All posts by Ericka Clay

About Ericka Clay

I’m Ericka. Some people say I'm funny. Most of those people are my mom. Check out my humor blog at creativeliar.com.

How to Glitter a Cat

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So…whatcha doing?

Sitting around, eating some Doritos, wondering when that thing from Star Trek will be invented so we can say “I want a cheeseburger” and then it magically appears on a plate?

Me too!

Since we’re both just sitting around chilling like the iced out bitches we are (haha…naughty words!), let’s go ahead and talk about something near and dear to the heart of all Americans.  Cat glittering.

How to Glitter a Cat

Picture of two chihuahuas lying down.

You can tell these aren’t cats because penis.  Wait…what?  Oh right.  Penis.

  1. You think cat glittering starts with commandeering a cat, don’t you?  You arrogant son of a bitch.  Haha, no but really cat glittering starts off with making sure you have all of your equipment in place, including your cat glittering uniform.  Personalization is key so the cats can tell you’re no doormat that follows everything a beautiful lady on the Internet says because they are horrible self-centered creatures.  So let’s talk uniform:
    • Cats. Hate. Pasties.  One moment you’re taking off your shirt to put stickers on your boobs and the next they’re looking at you like your mother did that time you wore your her earrings and accidentally swallowed one.  They looked like licorice, mother!!!  How is a thirteen-year-old supposed to know any better???  Anyways, sticker away those boobies and show those cats who’s boss.
    • Sombreros.  You’ll need one on your head and one in your truck to lure those cats in with the delicious prospect of tacos and mariachi music.  I had not one but two mariachi bands at my wedding and let me just say I have never before had the pleasure of watching so many cats use Matthew as a human scratching post.  To this day he still finds stray whiskers.
    •   Galoshes aren’t just for rain anymore.  Really were they ever for rain?  Haven’t they always been for people to say “Hmm…that lady ain’t right in the head wearing those galoshes without a shirt on”?  Well now they’re also for cat glittering because cats just love scratching the veins right out of your ankles as much as they enjoy judging your choice of boobie accoutrement.  Bastards.
    • You should probably put on some pants.  Cats love dangly bits if you know what I mean…………………………………………penises.
  2. Be Kanye West.  Okay so I read this meme somewhere that said something to the effect of “I wish someone loved me as much as Kanye West loves Kanye West” and I was all like “Hey, I should really buy more pasties” and then I was all like “Ding, ding, ding, yes!  Kanye West has this shit figured out!” because cats hate nothing more in the world than someone who truly loves herself/himself and/or Kanye West.  And pasties.  And dangly penises.  Did I mention penises?   Penises.
  3. Don’t have a penis.

That pretty much covers it.  There are some extra details you should take in consideration like rolling in a vat of salmon and charmingly whispering things like “Meow, meow…meow meow meow…penises.” (These are also highly effective if you’re married to my husband.)  But really, cat glittering is all about having heart and knowing you’re doing something good in the world with a container of glitter.  And without a penis.

Malignant

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Black and white photo of a kitchen table.

Photo credit: Travis D.

They are family and when they talk it rubs a blister in his ear.  Lou presses into it, his pointer finger jiggling the skin and hair that forms his canal.  It makes the sound of static.

“You okay dad?” Marnie asks handing him the bowl of lumps Rita refers to as “mashed potatoes.”  No, Lou isn’t okay, but he nods and smiles.  He has been thinking about the same thing for weeks now.  Finding Marnie’s unconscious body in the basement three months ago.  Believing she was dead.

“Oh the old fool’s fine.  Probably running his last golf game through his head.”  Lou watches his wife spoon a spineless tangle of green beans onto her plate.  Rita is a cruel kind of pretty, even now at sixty-two her lashes are ink-stained wings, her eyes a shrill flash of water.  But her mouth has morphed into another creature all together.  Her lips are two dried worms, renegade tags of skin flicking from their creases.  He imagines they cry out for joy when she gulps from her glass.

“Tell me about Eric.  You talk to him lately?” the worms ask Marnie.

“A little bit.  It’s been hard.”  Marnie’s eyes are lined with wet soldiers.  Rita offers a vague nod, simultaneously smacking Lou’s hand when he goes in for a second pork chop.

“Well, men.  They never know the right words, do they?”  Rita doesn’t look at him when she says it.  She hardly ever looks at him now, merely parents him with a blind hand.  When she used to look at his face, his heart would plunge and weave throughout his body.  His chin would nuzzle the small orifice of her ear and he would tell her so much in a whisper.  Those words, the best he had ever tasted.

“I don’t know.  I thought maybe he’d understand,” Marnie says.

A quiet spits on their plates.  It stabs its finger into Lou’s ear and the bister’s membrane is tested.  The coil in a spark plug, a nautilus shell.  These were the things his daughter looked like heaped into herself on the concrete basement floor.  He had done everything right, he knows he had.  Locked the doors, set the alarm.  It was only a quick jaunt to Carol’s, the Glintwood Apartment complex less than a mile from his house.  As he slipped Carol on like a reliable coat, his mind was incapable of biting into the ripened truth.  Rita: stuffed on pills and Pinot in their upstairs bedroom.  Marnie: battling with her future demon in the basement.  Lou: shamefully detached in every respect of the word.

