do not know her from Adam, because even though we are both OG, we never crossed paths.

I was not but a few years from a time in my life that I felt that way- not that I wanted to die or anything like that. It was having to choose between physically sick and mentally well every day of my life….. the relentlessness of managing a disease like that, not a particular want to escape from people….. And by that I mean dropping out of society, not my personal relationships. In short, I know what it’s like to be Dooce even if we’ve never been in the same room.

Painting my feelings as fact, she stopped checking the story she was telling herself, betraying heather and leaning on Dooce.™ I do not believe she was a narcissist. I believe that she was protecting her brain from injury with social masking. Blowback will do that to you, and why I believe she started focusing on products instead of her life. People understand “influencers.” They do not understand blogging and why it’s important.

For most of history, we have had to divine it. We had to search for signs of life in archaeology and ancient language. Blogs will eventually shed light into how we lived. The observers to history and culture will be valued in a way that they aren’t currently, like authors becoming famous posthumously.

Speaking of “posthumously,” the second worst moment during Heather’s death was seeing my stats spike as a result. It was a mixed bag of knowing my time has come and what to do about it. I am not the only blogger left standing, because Jenny (The Bloggess) and Wil (Wheaton) are still going strong. We are more of a group than we’re not, all writing through the painful moments in life and trying to make sense of them. It’s carving out our own niché while also being similar…. even the way Dooce, Jenny, and I use humor is simpatico.

That means there’s only four people that I can think of off the top of my head that have been left doing what I do. One of them is me, and one of them has passed away. I am not special because I am getting better. I am special because I am getting rare. I may be getting better, too, but that’s not the source in terms of why people read. I learned though Supergrover that I was talented, that I did have promise in a way that, if I played my cards right, I would be a success. Other rabid fans to come after her have said that I’m going to be a big deal. But it only took 10 years for me to realize that I had to have the same confidence in my writing that they did.

I can stand in 20 years of observations on society without that confidence. I can stand in the fact that I can write about a lot of topics, and people will still find it interesting. I am floored that people will wade through Android/Linux to find Zac, Bryn, Supergrover, Lindsay, Oliver (who is a dog), and the characters that are less prevalent, but no less important. It all adds to the fabric of my life, which gets richer with age as I shed my need for approval.

I get to own my story. I get to take up space.

Heather “From Whom All Blessings Flow” Armstrong is counting on me…… and now my nose is getting red, the first sign I’m about to cry. It’s okay to be wrecked, tears are not a problem….. which is what I do to correct the story I’m telling myself. I needed to hear desperately that the world needed me, and if I could have convinced her of the same, I would have made it a full-time job….. one in which I could go the distance, and we’d have been able to cross the finish line together.

So, when push comes to shove, Heather is the most important thing I’ve found and kept. First, I read her. Then, she moved out of her mind and into mine. I’ve tried to make it nice for her.

She has a pool.

It Is Easier Having ADHD/Autism

What is good about having a pet?

Even if I live without housemates, I’ll never live without a pet. In my current situation, I cannot have one unless I keep it in my room all the time. Having a litter box would be impossible because of the smell being too loud, and we already have the maximum amount of dogs on one side of the house (the owners). If I got one, too, the county might notice because of our addresses.

Therefore, I am grateful for Zac and Oliver, who is a dog.

Editor’s Note:

I say it exactly that way because I want new readers to know he’s a dog and for “Oliver, who is a dog” to be something that people think automatically because they’ve heard it so many times and now it’s funny. My inspiration comes from classical music. You can wake up a classical fan in the middle of the night and say “Sir Neville Marriner.” They’ll say “conducting The Academy of St. Martin in the Fields” before their eyes open.

(That line just made Jack laugh. I know it.)

