The house is so quiet this time of night. Everyone's asleep, and I can hear everything: the dryer going in the basement, Marie's radio, turned on to a classical station, in her room. The fridge is humming, and Anya is trying to give Drusilla a bath. She doesn't appreciate it. Oh, and Stormy just sneezed. Sigh. The cats have come down with cat flu, and though most of them are better thanks to antibiotics, Stormy's still lingering on a bit. She was the last cat to get it, though.
I guess it isn't all that quiet, given what I just listed. I guess it's just that Lee isn't the house, nor Jim, Krista or Julian. They're all such loud people that when they leave it's like a vaccum has sucked all the air out of the house. So weird about Lee; just a few years ago, I didn't even know him. Now, he's become a part of the family, for better or for worse. His girlfriend is visiting as well, and she's quite nice. Not as loud as Lee, thankfully.
Today I went and got fitted for a bridesmaid dress for Michelle's wedding. It was fun; the dress is a lovely color, and it went quickly, because I guessed my sizes right on the first try (I'm becoming a pro at this bridesmaid thing, you see). It's so weird, though; though I don't have bridal fever, of course being in that environment makes one wonder about one's own wedding, floating out there somewhere in the undetermined mist of future. I've never been one of those girls who plans their wedding out to the china when they're twelve, but I've always had definite likes and dislikes, ie, no huge bows on the back of the dress. I mentioned that I wouldn't really want a veil, so my mom stuck a tiara on my head. That, by the way, was a bad idea, and we decided a circlet or wreath would be better; but the action itself was so surreal. Weird to think that Michelle is going through all this for real.
Being a bridesmaid isn't so scary. You can be one when you're sixteen; I still have my maid of honor dress from Krista's wedding in the closet downstairs, along with my senior homecoming dress and my (mouse-chewed) senior prom dress. Being a bride - wearing one of those thirty-pound, larger-than-life dresses - now, that's a bit scary. It seems very removed from me: me, wearing a red shirt with a monkey on it, jeans, socks with little dancing hot cocoa mugs on them and an oversized Eeyore sweatshirt. Not exactly the picture of an adult. And yet... and yet, the notion isn't completely out of my grasp. I can see it happening. And the idea is NOT scary, because I know I'd be ready, and it would be exciting. It would be fun to have tomato sauce on my nose all the time, in essence. Maybe it's that knowledge that some might find scary.
I've been thinking about Seattle more and more. Maybe the grayness here is making me long for the sun of the West or something. I really was spoiled; it didn't rain the entire time we were in Seattle. I have a warped view now, perhaps.
My hair is getting longer, and I'm losing weight, despite the brownies I've been munching lately. I need to drink more water, though, or my kidneys will be screaming.
My. I guess being around my family does have an effect on me. I think that phrase was distinctly my mother.