Well, not really by Walnut, but you wouldn’t believe how tough it is to change the author stamp.
Erin and I met when we guest-blogged together at Demented Michelle’s place. The Demented One will be joining us shortly. What struck me most about Erin, since I’m a typical shallow guy who thinks with his testicles, is how cute she is, and how incredibly willing she is to bare her skin on her blog. We’re a lot alike in that regard, except her skin is worth looking at and mine is all covered up with hair.
Without further ado, here’s the lovely Erin O’Brien:

Greetings Hoffmanians. My name is Erin O’Brien and I am a writer in Cleveland, Ohio.
Was that not a nice, simple, polite introduction (nude picture not withstanding)?
It always amazes me how people introduce themselves and present themselves on the Internet, particularly in the blogosphere. Take our humble host, for instance. Although I have never met the good doctor, I know that he has a proclivity for earthy oral experiences. Now, I find nothing wrong with this. In fact, I find it refreshing in our increasingly sanitized, deodorized and hairless world. But can you imagine approaching someone at a cocktail party, someone you have never met and saying, “I love the smell. If I’m getting freshly washed goods, I feel cheated,” of the feminine … er … experience?
Granted, it seems the vast majority of bloggers go under anonymous names or titles. (Note at this juncture this does not include me or Dr. Hoffman.)
I, on the other hand, pride myself in taking the higher moral ground. Instead of announcing the status of my pubic area, I merely referred to the controversy surrounding how hirsute a woman should be. The resulting post, which was more or less a take-the-day-off filler post, garnered a flurry of commentary.
People love to talk about this stuff online. Look how much traffic the same topic stirred up here. Enough about shaved genitalia. Now onto me.
BUY my novel, Harvey & Eck!
READ the funniest thing I ever wrote.
MARVEL over the fact that I watched a bunch of people masturbate and got paid for it.
VISIT WITH OBSESSION The Erin O’Brien Owner’s Manual for Human Beings.
This is the light and the truth. This is the sound of falling water.
Erin O’Brien
www.erinobrien.us
erin-obrien.blogspot.com/
Naw, I don’t know how the joke ends, either.
Neither Karen nor I remember much about our wedding. Here’s what Karen had to say about it a moment ago, when I asked: “It was very stressful.” Weddings aren’t for the bride and groom, that’s for sure. I do know one thing — I had a gorgeous bride.
Remember that old Fredric March movie, Death Takes a Holiday? I have a new one for you: Fate Takes a Dump.
Yeah, I know: nothing original about Fate taking a dump. But when it happens to you for the first time, it feels pretty damned original. It plays havoc with your world view, too.
Can’t . . . resist . . . power . . . of Thirteen.
We celebrate our 22nd wedding anniversary on Friday. I’d like to pick up the story where I left off last year. Hmm. Let’s see. We had just done the narsty, but I hadn’t proposed.
Yeah. That’s a story.
I’ll bet you’re thinking I spent three days fixing some incredible meal for Karen, that I popped for the best bottle of wine I could afford, and that a woodburning fireplace and classical music figured in somehow, too. I kind of like that memory. Too bad it’s imaginary.
Karen was in her last year at Berkeley and I was in my first year of med school (Stanford, sixty miles south). As much as possible, I spent the weekends with Karen, hanging out in her studio apartment atop one of Berkeley’s sleazier massage parlors. Lord, what a dive. When we moved Karen in, foil covered the studio’s one window (accordingly, we called Karen’s predecessor “the Unnamed Vampire Graduate Student”). The window overlooked a ventilation shaft. If you got down on the floor and looked up, you might correctly guess the weather.
We shared a twin bed. (Every couple should do this in the beginning of their relationship so they can truly appreciate the queen-sized or king-sized bed when they get it.) This was not a problem, as we were in the spooning phase of our relationship. Living in terror that her black-belt-in-Judo-father would pop in on us in the middle of the night, that was my problem.
As much as we were in love, we sucked miserably when it came to romance. Candlelight dinner? One or the other of us would pipe up: “We’re having a romantic moment!” thus ruining the romantic moment. Do you see my predicament? I couldn’t have stage-managed a romantic proposal if my life depended on it. Honestly, I didn’t give it much thought. We both knew we were going to get married. The rest was details.
Some weekends, we carpooled back-and-forth from Berkeley to Palo Alto with Karen’s friend Kira. Karen and Kira had been pals since grade school. They roomed together at Berkeley for a couple of years and they both graduated from the College of Chemistry. Anyway, if I remember correctly, Karen was driving, Kira sat in the passenger seat, and I sat in the back. Kira, never the shrinking violet, began pressing me on my plans vis a vis her best friend. Here is a dramatic reenactment dredged from the depths of my memory.
Kira: Well, young man, what I’m asking is, what are your intentions towards our Karen?
Me: Oh, we’ve pretty much decided to get married.
Kira: Really. When?
Me: We haven’t picked a date.
Kira: But you’ve proposed?
(Cue road noise and perhaps the sound of Pink Floyd’s The Wall playing on the car’s tape deck.)
Kira: Surely you’ve proposed.
Karen: Not yet he hasn’t.
Me: So what do you say?
Karen: Sure.
Kira (screams incoherently, since she realizes she has just played witness to the lamest, most unemotional marriage proposal in the history of mankind)
If not exactly true, it’s at least true in spirit.
***
I decided straight away to ask her Dad’s permission. Karen’s mind boggled at the thought. Ask his permission? I think she was not-so-vaguely offended by the idea.
His main concern: he wanted to know how I would support Karen. (Now she’s really pissed. She fully intended to support herself with her grad student stipend.) Before Karen could commit patricide, I said, “With my student loan money, sir!” I convinced him that banks loved med students and would give me as much money as I wanted.
Here’s a pic of Karen and her dad just prior to the wedding:

