I made thisif i lose myselff but it was he who tought me 求翻

P.S. – I Made This…
I SEE IT. I LIKE IT. I MAKE IT.
P.S.- You're Invited...
Don't wait for a get-together to get it together!
WHAT YOU NEEDWhy i feel so bad that he dates someone while it was myself who refused his proposalHe said he loves me(like 2month ago..) and I also loved him but i refused him because I dont feel like dating anyone even i love him. but this was just past, my affec_百度作业帮
Why i feel so bad that he dates someone while it was myself who refused his proposalHe said he loves me(like 2month ago..) and I also loved him but i refused him because I dont feel like dating anyone even i love him. but this was just past, my affec
Why i feel so bad that he dates someone while it was myself who refused his proposalHe said he loves me(like 2month ago..) and I also loved him but i refused him because I dont feel like dating anyone even i love him. but this was just past, my affection to him may faded as we havent been connected lately. then i saw him changed his facebook relationship status saying he is in love with another girl. I am supposed to be relieved because of all those guilt i feel for him suddenly banished and since it was me who refuse his proposal therefore i have no reason to be mad on him. i am just so confused that i shouldnt be so messed up like this as i kind of not love him anymore. is this a sense of possession? anyone can help me and tell me what is the right way to deal with this?(too confused to focus on study so i came here to ask for help. anyone helped even with a nice little sentence would be greatly appreciated. thx!)你淘气的天使 谢谢你 翻译的很好 但是。。这就是我的问题 我不是来求翻译的………囧…
时间会冲淡一切的,相信楼主是一个拿的起放的下的人.既然选择了放弃就应该坚持下去!前方有美好前景等着你!错的时间遇到对的人——悲哀!
他说他爱我2个月前起而且我也爱他,但是我拒绝了他应为我不喜欢恋爱的状态即使我很爱他。这些只不过是过去,当我们很久不联系后我对他都喜爱逐渐退去,后来我看到他在facebook都博客中留言写到他正和另外个女孩交往。我放松了因为我对他的歉疚在看到这些后都消失了,既然我没有理由的拒绝了他,那我也不应该因为这事去生气.但是我很困惑,我不应该感觉到混乱,我应像一个不爱他的人应有的反映.这中表现和占有欲有关吗?...
为什么明明是我拒绝了他的求婚,却还是会因为他和别人交往难过?他说他爱我(差不多2个月前)而我也爱他,但是我拒绝了他因为尽管我爱他却不想和任何人交往。但是这已经过去式了,我们已经有段时间没有联系了,我想我对他的依恋会慢慢淡去的。然后我看到了他的Facebook上说他已经爱上了另一个女孩。我应该感到轻松的因为我从此不用再对他内疚了,而是我拒绝了他的求婚,所以我不该对他生气。我现在很混乱,我都...
It's so-call love syndromeWhat will my future be like?To be honest,it is quite a()question.Who knows?When I was a child,I was asked this question()of times,I could give them an answer,but it was not my real idea.When I grew up,I kept ()myself thr same question .Up til_百度作业帮
What will my future be like?To be honest,it is quite a()question.Who knows?When I was a child,I was asked this question()of times,I could give them an answer,but it was not my real idea.When I grew up,I kept ()myself thr same question .Up til
What will my future be like?To be honest,it is quite a()question.Who knows?When I was a child,I was asked this question()of times,I could give them an answer,but it was not my real idea.When I grew up,I kept ()myself thr same question .Up till now,I still cannot find the correct answer,()a simple one
What will my future be like?To be honest,it is quite a( simple )question.Who knows?When I was a child,I was asked this question( lots )of times,I could give them an answer,but it was not my real idea.When I grew up,I kept ( asking )myself the same question .Up till now,I still cannot find the correct answer,( though )a simple one英语翻译1.It was not until this moment when I considerated myself truly different that my writing acquire a voice.2.I knew I was a Mecxican woman,but I didn't think it had anything to do with why I felt so much inbalance in my life ,but it had ev_百度作业帮
英语翻译1.It was not until this moment when I considerated myself truly different that my writing acquire a voice.2.I knew I was a Mecxican woman,but I didn't think it had anything to do with why I felt so much inbalance in my life ,but it had ev
英语翻译1.It was not until this moment when I considerated myself truly different that my writing acquire a voice.2.I knew I was a Mecxican woman,but I didn't think it had anything to do with why I felt so much inbalance in my life ,but it had everything to do with it.请高手帮忙翻译清楚这两句话最好能分清句子成分.
