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May 27, 2004

The Latest Development

I thought that the world at large would like to know that I have now developed a tic under my right eye, a twitchy little muscle that runs through the recently acquired dark circle (thank you stress and sleep inconsistencies).

I've had this tic before, during the era of the voice lessons. I guess it is time to do some yoga or go on a bender or something. Me, I think it's a plot to make sure that I look as degenerated as possible for my upcoming 10th high school reunion.

I think the tic started promptly after it became clear that I need to make a very important, very hard, very stab-in-the-dark decision about Dad's care. I feel old today, but not old enough to make this call. When are the grownups going to step in and take over?

Tic tic tic.

Posted by hilatron at 09:12 PM | Comments (7) | TrackBack

May 24, 2004

Your Mission

If anyone out there can translate the following phrase into Latin:

"Half-Assed Is Better Than No Ass."

Then you would be my hero, because that is my new motto, yo. I realize that I'm missing out on a pleasing grammatical parallel, but I decided not to go for "half an ass is better than no ass" because heaven forfend that anyone think I am promoting the cause of dismembered donkeys.

This past week half-assedness generated, among other things: a successful business trip, a soul-rejuvenating visit to New York City, many lovely visits with friends, a wholesale order, a new skirt, and two square feet of free desk space. These are all things that would not have happened had I sat around waiting for the whole ass to materialize. What has half-assedness done for you?

Posted by hilatron at 11:22 AM | Comments (6) | TrackBack

May 17, 2004

This Just In

One million good wishes to everyone getting their same-sex marriage on today! May you have many happy, prosperous, Constitutional amendment-free years together.

Congratulations also to the Massachusetts Supreme Court for stepping up and doing what's right; and boo to the haters and the naysayers. Not that we have to worry about them; they are creating their own obsoletion.

Posted by hilatron at 09:46 AM | Comments (3) | TrackBack

May 11, 2004

Project Dad #4: Customer Service Voice

Gasp. I need to stop telling myself "now is the time when things will get better," because it's just a mean trick. My tendency to overestimate how much I can do in a given amount of time is legendary; my list expands infinitely into the misty future.

But I wanted to tell you about the Customer Service Voice. This might be the thing that breaks me, my friend.

Let me explain how it all began. It has become clear that the First Law of Project Dad runs: All tasks, no matter how mundane, must expand to fulfill the maximum potential for complexity. This law supercedes any and all actions of the puny force affected by the law, which is me. Thus the bank with Dad's safety deposit box is the only bank in town closed on Saturday mornings. Thus the ride to the eye doctor is mysteriously cancelled. Thus the disability check comes in just as I reach the goal of "spending down the assets."

This would all be fine, I mean, this is how things go, and I could jump around like a cranky gnat, yelling and bitching and having no effect whatsoever on the imperturbable creaky machinery of the long-term care industry and its numerous spawn, and the world would continue merrily on. But. All of these chores that build the brick wall I am throwing myself against, they involve other people. My intersection with these people involves also intersecting with the system* they work in, and when there is a problem, it is usually because my request and I do not fit neatly into a slot in the system.

This is where the Voice comes in, the Customer Service Voice. When it becomes clear (as it always does) that Team Project Dad is different, that for one reason or another we do not meet the criteria of the Population Served or the Target Market or just the plain old average of all the different possible people with their innumerable different possible issues, that is when whatever poor person I am tormenting has to bust out the Customer Service Voice. I've used it myself in various grim minimum-wage scenarios; it's sometimes the only barrier between you and the person you're about to disappoint, maybe piss off, definitely inconvenience.

The Customer Service Voice works like this: as it grows apparent to you both that the person you're speaking to can't help you, the voice rises in pitch (nonthreatening, to soften the blow to come). A faintly Midwestern whine enters the tone; vowels are extended and consonants are clipped (folksy, hey, I'm just a regular person like you, please don't let me be the one you flip out on) - "okay" becomes "ooooo-kheeee." The vocabulary changes; the words get bigger, the phrases ("check with Legal," "our policy does not allow," "not possible at this time") become more rote than meaning. The Customer Service Voice is an advanced, exquisite, means of telegraphing the message: You are special. You are different. You are making us work hard to figure you out, and damned if you aren't going to pay for that.

It has gotten so that I can pinpoint the moment the Voice happens. On the phone, there's always a pause as the person you're talking to stops the train, switches tracks over to the "special requests" section of training, stalls while they figure out if they need to bother the supervisor about you. In person, it's usually the sudden lack of eye contact that gives it away, perhaps as your victim casts around for the person with authority or with the key to the register.

It's no one's fault that we are not an easy match for any goods or services, not ours and not the employees of the underfunded, overworked bureaucracies on which we cast our hopes. But this knowledge does not actually do me a whole lot of good as I resist the urge to yell at yet another person who has to reluctantly make my life harder, swallowing frustration daily because there is no one to pinpoint as the bad guy. The Customer Service Voice, my ever-present bane, is the symbol for all these masses of people on the one side who want to help but can't, and on the other side who need help but can't figure out how to mold themselves into the proper pigeonhole, and in the middle all this fucking wasted energy spent categorizing, and checking, and balancing, and hoop-jumping, and peeling off slivers of resources to be doled out grudgingly and with suspicion.

*Brief diversion for inside joke: the phrase "the system" has become iconic among those in the know, as it is something my father tends to go on about in bad moments. If he's not figuring out the system, he's working the system or being mad at the system for not providing him with decent food, or for some other complaint less grounded in reality. So you have to laugh at how, three months into this thing, here I am with a bee in my own bonnet about the system. The line that delineates healthy from sick, able from unable, becomes murkier every day.

Posted by hilatron at 11:57 AM | Comments (2) | TrackBack

May 05, 2004

Stop. Breathe. Go again!

Whew, this week. My three lives - Project Dad, Crafty Robot, regular worky work and lifey life - have all reached a peak of busyness. It's very annoying to go to the office in the morning with a whole list of faxes to be sent and illicit personal use of the color printer to do, only to discover that they have all these requirements they ask of you to earn your keep. In short, I am having trouble with the endlessly shifting priorities, the multiple fronts on which I am fighting the To-Do List war. It would not be overstating the case to say that I'm getting a bit twitchy.

Anyway, thanks to the five or six people who still visit this blog once in a while, even though the blog is never home, the doorstep darkened, the welcome mat pulled into the dingy hallway and crumpled on the floor. We'll return soon I promise, with more tales of bureaucratic absurdity and the special "customer service voice" of New England retail employees. Until then, picture me as a multi-tasking Octotron with a methamphetamine problem and you'll be pretty close.

Posted by hilatron at 10:50 AM | Comments (8) | TrackBack

May 01, 2004

As the channels that we

As the channels that we were unauthorizedly getting through our ultra-basic cable hookup disappear (goodbye, Cartoon Network, Comedy Central, FX, VH1), my love-hate relationship with Animal Planet grows ever more intense. I believe that I have already mentioned my embarassingly emotional reaction to "Animal Cops," which kept me up until 2am last night the better to be traumatized by the animal hoarders, the "bait dogs," and the rectum tumors.

Now I am watching a show about "bad" animals. They do this all the time on this channel, with the judging. Right now at this moment they are chiding elephant seals for fighting, when all the elephant seals are doing is being elephant seals to the best of their ability. In recent weeks I have been treated to a countdown of the world's "grossest" animals, and a "who's the scarier predator: hippos or crocodiles?" faceoff with an actual points system. I do not know what is with the smarmy. Do people respond to this? Does it make them feel better to think about the poor oral hygeine of the monitor lizard?

Posted by hilatron at 01:36 PM | Comments (5)