Archive for April, 2013
Historic Route 30: Dutch Pies, Elusive Pretzels & a Pachyderm Paradise
It was imperative to go back to Dutch Haven the next morning before we left Lancaster. Crybaby Henry wanted to get a piece of shoo-fly pie and Chooch and I wanted souvenirs for our peeps. Plus, I like to look at the windmill on top of the store.
“How many pictures of that do you need!?” Henry cried when I went out front to take another picture. AS MANY AS THE DUTCH GIRL INSIDE OF ME DESIRES, OK FATHER?
I almost bought this Amish bonnet for Andrea because she said she wanted Amish shit, but I just couldn’t decide which one would make her look like the best Chaste Candlemaker. So I got her other Amish shit instead which of course I haven’t mailed yet, because I have a Lazy Sender reputation to uphold.
Chooch so badly wanted a t-shirt of a bunch of cats on the beach. It said “Beach Bums” and the back of the shirt was a picture of the cats’ asses. We literally fought about this shirt in the middle of the store because hello, I’m not buying some stupid beach t-shirt when Lancaster doesn’t even have a beach! Get a courting candle or GTFO kid!!
He ended up getting a little Amish doll magnet — for his TEACHER whom he loves more than me.
Of course, he managed to lose the magnet during his spring break.
Thank god for the Roadside America app or else we would have gotten home about 4 hours earlier than we actually did. There is a ton of tacky shit to see and do along the historic Rt. 30, so I was pretty thankful for our bent wheel keeping us off the turnpike.
One of the things I desperately wanted to do was take a tour of a Shoe House in Hellam, PA. I emailed them a few days beforehand to see if anyone would be around to give us a tour and they said NO. I flew into a rage that night at work. DON’T LIVE IN A HOUSE SHAPED LIKE A SHOE IF YOU’RE NOT GOING TO BE AVAILABLE TO GIVE A TOUR, YOU MOTHERFUCKERS!
I mean….maybe next time.
On our way to Lancaster the day before, we kept seeing signs for Smittie’s Soft Pretzels but never actually found Smittie and his soft pretzels. Near Gettsyburg, the signs began popping up again, but unless Smittie was selling his wares from inside a broke-down van from 1983 (one of the signs was propped up against its hood), there was no sight of any damn pretzels.
Miles later, I screamed, “THERE! ANOTHER SMITTIE’S SIGN!” Henry pulled over down the street and there it was — the elusive pretzel van.
The pretzels were eh.
“They’d be better if they were warm,” Henry lamented. Yeah, what’s up with that, Smitty? Maybe he should have my co-worker Cheryl send out an email for a pretzel warmer contribution drive. She’s really good at collecting money, on par with the paperboy from “Better Off Dead,” at least.
Fuck you and your room temp pretzels, Smitty. You cunt.
Of all places, Henry was the most adamant about stopping at Mister Ed’s.
“Is it going to make us miss Mister Ed’s?” he interrogated me when I mentioned casually some of the other awesome tourist traps I wished to visit. Then I figured out he probably just wanted to see if they had any old-timey candy from his childhood.
We were going to stop there the day before, but they were having some gigantic Easter egg hunt and there were millions of screaming kids and their asshole parents milling about, so we kept on driving and felt extremely thankful that Chooch was sleeping in the backseat, else we’d have never heard the end of it.
So, the story is that Mister Ed has been collecting elephantine things for his entire life, for no good reason. Except that if I had watched the video playing in the small museum, or read any of the signs on the walls, or cared enough to Google, I would probably have way more information to enlighten you guys right now. But the truth is that I stopped reading when I got to “over 5,000 elephant items” because really, what else do I need to know?
Wait! Lies! I’m telling lies again! I did read that Mister Ed’s had a fire a few years ago and over 2,000 of his elephant thingies perished. He ended up receiving OVER FIVE THOUSAND more in the mail from kind-hearted hoarders all over the world.
Mister Ed’s is basically just a roadside candy & gift shop with way too many stuffed animals for Chooch to beg for. Henry was mad at us for some reason that I forget now so he wouldn’t even stand near us inside the store. We even let him buy himself a Mallo Cup, but he was still being a total Hoover. Then he got mad because I bought a maple cake even though he mumbled, “You’re not going to like that.”
