still here …
I’m not starting the new job until Wednesday, as it turns out. I’m pretty excited, about as excited as I could be, I think, to be exchanging a subsidized 2-day workweek for a regular old 40 hour one. I don’t feel comfortable talking about it in too much detail, except to say I’ll be an editorial assistant at a publishing company in the city. I’m going to be a paper-pusher! A wordsmith! It is a dream come true, and the cherry on the sundae is that I’ll be near Trader Joe’s.
Still, I have a couple more breakdowns scheduled before I’m cool with everything that’s happening. I’m never allowed to forget about the impending wedding for more than 48 hours at a stretch because I’m guaranteed a call from one of my parents within that time frame with a new question or comment. I can’t hold their excitement against them — of couse I’d rather they be thrilled than passive & sullen; and Mr. Ben and I are going to be in DC this coming weekend to encourage them.
But it’s a lot to digest.
At Mr. Ben’s law firm’s clambake yesterday at a majesterial estate in Larchmont, a fellow who is a year closer to his wedding than I am to mine had lots of advice for me, much of it delivered as he held me by the shoulders. He is attempting to coordinate an interfaith, 400 person mega-marriage in New Jersey. Good luck, friend!
I am not so ambitious. I did, however, wonder idly about how many romance novels I’d have to write and sell to afford a gorgeous 1770s farmhouse on Long Island Sound, complete with barn cum guest house, a croquet lawn, kayaks, a pool table, a ping pong table, and the means to offer my hundred guests a raw bar, a regular bar, and a buffet lobster dinner.