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I’ve been pretty focused mentally on school, and well… ok, TV shows. I never lie to my online friends. I’ve been hoarding episodes of awful reality shows like idiots are about to go extinct. This has caused me to lag on readings and eventually focus mentally on school.

Also, I’ve had life events. You’ve heard of those, right, internet friends?

My grandparents officially “immigrated” as in “went through immigration at the airport” and my grandmother teared up a little. My grandfather is quitting smoking (after 60+ years). I have lost weight.

Basically, what I’m saying is that nothing makes sense.

What does make sense is that, lately, all I say about awkwardness is, “well, I should have been expecting it.”

The first example of this is a recent trip to Gananoque, ON with my Boy. We planned it a week or two beforehand (as I am always doing, and he is always trying to put off) and went on Thanksgiving weekend. 4 days, 3 nights; Sunday to Tuesday. It was supposed to be lovely. And for the large part, it was. The weather was balmy for early October (29C WHAT), the food was fantastical, and the town was just the loveliest little town I ever did see. Reminded me of Stars Hollow.

A few days prior, my father, in his compulsive pro-activity decided that, Hey! Wouldn’t it be great if he, my grandfather and my sister visited the 1000 Islands as well? No. It wouldn’t, I said. You would hate it, I begged. And still, the only hotel/motel/inn they found that wasn’t fully and utterly booked for Thanksgiving was ours. How swell.

The irony that what was essentially meant to be a complete mental and physical retreat from the oh-so-generally-tolerable idiosyncrasies of my family turned into a, Hey – let’s get dinner tonight, all 5 of us, is not lost on me, and hopefully not on you.

However, Gananoque, and the nearby US border, had bigger plans for us. After a night of wretchedly fantastic relaxation, we decided to hit up the States before my spa appointment (it was in the inn, okay? Like 3 steps from bed to nail-bed repair). In hindsight (as most of these things are), we really should have seen it coming.

We drove for a beautiful 15 minutes (when am I EVER that close to another country?!) and reached the strangely prolonged line to the border. But, it’s the end of Canadian Thanksgiving, after all, we thought. So we waited, and waited, and sang songs while waiting, and should have figured out after 30 minutes that when the line you’re in is moving the slowest, the guy in control of that particular line was probably beaten with the jerkface stick. And yet.

We finally roll up, after 45 minutes -Does it usually take this long? I naively ask – and the dude (bruteface extraordinaire) just wallops us with questions, some more expected than others: Why are you coming to the States? How long are you staying? When are you coming back? What do you do? Why don’t you have a job? Where did you get your money? How big is your penis? (Kidding.)

Then, lovely Officer McAssface scans our passports and gives us a slip of paper, while pointing – oh-so-un-fucking-coyly – to Officer McAss V.2 where  there are about 20 cars parked. I mentally attempt to recall whether I have acquired any illegal machines or substances in the past 24 hours, and nothing comes to mind, which, despite being logical, does not make me any less nervous.

“My experience with customs and border control has always been that Americans are nicer than Canadians,” my Boy says. And so my God Complex smirks (I AM ALWAYS RIGHT, I insist daily.)

While walking down the long walkway to the building the man who almost giggled when he took my keys told us to go, I ask whether the Boy thinks they’re going to strip search us. “Hopefully not by someone hot. The ensuing reaction might make them detain us.”

Another goon with a radio and a gun, whose job appeared to be just to open the door for presumed illegals and yell at office workers sporadically and awkwardly about doing fingerprints any slower, told us to shut off our phones before coming in. Okay, I like common procedure – just like in a movie theatre. I think I even saw a twinkle of a semi-smile in his eye, probably born from the hope that he might be able to tackle an old lady for not understanding what a cell-phone was and thus auto-labeling her as terrorist.

We sit down on uncomfortable airport chairs in a corral of Mormons, Russians, frat guys and scientists going to a conference. We wait another half hour, by which point my boredom has so far surpassed my anxiety that I’m thinking about playing Angry Birds on the Boy’s iPod. That probably wouldn’t have been encouraged by Door Goon.

“Arnika and Paalaya,”

“Arina? Paya?”

“Yeah, yeah. You guys. Come on up here.”

Asshole. I’m so not sorry for not being named Sally.

Same questions as the Officer McAssface, and then comes my favourite part of entering the United States to see some trees: “So, if you don’t have a job, how do you afford all these nail appointments and expensive trips?” He asks this to my BOY.