直到我的写作获得赞誉的这一刻,我才真正认识到自己不同.我知道我是一个Mecxican女人,但我却不认为它对我有什么用——为什么我的生命里有这么多的不平衡,但还是要一直去做.
你这是哪里来的句子,没法翻译!
1.直到我的写作获得发言权,我才认识了我的不同。2.我知道我是一个???(打错了吧,我是美国人,没有这个词,可能你要打墨西哥吧:mexico)女人,我并不认为它有什么用,但为什么我觉得我的生命有那么不公平,我的生命,应由我掌控。
when后面到different是修饰moment的it was ....that 是强调句I’m at a café all by myself! Can’t believe I’m alone. I ordered a cake sight unseen. Was deliberating between one called Delicios and one from Chile and asked the waitress which was mejor (better) —she told me the Chilean one had more sugar and I said I’ll take it. Bring on the sugar, baby. Yesterday I worked at the Fabrica all day like the rest of the family. Finished the program though and I think they will love it. Yojida, Jose’s daughter is a dear. She’s very smart, beautiful too. She wants to learn to write programs with Access and I’m sure she will. In the evening Jose went to a meeting early, Stephie went out and Mirta and I did our own thing. Then Stephie came home and there was all kinds of excitement. More when Jose arrived. I couldn’t understand a word but decided Jose was having an affair and Stephie found out. Later I found out that one of Stephie’s friends had called her fat behind her back and this was what had bent the entire family out of shape. Great to know that I had my pulse on the finger of nothing.
Things to remember:
o Oso rides the motorcycle and the jet ski.
o Arroz con pollo al a Peru.
o Put a little water in the blender, fill it with cilantro and a little red pepper (sweet).
o Brown two small onions and 2-3 cloves of garlic. Add tsp coriander or cumin (needed to smell both) as wasn’t sure of the translation. Salt and pepper chicken, brown with onions. Add one large cup beer to cilantro and I think some oil and bouillon cube.
o Pour over chicken and cook until chicken is done.
o Remove chicken, add same amount of rice as there was liquid—3 cups to 3 cups makes too much. Add another sweet pepper and some peas. Hmmm, may need to modify here—and cook for 20 minutes.
Booked an ART CLASS for 2 p.m. tomorrow with Francisco Chavez.
December 21, 2010
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Family is really important here. When William#3 heard that Carmen was going away for the day he came over to his grandparents place (an hour by bus one way) to hang out with them. He comes by every Sunday anyway, but this past weekend, he came by on Saturday too.
I went for a walk last night with Mari, Jose’s first wife. She told me she works in the plastic factory too. This morning their 2 year old granddaughter, Nicole, and Jose’s son Francisco came by early and sat on Jose and Mirta’s bed to visit while Mirta slept on. Everyone mingles continually. Mari’s boyfriend is probably only about 18—at least he looks it. She told me he was really young—still in school, so maybe only 16! Her oldest son just turned 25 so she must be 40, I’d think, but folks have kids really young around here.
Today is Francisco’s birthday so Mirta made a cake, put it in the oven, then asked Mari to take it out and frost it while Jose, Mirta, Nicole and I went out. I love this family too! Everyone wants to speak English, so we exchange words all day long.
We drove for around an hour today through gorgeous mountainous rain forest (horrendous roads) and then it lived up to its name and started to rain. We arrived at a fish farm/restaurant where we dropped a line with a ball of something on it—I didn’t even ask what it was—and within three seconds had a beautiful fish with a red stripe on the line. The bait man killed it in front of my eyes (I hate that), then took it to the kitchen and it was fried for me. Nicole caught the other two for Jose and Mirta. It then started to pour buckets of water. I figured we’d be killed on the way home because of the roads and the rain so ate chicharon (fried pork), fried yucca, 2 cups of agua dulce con leche and rice pudding. I hate the thought of dying when I’ve been resisting temptation. Mirta asked for raw onions and they brought us a huge bowl in lemon—must have been 2-3 onions. We ate them all. I had always thought I disliked raw onions, but obviously this is no longer true. Another cosa falls to maturity.