“What’s there to understand?”  Rita.  Her nose is a pinched straw, a clipped wheeze aching through her right nostril.  Everything, Lou thinks, the syllables crushed with each bite of green bean.  He had spotted Marnie from the basement doorway.  He had called 911.  He had consumed the stairs two at a time, rushed into their bedroom and yanked Rita hard into reality.  He had put his wife in the ambulance with Marnie, hardly fit to stand let alone drive.  He had followed into a hot drool of rain, pricks of red light cutting through his windshield, the sound of his unbarred voice, a needle seeking his quick.

His wife trims a sliver off her chop and with a damp smack, kills the quiet.  “Karen Hannigan.  Pregnant,” Rita says and with that the kitchen revolves, a top snapped from two fingertips.  A swirl of fluid in a cyst.

© 2011-2013 Ericka Clay All Rights Reserved

Scabbed

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Scabbed #poetry #poem | creativeliar.com

Photo credit: James Kendall

Sara can’t see because she hides her face
behind crooked fingers she’s cocked sideways
so the middle one points somewhere between
my neck and chest.  You and I dine at Ace’s
steakhouse, waiting for plates of beef that seep
cold blood, our cheeks rouged with heat or shame.
I’m sorry we’re here and even sorrier we sit
close to a woman who’d skin me with canines
and claws if no one was here to witness.
We all pretend to notice wall color,
the veins on the backs of our hands, every-
thing that is nothing compared to the truth.

I see her face and wonder if she’ll break
framed wedding pictures in her head and light
the marital bed on fire when observing
your indiscretion, your moment of painful
clarity, your moment with me.  Yet, knowing
her I know she’s wedded the thought, broken
bread with it, bleached the sheets and burned
the splinters only to open herself
up, once more, for someone like you.

You see, I’m like her too.  I had
something before this moment, went in so
sharp, so quick that I hardly noticed it.  But
the wound was there, it festered, coated thick
with his spit and sperm until swollen, congealed,
knot-like. It became a part of me, became the part
that does not heal.  So now I watch her, watch the way
she scratches at the skin with a dirty nail till the edges
tear and life is drawn to the surface, only for it all
to scab over once again.  You see, I’m like her
because I let him, let you, let everyone in
and never found a way to
let myself out.

© 2010-2013 Ericka Clay All Rights Reserved

Dear Mom,

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Dear Mom, #funny | creativeliar.com

EVIL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Sleeping has become a thing that doesn’t interest me.  That’s what I keep telling myself.

It’s pretty much the same mantra I repeated while watching the royal wedding except I replaced “sleep” with “Prince William” and instead of saying it quietly in my bed at night, I yelled it down my street in a tear filled rage wearing the wedding gown I had made for myself in sixth grade while tearing at the sky with his royal highness’s dog eared poster that he signed.  And by “he” I mean my mother.

The thing is, I have a child, and apparently children are pretty evil.  You are the reason I was previously unaware of this, and by “you” I mean my mother.

Dear Mom,

Remember that time you decided to have one kid who was all things perfect and routinely entertained you by saying things like “Why are you obsessed with culottes?” and “Are you sure orange is your color?”

Well, guess freaking what.  Apparently not all children are helpful fashion critics because yesterday I dropped my daughter off at school and she didn’t even have the decency to tell me my pants had a hole in the crotch.  And that I had forgotten to put on pants.

Do you know how easy you had it?  Do you??  I’m over here dealing with Shirley McScreams a lot because I forgot to coat dinner in chocolate again while you could have made a side of string freaking beans and I would have eaten it.  As the side to my prime rib.

How was I to know children are terrors that think sleep is the archenemy of the human race?  There I was at twenty-four, reliving all the gorgeous times I allowed you to be seen in public with me, thinking how wonderful it would be to spend precious moments like that with my child when little did I know I was harboring a trained sleep assassin in my uterus.

Really, I blame you and TV and the parts of the Internet that feature unglittered cats and that guy at the Steak and Shake who said I can put the shake in his steak any time (what does that mean, Mom??  What does that even mean???) and hair spray.  For the love of unglittered cats, I just do not understand hair spray.

So this is what we’re going to do.  I’m going to start wearing orange culottes and burning pot roast like it’s my freaking job and you’re going to dress like Princess Kate on Wednesdays and Fridays and regale my neighborhood with your “blue blood ankles.”  And yes, you have to say “blue blood ankles” or they won’t know what the hell you’re talking about.

Maybe if we switch places then we’ll see what it’s like to be in each other’s shoes which from where I’m currently sitting, is just lovely.  Your daughter is intensely attractive and I’d make out with her if she weren’t me.  Plus I just tried and hit my head on my night stand.  It hurts.

So have fun wrangling a pint-sized war lord who doesn’t even know how to apply eye liner properly.

This pot roast won’t burn itself.

