• Tangled Memories

    tangledI’ve always had long, straight hair. You’d think that would make life easier—no curls to tame, no frizz to battle. But somehow, my straight hair has always managed to find its own special ways to get me tangled in trouble.

    And honestly? That theme started way back in childhood.

    The Daily Ponytail Pain Olympics

    When I was little, Mom took charge of styling my long, straight hair every morning—ponytails, braids, neat little parts. She had a vision, and my job was simply to sit still and survive it. What didn’t help was that even as a kid (and still now), I couldn’t stand “sticky-outies.” Every single hair needed to be smooth, tight, and perfectly in place. One little piece sticking out of a ponytail could send me into full hysterics, and Mom would have to stop everything and fix it before I could function again.

    Mom would grab the brush and immediately begin working like she was on a mission. I’d wince, pout, or try to subtly shrink away from the next swipe. Naturally, the more I reacted, the firmer her brushing became.

    Eventually came the line every child of the 70s and 80s heard at least once:

    “If you think THAT hurts—I’ll show you something that really hurts…”

  • Y2K: History’s Most Boring Apocolypse

    In 1999, my job description was basically “professional panic manager.” By day, I was a Senior Field Consultant for Consultis. By night, I moonlighted with my own company, Schneider Consulting. Translation: I got paid to keep computers from throwing a digital temper tantrum at midnight on December 31st.

    The “crisis”? Two-digit years. Computers thought “00” meant 1900, not 2000. Which, according to the news, meant banks would collapse, planes would fall from the sky, and your toaster might start a small nuclear war. Basically, we were all one spreadsheet away from the Stone Age.

  • Growth in Progress (Kind of)

    growthI’m 15 years old and I’m begrudgingly awake for the day trying to get ready for school. “Mommmmmmm…. What should I wear today?”  I could never make this decision easily.  She enters my room while I’m dozing against the doorframe of my closet.  “How about this?” as she pulls out a sweater.  “Nah – I don’t want to wear that!” I sneer.  “Ok – fine.  What about this one?” as she picks out a different shirt.  “Nah – not that one either.” I again reply.  “If you don’t like my suggestions, why did you ask me?” she queries.  “Well – now I know what I DON’T want to wear!” I bantered.  Mom then left my room, shaking her head.