He died a little over a year ago of pancreatic cancer. What a miserable way to go. Needless to say, we miss him a lot.
Tomorrow: an atheist and a lapsed Jew have a Buddhist wedding.
D.
Occasionally, I visit one of our local used book stores. It takes me a year or so to forget the score and there I am, back again, amazed by the sight of hundreds of books, none of them worth reading.
Me: Where do you keep your hard-boiled?
Bookstore person: (blank stare)
Me: You know, hard-boiled, noir . . .
Bookstore person: (blank stare)
Me:Â Like Raymond Chandler, Dashiell Hammett.
Bookstore person: (blank stare)
Me (running from store): Aiieeeeee!
***
But seriously.
You learn a lot about a community by looking at the contents of their used book stores. There’s a reason why the best used book stores are in places like Berkeley and San Francisco. Interesting, diverse population = interesting, diverse used books.
Needless to say, I can’t wait for Seattle.
D.
I still need guest bloggers (what did you think I meant?) Pop down a few posts for the details. Don’t miss this opportunity to preach to the foodies, liberals, romantics, and sex-fiends of the blogosphere.
***
Author Erin O’Brien will be our first guest blogger (July 1), and she will kick off what I hope will be a long and esteemed tradition of guest-blogging in the nude. Don’t miss it. And because Erin has a webcam on her blog, of course I want a webcam on MY blog and I want it NOW:
Mr. Salt:
You can have all those things when you get homeVeruca:
No, now!!I want a ball
I want a party
Pink macaroons and a million balloons
And performing baboons and …
Give it to me
Rrhh rhhh
Now!
Veruca Salt. Oh, how I love her.
Anyway.
I was saying, I want it NOW, or at least by this evening. I have the camera and the Stickam account, and I’ve done everything Stickam told me to do, but I still can’t get live video. Maybe it’s for the best, though, because it will undoubtedly scare women away.
Are there any other Stickam-like services out there? Or can someone explain to me how I can set this up without Stickam? As Veruca would say, Rrhh. Such frustration.
D.
Random Flickr Blogging rides again. Brought to you by the number 4580. Photo pinched from Justabird2’s photostream.
Meet Calum and Edgar:

Calum: Would you look at that.
Edgar: Shameless, it is. Yet perfectly legal.
Calum: Plucked clean as the day she was born.
Edgar: Cleaner. It’s a, what do you call it. The latest thing. A Brazilian, ain’t it?
Calum: Why would a chick do something like that?
Edgar: Dunno. Maybe her bloke got tired of gettin’ feathers up his bill.
Or late evening. Whatever it is.
I like the medical info on your web-site but do you think you can quit coming aginst our beloved president!? If you don’t like him get out of this country!!
Treat others the way you want to be treated!God is watching.                        Jane Smith
This is so very wrong in so very many ways: from the assumption that dissent justifies banishment, to the sanctimonious, hypocritical, and pink signature line, to the exuberant punctuation, to the blushing happy face. And heavens to betsy, I’m not even going to start in on the grammar and spelling.
Thanks, Jane. You made my evening.
D.
PS: I changed the name and deleted the email address because, unlike Jane, I do try to treat others the way I would like to be treated.