Oh. Lord. I PAY FOR MY OWN DANG NAILS. OWN. DANG. NAILS. YOU SON OF A F-

Sexist nugget of idiocy, you are. Also, this is the cheapest trip that people can go on: we travelled a whole 2 hours away from where we live. It would barely dent the bank account of a 10-year-old mowing lawns for a living, you condescending shit of a human being.

“Oh, okay. Well I guess we didn’t find any guns, narcotics, or dead bodies in your trunk, so you’re free to go.”

I wonder if it was the two fold-away chairs that my parents sit on at my sister’s soccer games that tipped them off about the lack of drugs, or the Subway wrappers. Criminals gotta eat too, I guess, but, oh man, were we suspicious.

When we got through, the trees closing in on the highway seemed to be frontin’ and being all aggressive and shit, plus the roads had tolls. We finally found a free little park area with a lake, sat for half an hour, angrily discussing how the air smelled disgusting and the benches were sub-par and the water probably couldn’t house fish even if it was a caviar factory, and then we got in our car and drove back.

“Hi. Where you coming from?”

“Oh you know, just wanted to come and see a few of the parks on the US side of the 1000 islands, that sort of thing.”

“How long did you stay?”

“About an hour. It wasn’t very interesting. Plus I have a nail appointment soon.”

“Oh. Okay. Have a nice day!”

GOD COMPLEX EXACERBATED. I AM ALWAYS RIGHT but oh was I happy to be back in Ontario, with the pretty and non-aggressive trees and the proper speed limits (miles are for mules) and Tim Horton’s.

sad couple is sad (in america)

I almost cried with joy after seeing the speed limit.

So, that didn’t go as planned, as in, instead of enjoying nature, I just enforced my mental blockade against everything American.

The most recent example of my life being awkward is my family. Comedy empires have been built on it, yes, but it doesn’t stop evolving for Hollywood’s sake.

I don’t know how other people’s families are, but the men in my family are very traditional. Ie. sexist. Ie. they think that women do housework and bear children and listen to the head of the family (a man). You choose whether this is a comment on Russian families, or immigrant families, or silly families. It might not be a comment at all, and it isn’t to me because it’s just my reality.

This past week, after getting back from Gananoque, I’ve been pestered by my dad and grandfather about cooking and cleaning almost incessantly. Do they care that I have 5 books to read before Monday? Do they pay attention to the fact that I work 2 jobs, volunteer and write for free, and study full-time? No. They want dinner, and dinner they want. That is all that matters.

My grandfather has a tendency of coming into any room where I reside and saying, Hozay’ka (woman in charge of the household), What do you have for lunch? Or, What are you cooking? if I am at the stove or in the vicinity of the kitchen.

This bothers me to no small extent, and while I try not to react every single time by forcing him to sit and watch English films about feminism and banging him on the head with Gloria Steinem‘s articles, I often lash out. You want food? There IS no food. Find your own food.

A few days ago, I decided to take a different tactic.

“What are you doing, hozay’ka?”

“Making lunch.”

“For everyone?”

“No, just for me.”

“Oh,” disapprovingly he says “what are you going to do when you have a family?”

“Well, I think Boy will stay home, actually. He’ll cook, clean, that sort of stuff. Probably raise the kids. When I have a family, I will go work and earn money.”

“Oh, hahaha! You’re so funny Arinushka.”

“I’m serious.”

“Oh.”

The next morning, when my mom and grandma had arrived from Russia, he reveals to them the deep rebellion of my nature in hushed tones. “She’s planning to go work and have Boy stay home and clean and cook.” I didn’t hear it, but I’m sure it was murmured conspiratorially, in a manner that suggests that what I’m doing is completely unorthodox and unacceptable. As if I was a moral dissenter to Perfection.

Later that day when I was speaking to both mom and grandmother, I was complaining about how they kept asking for food like stupid helpless baby birds, when in fact they seemed like giant ostriches who would seem to have their shit figured out by 43 and 72 years of age.

“Oh, this morning he told us ALL about how you were planning to subvert the family dynamic. You horrible woman, you.” Cue laughter and my eternal smugness.

Let him believe it, I told them. At least until the Boy comes over for dinner next and gets a variety of garbled Russian questions asked by the worried eyes of my grandfather about his capability to cook food and clean laundry.

