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How to Have a Weird Dental Visit

These are the things my substitute dentist said while I sat, very helpless, in the chair staring back at him. If you are also a dentist, and you’ve been thinking to yourself, “What can I say to my patients that will make them possibly laugh but definitely feel weird?” here is a helpful list to get you started:

“Youโ€™ve got a lot of bones in the top of your mouth, which is totally okay! Unless you need dentures when youโ€™re older, and then theyโ€™ll have to scrape the bones away. Best to just keep taking care of your teeth.” *laughs*

Him: Have you always had that mole on the side of your face?ย Me: Yes. Him: Oh. Alright then.

“You should probably floss more. Iโ€™m not very good at flossing myself, but Iโ€™d definitely recommend it for you.”

โ€œWould you like me to order you a pizza while youโ€™re waiting? They could probably get here pretty fast.โ€

โ€œYou might want to ask for a receipt before you leave in case you get pulled over driving home. Since your mouth is so numb a police officer might think youโ€™re drunk. Just an idea.”

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Nap’s Care Guide

This is the guide we give to anyone who decides they’re willing to watch our dramatic dog overnight. Many people have told me it’s great reading material, so here you go:


Food:

He gets one scoop for breakfast and one for dinner – he eats breakfast anytime before noon (because we are neglectful and forget) and dinner anytime after five (probably whenever youโ€™re eating – he likes to pretend he’s a person and eat with you). A lot of the time he’ll refuse to eat his food because he was raised on the streets where he got delicious meat scraps all the time, and now he thinks he’s too good for dog food.

Water:

Heโ€™s bad at drinking water. We think he never learned how to do it properly (or maybe learned from a cat). Heโ€™ll also try to chug a bunch of water right after you take him outside before bed like a toddler, so stay vigilant. 

Walks:

We try to walk him every 3-5 hours (but he can go up to 6 or 7 if necessary). Heโ€™s usually good about just going out whenever you wake up (on weekends he turns into a teenager and doesn’t wake up until 10 am).

Heโ€™s fine sleeping in his bed at night, but heโ€™ll likely try to sneakily crawl into a humanโ€™s bed in the middle of the night and situate himself in the nooks and crannies of a body until you canโ€™t move. You can put up with this or you can not put up with this (weโ€™re pretty 50/50). 

Sometimes heโ€™ll start hacking like heโ€™s going to throw up everywhere, but 99% of the time heโ€™s just being dramatic.ย 

If you pass a skateboarder while walking, heโ€™ll wait until it’s right beside you and then try to attack it.

His fears: vacuums, brooms, blenders, drills, balls, basically anything that makes a noise or moves, large puddles, bouquets of roses, saxophone players, his own farts, loneliness.

His loves: cuddling, long walks where he gets to cross streets, chasing squirrels and rabbits, dog ice cream, playing hide and seek, butt rubs, howling out the window, sitting on your feet, Watermelon Sugar by Harry Styles.

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Why Middle Schoolers Shouldn’t Date

In sixth grade, I got my very first boyfriend. Weโ€™ll call him Reid. I honestly donโ€™t remember how Reid and I started dating (and by โ€œdatingโ€ I mean messaging each other our deepest, darkest secrets for hours on AIM every night and then barely knowing how to speak to one another at school), but I do know it was around the holidays, because I received a lot of gifts.

For Christmas, he gave me a small penguin inside of a candle box, which I appreciated, because then the penguin smelled very strongly of cinnamon. For Valentineโ€™s Day, I got a small pink teddy bear and a card with a penguin on it giving a hug (if this wasnโ€™t already apparent, I was obsessed with penguins). At some point, he gave me earrings (probably penguins), and I only remember this because he spent an entire recess relentlessly searching the grass for one that I accidentally dropped. I also remember not having the heart to tell him that my ears werenโ€™t even pierced.ย 

Reid was an absolutely perfect first boyfriend. I mean really, the kindest and most caring boy youโ€™d ever meet. But he was also very clingy. And short. I probably could have dealt with those things individually, but the combination started to get to me. 