Jose is a very interesting man. The second of 15 children (12 boys in a row, then three girls) with an alcoholic father—I thought drunks weren’t supposed to be able to get it up—he and one other brother worked from the time they were 3 or 4 to support the family. Every centavo they made was turned over to the mother, who by the way is alive and lives with the father still, he hasn’t had a drink in over 20 years. They milked cows and mucked out stables, picked coffee and other fruit/vegetables. He didn’t have a pair of shoes until he was 11. I will get the next installment on his life later. I believe it is another novella.
Things to remember:
o Alisia#1 was 14 and Beto was 16 when they married. Alisia had 4 children by the time she was 20.
o No ca 2 year o Nicole wetting her pants and saying, she “didn’t do todo (all) in her pants, just part.”
o No cars are on the street today, not because it’s Sunday, but because there’s a soccer game on TV.
o Peel yucca and the other two veggies bef no need to peel the purple potato-like thing, but add sugar to it. Add garlic to all of them after they are cooked.
o Mirta prepares all the food as soon as she comes home from the grocery and puts it in the fridge to eat later. This is a very good idea.
No food is ever wasted, in fact nothing is wasted. It’s embarrassing that I could be humiliated by someone throwing a popsicle stick on the ground when I’m such a waster in my regular life. I justify it by putting my garbage in the correct garbage can!
Everyone is talking at once, including about ten dogs. They all want to visit my mother in Darlington—they’ll think they’ve entered a hospital. Wish my camera hadn’t broken as I really want pictures of everyone’s faces—yes, we all have more than one face.
I think we’re getting ready for Francisco’ need to find a clock for this room. Am very cansada (tired) by evening. Spanish is exhausting—much easier when I’m telling my stories as I can control the conversation then. Really difficult at parties and I absolutely suck on the phone. Jose asked me why I don’t own a house and I tried to explain my life philosophy, but now in retrospect I believe the real answer is I’m a grasshopper and never save for the future. My philosophical reasons sound so much better. Strong-armed Jose into letting me pay for groceries today—practically had an arm wrestle in the check-out line. Really need a cup of coffee—forget the “malo for your health” I’m in CR!
The fiesta tonight was really nice and I didn’t even need the coffee. Mari, Albert, Francisco, Nicole and I attended—Stephanie and two of her friends attended briefly. Jose and Mirta barbequed steaks and pork, but I didn’t eat any as, since I survived the ride back today and there is a large chocolate cake waiting in the wings, I need to conserve some calories somewhere.
Heard many stories of Oso the dog today. I’m going to make a children’s book of his life, though I think the beginning will have to be censored or aimed at an older crowd. Jose gave Oso’s mother to a girl whose father wouldn’t buy her a dog. The mother was a pure bred poodle. The father wanted to breed her with another pure bred poodle but couldn’t find one, so locked her on the porch when she went into heat. However there was a gate and she backed her butt up to the gate and did the do with a half Pekinese-half something else and had a litter of puppies that look much like poodles with a really bad under bite. I wonder if anyone has thought of dog orthodontia yet? Anyway, the father was so mad he threw the puppies into the street where they were all rescued by different people. Jose took one which became Oso.
Jose and Albert are trying to remember all the Oso stories for me:
Oso followed Jose’s car for three kilometers and Jose didn’t notice until he stopped the car to get out and Oso jumped in.
Jose and Mirta and Oso went to San Jose and Oso jumped on a bus by himself. Someone told Mirta that he had seen Oso jump a bus and so she and Jose chased after 3 or 4 buses before they found Oso, sitting on a seat like all the other passengers, looking out the window. Everyone on the bus was laughing when they stopped to get him. I wonder if he paid his fare.
This is so weird, Oso just came scratching at my door and now he is sitting in my room looking at me and whining like he wants to tell me something—he’s never done this before. Maybe he knows I’m writing his stories and wants his side to be told, or probably he wants me to leave out the part about the bad under bite.
Once they left him at a gas station in Puntarenas and didn’t notice until they got back to Grecia. They drove back to the gas station the next day—it’s a five hour trip one way—and were told that a taxi driver had taken him. They checked out all the taxis until they found the right one, but the driver had given Oso away as a gift to his mother who lived in a different town. They went to the different town and found the mother, but she had a Doberman who didn’t like Oso, so she had given him to someone else. Finally, at this person’s house they found Oso.