-A

P.S. Oh, and there was that time I thought I was being all culturally sensitive and progressive when I found a Farsi movie approved by Sundance playing in a movie theatre in Toronto and invited my Boy and his Mother and it turned out to be a lesbian porno. Fun.

My life happens in small increments, especially on the 2 long-winded days I’ve had of “summer vacation.”

I went to visit my grandmother’s grave yesterday and it was wet for most of the day except for the 10 minutes or so we spent there, when the sun peeked out and washed us with a bit of warmth. I can still hear her voice and feel her soft, but gnarled and twisted hands in mine. I stopped holding them a while before she died because they felt strange underneath my straight fingers. They were curving around everything she was losing, I think – mobility, independence, family.

Voracity is something she never lost even when she was in the ICU, twitching when we came near. I felt her body struggle to wake – I saw it and I couldn’t help but cry to see the woman my grandfather loved aching to see us one last time. He loved her more than she loved him, but she loved him because he was there, I think, because he was her family after 49 years. He made her soup with giant chunks of vegetables, and helped her stand even after his back gave out and he had a stroke. He helped her cook a meal of gargantuan proportions when she couldn’t use her hands anymore (eventually he had to resign because she yelled at him for doing it wrong – so he brought the cutting board to her bed.)

It’s been almost 2 years since her death now but my grandfather’s eyes are still moist and red. He bends down, one puffy hand on top of the bird-shat-on stone, touches his lips to the picture of her that my father and I picked out. She is about 40 in it, black-and-white, wrinkle-less, serene and loving – even in a photograph. I remember her like this – and I see pictures of her looking older all the time, but always this image, when we used to sit in her kitchen and make dumplings together, and she would let me press whipped cream straight into my mouth before my mom came to pick me up. Always yes from her. Always, let’s get more, do more, more of whatever you want. I still have a hard time remembering all her illnesses, but you would never have been able to tell.

I was a spoiled kid, but I immigrated young.

You can’t get sick on your hardships. You can only live through them, or not live through them.

-A

When I feel melancholic, I need to hear my grandmother’s voice. Needles pricking at my tear ducts.

011, 7, 495, 914, 4223

Every number has a different noise.

Alyo?

Sometimes, Oftentimes I feel like crying when I call her.  Tonight I didn’t even hear her.

I’ve never been able to hold a conversation with my grandfather for more than 6 minutes. Today it was 20.

There’s nothing to soothe.  I am all salve and no tea.

I am honey and lemon and suckle.

I push my feet underneath my paisley blanket, thinking it’ll warm up my boney toes.  It doesn’t, until I catwrap them.

The overhead light is on and it’s too bright, but gets darker if I stop my eyes from focusing on it. Peripheral vision makes me focus on a bright red light emanating from its’ position on my giant heater.  It is foreign. No wood, no paint: metal.

Like a nazi near Moscow.

We talk about the weather or their health.  My grandmother is anxious.  He is on a balancing beam.

They haven’t seen snow yet but are on a break from teaching for some government-sponsored holiday for a week.

I haven’t told them I am waiting for Cuba.

They haven’t seen my new, short hair.

I want to build caves for them made of kittens and yarn, and doctors wading through the yarn to dote on them like lovers.  I want to play card games.

I want to be the Ass.

I want cold tea.

I want a peaceful sleep.

-Arina

The weather is often unpredictable. Life mirrors weather, I think.

Today’s morning was chilling and dark with lots of dreary rain falling on the lawn around our house.  Then, I started cooking blinchiki for my grandmother’s remembrance dinner and the sun came out. Probably at the time my family was at the cemetery.  This morning was awful but it improved, if slowly.

If only we had black caviar – but even a small can of red caviar goes for about $27 dollars in Canada. It’s definitely not a cheap indulgence. But delicious. Although I prefer smoked salmon.

The one thing my grandmother always loved was cooking. Good food for my family, for her friends, for strangers – anyone. She would feed them and make them feel safe with her lulling insistence.

I’m pretty sure I got some of her genes.

But time will tell.

-Arina

To start a post backwards, here’s a summary of this post, if you don’t want to get into the details:

I have a beef with people that don’t tell you they want something, and then when you don’t do the thing they didn’t ask you to do – get upset about it.

Isn’t that silly bordering on utterly stupid?  I’ve been around a lot of that lately.  Sure, it would have been nice if I could read minds, but a lot of people (namely my family) walk around expecting 5 million things of me that they don’t even tell me about. Well, you know what?

SUCK IT.

