Skip to main content

San Francisco Part III

Last day in San Francisco and I was finally starting to relax. Nobody had tugged on my arm to ask me to do something (except for the homeless people outside the hotel who wanted my spare change. Huh. I guess that's not much different than at home).

I guess I was feeling a little bit uninhibited as we were waiting for the elevator in the hotel to go get some breakfast. We'd watched WAAYYY too many Michael Jackson music videos. I started singing "Beat It" and doing my Michael Jackson dance pop and lock, hipping and hopping. I was too caught up in my own performance (which, in my own little mind, was amazing) that I didn't hear the elevator door open. I turned to a captive audience who were looking at me, wide eyed. Some were giggling.

What puzzled me is that two blocks away, there were thousands of men dressed in drag. Downstairs in the lobby you could find men in suits wearing plastic rainbow necklaces. On the street outside the hotel I had seen men and women sporting fairy wings, Indian headresses, different colored mohawks, and fishnet stockings.

And these people were staring at me like I was a freak?

There was really only one thing to do at this point. Moonwalk out of their eyesight.

And so I did. I tripped.

Comments

  1. I love your SF stories--totally cracking up that you tripped while moonwalking. How fun that you and Scott got to go! I LOVE SF.

    ReplyDelete
  2. we would be the best of friend if you lived here, or I lived there. People look at me like I'm a freak too, I sing in the car at the top of my lungs, and I dance "to myself" all the time.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Oh absolutely you fancinate me! But I am talking about all those hoodlums that are withholding pictures and glimpses into their private life. Out of the 30 blogs I read only about 3 have given me regular postings. Bunch of bums.

    On to your post, at least the onlookers didn't join in and harmonize with you. I had a guy at walgreens totally break into my solo.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I love all three parts of your SF trip. You give much more info than Mr. Taylor. Next time you go traveling give me a jingle, between the four of us girls we have all sorts of hair products in 3 ounce bottles! That is the perk of having a grandchild (soon to be two) live across the country.

    ReplyDelete
  5. That's just good, clean entertainment, people.

    ReplyDelete
  6. These updates are keeping me in stitches!

    ReplyDelete
  7. Oh Nancy, you should write a book. You have such a good sense of humor. I love reading your takes on life. Tee Hee

    ReplyDelete
  8. I am proud to have the strangest mom (you) in the world, I just have to say that. After my friends meet you, they tell me how much it explains about me. I wonder if I should be alarmed by that..... Of course, they also tell me that you rock, so...

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

How To Be A Dedicated Neurotic

Going through old files from graduate school, I found an invaluable pamphlet. Be a Dedicated Neurotic Remember the Past. . . and Regret it. Abhor the Present. Dread the Future. 1. Become preoccupied with the body, and make a long list of symptoms. Make them sound very clinical and professional... 2. BLAME your boss, your spouse, your partner, your neighbor, your kid. THEY are responsible for your miseries. 3. Feel trapped. You couldn't possibly declare your own independence without hurting someone's feelings. 4. Overeat. Rationalize and eat! Eat an insulated wall around yourself. Diet for a few days and say it doesn't work for you. 5. Self-pity. No matter what, feel sorry for yourself. Agonize over things about which no one cares. 6. Don't ever try. That way nobody can really accuse you of failure. You can always say, "But I could have done it." 7. Stress how shy you are. Insist that the world must come to you. You're special. 8. Your agg...

Pioneer Trek

Utah was founded by the Mormon pioneers in 1847 after enduring unimaginable losses and seeking a place of peace. July 24th marks the anniversary that the first wagon trains arrived in the Salt Lake Valley. Their numbers were greatly diminished by crossing the country in wagons and handcarts, dying of scurvy, tuberculous, malaria, starvation, unidentified fevers, and freezing to death. This, they found preferable to facing the extermination order put forth by Governor Boggs of Missouri. I believe this is the most courageous act of faith - to leave all they had that was familiar and travel the rough terrain in the unknown in search of a place where they could worship in peace. My daughters left this morning for a small re-creation of what the pioneers experienced. I don't love the idea since I know so many of the pioneers died but it is a way for many of the youth to connect to their ancestors and understand what many of the early members endured for their faith. The youth were asked...

Public Notice

Dear friends, neighbors, enemies, and people I don't know: Understand that it all started out very innocently. I planned my garden carefully. Everything had a place and plenty of room. Within my planning, I included three spaghetti squash plants, two yellow squash and two zucchini. Out of the 7 plants, two came up and they weren't my beloved spaghetti squash. This year we have added two grow boxes to the south side of the house. One of which we brought in a garden mix of soil and I planted neat little rows of seeds. The other was left untouched. All I saw was dirt. So I started pushing squash seeds into it. I don't even know what kind they are. When they came up, I transplanted them so they would have room to grow. I also noticed I had two squash plants (pumpkins, perhaps?) growing in the main garden that I hadn't planted. Apparently, I had also dropped a seed in the dirt outside the grow boxes and it's coming up as a squash plant, too. Last count, I hav...