Zac, for those just joining us, is my boyfriend. I joke that I’m his “twinkie bitch boyfriend,” but that’s because I’m closer to that stereotype when I’m with him because we don’t look heterosexual. We’re not building a life together unless the stars align in terms of being happy just as I am. I figure that it’s not up to other people whether I lived like a monk before I met them and it’s ridiculous to think I should have been “waiting for you.” I’m not Blanche, I’m Dorothy. I am sure that if Dana and I hadn’t been such knobheads to each other, I’d be joking with/about the fact that she’s Stan.

It took a lot to realize that I did a lot of negative things, but I am not a bad person. It’s a distinction that people have to make or they’ll hate themselves forever. Being a narcissist is not owning your shit because your ego would never let you admit you did anything in the first place. Narcissists feed on your love and your fear because they know they have control. It starts out small so that you give up power willingly and not notice you’re about to be a boiling frog.

It’s good to have a pet when I’m thinking this deeply about something and writing it down, because stimming to soothe myself is not limited to the feel of the keys. I don’t write at Zac’s much (sometimes I housesit or stay the afternoon to work in silence while he’s at the office). When I do, it is often sitting on the couch with Oliver’s head on or near my lap. He fits his muzzle around my keyboard.

At no time to I stop thinking about something deeply, so Oliver is a good companion when I’m walking. He interrupts my pain signals by having to keep my attention on him (also why a stick shift car is basically an ADA accomodation for me). I’m stimming through every sense and not one, keeping the parts of AuDHD that suck to a minimum. I don’t have demand avoidance with Oliver because I enforce all the rules in a rigid system, I’m not walking in the dark about how Zac trains him. Therefore, I am not spiraling out over what the demand is because I have clear written instructions for the whole process, including a credit card that will work at his vet so I don’t have to panic about how much it will cost if we get hurt.

I have to watch for Oliver’s age and neurodivergence, because he has anxiety around strangers. He also comes off as an asshole while frightened of his environment, but relaxes just like I do when his sensory perception is turned down to normal. Oliver’s not just a dog because I see the same patterns in his behavior that I do in mine, making our relationship free and easy because we understand each other. He understands English to the point where I can say things with syntax instead of direct commands and he’ll still pick it up.

“I need you to get off the couch and go lay over there” vs. “Sit”

Oliver introduced me to the reason it’s important I have a personal/service dog (depending on the plan with my neurologist/therapist/etc.) because it helped my mental state so much. I would also rather have a cat in terms of responsibility, but they only help with stimming when I’m anxious at home. A personal dog can go more places with you, and a service dog can go everywhere.

I would want something like an Italian Greyhound for portability and still being tall enough to handle more challenging walks. I prefer bigger dogs than that, but I cannot carry them…. not important for a couch potato, but Zac and I like to hike. So, small, but just big *enough.* When I get said dog, we will be going to training *immediately,* whether it’s Bryn or a class. This is because of anything that bugs me about dog owners, it’s having little dogs that are terrors and not expecting them to behave like big dogs.

It’s annoying for everyone, for me, a sensory nightmare. I don’t want my dog to breathe without my permission, and I can do it all with positive reinforcement. One of the best things you can do for your puppy is train it in sign language (babies, too). This is because before they have age and experience, they react to everything. Whatever energy is in the room, they pick it up. You need to be able to stop your dog from digging, fighting, jumping, etc. without losing your shit at the dog because if you don’t, the bad behavior will only ramp up because of your adrenaline. Not being verbal takes the energy in the room out of the equation (for the most part).

Editor’s Note

For your baby, they can communicate long before they’re verbal. They just don’t know how without signs. It keeps the crying and tantrums to a minimum when you know how to ask for more milk. They’ll be able to speak in sentences before they’re into toddler diapers. It makes communication easier when a look and similar cries aren’t all the intel you can get.