I have no problems complying with requests from people I love, when they are made.  Until they (YOUU!!!) deal with the fact that I can’t read their minds and start telling me things prior to the moment it becomes of the most LIFE-THREATENING IMPORTANCE, they’re going to get nada sympathy or understanding from moi!

For example, I asked my father Wednesday night to borrow the car on Friday to do something for my internship downtown.  He eventually said yes (I really was born to be a lawyer, except for that whole perserverance through law school bit), and I was like, ok! So I told my boss: ok!  I will help. I am good intern.  I was proud of myself for “stepping up to the plate” as they say (I think that means towards a plate of pie, but that’s just one girl’s interpretation of it).

Thursday passes in a rainy haze, I get my 1st metropass EVER and am incredibly giddy and run through the evening at work.  End of Thursday.  Friday morning, I wake up at the prepared time in order to make it downtown for 11 (9:00… I am female and like breakfast and live in suburbia).  I squeel out of my driveway at 10 to go pick up my lovely downtown-navigating-master-nerd boyfriend and am at his house at 10:30.  I check my phone while waiting for the BF and see that while I was driving I got a call from the padre. “What could it be? I think to myself. Perhaps padre wants to wish me luck for whatever arduous task awaits me today!”

Oh how wrong I was. As I find I often am when it comes to certain phone-calls from certain people.  Well, in good form plus being all happy about internshipping this wonderful day, I call him back only to hear a pissed off, barking 40-year-old man in the midst of a mid-life crisis on the other side of the wire (what else could have made him so freakin’ angry?) – what the problem was, you may ask? Why bite off the head of a wonderful daughter, you the reader, and I the receiver, might ask?  The back right tire is “leaking air” and needs to be not only “pumped up” but also taken to a mechanic to find the leak, checked to see if it’s fixable, fix leak and/or get new tire, oh, and the man needs to be paid for labour and/or new tire. (Which, if you know anything about cars and mechanics, are total rip-offs – both labour and tires!)

Now, listen here kids. I am a student. I am a student with currently no debt, and I would like to keep it this way, as well as indulging a little bit in an other worldly adventure next summer.  I have amped up my household responsibilities as per my own initiative and my parents’ nurturing nudges towards adulthood.  I have taken on my cell phone bill.  Occasionally, I cook dinner.  Sometimes I do dishwasher duty.  Generally I can’t put a whole gas tank into my dad’s car (which I often borrow in the summer because he drives a motorcycle in the good weather or he can borrow my grandfather’s car if not) because it takes premium gas. It’s expensive. And I’m trying to save.

I’ve never been good with money.  I’ve always been rather good at indulging myself, but I’m learning. My question is why he all of a sudden expects me to be so incredibly self-sufficient?  I’ve taken on almost all of my expenses – transportation, food (outside), clothes, technology, even CLEANING which I did BEFORE he asked me to last week.

The problem is that I’m not self-sufficient. Not even nearly. So why am I being forced to dole out for expenses that I really can’t afford, especially when I feel like I’m already taking off a huge chunk of the economical weight I used to burden them with? I mean, they’re not forcing me, but I feel like a talk is really in order right now.  I just can’t… save anything with all of this.  It’s strange considering they support my decision to take an internship this summer instead of a second job and yet with 2 days a week I still get shit for not paying for this or paying for that or “not paying for using the car.”

My second issue with this scenario is the fact that I was sitting around ALL DAY before maybe 3 pm on Thursday when my father could have called and told me about this life-threatening, causing-tires-to-explode leak. But no. When I am rushing to get on the way to not disappoint my boss at my internship is when he calls me. At the most INCONVENIENT TIME, and then YELLS at me when I don’t understand the technical car terms that he’s barking at me in RUSSIAN. I barely know what the terms mean in English, and he expects me to understand it in angry, barky Russian.

All in all, the most unpleasant phone call I’ve ever had. Maybe I sound like a snob but I feel completely in the right here to be pissed.

So, well, GRRRRR.

Apart from that this song has been on repeat for at least the past 2 days in my head and on my mac, so, therefore, you should listen to it. It is happy. It will make you happy.

Yesterday was the 1 year death-aversary of my grandmother.  I tried to stay away from my grandpa mostly, I don’t know if it was cowardly or courteous.  Sometimes I don’t think intentions matter – people only see the bad.

Everything else is ok. How are you all? Sorry for the sporadic updates; summer warps time in the weirdest ways.

-Arina