I need to practice drawing dogs.
November 22, 2010
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I’m back with Jose and Mirta.
Yesterday morning was spent rehashing the trip with Alisia#1. Beto, who usually goes to bed around 7 p.m., stayed up until we returned around 9 p.m. on Friday night and even sat with us for an hour while we ate and Alisia#1 told him about our trip.
I think he’s a bit jealous.
Saturday morning Alisia#1 had a bowl of fruit set out with honey and whole wheat toast and my silverware wrapped in a napkin just like at the hotel—how cute is that.
Carmen went by bus to Heredia on Saturday to pick up Alisia#2 and Andrea, Alberto, Monica, Gilary and Estefan and then meet up with Edwin and Leda.
They all will take a bus to William#2’s home.
I’d like to see the looks on my family’s faces if I suggested 2-hour bus trips one-way to visit anyone.
I hung out with Alisia#1, Patricia, Beto and William#3 while I waited for Jose and Mirta.
Talked to William for half an hour with entire family in the room…no one has an extension in a bedroom.
There is only one phone, it is in the living room and it is not cordless. I speak in code, M for mother, D for dad, little bro for younger brother, etc.
Even though no one speaks English, most of them know the words for mother, father, brother.
Told him Carmen, Edwin and I want to seek out the half-brother none have met right in front of his folks.
Have I mentioned the CR habit of talking about how gordo (fat) or flaco (thin) everyone is?
They have no problem calling a person gordo right to their face.
When I eat something fattening, Beto holds his arms out wide and puffs out his cheeks and calls me gordita!
Poor Alisia#2 used to be flacita and is no longer so.
Everyone talks about it all the time and she just nods her head—I’d line them up and smack them!
Things to remember:
Carmen told me that when she was young and had a novio (boyfriend) at the house, at 6:30 p.m. Beto (her dad) would tell the boy it was late and time for him to leave. Good grief! No one even arrived to pick us up by 6:30 pm. I thought that folks in Latin countries stayed up late. Apparently not in all families.
Ceviche – fresh fish cut very small, lots of raw onion sliced thin, cilantro, lemon and [different recipe] can include platanos and red pepper.
Also add pink potato-like veggie that is cooked first with sugar, not peeled.
Platanos: – chop very small and sauté with sweet red peppers, cilantro and potatoes.
2 potatoes
5 platanos, boil platanos first in water for 20-30 minutes
Chayote – boil whole in water for 1-2 hours, cut in half, scrape out inside and smash with grated cheese, butter, sugar and vanilla, add raisins.
Put back in skins, top with fine bread crumbs and bake 5-10 minutes.
Try same thing only use onions, cheese and chicken with chayote.
William’s mom has started folding napkins around our silverware at every meal. She is making a huge effort to make the food as pretty as it was at the hotel.
She was really enchanted with the kitchen.
Carmen told me that her father was quite the looker in his younger days (as was Alisia#1) and the women were always after him.
Carmen tried to blame it 1) and, drum roll, 2) on some myth that men don’t like to masturbate.
1) Women have to tell men NO men can do the same thing. 2) Men love to masturbate whether they’re having sex or not and if they don’t like to masturbate, then oh well, lazybones.
I think I actually conveyed these thoughts to her.
I don’t know the word for masturbate in Spanish and I don’t think Carmen does either. Or more likely she just doesn’t like to use it so we used rude hand gestures instead.
Can only imagine what her mom thought as I glanced up and saw her looking out the window at us as we moved our hands up and down in the age-old (well at least my age-old) sign for masturbation.
It’s kind of unbelievable that women would think men are so weak they can’t be blamed for not resisting a come-hither, yet we let them run the world.
Told David not to kill anything unless it was necessary.
He was stung by a bee in the pool because he picked it up and decided to crush it in his hand.
Good for the bee to get in one last sting.
I told him he deserved it and that all life was important.
He thinks I’m insane and I overheard him telling Patricia and Alisia#1 about my saving a cricket and a spider, but now they are all very careful not to kill anything in front of me.
