Steeped in Sass

A Husband’s Memory Is Selectively Dino-Shaped


I Have Witnesses

I don’t pay attention to the news anymore unless I click on something by accident.
Even then, I ninja-swipe like a wasp hovering near my face, because—much like the mail—nothing good ever comes from it. It’s either a bill, bad news, or a letter from a Jehovah’s Witness begging me to please reconsider my eternal salvation.

But every once in a while, a word or phrase hooks me.

I clicked on something random in my “for you” page—the place where my phone thinks it has me figured out. The headline said: “Museum Going Out of Business. Life-Sized Dinosaurs for Sale.”

Now, I’m not a dinosaur person. I don’t remember ever Googling anything close to that. And yet suddenly this felt personal. Why would this be recommended to me? How much does a life-sized dinosaur even cost? Are we talking movie quality or a sad six-foot foam thing?

The descriptions had me wheezing. One said the dinos offered “movement for realistic entertainment and child petting.” The listings were on Facebook Marketplace, right next to someone selling a stained sofa described as “pet-free” and their particle-board bookshelf labeled “probably real wood.”

And once I started reading, I couldn’t stop. Then a photo of a massive T-rex appeared. Not six feet. Thirty-nine feet of pure ridiculousness.
Price: under three grand.
Fine print: buyer responsible for shipping.

That sent me down a whole trail of questions:
How does someone move a 39-foot T-rex under bridges?
Where do you park it?
Who makes a collar that size so I can put a giant dog tag on him labeled “Burt Reynolds”?

Naturally, after processing the idea for a solid thirty seconds, I called my best friend.

“How big is your husband’s flatbed,” I asked, “and how willing would you be to talk him into a drive to New Jersey?”

“I don’t know,” she said. “Why? Do you need to bury somebody?”

“Not exactly. I need to convince Rob that buying a 39-foot T-rex is a great idea.”

She snorted. “Why would you want one?”

“How badly do you want to help me make the neighbors and the Amazon delivery driver lose their minds?”

“That is hilarious.”

“Think about it,” I said. “We could put a fence around him, give him a giant tennis ball, and add one of those church signs that says, ‘I identify as a German Shepherd.’ For Halloween, we could add fake blood and drape ourselves over his tiny arms. Christmas? Giant Santa hat. Easter? Big dinosaur eggs. The possibilities are endless.”

“Did Rob say yes?”

“I haven’t called him yet.”

“I’m in,” she said immediately.

A few minutes later my son wandered in to find me on my bed, giggling like I’d lost it, scrolling Etsy for vintage Christmas lights and over-sized pastel-dyed eggs.

“What are you laughing at?” he asked.

“How would you like a T-rex for a brother?”

“WHAT!?”

So I explained the entire saga, and he was instantly on board.

“We have to convince Dad,” he said. “This is epic.”

So the two of us approached Rob together.

“WHY would you want that?” he asked. “And what would you even do with it during the day?”

“I’d raise my teacup and say, ‘Good morning, Burt.’”

“And how would we even get it home?”

“Obviously, Tasha would help.”

“We are not getting a 39-foot T-rex.”

Our joy died right there.

Then—one month later—the same listing popped up on his feed. He called me sounding thrilled.

“Hey! You’ll probably say no, but I want a life-sized dinosaur.”

My son and I stared at the phone with rage in our souls.

“Burt already sold,” I said.

“Mom literally asked you for that a month ago,” my son added. “She wanted the 39-footer.”

“I don’t remember that,” Rob said. “Anyway, I want the flying one.”

“You’re right,” I told him. “We’re not buying it.”

Still Blooming, Despite the Forecast

Not Dead, Just Decorated


The one where my body taps out but Rob owes me matcha.

One of my biggest flaws is the deep, bone-stubborn need to do everything myself. I don’t just “like” independence, I wear it like a gold star. Top tier. Full ceremony. Fireworks optional but preferred.