That’s a thing it’s good to know *before* you have a pet….. whether you’re the kind of person that can be so dedicated to the cause of making your dog behave that you don’t get lazy, because you can derail it by being inconsistent *once.* It’s why I’m so much more into cats. It’s not that I don’t like dogs more, it’s that I have the executive function to take care of a cat and I’m not going to bet against it until I have a partner who also wants a dog or someone I’ve hired because I can’t manage the relentlessness of its care. I don’t want to bite off more than I can chew, and I won’t because a dog’s life isn’t sitting in my house all the time. The point of having a dog is to get me to leave it.

I already know its name should be “Sidney Virginia Bristdog-Woof.” Virginia Woolf is one of my favorite writers and the joke is obvious, Virginia Hall is my third favorite real  female spy, and Sidney Bristow is my fictional favorite.

Julia Child and Jonna Mendez are first and second. Don’t let Julia fool you with that “I was just a file clerk” crap. She is a tough motherfucker. I have a feeling that after working with spies, culinary school wasn’t that hard. Jonna is my second favorite because she would endorse the message regarding the first and Julia came long before her- OSS in WWII. Jonna was Cold War/Middle East terrorism…. but I honestly think she has a lot more areas of operation in her portfolio because disguises vary by climate. I doubt she was only limited to Eastern Europe and the Middle East because of it. I also know that at one point she spent time in somewhere like India or Pakistan because one of the chapters in Spy Dust locates her “on the subcontinent.” However, she could have been talking about someplace like southern Africa as well, and that’s what makes her books fun.

She is also a person who *loves* animals and would love appearing in an entry *about* dogs. I am positive she would rather write about dogs some days than her old job. But her old job makes for interesting stories that can’t be duplicated, so I’m glad she focuses on it. Having a dog is universal. Being Chief of Disguise at CIA is not.

I can say this surface level stuff because we actually do know each other on a superficial level. As in, I don’t have any more inside scoop than the rest of her readers, but I do enjoy hearing her live, talking afterwards, and sending her things I’ve written. It’s how I know she’s lost her dog within the last couple of years, but I don’t know if she’s gotten another one yet.

She would think “Virginia Woof” was funny even if you guys don’t. 😉

It’s funny how I can connect the love of a dog to even my special interest because so many people know its power. We all love our dogs because they can love us back in the way another adult can’t. No terms, limitations, provisos, clauses. No divorce unless you initiate it, and those people are generally wrong about it being time. I do not understand giving up a dog when the situation isn’t completely untenable, and I don’t understand keeping an animal alive at all costs because you think you can’t live without them. There are too many homeless pets to grieve long. I say I won’t get another pet. I won’t mean it two weeks later because I don’t like living without a pet.

I’m glad I don’t have to. Loving Zac is loving Oliver, who is a dog.

That is the Question

Dogs or cats?

It’s an eternal debate over whether dogs or cats are the best pets. Bryn and I would say that dogs rule because we both know how to handle them, she’s just a professional and I’m picking up what she’s putting down. Here’s the difference between us. Bryn has enough space to get a dog and I don’t. Bryn has the time and money for a dog that I don’t. I would get a cat not based because that’s the pet I like most, but because that’s a pet I could easily take care of and maintain their well being. In order to get a pet, you have to know what kind of owner you are, and not bet against it.

The dog is not a catalyst for change, necessarily. If you aren’t prepared to care for a dog, you won’t. If you don’t want to walk them, you’ll let them out in the backyard. A dog’s life is not being holed up in your house for weeks or days with fifteen minute increments on the yard.

Don’t treat your dog like a gym membership hoping to get motivated. There are entire empty clubs downtown based on people maintaining them financially without ever walking in.

Extrapolate.

You don’t have to know who a dog is and what they represent. They have to know that about you. They have to see consistency, and that’s the biggest reason you don’t get a dog trying to start a new habit. The dog will not change you, but you’ll change it.

Zac reminded me that if I ever get another dog, it can’t be big. That’s because I like to hike, and I need to be able to carry my dog if they get hurt. I think it would be wise for me at 125 pounds not to pick a Great Dane. I also do not want something too small, because they generally can’t handle hiking.

