Showing posts with label Halloween. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Halloween. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

A True Tale of Halloween Terror: The Black Apple



This is not an urban legend. It didn't happen to a friend of a friend. I know it's true, because it happened to me.

My iPhone... is dead.

It didn't happen in the usual way, through old age, or willed obsolescence, or even a technical difficulty. No, my beloved partner was untimely ripped from me in a manner most unexpected.

Sunday afternoon, my son and a preschool buddy, fully clothed, were playing by the side of our swimmng pool. The little boy, reaching for a ripple with a stick, reached too far. From the other side of the pool I watched as his body angled one degree too many and gravity quietly tumbled him head first into the water. It was a small distance, given his size, but the tiny splash set a tsunami of adrenaline racing up my spine, electric. His head came up, and I jumped in.

My reaction may have been, upon reflection, largely unnecessary. The little boy had just this past summer learned to feel comfortable in the water and could kick a good distance. He was right by the side of the pool and Benjamin was there, too, reaching for his upstretched hand. They probably could have remained there safely in stasis, hanging to the edge, until I scurried over to the other side.  I was also aware that there were items in the pockets of my shorts— what was that, a wallet? in one side, and surely my phone, yes, of course it was, in the other— and I could have shed these items in all of two seconds. I could actually hear my rational self, dimly, in the back of my head, calmly advancing these considerations, but then it was as if a giant override switch had been pulled, bringing all active deliberations to a screeching halt, save for one thought: CHILD IN WATER. GET TO CHILD. And in I went.

The boy was rescued without going down a second time. "I didn't swim, Mommy, I held on to the side!" he yelled triumphantly to his stricken mother, as I pulled myself up to sit next to him, waterlogged. He suffered no outward sign of distress. The same, alas, cannot be said for my phone. I pulled her from my pocket, she flickered her white apple one last time, and went dark, evermore.

"Sometime dead... is bettah."
Doug, playing the part of the grizzled but kindly Maine neighbor, introduced me to a mysterious ritual in which a dead iPhone, buried in a pile of rice, could become resurrected. I dutifully interred my phone into a bag of Natural Directions long-grain and left her there for the night. Would she return from the dead, evil perhaps, but still sentient? I wouldn't care if Siri started sounding like Peter Lorre as long as she could still give me directions to the nearest Bed Bath and Beyond...
"I've found twenty gin joints
fairly close to you."

I spent the night on the edge of a troubled sleep. Was that her beeping, muffled under all that rice, announcing a text message? Did she just buzz? Could that be a Scrabble alert? Alas, no. “Please come back, Siri, come back,” I murmured, half-awake. I could almost hear her mournful tone whispering in my ear: “I’m sorry about this, James, but I can’t answer that right now…”

The next morning, with trembling fingers, I extracted the rectangular corpse from its granular crypt. There beat no alabaster apple upon her ebon frame; she was still dead. Dead as a doornail. Mind, I don't mean to say that I know, of my own knowledge, what there is particularly dead about a doornail, but...

The day passed as if in a waking nightmare. I was wandering deaf in a hearing world. No music. No texts. No calls. The weather—my God, man! How shall I know what the weather is, without Siri to tell me such? And by what means should I pay for my Starbucks? I had an app for that! 
Had.

Away from home, I was like a field mouse trying to escape the rain, desperately hopping from wifi station to wifi station, constantly checking my emails, hoping to piece together what I might be missing from the life Out There. Who was trying to get ahold of me? Who had penned a witty Facebook rejoinder? Was it my turn on Words with Friends?

And then came the abyss, the purgatory which also goes by the name Post Office. Oh, to wait in line, the long snaking line, at the ghostly remains of what was once a robust post office, now serviced by naught but two clerks, both of whom had a penchant to Chat… I had forgotten what it was like to stand in line with nothing to read or hear or play, the stupor that comes with waiting, waiting, trying not to stare too hard at the mole on the neck of the person in front of you… I wanted to take photos of the complete squalor, but... I CAN'T. I DON'T HAVE MY PHONE.

The Horror. The Horror. 






I barely made it home alive…







And now, my iPhone, never flitting, still is sitting, still is sitting
In the pallid bag of rice just above the oven door;
And my Siri has the seeming
Of a demon that is dreaming
And the YouTube’s stopped its streaming
Streaming on the titanium core
And my soul without that apple shining on the titanium core
Shall be lifted—nevermore!



Note: The TRUE Halloween horror story is, of course, the devastation that Ms. Sandy has wreaked upon our brethren to the east.  Direct Relief International is coordinating efforts with those on the ground in places hardest hit to get aid as soon as possible. If you'd like to help out with some bucks, just click here

Monday, October 31, 2011

Halloween Shame

Yes, I confess, I did it! I did it! I don't know what came over me, but I couldn't help myself until... it was too late.