Well guess what? He was right. It was disgusting. But still!
I know. Don’t say it. This is going to be Chooch as an old man, but with tens of thousands of cat curios.
The actual elephant museum was only one room, but it was still worth it. Mister Ed even had the same elephant table as me! Except that his is elephant-colored, not pink. I bought a small Hindu-esque elephant from the gift shop and now I don’t know where I put it. I also bought a Mister Ed’s magnet and lost that, too. I always happen to LOSE STUFF after Henry cleans the house.
Ugh, I wish this was for sale!! I’ll just get Henry to make me one, I guess. In lieu of an engagement ring, maybe.
l-r. elphants.
Henry, being miserable. Even in a pachyderm paradise.
That elephant was supposed to talk, but it did NOT.
4 commentsChooch Takes the Chameleon Club: Pierce the Veil, 3-23-13
The line to get into the Chameleon Club was pretty massive, wrapping down and around the block, this undulating horde of scene kids staring at the old people who had the poor sense to bring their six-year-0ld to a Pierce the Veil show.
Chooch got a few shout outs for wearing a Chiodos shirt though.
“All these other people are wearing Pierce the Veil shirts and I’m wearing Chiodos!” he whined when we claimed our spot at the caboose of the scene kid train. I considered giving him the “Don’t wear the band’s shirt to their show” seminar, but figured I already control enough of his life.
So instead, I explained, “Well, that’s just because you don’t have a Pierce the Veil shirt yet” and then quickly used this as incentive to get him to stop being a dickhead in line.
And I guess when I say “dickhead,” what I actually mean is six-year-old. Of COURSE a six-year-old is going to go nuts standing in line for an hour! Especially when there are masses of teenaged girls paying attention to him.
Henry seemed relatively amiable and tempered, I’m assuming because there were other parents in line so he didn’t feel quite as pedophilic as usual.
After barely moving for 30 minutes, some of the Chameleon Club staff came out and tried create some sort of order to the situation, so they separated us into will call and TicketFly lines. This meant that every time our line moved forward, we would pass new people who hadn’t yet giggled and said “Aww!” when they saw Chooch. Thanks guys, for rewinding his asshole key.
The only way I could get him to calm down and stop moving was to ask him questions about that dumb Minecraft game that he plays. Six-year-old Chooch was shelved and suddenly I was talking to this new person, this little grown-up in my kid’s body. He is INTENSE about Minecraft and speaks extremely matter-of-factly about it. He paid no attention to any of the girls around him.
Wow. I just pictured his future and it looks dark. I guess that’s because he’s going to be LIVING IN MY BASEMENT.
The show was supposed to start at 7, but I’m pretty sure we were still standing outside by then. I don’t know if they were having problems or what, but it gave me way too much idle time to have a million doubts and second thoughts about bringing Chooch to a post-hardcore show.
Perhaps the person who called Child Services on us last year was on to something.
I kept scanning the crowd, looking for some other retarded, negligent mom who brought her innocent youth to the show, but Chooch was BY FAR the youngest kid there.
Of course he was. No one else is that stupid!
“Do you think this was a mistake?” I asked Henry as the lines finally started moving with purpose. Henry just frowned at me and then there we were, inside the Chameleon Club, throbbing bass drowning out Chooch’s Minecraft monologue. The transition from Quiet Outside to Loud Pandemonium didn’t even faze him. He just kept right on talking, mindlessly handing over his ticket to be scanned while explaining all of the Minecraft weapons to me.
At the top of the first flight of steps, a club staff member encouraged us to keep climbing the steps to the two balconies, because Chooch would supposedly be able to see no matter where he stood up there. Which would be true if Chooch was a six-foot-tall man. But as it turned out, every space in front of the balcony was already claimed and those teenagers don’t give a fuck about no six-year-old kid, that’s for sure. Not a single asshole would budge.
We decided that the main floor would be best, and to be honest — being on a balcony with Chooch is not really the best idea for a hyper-protective mom like me. Besides, we found a prime spot near the back, next to a wall that had a small ledge on it that was perfect for Chooch’s butt. The club was pretty small, so even though we were in the back, we weren’t very far from the stage. Even I could see perfectly, and I’m pretty short.
