Saturday 26 April 2008

For Your Twisted Amusement

I don't visit my brother's grave. Not because I didn't love my brother, or even because cemeteries spook me, but because it breaks my heart to see the shiny marble headstone that doesn't have my name on it. It took twenty years for my parents to work up the courage to have a proper marker made for him, and the day we had the memorial service to unveil it I remember walking over and staring for about five minutes at the beautifully carved gray and black memorial that bore my parents' and older brother's names, but no mention of the sister who, although young at his time of death, has missed him every single day of her life.

My family are not cruel people, and to say anything about it would hurt them. I can't do that. But neither can I work up the nerve to visit him and see that hated stone staring accusingly at me. So I went to the owner of a private park where Michael and I used to walk when I was a toddler, and I obtained his permission to build a memorial of my own. I visit it often.

I don't bring him flowers. Most eighteen-year-old boys don't like flowers much when they're alive, and it seems kind of disrespectful to force them on him now just because he's dead. Sometimes I bring music for him; insane 120-beat-per-minute acid house junk that he likes and that hurts my ears, but lets me feel close to him. But most of the time I take him baked goods. Instead of a marble headstone I used a large boulder, big enough to sit on, in which I carved his name and dates of birth and death, and in front of it I build brownie mausoleums, pyramids of chocolate chip or peanut butter or almond or lemon-zest cookies, little inukshuk of banana bread and date-walnut loaf to welcome visitors and point the way to the great log cabin in the sky, the way their stone counterparts do up North. On special occasions I make applesauce squares. I wasn't old enough to bake when Michael died, but if he'd lived he would have loved my applesauce squares. Everyone does.

Michael was a teenager in the late seventies and early eighties, the age of individuality, where every teenager's wish was to stand out from the crowd. In life he did this by bleaching his hair and wearing black leather and eyeliner. So what I've done seems fitting. Because I have faith that wherever his essence may reside, he's happy and smug in the assurance that he's probably the only person in the world whose memorials come chocolate-coated.

Monday 21 April 2008

Exercise

Exercise.

The thing I hate about exercising and healthy eating is, you have to do it every day.

Now that sounds stupidly obvious. OF COURSE you have to do it every day. But when you're in the place that I am, far enough along with the diet and exercise regime that it's lost its novelty, but not far enough along that it's become an integral part of your life yet, it seems horribly unfair that it has to be a daily thing. I get such a rush when I jog for an hour or eat my 5-a-day of fruits and vegetables (and not much else for the day), it seems to me that I should get to savour that smug, self-righteous feeling for a few days at least, the way you do when you get an A in class or a nice compliment from someone you fancy. But no, I go to sleep and when I wake up I have to do it all over again.

Of course, I haven't been doing enough of it lately.

Since Mom had her op in November my exercise regime has gone to hell. I didn't notice this so much in Nov-Dec, because the combined stress of running around getting things for Mom and breaking up with Oli and thinking I was going nuts because of the nasty notes and journal comments and phone calls I was getting, I dropped 28 lbs in a little under a month, plus a couple more on top. Stupidly, I just assumed that people were being kind when they asked me if I'd lost weight. I didn't even notice it, really, until after Christmas I had my check-up with the doctor and he asked me if I'd started a new diet and exercise plan and I realised, actually, I hadn't had time to exercise AT ALL in the last two months.

When I saw him, I immediately realised that I needed to start up at the gym again, and I had great plans to go, and then mono (glandular fever) knocked me on my ass. And just when I was recovering that I got the Bell's Palsy, and was banned from any type of exercise, and then I had a nasty flu, and now somehow without my realising it's nearly May and I haven't been to the gym for about 5 months.

Oh, it's not like I don't get any exercise at all. What with walking to the shop and around the house and running up and down the stairs all the time, as well as the planned walks I take daily, I end up walking about five miles a day. Plus my standard ballet exercises, which at the moment take me half an hour to do them all, and I try to do them twice a day, although when I get the repetitions up (with the approval of my physiotherapist, who thinks it's better to not do enough than do too much; what with needing to be thin for Tony and Debbie's wedding I generally disagree with her, but nevermind) they'll take me an hour.

But those are really just stretches. The most aerobic I get is balancing on my hands and heels in a triangle to stretch my obliques and serratus anterior. Not exactly Cardio Central.

So what I really need is something that will get my heart pumping. Preferably a treadmill. I'm not overly keen on the cross-trainer machines, at least not as part of my daily regime. I can take or leave an exercise bike, although I kind of like those ones where you get to sit in a chair and pedal. And rowers...well, they're OK, but I don't care all that much about my lats and trapezius, and I can tone up my arms just with weights.

(Yes, I know that you should use every machine to get a well-rounded workout, but I don't care all that much about being well-rounded; some parts of my body are fine as they are.)

The question is whether I should try and find a good gym, which would offer me all these things but might be a pain in the butt to get to with no car, or try and buy a treadmill, which would offer me the convenience of working at home - as well as not feeling horribly inadequate because of all the beautiful skinny girls who seem to inhabit the gyms around St. Albans - but I wouldn't have a clue where to put.

Actually, the REAL question is what I can afford.

Probably Mom will kill me if I buy yet more exercise equipment, so I'm still leaning towards the gym, but I need to find one that's a) close to me, or that I can get to easily, either by bus or bribing someone with a car to go with me, and b) will let me pay per session, and not too much. I don't want a pay monthly gym when I don't know how many times a week I can get there.

Oh, how I wish I were rich. *sigh*

And that's how my life is right now, really. Not much to mention, because there's not much going on besides exercise and wedding preparations and standard things like eating and sleeping and playing DS.

Although Hotel Babylon started on Sky, and after a year or more of refusing to watch because it looked so crass and tacky, I'm totally addicted after just the first episode. Shame the character that Michael Obiora plays is gay, because he has the face of an angel. Not that I care one whit whether someone is gay or not, just that it cuts down on my fantasising when it's a guy I'm attracted to.

So what's going on with you, dear reader?