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I wrote a post for this blog today about Madonna, but ended up publishing it on my pro International Adoption Blog instead.

I have a commitment over there, and they pay me, so when I come up with 300 or more words that hang together without requiring some swearing and fit the parameter of “on topic” I’ll put it there every time. (I took out a WTF? that would have sauced it up a bit had I left it here, but it works without it.)

Of course, this leaves me with an empty rectangle on this site and a brain emptied from an output of 1,508 words today on blogs alone. Is it any wonder my fiction suffers?

I’m going to have to figure out something, though, as the couple of books I have in me are fighting to get out, percolating day and night and keeping me awake. I thought today … during my morning walk, treadmillified as it is to keep distractions to a dull roar … of starting a blog for a book. Maybe that’s what it will take to get me grinding out a couple of pages a day.

Anyone want to read a first draft in progress? Perhaps a password protected blog that will never see the light of day is a better thought.

What do my mother, Liz Taylor and a chimp named Jiggs have in common?

They were all born in 1932 and recently celebrated 75th birthdays. That’s a lot of candles.

How cool would it have been to have a party to fete all three? My mom, of course, would be a bit star struck … after all, she grew up on Tarzan movies and everyone knows all the girls were really watching for the scenes with Cheeta (He was SO cute!) … and would have fretted over Liz, knowing too much about her health problems over the years.

There’d have been a lot of common ground, so conversation would flow smoothly, if not evenly; Jiggs being all non-verbal, you know. Mom and Ms. Taylor could yack for a week on ex-husbands alone. Then, there’s another week on weddings … and my mom did have the hots for Eddie Fisher way back when. (With a few twists of the path, Carrie and I could have been half-sisters, as Mom would not have turned him down.)

Jiggs would have heard ALL about me from my mother. She’s well proud of my passion for non-human primates and has been very impressed by the personal relationships I’ve had in the past with some wonderful individuals of the Pan troglodytes persuasion, so I’m sure she’d tell him all about how my good friend, Judy, would draw for me, and how Josie loved tickles.

Maybe, if we start planning now, we’ll be able to pull something together for 2012 when they all turn 80.

Mom 1956

I saw a couple of clips from the Correspondent’s Dinner last night during the three hours of hours of CNN we get on Sundays here. David Letterman‘s “Top 10 GW Bush Moments” was all it should have been, with Dave having to do nothing but the countdown … the President did the rest, and I have no doubt there was a lot of debate during the whittling-down process to end up with only ten major embarrassments.

I was a bit surprised to hear that Rich Little is still doing gigs … he must be, what?, 70 by now? … but almost fell off my chair when I saw him. How much surgery has that guy had? He looks like some pod-person-mutant-manufactured version of the Rich Little I remember; vaguely familiar, but in a horribly-abused-by-surgery sort of way.

I’ll go off on politics in some other post, but I’m feeling compelled to address the topic of Rich Little’s face, and I have to ask some questions:

When did “freak” become more acceptable a look than “mature”?

Is a distorted and disturbing version of twenty-five honestly considered more attractive than a healthy look of sixty-five?

And …

Does no one own a mirror anymore?

A few years ago, Mark and I were in L.A., and invited to attend a big hoo-hah benefit event — one of those thousands-of-dollars-per-plate things — for Cedars Sinai Hospital’s breast cancer program. It was totally Hollywood, with Jay Leno as MC and music by, among others, Sting.

It had been a while since I’d rubbed shoulders with Tinsel Town’s rich and famous, so like every experience in the US after a few years of isolation on this island, there’s a door marked ‘Culture Shock’ that I must pass through before I’m back into the swing of my old American rhythm.

I suppose because it was a medical-related do, the older folks were out in force. There was enough fur in the place to keep the population of Fairbanks toasty … remember, this was Los Angeles in May or June; I can’t recall the exact date, but it was heading toward a SoCal summer … and such an abundance of jewelry that the tinkling of a hundred crystal chandeliers during an 8.2 earthquake would have been drowned out by the jingling.

What struck me, however, was not the gold, diamonds, pelts, original gowns, and household names … Larry King was at the next table … it was the faces, almost every one of which had been tugged back so far that mouths were stretched to close to twice their width and eyes had all gone Asian.

When these victims of the illusion of perpetual youth spoke, it was like watching South Park Canadians flapping away, the faces came that close to splitting completely in two. That look added to the Botox freeze … all expression killed at the root, so nary a nerve left to raise an eyebrow or indicate pleasure or dis … had the crowd looking distinctly alien, and not a little ugly.

Is this what California has come to? The Emperor’s New Face?