I was horrified when Alisia#1 reached over me to throw her trash out the window of the bus. I almost dove out the window after it.
However, after she saw me put my trash in my purse she started to do the same.
Heard them talking about me when I took all their popsicle wrappers and sticks and put them in the garbage can at the bus stop rather than flinging them over my shoulder.
IMPORTANT NOTE:
They may throw the occasional popsicle stick out the window, however, they use very few throw-away products.
I probably produce more garbage in a week than their whole family in a month.
Same with energy.
Dishes are washed in cold water that is collected in rain barrels and strained.
Dish soap is a semi-solid hunk that is used sparingly.
Paper towels are not used at all.
No electricity is used for drying clothes.
Lights are turned off when not in a room ALWAYS.
Hot water in the shower is really just slightly warm.
There’s only one car among all the people in his family I have met…Patricia owns it. Beverages are made from fresh fruit on a daily basis. Everything that can be re-used IS re-used.
Things that break are fixed.
Beto has been working on an iron for a couple of weeks. The ecological footprint of this family is practically invisible. Mine on the other hand…well mine is improving.
November 13, 2010
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Rompio is the word of the week.
The toilet seat now broke, while I was sitting on it.
The trip to Sugar Beach was a great idea.
I have never seen Alisia so excited.
She gets up before dawn each morning and walks to the beach (about 4 minutes). She doesn’t swim but she sits on the beach and lets the waves roll up to her. Sometimes they roll her over completely. She does this several times each day.
The kitchen area has four wooden barstools at a cute counter open to the living room. The kitchen area itself is good-sized with all the regular stuff…well stuff that’s regular in America. Every time I walk into the suite, Alisia is in the kitchen just opening things and looking…the drawers and the microwave and the fridge.
She gestures me over to show me some new wonder: Mira, Sara, mira. [Note: My Spanish has been so bad that at one time I thought “Mira” was William’s nickname for me.] The hotel really is spectacular.
Iguana, sapos, birds for days…absolutely worth the money, though I would be broke if we stayed much longer.
Playa Azucar - Sugar Beach
David doesn’t need to listen to my bad S he has learned to read my mind. He tells me where things I’m looking for are when I haven’t yet asked and asks me if I want this or that when I do but haven’t felt like figuring out the Spanish to ask. Maybe I should concentrate on developing this skill rather than learning Spanish. It’s probably it’s probably David’s. Best press on with the Spanish.
Portrait of a Mind Reader
The father of the Hungarian boy thinks Alisia looks like Golda Meir—I think it’s just her hair.
But I want to look her up on the net anyway to refresh my memory which seems to be worse every day.
I can’t believe I plan on studying Italian next, then French.
I’m going to start making lists of words to memorize every day—maybe every other day.
The bus ride home was a very long 6 1/2 -7 hours with NO stops for the bathroom.
I don’t think I’ve ever gone that long without going to the bathroom.
Am too tired to think, so will draw.
October 23, 2010
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The mornings are spectacular here, it rains in the afternoons and the evenings are beautiful with clouds, but the air is fresh.
I swam in the ocean, or rather bobbed around like a cork for hours.
A Hungarian woman bobbed around with me, visiting, for a couple of hours. We didn’t have to move at all. Just laid on our backs and rolled around now and then to stretch our legs.
I have many wounds: everything is rompiendo (breaking).
My head, my camera, my bracelet, and now my pen.
Later: also my ankle…hurt but not broken.
I hit my head on an underwater ledge in the swimming pool while showing off to David, age 14.
David, not me, though who would guess by my behavior.
Have a huge knot on my temple—briefly worried about brain damage (10-20 minutes) but decided I couldn’t have damaged what I wasn’t using.
Also worried about cancer of the shoulder, but recalled incident a few years ago when was worried about thigh cancer and finally remembered I had walked up and down the front stairs 20 times the day before for put-out day.
Actually ruled thigh cancer out fairly early that day because I hadn’t ever heard of it, in favor of dehydration.
So, used my deductive reasoning this time to narrow down other possibilities to four hours of swimming, including but not limited to, the butterfly stroke and/or the fall I took with the backpack containing all the shells on Sugar Beach.
I am planning an art project with them…the shells, not my wounds.
Hope I can un-funk them.
My wallet, money and passport are all really malo from ocean water.