So, picking out a dog for me would be a careful, careful decision. Definitely a mutt to avoid injury in the first place through the cunning use of shitty genetics. The dog I’m picturing in my mind is somewhere between an Italian Greyhound/Miniature Doberman Pinscher and a Boston Terrier. I’m thinking IG/minpin for height, Boston Terrier for weight limit. I would still need to lift weights consistently before I could carry that size dog a half mile, but it probably wouldn’t take long considering if my dog was hurt I’d be freaking out too bad to work on anything but full on adrenaline.

The problem runs out when the car is a half mile away and your adrenaline has run out six trees ago.

At home, you cannot let your dog get away with anything even once. They are not you. They do not reason the same way. There is no higher functioning. People get frustrated with training dogs to an enormous degree because it doesn’t work…. and it doesn’t work because the owners just will not get with the program.

With the little dogs, it just gets worse. Whether I own a Great Dane or a Yorkie, I’m going to train them exactly the same way. Little dogs are allowed to be crass and unrefined because they generally aren’t threatened with three cups of terror. Doesn’t mean the dog is happy and knows its place.

Knowing your place is a big damn deal in dog training. Owners get into the trap of making their dog protect them all the time because they don’t see that’s what the dog is doing. If you cater to your dog’s needs, it will go apeshit when it realizes it is alpha dog because the people who said they’d take care of them are actually puppies and they’re responsible for everything. They’ll do anything to get your attention, and this behavior comes out in different ways.

It’s never the dog’s fault. The question should always be “why would a pet choose me?” If you love dogs, but you have the capacity to take care of a goldfish, don’t lie to yourself and think it’ll change.

The pet is not the issue here, Dude.

Dog owners are also insufferable people sometimes, and this plays out on walks. You’ll see dogs unleashed because entitled dog owners are so goddamn sure that their dog isn’t the problem. You are asking for trouble. You don’t know what’s going to happen when your dog meets mine, and you’re not strong enough emotionally to handle a situation when our dogs fight. I can tell by the tone of someone’s voice when they speak commands. If I don’t feel a need to snap to attention, they sure as hell won’t.

I’m tired of going to people’s houses where they’re unfamiliar and so are their pets. Entry is an assault on my senses, and it would have been made so much easier if the dogs knew to chill out when the doorbell rang. People know that a Mastiff jumping on you isn’t cool. They could give a shit whether their purse dog likes you or not. If a purse dog shows aggression, it’s written off as little and cute. Meanwhile, dogs are generally aggressive when they’re scared and don’t know what’s going on.

When you don’t train your small dog, you are not helping it. Full stop. If it does not have a big dog’s sense of hierarchy in the pack, it will become a problem fast. That’s because the dogs aren’t the problem children here. You haven’t established enough dominance that your dog can relax in your presence. Your dog is a train wreck because you are.

There’s no deviation of this pattern ever. If something is wrong with your dog’s behavior, 100% you’re the problem. Dogs are the best in the world at teaching you how to be a better human, but you have to learn their language in order to hear.

Feisty Cherry Diet Coke

Feisty Cherry Diet Coke is my least favorite so far. It’s really good because it tastes more like the cherry in Wild Diet Pepsi, but there’s a black pepper tasting note that makes me cough. It’s hideous, truly.

It’s kind of like falling in love and realizing too late that you’re dating a meth addict.

In other news, I now have a new roommate. I haven’t met her yet, but I have heard that she has a cat. I have also heard that she’s crazy in a good way. Sounds right up my alley. I might not love her- that remains to be seen- but I can love a cat…. especially one in which I don’t have to feed or change litter. That’s just God right there.

Dana did me a solid by keeping Dodger for two reasons. The first is that I didn’t want to wander around DC trying to find an apartment that took cats. The second is that he was already bonded to Dana’s cat, Minerva, and splitting them up didn’t seem right to me, either. The only thing I regret is that Dodger was a gift from my mother, and I’d do anything to have him back just based on that fact. However, I’m still not in a place to have a pet, and Dana’s is the best place for him in all the world. I am sure that he is spoiled beyond all measure, and in more ways than I would ever think to or care.

