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My Favorite Word

My sister once said to me, “For someone who has the biggest vocabulary I know, you sure say the word ‘Fuck’ a lot.” I took this as a complement. She had not meant it as a complement. Truth be told, she swears very little. I can’t even remember the last time that I heard her swear. I, on the other hand, tend to swear like a very well-educated pirate. What my sister doesn’t comprehend is that I don’t swear for the shock value, or because I can’t think of anything else to say. Trust me when I say, that I can think of a plethora of other expletives to fit any number of situations. But using a swear word, one of those “taboo”, “inappropriate” words has a power behind it that still exists even if you are all alone.

Lalochezia

That power is given to those words from the moment that we start to learn language. Kids get in trouble for swearing. They are told that those are naughty words or only for adults. Which of course means that by the time you hit fifth grade you’re uttering every swear word you can think of with your friends and then giggling incessantly if a teacher or parent should walk by and almost hear you. At least this is what is was like with my friends. But then of course, I grew up in a very small mountain town where there wasn’t much to do. So maybe giggling at swear words was our version of hanging out at the mall. Who knows. At any rate, swear words take on this aura of rebelliousness. For most kids.

I was not one of those kids, because I didn’t get in trouble for swearing. When I was about nine, my mother scolded me for saying the word ‘shit.’ I pointed out to her that she said it all the time. Sometimes in different languages. I also told her that I didn’t buy the whole argument about adult words vs kid words especially since adults used those words around kids. So she made me a deal. She said that she wouldn’t swear for the entire week, and if she slipped up then I would be allowed to say that word with impunity. By the end of the week I could say them all. Needless to say, dad, who worked in the school district I attended, was not overly thrilled with this deal. Especially since I’m sure he imagined getting reports about me swearing in class. So dad added an addendum to the agreement: I could say any word that I wanted to, but if I got in trouble for my particular word choices, I was on my own. It was up to me to take responsibility for what I said.

Sailor

Herein lay my first lesson in the power of words. I was nine years old and allowed to say anything I wanted free of reprisals from my parents. But I had to learn not where certain words were appropriate, but how they were received and whether or not I liked that reception. For example, swearing at school out a recess with my friends was fun and daring. Swearing during class in front of the teacher got me trouble. Obviously I liked the first, but not the second, so I kept swearing in the first instance and never swore in the second. It was in this way that I developed the ability to switch my vulgarity on and off. Around older adults (who appear to be the type that would not appreciate it), or children, I don’t swear. I turn the pirate off. Around my friends, and heck even sometimes in my writing, the pirate gets turned back on.

Quite frankly, I prefer it and I’m more relaxed when the pirate gets to come out. I swear, because I choose to swear. It provides a lovely release of frustration, or surprise, or anger, or whatever emotion tends to be surging. And I’ve even seen studies that show that people who swear regularly are healthier and in general more honest. Don’t know if I believe that, but there you go. So for those of you who were offended, or “put-off,” by the f-bombs that were dropped in my last post, I apologize. However, I’m not going to start mincing my words. I do have an extensive lexicon, but as my sister so adroitly noticed, ‘Fuck’ happens to be my favorite word.

The Task of Choosing Ten

I was tagged on Facebook to list ten books that really made an impact on my life. Not because of grandeur or quality of writing, just books, or literature in general, that has managed to stay with me. In the instructions, you are admonished not to spend a lot of time thinking about it, just put down the ones that immediately come to mind. So I started to make my list, and I found myself thinking really hard about it. Not because I wanted to make it just right, or I wanted people to be impressed by my selections. I was struggling because I’ve never been a big reader, and I was having difficulties coming up with ten titles. In the end I wound up with five plays and five books, and of the ten only three of them were read in my youth, and one of those three was read at the age of 17.

1. The Borning Room by Paul Fleischman
2. Our Country’s Good by Timberlake Wertenbaker
3. The Giver by Lois Lowry
4. A Room of One’s Own by Virginia Woolf
5. The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne
6. When Nietzsche Wept by Irvin Yalom
7. King Lear by Shakespeare
8. Henry V by Shakespeare
9. Stop Kiss by Diana Son
10. Arcadia by Tom Stoppard

You see, my sister and I were born 11 months apart. Crazy, I know. My parents always claimed that it was on purpose. Personally, I think that there isn’t much to do in a small mountain town … At any rate, we are very close in age and living in the aforementioned small mountain town we wound up sharing everything. Everything. We had the same teachers, were in all the same clubs and to a certain extent we even shared the same friends. Since we were so close in age, and the opportunities were few and far between, in many instances we had no choice in the matter. However, when my dad jokes that he raised a right brain and a left brain in two separate children, he’s not far off. My sister and I have little in common, heck we don’t even look alike.

Therefore, whenever it was possible we would do things separately and there became this unwritten code that both of us acknowledged. Some things were hers, some things were mine, and we never strayed into the other person’s “things.” Oddly, we never fought about who got what “thing” either, it just naturally happened. We had plenty of other things to fight about though. There was a time during our early teens that I affectionately refer to as WWIII.