Things to remember:
Fat dog chasing owners in car down busy San Jose street with our bus behind beeping and flashing lights. Eventually they noticed us and stopped for their dog.
Hungarian boy’s stories: a) said he was in a bicycle accident, in hospital six months, only walking
b) said he was 11 years old—ha. Didn’t even have all his permanent teeth. c) said he had raced in a bicycle world championship…at age what, 7? When I started to ask his mother about his bike accident, he flashed his arms in front of my face and shook his head desperately to make me stop, the little liar story-teller.
Hungarian Woman
October 19, 2010
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I am waiting for Wm’s mother, sister Patricia and her son David to get ready to have a bite to eat in the restaurant. Incredible light show is happening outside.
I saw several lightning bolts touch down in the distance and could smell the electricity in the air.
It took 5 1/2
hours by bus to get to Playa Flamingo and then another 20 minutes by taxi to get to Playa Pan de Azucar.
The bus ride was beautiful, though hot.
The driver had music on so the whole bus could enjoy it.
At one point everyone sang a couple of the songs together.
I should back track.
Yesterday Patricia, David and I went shopping and asking questions about how to get a bus to the coast.
We walked from bus terminal to bus terminal to bus terminal to find out our options.
Weird that they don’t all depart from the same place.
Ours ended up leaving from the Coca Cola Center, another mystery in that name. I am not sure why, but no one wants to use the phone to find things out—let your fingers do the walking is not a common move around here.
No one would call to book a hotel. I finally did all the calling and even managed to get us the Tico discount.
I think Wm’s family was impressed with my business like performance on the telephone.
Patricia and David were supposed to pick up Alisia#1 and me at 7 a.m. but didn’t get to us until 7:30 a.m. so we had a nerve-wracking time hoping to make the 8 a.m. bus.
The driver kept saying we would never make it by 8 a.m., but Patricia directed the man like a pro and strong armed him into taking the route she wanted. We made it there with four minutes to spare.
Our room is the size of William’s parent’s house and Carmen’s house combined—maybe larger and right on the beach.
There is a kitchen, living room, and two bedrooms.
Patricia and David have one bedroom and Alisia and I share the other.
We had a great time in the ocean which is as warm as bathwater but not as clear as the Atlantic.
Then we went to the swimming pool.
When we had dinner tonight, everyone was stunned to see a napkin folded in a special fold in front of them and they very carefully set them aside so as not to disturb the fold.
It turns out they were that fancy paper we find in the bathrooms of expensive restaurants in SF and this really blew them away.
There’s a big problem with mapaches here (raccoons) which of course there would be as they follow me all over the world—am waiting to find pigeons breeding in my window and the circle will be totally complete.
Observation:
No one seems to fart out loud in CR, including me!
And I would know about others because the toilets are not exactly miles from the other rooms.
Not sure what makes this process quieter than in SF—do U.S. toilets echo more? Is it the air? The food?
Also do not need to use much toilet paper—hmmm. What’s it all about, Alfie?
October 14, 2010
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Things to remember:
Alisia#1 (Wm’s sisters and father call her El Jefe…the boss) asked me what I normally had for breakfast and when I said cereal, she and Carmen went out and bought chocolate flavored corn flakes for me—they’re actually quite good.
When something is papaya-colored, it is the inside of the papaya, not the outside.
All dogs hate David—I think he has ADD.
Don’t think the two are related.
We always keep the plug in the drain in the shower when we’ we always keep the toilet seat down, we always keep the bathroom door closed.
These things worry me slightly, as the only reason I can figure out why we do these things is to keep something from crawling in.
Kathy Gould once had a rat jump out of her toilet in Milwaukee so she kept 4 or 5 phonebooks on the toilet all the time after that.
We’d flush the toilet twice before lifting them off, then “go” like lightening and slam the books back down.
Rice is served at dinner (almuerzo as it’s at noon) every day, even when we have spaghetti or potatoes.
The salads are delicious and all Beto and I use for dressing is a fresh squeezed lemon.
I am not actually gaining weight.
I can fit into my tightest pants.
Someone from the family stops by to clean about twice/week.
Today it was Alisia#2; a couple of days ago it was Monica.
And I mean they really clean.
Everything is always spotless, limpia, limpia, limpia.