He always wanted to be next to me – on the bus, on the gym bleachers, at the lunch table. You name it. And if we werenโ€™t together in person, we had to be messaging each other. I like to think that now, as an almost-27-year-old, this wouldnโ€™t bother me as much. So the boy enjoys my company, how flattering. But middle-school me had shit to do (rewatch March of the Penguins? Take care of my Tamagotchi? Bedazzle my weekend jean shorts? I donโ€™t know), and she needed some space.ย 

Things were going just fine, but then Reid got greedy. He stopped being satisfied with our classic little middle school romance and needed to go on a real-person date. 

So we ended up at Trippโ€™s, an Applebee-esque restaurant. And by โ€œwe,โ€ I donโ€™t just mean the two of us. I mean me, Reid, my mother, Reidโ€™s mother, my little brother, and Reidโ€™s little sister. โ€œThatโ€™s not so bad, Emily, you could just let your mothers do the talking and chill out while you munch on your chicken fingers.โ€ No no no.ย 

To simulate a real date, Reid and I were told to sit at our own table for two. Our mothers and siblings sat at their own table, about five feet away. Close enough to eavesdrop, but not close enough to be of any real help in this dire situation. At one point, an elderly man walked by with his wife and exclaimed, โ€œLook at that Eileen, young loveโ€ and then heartily laughed.ย 

Was this an ideal way to spend my Saturday? No. Was I sweating through my Limited Too shirt due to embarrassment and panic? Obviously. But it could have all been forgotten if Reid hadnโ€™t ordered the potato soup.ย 

First of all, I remember being incredibly freaked out by the fact that this middle schooler ordered potato soup as his meal. I was expecting a burger, or grilled cheese, or even just a heaping plate of fries. Potato soup was foreign to me. I did not know this boy who ordered potato soup. 

Get over it, I thought. Maybe he’s very sophisticated. But then the potato soup dribbled down his chin, the chunks of potato stuck in place on his face, and that was too much for me. That was the end.ย 

Our breakup did not go well. I felt so guilty and upset about shattering his heart that I physically gave myself strep throat (which was actually quite convenient, since I got to skip school for a few days), and Reid was so anguished that he signed up to sing Daniel Powterโ€™s โ€œBad Dayโ€ in the school talent show. Every day in choir practice, I got to watch Reid belt out some heavy hitting lines very passionately and very off-key while everyone glared in my direction:ย 

Where is the moment we needed the most?

You kick up the leaves, and the magic is lost

They tell me your blue sky’s faded to gray

They tell me your passion’s gone away

And I don’t need no carrying on

Daniel Powter/A distressed Reid

And to make matters worse, Reidโ€™s mother (who I was sure hated my guts) was the school librarian. So naturally, I couldnโ€™t walk into the library ever again. Which was a real problem for me, because I LOVED the library. Youโ€™d think I would have thought about my love of books before going and seducing the librarianโ€™s son.ย 

So that, everyone, is why you shouldnโ€™t date in middle school. Or, as a more important rule, avoid potato soup. No one needs to see you eat that.ย 

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Maybe I’ve Been Watching Too Much Stranger Things

So the other day Addy and I were walking the dog, and I noticed that the sky was filled with large white fuzzy things. And when I say filled, I mean filled – I could spot the foreign-looking particles as far as my eyes could see. They were drifting lazily through the air in a way that was so nonthreatening that it became threatening. They were like cute little cotton balls that you wanted to rub all over your face, but they also gave you an ominous feeling like you might die soon.

And this is embarrassing to admit, but my first thought was, I am in the Upside Down. I remember looking around quickly, trying to find other signs to back up this theory. I couldn’t tell you what I was expecting to find – maybe dark sticky vines growing on everything around me, or Will Byers frantically running around. But I do remember feeling very panicked.