One of the women sharing our table, the wife of a dead star who’s parlayed her widowhood into minor celeb status, must be pushing 80. The signs of repeated nipping and tucking and deadening can not be missed, but the bizarreness of her face goes strangely well with the rest of her. On this evening, she was wearing a skin-tight gold lamé mini-dress with stiletto heals, and had her hair up in two pigtails with fluffy bangs.

Oh, my.

I was just bitching about island life, its frustrations and power cuts … I hadn’t even reached the part about shortages and how sorely toilet paper can be missed … and the pervading mentality that has moving at the speed of slug (the mollusk, thankyouverymuch) driving me round the bend.

Well … I take it back.

After reading this about decaptiation by children in Pakistan … following on the heels of the VA Tech mayhem, of course … I’m suddenly happy as a clam in white wine.

A boy … he looks about 12, doesn’t he? … hacked a guy’s head off. It wasn’t even a case of a clean swipe — ta da!: lopped off and rolling. Nope. It took time and effort to finally separate the man’s head completely from the rest of him, and this kid was in no particular hurry to pull it off … so to speak.

So, I’ll take the unhurried, under-motivated, and noncommittal that comes with the Seychellois. I’ll find amusing the fact that most here are far too sloth-like to bother with violence, and way too squeamish to do much more than stomp on a baby hedgehog. (This I’ve seen, but won’t related the incident here. Too brutal.)

Yeah. I’ll stay where I am.

Beheading boy

Trade Places?

Kansas is sounding good to me this week. Utah or Nebraska or Iowa … anywhere land-locked with a reliable electricity supply and Internet connections that run continuously for a few hours at a time.

The lack of both here had me ready to pack up, lock, stock and snorkel gear, and run away to somewhere, anywhere, no matter how boring or flat. I’d had it up to my none-too-patient-under-any-circumstance eyebrows with an island work ethic … now there’s an oxymoron! … that allows for outright lies to substitute for customer service and finds any inclination to hurry a distinct minus.

“Hang loose” may be the theme song for the arm wattle that flaps when I wave these days, but as a mindset it’s beyond my scope. I’m a problem-solver, not a sit-back-and-waiter, so when things go wrong, I want answers and I want them NOW.

What could a week like this one inspire in me, then, but a powerful urge to flee? I’m introspective and self-critical enough to notice that I simply may not be hardwired to survive the slow pace of Seychelles incompetence and slovenly performance. Perhaps, after eleven years on this island I’ve had enough, reached my breaking point and need to look at moving back into the real world … the world that works and works fast, puts up with little that doesn’t meet perfection, that demands the best, the fastest, the sleekest.

Ummmmmmm.

But, then again …

There’s the gun thing.

No such thing as school shootings here. (The crazies tend to drink themselves into early graves to which they go alone.) The very concept is so foreign that I’m being asked to explain how such a tragedy could possibly happen … me! as if I have an inside track to the mind of psycho America.

I left the US BOJ (Before OJ), so have missed what must be the strangest period in the country’s history and have no clue, no clue at all, how or why a VA Tech could happen.

You know? Now that I think about it, I guess I’ll get the candles out, put pen to paper occasionally, and stay put. Not Kansas

With a commitment of a minimum of 86 posts per month at my blog job for Adoption.com … each at between 300 and 500 words … I must be out of my mind to make myself another empty rectangle that needs filling on a regular basis, but even with all the blather I impart there I find myself feeling stifled and longing for an outlet.

It could be that keeping to topic is beginning to drive me ’round the bend … discipline makes me cranky … or perhaps it’s working for an organization I know to be of a conservative leaning, meaning I can’t very well pull out the stops, throw in the colorful language I’m fond of or get down and dirty in the oh-so-many ways I long to on topics ranging from the adoption-related to politics of both the countries I hold passports for, or mouth-off in general on whatever on any given day constitutes the pissed-off-able.

Maybe it’s island fever prompting me to extend one more bit beyond the time allowed in a day, setting myself up to begrudge each trip to the beach and miss the azure 86ºF waters that are often the only saving grace offered up amongst the frustrations a dearth of necessary items raise almost daily (toilet paper, onions …), the bane of island life.

Hell if I know, but I’m here, and knowing me I’ll be staying and yapping away in this blank rectangle for months to come.

By way of intro: I’m Sandra. I live on the island of Mahé in the country of Seychelles, a postage stamp of a bit of land in the Indian Ocean about 1000 miles off the coast of East Africa. I share my piece of paradise with my husband, Mark, and our two kids, Sam and Cj.

Our family tree has widely spread roots, with me starting out in the US, Mark coming into the world in England and the kids Cambodian-born. None of us are where we began life this time around, but we’re settled here for the foreseeable future where I’ll be blogging away from Blog Island in the pauses between everything else.