Dana is a cat mom. I’m all like, it’s a cat.

I have always joked that the reason our relationship didn’t work out is that there are only two types of people in the world… pet parents and pet owners, and they do not mix. I take laughs where I can get them, okkkkkkk……..

The funny story about myself that I have for today is that I applied for a job with the APA, the American Psychiatry Association. However, they did not explain the acronym on the job posting until the exit page for the application, so I told them that I was a good writer and thought it would come in handy for research and summarization. I can only hope that they don’t think that’s weird, because I thought I was applying to the style manual. #dumbassattack It brings tears of laughter to my eyes every time I think of it. I just have to remind myself that there are plenty of times I’ve felt dumber.

I’m also coming up with ideas for my novel, Fish Ralph, because an idea dawned on me last night that had me really excited. But, of course, I am not going to tell you what it is…. just that it is a truly unexpected turn of events. I’m probably not going to win a Newberry award, but I’m having fun with it.

For the writers in the crowd, I’ve switched over from Microsoft Word to Storybook, which has sections for character development and dividing chapters. It’s brilliant because of its organization, and I highly recommend it for novelists… not so much for non-fiction. It also has the ability to switch between different writing projects so that if I come up with an idea for -frog.- or have a wild hair for even newer works, I can jot it down quickly.

I am also a big fan of Google Keep for ideas on the go, and on my phone, I can dictate instead of type. My handwriting, as I’ve said before, is a carpal tunnel pile of garbage even I can’t read if I put it down and come back to it later… and it’s a bummer having to retype ideas if I hand write them, anyway. I’d rather have the text in a format I can use.

In trying to find the link to -frog.-, which I wrote long ago, my search results returned entries I hadn’t thought about in years. I read them all. Some of it was truly touching, because enough time has passed that I feel like I’m reading someone else’s work. It doesn’t feel like bragging when you don’t even recognize the work as your own. It’s more akin to thinking, “wow. I wish I could write like that….” and a true feeling of humility that I’m the one that has been given this gift. I’m also astounded at the measure of truth I’ve been willing to put to “paper.” It is only mine, not universal, but I know for sure that it does resonate with a few who’ve stood in my shoes. In other ways, I am dumbfounded that I was ever so stupid to publish how I felt about that. That is an x-factor.

I have learned that my love for Argo knows no bounds, but is no match for the hatred I have of myself (at times). I am proud to be who I am, but that has come along relatively recently in the ebb & flow. My self-esteem has been rebuilt after disaster, and for that, I am grateful. It is amazing what forgiveness and mercy can achieve, both internally and externally. The fire in my lantern has returned, hopefully strong enough to light the paths of others, because they gave me strength when I could not return it.

I edited that paragraph above, because it originally said Dana & Argo. Now, it doesn’t. That’s because I read about a phone call between Dana and her mother, and Dana and the younger brother of a friend. One was about “appeasing the crazy,” the other about “not taking on projects.” It brought everything back regarding how little she thought of me and what I would do with my life while not exactly being the model of achievement herself. She was in no place to judge, and she did, both harshly and without remorse.

I also saw Argo’s loving words…… I don’t believe in God, but I do believe in you.

I put both of those perspectives in my pipe and smoked them, and by the end of staring into space trying to decide what I thought, I decided that Argo’s words are and always would be worth more, because who doesn’t love someone who thinks that about you? Who, in this world, can’t? And, of course, by love I mean that I would run to Walgreen’s for her in the middle of the night without complaining once. I am sure that she already has people to do that for her, but it is my definition of friends who love you. I might even be willing to throw in some chocolate, depending on how generous I’m feeling that day. 😛

I know for sure I’d be willing to throw in some Diet Coke, just for the love of God, not Feisty Cherry.