So then I asked Addy what he thought the large fuzzy things in the air were, and he said, very matter-of-factly, “pollen.” He could tell by looking at my face that this was not the answer I was expecting, so he asked, “wait, what did you think they were?” and I very quietly whispered “the Upside Down” while trying not to make eye contact with him. Then he just stood still and gave me that deep stare that means he’s rethinking all of his life choices.

And then I sneezed.

Posted in Blogging

The Cooking Show You’ve Always Wanted

I told Addy that me starting a YouTube cooking channel could be my latest career, and his response was “it would be too boring.”

But then while making dinner I had to wear sunglasses while chopping the onions because I couldn’t find my ski goggles, and then I accidentally squirted garlic into my eye and crumpled to the ground while screaming, and after he strategically poured water on my face while I was still in the fetal position he said, “I take it back, I would definitely watch your cooking show.”

So it looks like I won that one, everyone.

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Things I’m Taking into 2021

  1. An appetite for avocados. This is a big deal, everyone. When avocados randomly became trendy, I thought they were disgusting. They are mushy green ovals that basically have a round rock in the middle and that barely have a taste. But people were offended that I didn’t like them, and I was embarrassed that I, a millennial, thought they were gross, so I forced myself to eat them anyway. Many months later, it worked. I actually like them. I can eat an entire avocado half plain with a spoon and not gag. Talk about self improvement.
  2. A crocheting addiction. I am not exaggerating when I say I spent almost all of 2020 crocheting, pulling apart what I made, crocheting it again, pulling it apart again, and finally finishing it. The only reason this addiction came to fruition is because I was assigned six different articles for work on how to crochet things. So by the time I finished thoroughly researching and writing each one, I already knew how to crochet. Might as well try it for real, I thought. Two hats, a scarf, three sweaters, five bags, a large blanket, and too many Netflix shows later, I cannot seem to stop.
  3. 43 more books. Am I going to end up like Rory Gilmore, stacking books under my bed and in drawers because I don’t have space for them? Yes. Am I upset about it? Absolutely not.
  4. Steadily increasing debt. The last time I checked, I have paid off -4% of my student loans. Negative four percent. So things are clearly going well on that front.
  5. Knowledge of what it’s like to live in a fireplace. See the article I wrote about ash falling from the sky and why it’s important to eat ice cream.
  6. Dog mind-reading skills. I’ve spent so much time with my dog by now that we are basically the same being. He is really just another of my appendages. Every morning I wake up to find that sometime during the night he crawled up under my arms and fell asleep next to my face. If I go to the bathroom, he comes and lays on my feet. I can look at him and tell if he’s anxious about something or doesn’t like the music I’m listening to or wants to play with his squirrel toy but the scary vacuum is in the way.
  7. Nightly dreams consisting of Harry Styles flirting with me. Honestly, I hope to never get rid of these. Keep them coming. The only downside is when I wake up and the realization hits that I did not, in fact, sit across from Harry at dinner last night while he gracefully ate spaghetti and complimented my taste in romantic comedies.
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Right Foot, Wrong Foot

When I was in the third grade, I played a foot in our school play. Like, a literal foot. And I have a lot of questions about this.

Mainly, what was this play even about? What was the plot? Was it suspenseful or comedic? I genuinely can’t remember, and I hate myself for it. It was written by one of the (more eccentric) third grade teachers, but I wasn’t smart enough to save the script with my lines in it that I had to memorize. Yes, that’s right. I HAD LINES. As a FOOT. And not even just one line, but way too many. We spent weeks preparing for this play, and I can just imagine myself standing in front of the mirror at home practicing what could only have been very deep, reflective dialogue that I would later say in front of confused-looking parents as I wore a giant painted foam foot on top of my head.