Yours in this life and in the next as long as the next life consists of talking roosters who compliment me on my posture,

Ericka Wilhelmina Clay

PS – Wilhelmina?  Can you imagine???  Haha, no but seriously, please stop wearing orange.

I just sent it to her.  Let’s just hope this puts us back on good terms.  Now to take a nice nap on that lady selling suede handbags.  No, wait.  That’s just my dog.

I am so tired.

Helga

Helga #poem | creativeliar.com

Photo credit: ndanger

This all began when Richard left, when Helga
forced herself into an empty bed and
grazed a melancholy hand across the
dent where Richard’s sleeping body would heave
and gasp startling snores at three in the morning.
There were other things too.  There were the looks
she received from neighbors that said “It happens
to the best of us,” and the others that
read “Poor thing will never get it right, find
somebody else, get herself together,”
etcetera, etcetera.   It was those daunting
voices Helga imagined slipping out of her
neighbors’ mouths when they made lunch dates
without her.  It was voices like these that changed
what Helga was.

It was necessary, a metamorphosis,
a lifestyle change, the development of
self-control that would keep Helga from making
a permanent safe room out of her refrigerator.
But Helga’s change wasn’t change at all.  She
continued to take mini-vacations
to the fridge.  Her kitchen was a halfway
home for the confused and abused, for those
who needed to bake a wall of lasagna,
or a fortress of bunt cake.  Helga’s obsession
was defined by degrees: Hostess cupcake
for an energy boost, family size
bag of Doritos after taking a
two minute walk around her living room,
double stuffed Oreos when it rained.  She
would only break out the big guns for emergencies:
dead dog, broken ankle (the result of
decorating her ridiculously
tall Christmas tree), flat tire, flat tire again,
her favorite soap opera going
on permanent hiatus.  For these situations
she didn’t think, she acted.  Turkeys would
roast in the oven, bathing in garlicy
juices; pie crusts would cling to pie pans, dough
curling over the edges; homemade ice
cream shivered in the freezer, counting on
the occasional gap between door and
fridge for warmth.  These days were the
hardest to bear.

Still, Helga had no use for change, she only
smoothed over the situation with compliments
and false good feelings as if icing a
cake to hide its imperfections.  She bought
new clothes, accoutrement for her brand new
figure.  At first, she attempted to try
on clothing two sizes smaller than she
was, like the flower print pants that enfolded
her legs like sausage casings.  Sometimes she
succeeded like the time she squeezed into
that Nicole Miller tube top.  She had a
full two minutes of victory until
she realized the top would not budge and she
had to cut herself out of it with the
hot pink Swiss Army knife Richard bought her
last Christmas.  It was embarrassing stuffing
scraps of a perfectly good tube top into
her hand bag and even more embarrassing
being chased by store security.
Helga was not two sizes smaller.

It was like this for a period of time.
Weeks went by where Helga would sit by the
Window and close her eyes tight praying that
Richard’s car would make an appearance.  No
Amount of baked apple tarts or seared salmon
steaks filled the void where Richard used to exist.
Helga went to bed every night, her
ritual always the same.  She took a
long, hot shower and sang every song
she could remember from Les Miserables
and by the time she finished she had become
a five-foot-four blotchy lobster struggling
to make the ends of her bath towel meet.  Next,
she’d slather on lotion, careful to cover
each crease and fold while congratulating
herself on maintaining such an excellent
weight.  Smooth and a bit sticky, Helga would
tug on the blue flannel night gown that Richard
had said brought out her eyes.

Then Sunday happened.  Helga didn’t mean
to stop by the Marmont Motel.  In fact,
she had meant to drive southbound, not northbound,
but her two wrists, the one that had inconveniently
grown around her “Polex” wrist watch and the
other that lay naked against the steering
wheel, jerked to the left and she found herself
at the place where Richard had resided
for the last month.  She got out of the car
as if she had a purpose, as if she
was there to visit an old friend.  For a
moment Helga almost believed that Richard
was inside one of those cracker jack boxes,
perched on the corner of the bed with legs
crossed and a bottle of Don Perignon
in hand.   But Richard wasn’t in his room
at all.  He was actually leaning
over the railing and looking, looking
right at Helga.  Helga went into fight
or flight mode and thought of sixth grade biology
when she learned her body was in control,
her mind merely a passenger along
for the ride.  Her body failed her this one
and only time, so instead of breaking
out into a manic run, she found her
eyes on Richard’s face.  Richard squinted at
Helga like she was there but wasn’t, as
if he was trying to make out a spot
on his shirt to see if it was an ink
stain or an insect.  He drew hard on his
cigarette and flicked it over the railing.
He turned and left Helga there, knee deep in
a puddle of what was.

Sunday night was not like all the other nights.
Instead of sneaking down the stairs for a
late night snack, Helga subconsciously closed
the kitchen in her mind.  As she lie in
her empty bed and felt her body spread
from end to end she realized, once again,
the immensity of her size.  Right before
she closed her heavy lids, Helga stretched the
fingers of her corpulent hand and waved
goodbye to the Richard sized depression
beneath her.

© 2010-2013 Ericka Clay. All Rights Reserved.