NOTE TO THE AUTHORITIES: WE PROVIDED EAR PLUGS FOR CHOOCH AND MADE SURE HE KEPT THEM IN DURING EVERY BAND. WE ARE NOT IDIOTS.
When the house music faded out and the first band — Issues — came out, Chooch became hyper-alert. It was a true make-or-break moment — this kid was either going to fucking FEEL it or he was going to be struck with aural fear. Henry hoisted him up on the little ledge thing and, without being prompted, Chooch started throwing his arms up in the air and he was SO INTO IT, you guys, I wanted to fucking DIE. I felt like I had waited my whole life for that moment.
Chooch placed a hand on his chest and laughed.
“Do you feel the bass?” I yelled over the music.
“Yes!” he shouted and laughed again.
This was Chooch’s face after Tyler Carter from Issues called everyone motherfuckers.
[Interestingly, Jonny Craig and Tyler Carter were having a feud awhile back. Jonny’s twitter handle ends in “4L” and then Tyler made his twitter handle end in that too, so Jonny was all, “TAKE THE 4L OUT OF YOUR NAME, WAHHHH!” And then Tyler had all of these cryptic-but-not-cryptic tweets about losing all respect for his idol, which was actually pretty awesome. But I guess they’re friends again because Jonny recently posted a picture with him on Instagram. Maybe I should host my own Scene Kid News Hour since it’s the only real news I know.]
At one point, Chooch booted me in the back.
“CLAP, MOMMY!” he screamed, after one of the songs ended and he noticed I wasn’t clapping. I started to tell him I wasn’t clapping because I didn’t care too much about this band, but instead I just sighed and joined in the applause. Chooch seemed satisifed about that.
LOOK AT HIM WITH HIS ARM UP, OH MY GOD!
After the Issues set ended, the concert version of the “Are we there yet” game commenced (“When’s Pierce the Veil coming out!?”), so Henry stuffed a slice of pizza into Chooch’s mouth. I’ve never seen that kid devour any sort of non-ice cream food so fast before. All that raging during Issues made him hungry, I guess.
I kept his mind focused in between sets by allowing him to continue the Minecraft conversation. He was talking about some of the Minecraft videos he watches and mentioned something about someone’s roommate.
“Do you have a roommate?” I asked. (He only plays the Pocket Edition on his Kindle so he’s not actually playing online with other strangers.)
“Oh yes!” he answered excitedly. “It’s a pig. His name is Gilbert.”
Some guy in his early 20s stopped next to us and looked at Chooch thoughtfully. Finally, he spoke. “You’re awesome,” he said, offering his knuckles to Chooch, who bumped them back with his own fist. Chooch looked at me after the guy walked away and kind of laughed, as if to say, “What a fucking weener, of COURSE I’m awesome.”
Chooch disliked the next two bands (letlive.* apparently made his stomach hurt and Memphis May Fire wasn’t Pierce the Veil so he hated them) so I let him play on my phone. By the time MMF was over, he was starting to unravel. It was past 10PM and he had a long day being in the car with his asshole parents, so I couldn’t really blame him.
“Just try to make it a little bit longer and I’ll play air hockey with you when we get back to the hotel,” I promised, figuring he would be too tired by then anyway.
But when the lights went out and everyone started screaming, “PIERCE THE VEIL!”, Chooch was suddenly very alert. Henry put him back on the ledge and he sat there, clutching his Vic Fuentes doll, looking so expectant and excited.
I wish I had a picture of his face when PTV came out onto the stage, but I was so very much in the moment that fucking around with my phone was the last thing I was thinking of. It doesn’t matter if I don’t have a picture because I know I’ll never forget that look on his face — his smile was so big and he started laughing and waving his Vic doll in the air.
Chooch, in total awe. And speechless! When does THAT ever happen?
“I really like the drummer!” he shouted, so now of course he wants to take drum lessons and I am more than happy to oblige.
A few songs in, some kid pushed through the crowd, his 1998 candy raver girlfriend unconscious and draped over his arms. “Move!” he yelled, parting the people next to us.