Rivalry

My sister’s biggest “thing” was reading. She was, and still is, a voracious reader. Now that’s not to say that I didn’t read at all, obviously for school and summer book clubs I had to. So I would read the minimum amount required and no more, and I would make damn sure that I never read the books that Jen did. Those were hers and that was sacred territory. Likewise, she stayed away from the books that I read, keeping that world completely separate. My biggest “thing” was theater and performing and she was more than willing to stay far, far away. We had our things and it kept us sane-ish. The funny thing is that by the time we were both in high school, and the treatise had been signed to end WWIII, we realized that maybe this whole sharing thing wasn’t such a bad gig. We embraced our mutual group of friends and stopped trying to avoid each other in clubs and groups.

But the real olive branch came, when one day Jen came into my room and handed me a book. It was one of “hers.” From a series she adored, by an author she had gone to meet to get an autograph. Normally, I would not have touched that book with a ten foot pole. It was off limits, go directly to jail do not collect $200, end of story. And here she was, handing it to me and encouraging me to read it because she thought that I would really like the story. Mind blown. That is how I came to read the Redwall series, and the beginning of my sister’s and my odd reading relationship.

Now we will often read the same books and talk about them. Generally books of her choosing because she finds my taste a little too heavy and I’ll read just about anything. What cracks me up though, is that every now and then she’ll call me to ask if I told her that she wouldn’t like a specific book, or if she’s avoided it her entire life because it was one of “mine.” Funny how something that seemed so important twenty years ago, doesn’t matter at all now. It still feels a little against the grain every time that I pick up a book, but I’m getting over it. Maybe next time it won’t take me so long to come up with ten titles.

Jen and Me

Little Sister – 1, Big Sister – 0

When I was younger I always assumed that I would eventually grow out of torturing my older sister. Stop pressing her buttons and annoying her simply for the pleasure of getting a rise out of her. You know maturity and all that. Thank goodness I was wrong, because let’s be honest, being a pain in her ass is one of my favorite past times! I think I will forever enjoy holding my finger an inch away from her and saying, “Not touching, can’t get mad.” True, I get elbowed every time I do it, but it’s worth it! Especially since now that I’m five inches taller than her, the elbow lands in my stomach instead of the ribs. Huge improvement! Recently I put a picture of the two of us up on Facebook which presented a lovely opportunity to drive her nuts, and since the exchange occurred over text messaging I can now share my mirth with you. So with out further ado, I present to you:

The Torture of Jen

Jen: What picture did you post of the two of us today?
Kat: You realize you could just go onto Facebook and look?
J: That’s so difficult when I can just ask you to send it to me. 🙂
K: Now why would I send it to you when instead I can tease you about having it and you not knowing which photo it is?
J: Cause you’re not a bitch.
K: I’m fairly certain that I’ve lost track of how many times you personally have called me a bitch. You’re argument is invalid.
J: I was hoping you’ve changed for the positive. Once again you dash my hopes.
K: Hey, change is scary. I don’t like to upset people.
J: 🙂 The real reason you should send it is because if you don’t I might actually go on Facebook and that’s not tease worthy.
K: But then you could catch up on all the fun memes I send you!
J: No
K:Then what’s the point in sending them?!?!
J: Because someday I will and then laugh historically for hours till I cry.
K: Well that day could be today!
J: No
K: And by the by, how does one laugh “historically?” Do you have to wear one of those powdered wigs while doing it?
J: Damn auto correct on the phone.
K: I bet you could laugh historically though. Set up some candles in a nice tableau. A couple of old timey costumes, then probably an overly formal polite laugh. That could be laughing historically. Or maybe just laughing at things in history. Maybe that’s laughing historically?
J: 🙂 You certainly seem busy at work today.
K: Swamped, how could you tell?
J: I just got a feeling.
. . .
J: Send the damn picture.
K: But I’m busy.
J: Lol.
K: Maybe I’d have time to send it if you stopped texting me.
. . .
K: Hello?
J: I was giving you the time you need to send the picture since you can’t read and send a text at the same time.
K: Oh! Well clearly that didn’t work since I was preoccupied thinking something had happened to you. So whatcha doin’ tonight?
J: No plans. You?
K: I have an article to write and an episode of Criminal Minds! 🙂 To watch. I’m watching Criminal Minds, not writing it.
J: 🙂 I figured that’s what you meant.
K: Well, just in case.
J: I assume if you get a job as a staff writer on a major TV show, I’ll hear about it pretty quick.
K: That’s a pretty safe bet.
J: Picture.
K: What picture?
J: You are a bitch.
K: See, there you go again!
J: You know you laughed.
K: Well that’s true, I did.
. . .
K: You realize that I sent the picture half an hour ago right?
J: You are a brat.
. . .
J: That’s a really good picture.

Jen and me

Yes, yes it is Jen. Now who’s sad that I’m not their little sister?