Monday, August 29, 2011

The way my grandparents prepared for the storm

Life is strange.
I hadn’t stepped a foot outside of my house in over twenty four hours and I was begging to feel like I was in a time warp.
One too many scary movies and vampire novels later, I attempted to face my irrational fear of getting blown away by the wind.
First I looked out the window.
Branches were waving back and forth, the wind was whistling, and the block was desolate.
I went outside anyway.
After 2 minutes I ran back in, shut the door behind me, and never looked back. “I’ll just watch more television,” I thought to myself.
The previous day, I came home to an interesting set of grandparents, as well as an unusual amount of tomato sauce in jars.
I am talking boxes and boxes filled with jars of tomato sauce surrounding the living room.
At first I thought my grandparents had stocked up on food. When I realized it was only the condiment, I was confused.
“We are so tired. We made a lot of sauce today,” said my grandmother.
My grandfather was sprawled out on the sofa, reading the paper as usual.
I could not care less about their day, what they did, or how much sauce they made. I was worried about the hurricane and how we were going to survive.
Earlier my mother actually suggested I buy a life jacket for my grandmother because she cannot swim.
I ran through the cabinets and fridge to see if any food was stored. Besides tomato sauce, there was milk, orange juice, veggies and pasta.
“We cannot survive the weekend, stuck in the house, on this!” I said. “There is going to be a hurricane, remember?”
Honestly, we are Italian. We eat a lot. There was not a sufficient amount of food to keep us happy for 2 days. I mean, I know I would get cranky.  
“Oh, don’t worry about it. Nothing is going to happen,” said my grandmother.
“Oh, we made so much sauce today,” she continued. “We aren’t used to working this hard. My friends woke up at 5am to start making sauce. I don’t know how they do it.”
I was glad we had a 4 month supply of jarred tomato sauce, I really was, but at that point in time I wasn’t concerned about how great my pasta was going to be that Sunday.
“We have to go food shopping!” I screamed. “Get in the car. We need water, canned food, hummus, guacamole, chips.”
“No no no no no,” said my grandfather. “Tomorrow we go to store. Tomorrow we put chair in shed. Tomorrow we lock window.”
His broken English pissed me off even more. So I decided to eat my dinner.
Funny enough, I brought sushi home that night.
They looked at the sushi as if it had three heads.
“What is this? Hooshi?”
“No, shooshie,” said my grandmother.
“Eat it, I am full.” I said.
She responds with, “Good. Don’t eat anymore, and don’t get fat.”
My grandmother then did something very, very dangerous. She took a huge chunk of wasabi and wrapped it in ginger. As she began putting this concoction to her mouth I screamed, “No, you cannot eat that!”
Phew, she actually listened and put it down.
Then I went through the process of explaining to her the rules of sushi.
Grandfather was next. He attempted the same exact thing. At that point, I was hysterical laughing.
What does marriage to do people? Slowly but steadily turn them into clones?
“Sal!” Grandmother goes. “Look at this. Taste this.”
They were both fascinated and confused all at the same time.
“Where do I put this? How do I eat this? What is this?”
Then my grandfather continued to put his two senses in.
“Does Shooshie mean dirty in English? I ask because Sugido means dirty in Italian.”
I am used to this nonsense talk. I don’t even respond to his question.
So many questions about something our generation was raised with.
When they finished eating the sushi I was relieved. Never again would I bring home something other than pasta or pizza for them to eat. It was actually a health hazard.
One minute later my grandmother is cutting up cheese with a knife and putting the knife to her mouth as if it were a fork. This is typical. I worry about her sometimes.
My grandfather continues reading the paper. He is now talking about Libya. Still no concern about the hurricane.
I can’t help but continue laughing. My grandmother then approaches me, with curious eyes.
“What is wrong with you? Why are you laughing so much?”
She probably thought I was drunk.  Their behavior was completely typical. I was just looking at it from a different lens.
In all honesty, my grandparents’ lack of concern really calmed my nerves.
About the hurricane, we were fine and had some banging pasta that day.


Sunday, August 14, 2011

When I Decided I Had the Power to Change Societal Norms

“Changing Societal Norms”
I recently came up with the brilliant idea to completely change and rearrange societal norms. It takes one person to start a trend and I personally believe I am cool enough to influence others. After taking Sociology 101 I thought to myself, “our rules are stupid, boring, and it is our fault. Let’s make our existence a little more interesting." I mean, come on, some people are just so BORING.
The first step in this process consists of completely new language made up of of clicks, moans, screams, yips, rapid blinking of the eyes and head shakes. How much fun! I began in my attempts to change our language by throwing these sounds into my sentences. Soon to find out people were referring to me as the girl who constantly made sex sounds. This upset me. This was our new language people! Thinking back, I wonder about my choice of sounds. Maybe I was sexually repressed? A few years will do it to you. Anyway, I kept with the clicks and head shakes. I figured our society is so obsessed with the possible existence of aliens, why not start acting like them. I know I enjoyed "Signs."
Next came, the call, the luring call, behold. The socially accepted way we attempt to attract potential partners is semi-annoying and fairly time consuming. Some people take the easy way out, by texting DTF to whomever they wish, which could either go very bad or very good. We want something which is easy but not too risky. I say we simply jump up and down while pointing. This is simple, obvious and does not cross boundaries. Best part is, everyone around will know who you are after and back off, very efficient.
I wondered what people would think about this. At one point people thought the person I was pointing to was a robber, criminal or something along those lines. They threw him out of the bar. What a shame, he was a handsome fellow.
Sadly, it seems as if no one took to my ideas. I have been very upset due to the negative outcome of my master plan. But don’t worry, surprises are on their way.