Maybe you’re wondering which “characters” the other students played. Was it just a collection of feet children onstage? Were all of the other appendages present? And I really wish I could tell you. I know there was a hand and an ear, but that’s all I’ve got. Which brings me to another important question: did I try out for the role of “Foot”? Like, was this something I was striving for? Did I go home and tell my mother, “I hope I get to play the foot! What a dream that would be!” Or did my teacher just decide, “you know, I think Emily would make a perfect Foot” and that was that. I don’t know which is worse.

I blame my family for this lapse in foot memories. They must have known I’d want to remember this when I was older. Watch a video of myself speaking, all foot-like. Probably even reenact it at home. But no, all I have is one picture, taken next to the men’s restroom.

While I’m still not sure whether this was a net positive or negative for me, it did provide me with an Instagram caption I’m quite proud of.

I hope my children ask me how my third grade acting career went so I can tell them it started off on the wrong foot.

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Naked or Not?

Last night I had a dream that I was starting grad school, and my first class was in this huge auditorium full of people. Except everyone around me had forgotten their masks, and I had forgotten my mask too, so all of the students were looking at each other and judging their seat neighbors for breathing too much in their direction while also feeling guilty about breaking the rules themselves. No one wanted to sit next to me which made me feel terrible, but I also didn’t want to sit next to anyone either, so hundreds of people were just staring at each other while feeling self conscious and panicked.

I can’t remember a specific time when I dreamed that I was in front of a bunch of people naked, but I can tell you this dream felt the same. That embarrassed, mildly mortifying dread. How could I have left the house without putting that on? Will I ever be allowed in public again? What would my mother think?

So basically I’ve decided that having a dream where you go out in public but forgot to put on a mask is the new having a dream where you forgot your clothes. Instead of your entire body being naked, it’s just your face. Which might be worse, because no one will get sick from seeing me dream-naked. (Hopefully.)

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A Love Note to Goats

Well everyone, last night I finally fulfilled my dream of drinking wine and eating sour patch kids with goats while we all watch Edward Scissorhands. And I have photographic proof:

I’ve never wanted attention so badly from something that has four legs and smells. Addy and I spent most of the movie trying to gain the affection of each goat, until finally one decided to sprawl out behind our backs (which created a very welcome back warmer). Domino (we are on a first-name basis now) got so comfortable that an employee had to push him off of us so we could leave. It was everything I could have dreamed of and more.

I also learned that it may look like a goat has stopped suddenly in front of you to stare deeply into your eyes and talk to your soul, but it’s actually just peeing.

Here is an additional blurry picture of Addy being eaten alive by five goats at once.

Happy Halloween!

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So You Want to Write a Memoir

Writing a memoir is a daunting task. When I tell people that’s one of my main goals (and has been since I was 12), they usually either ask, “oh, aren’t you too young to have lived an interesting life?” or “how do you remember everything well enough to write about it?”

First of all, you don’t need to have lived an insanely exotic life to write a memoir. Obviously this helps (my life has had many plot twists, just you wait and see), but what makes memoirs so good is our ability to relate to certain parts of them, as well as the quality of the writing. You could have lived on a pirate ship for a year and have hundreds of wild tales, but if you tell those tales poorly, you’ve got a bad memoir. The best writers can write about anything and make it captivating, including their own ordinary lives.

Many people assume the only way to write an authentic memoir is to have a stack of old diaries or journals that depict the details of their lives. Sure, if you wrote in a diary throughout your life, that would be super helpful to refer back to. But people seem to forget that our lives are already centered around documenting every little thing we do. I can scroll back through my Facebook profile and see everything I’ve posted since I was 13 (this isn’t necessarily for the best). If you’re trying to dig up memories from your past in the hopes of turning them into great writing, read through your tweets. Peruse your Instagram pictures. Look through your photos and texts and handwritten letters. Call a friend or family member and ask them for a story. I’m sure you’ll stumble across things you had forgotten about and create stellar writing out of them.