I love my friends, truly. But asking for help? Barf.
I’d rather be duct-taped to a flaming lawn chair than admit I need something. I want to hang out with people because I miss them, not because my kidneys have decided to make me feel as if I went toe to toe with Ronda Rousey.

And worst of all?
Cancellation.
I hate canceling plans. It feels like a personal failure wrapped in guilt and glitter.

So naturally, when life hits the fan, I start doing the most rational thing possible: hand-washing laundry in the kitchen sink like it’s 1842. Meanwhile, my best friend is texting me photos of her top-tier, NASA-approved washing machine like, “Are you good? You know you have an open invitation right?”

No. I’m clearly not good. But I’m also not going over there. Because, stubborn.

If “pain in the ass” had a sound, it’d be me, hammering fifty crooked nails into a dilapidated bug house. Muddy boots on my feet, the echoes bouncing off trees while my husband just wants to nap for, I don’t know, ten minutes tops (or four hours, don’t judge him… or do because it annoys me). That rage tapping is not a red-bellied woodpecker. It’s DIY’ing instead of D-I-recovering.


Flash forward to the actual crisis.

Rob finds me curled up like a discarded sock on the bed. I’m too quiet, which is always a red flag. He begs me to see someone but I say no. He threatens to drag me but switches gears towards a rational adult and pulls out the big guns:

Bribes.

He offered me matcha if I’d go to the doctor. A whole bribe-drink I still haven’t collected, by the way. Justice for matcha.

The cup urgent-care handed me was labeled “apple juice,” but it was suspiciously sterile, and I wasn’t allowed to leave the office until I promised to hit the pharmacy like a good patient. Meanwhile, Nikolai (who takes zero days off from being a legendary kid) wrote a whole song on the way to the truck titled “My Daddy Was Right, He Told You So!”
Rob smirked, “If you didn’t have me, you’d be fertilizer.”

Honestly? Accurate.


Round one: urgent care.
Round two: a different urgent care.
Round three: Cipro.

Cipro, as it turns out, is my body’s least favorite hobby.

I was trying to be productive, dragging my disabled corpse to coffee shops just to write something coherent while we were still waiting for internet on the farm. (Because clearly, being near death shouldn’t affect your publishing goals.)

But instead of inspiration, I was met with that lovely, slithery heat climbing up my neck, my ears, my scalp… almost like Satan himself decided it was time to end all redheads. My breathing went sideways, and I realized:

“Oh. I think I’m allergic to antibiotics. That’s new.”
The hives took one look at my body and said, “Let’s go clubbing.”

They hit my throat, my legs, my face, and gripped my soul like it was out for vengeance. The best part? My kid smacked a sticker on my back that said DOG FOOD and I didn’t notice it until after our adventure. I mean… who needs ego when you’ve got labels and full-body histamine hell?


Rob rearranged his entire work life—again—to rescue me. Bless him and his ever-whitening head of hair.

We hit the ER, who gave me that “you’re fine-ish” vibe and sent me home with a shrug and maybe a wave. Just in time for the pharmacy to switch my seizure medication to a totally new brand. Mid-crisis. Because clearly, I was having too calm a week.

Let’s recap:

  • One raging kidney infection
  • Two urgent care visits
  • One allergic reaction
  • Full-body hives (with throat flair!)
  • Fever spikes
  • Brain on seizure roulette
  • And a surprise seizure med brand swap
  • Plus a sticker that screamed “kibble”

At this point, my body was like, “Survival mode? Nah, let’s try chaotic neutral.


So here’s your update:
I’m not better.
I’m not worse.
I’m just seasoned… in epsom salts, binging murder mysteries, burning through the mint chocolate ice cream, and letting the weeds take over the dahlias because frankly, I’m too itchy to deal with it.

Life is currently a beautiful mix of trauma and unclaimed matcha bribes. And honestly? Rob needs to pay up because I’ve earned every drop of it.

So if you’re wondering how I’ve been:
I’ve cancelled all my plans. I’m not thrilled but I’m still blooming… with a rash, a fever, and possibly a tail, depending on the sticker.