Chooch took all of this in, then turned to me and said dryly,” She’s dead. She saw Vic and she died.” And then he focused his attention back on the stage. I wish I had that kid’s comedic timing.
Henry ended up taking him out to the car during the fourth song. It was almost 11 by then and he could barely keep his eyes open. They stopped by the merch table for a shirt and the merch guy gave Chooch a free poster for being his youngest customer.
I wasn’t there for that though because hello — I wasn’t leaving the Pierce the Veil show! I stayed there ’til the end. And then cried.
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This will be my favorite picture of him for a long time, I can already tell.
Post-Show Shenanigans
We decided not to stick around and try to meet the band. It was almost midnight, cold and who knows what kind of area that place is at night — Amish juveniles might rage in the street with their pitchforks and torches, holes pre-cut in rape-ready bed sheets. Chooch had had enough excitement anyway, so maybe next time he can scratch “groupie” off his Underage Bucket List.
Chooch’s second wind kicked in when we got back to the hotel and I honored my promise of air hockey. However, when I was trying to get change out of the change machine, some older man and his grandson (?) hijacked the table, so Chooch ended up playing air hockey with some little foreign child and it was utterly awkward for me because the old guy and some broad who was presumably that kid’s mom just up and walked away, leaving me to supervise while they went off to play pool. So fucking weird!
But then Chooch and I got to play while that kid stood to the side, trying to capture the puck. I had visions of me screaming, “HE WASN’T MY RESPONSIBILITY!” as the paramedics wrapped his broken fingers. Stupid idiot kid.
This entire situation left Chooch and I somewhere near an 87 on the Giddy Meter, so after our game, we tore off through the halls of the hotel, laughing and carrying on like children (which I guess is understandable in Chooch’s case). But then Henry happened to pass us in the hallway, on his way back from complaining about a clogged toilet to the front desk (maybe Of Monsters & Men can write a shitty song about THAT little talk), and totally put his foot into the asshole of our late night hotel antics.
“Get back to the room! SHUT UP!” he hissed, guiding us down to the room the Ramada had relocated us to. Apparently, we had to swap a working heater for a working toilet. But after the night I had, I could have been relegated to a hobo tent and would have still fallen asleep happy.
OK, that’s probably a total lie. But still — a chilly room was a small price to pay for the memories I got to make with Chooch at the Chameleon Club. My heart could not have felt any more swollen that night, I swear to god. Finally, both of my loves had converged inside of this little club in Lancaster. It was hard to justify complaining about a chilly room after that.
6 commentsBest Worst Date: Pittsburgh Blogger Guest Post
Guys! Stop! There’s the Pittsburgh Guest Blogger thingie happening today and I was actually invited to participate! I’m never invited to join these things! I’m like the goddamn Rudolph the red-haired herpes-laden reindeer of blogging. But Alex of Everybody Loves Alex was kind enough to have me join in on the fun, and I was thrilled to find out that Caitlin of Prettyburgh was chosen to guest post on my blog! This girl knows all of the best happy hour places in Pittsburgh and I really need to start hanging out with her and stop drinking swill from Chooch’s old sippy cups. My, um, “Pittsburgh Travel Guide” can be found over at Everybody Loves Alex, that is if he can stop getting drunk at Babies R Us long ago to put it up.
When Everybody Loves Alex proposed the idea of a Pittsburgh Bloggers Blog Swap, I got very excited. The long, disgusting, repulsive, inhumane winter really got me in a creative funk. The idea of being forced to write a blog about a topic picked at random by a complete stranger sounded like just the ticket to get back to some writing.
BUT IMAGINE my excitement when I was picked to write for Oh Honestly Erin?! Her blog is filled with raw, uncensored musings about cemeteries, amusement parks, her son, and her manservant…errr…boyfriend Henry.
Erin asked me to write about my worst date ever. Interesting topic as I am newly single. The thought of awkward dates, being set up with strangers, etc. is enough to make me want to move to a commune and become a sisterwife. JK. But really, dating can be exhausting.
Thinking more about all of the dates I have been on, one certainly will always stick out in my mind as the BEST worst date ever.
I was 16 years old working as a hostess at a local sports bar/restaurant. A bunch of teenagers working in one restaurant seems to really highlight the hormones running buck wild and all over the place at that age.