They’d be horrified if I was willing and able to tell them about throwing confetti all over my floors for six months instead of cleaning them. It was actually quite cool…sort of a colorful version of sawdust on a bar room floor. I only allowed metallic confetti…no paper. I had my standards.
More exciting historical family drama as heard from Carmen:
[Note 1: I don’t say “told by” Carmen because we must take into consideration that Carmen’s Spanish is being translated by me.]
[Note 2: I told William I would know more about him and his family than he knows and it sure looks like I was right.]
[Note 3: Carmen tells me to write all these histories in my journal as she tells them…escribe escribe. She thinks this will be a grand book.]
Found out that Guillermo was an alcoholic and also that he didn’t want Patricia’s son Alberto around so either kicked him out or he ran away at 12.
When Carmen asked Patricia where Alberto was, Patricia didn’t answer, just hung her head so Carmen asked again and again until Patricia told her Guillermo didn’t want him.
Carmen had a fit, told Patricia that there were tons of men in the world, but Alberto was blood.
Carmen went looking for him and found him working in some type of cargo place and took him to Alisia#2’s home.
Alisia#2 kept him until he got married, but Carmen made Patricia pay for psychological help for Alberto. They are all very close today, by the way, so it must have worked. Guillermo and Alberto even seem to get along. But then again, Guillermo doesn’t drink anymore.
Found out that William#3 doesn’t want Rosabell (his mom and Wm’s youngest sister) to have a boyfriend. When she invited a man over to her house to watch TV, William#3 came home, found him in the living room, and hit him over the head with a broom….fwhap (Carmen’s sound effects). The man left, never to be seen again.
Found out that William#3 was dating a woman his mother’s age, who has 3 or 4 children.
Think there might be issues here?
Found out that my Wm’s father had an affair when Alisia (Wm’s mother) was pregnant with Edwin, the 4th sibling.
Alisia packed up Daniel, Wm. and Carmen and left Beto (Wm’s dad) and when he came home (he worked up near Nicaragua at the time and only came home every couple of months) there was nobody living in his house.
He went looking for her and finally found her, went down on his KNEES, and begged her forgiveness and she told him he could only have one woman—good for Alisia. He told her he would only have one woman if she would come back to him and they have lived together ever since.
The reason we know this story is that Edwin told us that last year a man came by his house who claimed to be his half-brother.
He wasn’t home at the time, only one of his step-daughters was there (Edwin married a woman with 9 children…which is another big history), so nobody in the family has yet met the new half brother.
Edwin told Beto and Alisia the story and asked if Beto had another son. (Maybe all families have exotic stories happening but we just don’t talk about them so they get lost to the ages.) Beto denied the entire story, but Alisia said, si, es VERDAD (the truth).
Perhaps this is why she almost fainted when she saw William#2 for the first time…maybe she thought Beto had been up to his old tricks.
Carmen and Edwin and I are going looking for this man after we return from Panama. Leda’s daughter said the guy looked a lot like Edwin.
Carmen pulled her lower eyelid down with her index finger and said we would see.
She calls us the Costa Rican Interpol.
We think he lives in the north near Nicaragua.
Our plan is to stop in different towns along the border, point at Edwin and ask if they know anyone who looks like him.
This is our plan? We are keeping our plans secret from both of Wm’s parents.
Edwin also used to be an active alcoholic.
He told me he drank every day and had six accidents before he got a grip.
Leda helped him, gracias adios.
He didn’t go to AA, Guillermo did.
Just before they left, Carmen got out the bible and read something and then everyone star everyone said something different at the same time so I couldn’t really understand exactly what anyone was saying. We stood in a circle, Leda, Edwin, Carmen and me. Then they all focused on me.
Leda stood in front of me and placed her hand on my heart and Carmen and Edwin were behind me with their hands on my shoulders and everyone prayed out loud.
Because I don’t say anything during these praying circles, I have a feeling they might just be realizing what a heathen is in their midst.
I have started closing my eyes to try to blend in a little better, but I don’t think anything less than praying out loud will satisfy here.
I keep trying to recall my grouping theory in these moments but it’s difficult.
I must say that it feels good to have people praying over you, though, so I am just enjoying the moment…sort of a group psychic, spiritual and mental massage.
October 11, 2010
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