Yes, I used a box mix to make my child's Halloween cupcakes.

Not just a box mix like Duncan Hines or something comfortably good-tasting. No, I was beguiled by boxes at World Market. Ones that promised "spooky brain cupcakes" and "zombie cupcakes-with zombie parts!" I thought they would be fun and easy to make. They have paper sleeves for the cupcakes! And bone sprinkles! How bad could they be?

As soon as I opened the packet labeled "cupcake mix" I knew we were in trouble. It smelled like I was making up a batch of plastic. Blech. How could this be good? And how old were these ingredients? The frosting was worse--it had the texture and odor of that foam they shoot out of a hose when your house is burning down. I can still smell it on my fingers as I type. As I was lading the brain frosting into my plastic piping bag I kept thinking of how much better I could have made them from scratch. Some raspberry purée for coloring, maybe a velvet chocolate cake, oh, it would have been so much better. Shame shame shame.

Perhaps the children will love my Chernobyl cupcakes, but they will haunt me all Halloween. Nevermore!

Update: Luckily, not children were harmed in the making of the cupcakes. Turns out only TWO of the two dozen were eaten, and a parent ate one. Turns out I was trumped by a mom who made cupcakes that had edible skeletons dangling on them—and they were homemade. Sigh...

Sunday, October 31, 2010

A Fathers and Son Halloween

Demon Dog Rowdy

I think we've got Halloween down by now. Not a lot of stress this year. I go out shopping for decorations with Benjamin (who maintains an attraction-repulsion to Halloween stores but will venture in as long as there isn't anything electronic lunging out at him). Benj and I decorate the outside, and he gets all Creative Director on me, figuring out where the headless skeleton goes and how to drape the cobwebs and what if the giant wasp was eating the vulture! So proud.  We make the Jello brain mold and Benj spatters it with raspberry blood. We don't carve the pumpkins too soon (a few days before, tops) because any earlier in the hot Los Angeles sun and by Halloween they resemble all those Nazis in the climax of "Raiders of the Lost Ark." Doug was able to avoid the pumpkin carnage this year because he already had one ready to go. Benj had decorated a pumpkin for school to look like a hero of his choosing--and he picked Doug. 







Which is 
the Pumpkin Head, 
and which is 
the school project? 
You decide.








I don't mind carving, actually. It's one of the things, like lugging home the Christmas tree or tending the herb garden, that I like doing rather than having done. There aren't many of those instances in our household; when anything breaks down that's harder than changing a light bulb, Benj is apt to say, "We better call the man." He know us too well. We're not exactly handy. 

Which made this Halloween all the more special. Ten minutes before going to a Halloween party given by one of Benj's friends, Doug and I decide to dress up. Mind you, this NEVER happens. We hate to do the whole costume bit. But the host requested it, so... 

In ten minutes, there's not a lot you can do. We're in the small vanity room off the bedroom, the one with the big mirror, the one that most women would die for but that we use mostly as a depository for all the spare toiletries, small electronics, and change. I have on a flannel shirt that I'm dusting with powder, black and brown smudges on my face, and a hat with a light attached. Presto: Chilean Miner. Doug is applying red makeup under his eyes, and using shadow to make his face paler and gaunter than it already is. His hair is slicked down, and he's wearing a fancy black shirt. Can you guess? It's Vampire Eric, from True Blood (alas, no one gets this at the party, because no one watches True Blood. Still, if only he had worn a track suit...)













Doug or Alexander Skarsgard? You decide. 





Benj is watching us, rapt, as we unscrew little pots of makeup and expertly apply them, via brush and sponge, to our faces. He observes how concentrated we are, watching ourselves transform in the mirror, dabbing and blending, dabbing and blending. He already has his costume on— a hybrid of a "Ben 10" store-bought Swampfire costume and a mouldering Scream Mask he found at the Halloween store— but he takes his mask off, touches his cheek and asks tentatively, "Could I have a cut right here?"


"Of COURSE you can have a cut there!" Does he know who he's talking to? We're THEATRE FOLK!


"Okay, Ben, look here, we use pencil first to figure out where... okay, here's some red for the wound... let's get some of this yellow, just a touch, and then overlay some purple... hold still while I blend it in... doesn't that look nice and bruised?... some more red, yes, sure you can have blood leaking... some powder to set it—how's that?


And there you have it. We may not be able to show you how to build a bird house, Benj, or how to shoot a layup, or tell you what the difference is between the National and the American League, but if you wanna look like a 75-year-old man or a burn victim, WE'RE THERE.


Happy Halloween, all my little ghosties out there in the dark.