One day my fellow hostess told me her friend, Jamison, was coming in for lunch and she thought we might get along. She said he loved music, was really attractive, funny, easy going…sounded right up my alley!
He walked in and holy.shit., was he cute. Huge smile, bright blue eyes, great laugh, and friendlier than any men I had recently met. We chatted for a bit and immediately clicked. He asked me out to a concert. How exciting! I loved going to shows and couldn’t think of a better date. I was smitten as a kitten.
After work, I hauled my girly ass to the mall to get a new outfit for the show that was that night. I ended up leaving the mall with a lace top. The shirt reminded me of the scene in Reality Bites where Ethan Hawke tells Winona Ryder she looks like a doily. I also bought a new pair of white jeans…good choice for a concert…
Anyways, I went home, did my hair which may or may not involved sparkle hair clips, and put on my makeup which may or may not have involved eye glitter. It was 2001! Cut me a break.
So I walk out of the house looking something like Baby Spice.
Jamison picks me up and we talk the entire way to the show about anything and everything. At that age, I was used to being the outgoing one on a date since that is maybe the most awkward time for boys that age (voice cracking, accidental boners, etc. etc. etc.) But Jamison was just as chatty as I was. He was so very excited to see the band that was playing. They had just brought on a new lead singer whom he had never heard or seen before. I loved his enthusiasm for music, as it was and always will be, my first love.
- Oh hi! Caitlin with Sharon Van Etten at a concert with less mosh pits and bleeding nostrils.
We get to Club Laga, me in my doily, blow dried hair and over-pasteled 90s make-up, and Jamison in his jeans and black tee.
I am suddenly in shock. I see more gauged ears, black lipstick, chains, and septum piercings than I had ever seen in my entire lifetime. I was at a Dillinger Escape Plan show.
Keep in mind, I wasn’t mortified because of how everyone else looked, but because I was 16-years-old, self-conscious, and stuck out like the sorest thumb that ever existed.
“I got this,” I told myself. Jamison wasn’t fazed. I didn’t know if it was because he was so excited about seeing the show or because he genuinely didn’t care or notice how ridiculous I looked amongst the backdrop of hardcore punk fans. I would later find out both things were true.
The music/screaming started. It was really something. It certainly wasn’t my taste musically, but the energy behind the band was crazy. Jamison had stayed in the back with me so I wouldn’t be pulverized by fellow concertgoers. I could tell he would really enjoy going up into the moshpit, so I told him to go up and I would be just fine.
And I was…until Jamison came back 20 minutes later with a face full of blood.
“What happened? Are you okay?!”
“The pit is fucking awesome. I think I broke my nose.”
What.
Blood was everywhere, and we went into the men’s bathroom to clean him up. Upon walking in, there were two men at the urinal..if I wasn’t already sick from the blood…I sure was now.
But I looked at Jamison who had a big smile on his face and was laughing at what had just happened as his bloody nose dripped onto my new white jeans. I couldn’t help but start laughing with him. It was one of those moments where you say, “Who am I and how did I get here?“ The moments I now live for.
Jamison and I ended up dating for about 5 months. I still look back on that relationship as one of the most exciting ones I have had. I think we were both so thrilled about meeting someone we could learn different things from, and we had no bitterness in our hearts from previous relationships. We just purely enjoyed one another. Every date was like a new adventure.
Now that I am single again, thinking about my relationship with Jamison reminds me of how important it is to not close myself off to experiences that might not be my “normal”. Not even just with relationships with men, but relationships in general. I think as people get older, it is easy to find comfort in routine. But I can honestly say the times I have let my guard down, tried new things, met new people, are the times I grow the most and learn about myself.
And while I never listened to the Dillinger Escape Plan again, Jamison introduced me to Nick Drake, The Moldy Peaches, Mitch Hedberg, Gustav Klimt, a myriad of jazz, and the list goes on. And I am more than thankful for that night at Laga.
And as Comic Book Guy might say, “Best worst date EVER.”
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Thank you, PrettyBurgh! This made me laugh so hard because I like DEP and can imagine how blindsided you must have been! But just so you know, if you ever want to guest post on my blog again, it totally has to be about the two guys in the urinal.