Tag Archives: Mike Reph

Sometimes There’s Nothing Like 711

It’s 10PM on a Saturday night, and Mike and I are walking the streets of Vancouver, BC.  We’ve been in the city just over 24 hours and have explored Stanley Park, Granville Island, and Gastown.  We’re ready to cut loose — and cut a rug.

I know what you’re thinking.  “Seriously!?  Dancing?   For the love of all that’s good, you’re MARRIED.  Act your age.”

We had those thoughts too.  But we dismissed them quickly.  Dancing is fun.

Getting to dance?  Not as fun.  No one told us that Vancouver does an incredibly good job masquerading as New York City;  when the sun goes down she puts on a little lipstick and suddenly she’s running down the street in a mini-skirt hailing a cab.  Really, V?  Just who do you think you are?

Things begin optimistically as we have dinner at a chic and lively restaurant called the Cactus Club.  It attracts singles in their late twenties and early thirties, our dream demographic (we are 25, but being married adds five years).  We have a great dinner and decide to ask the wait staff for some recommendations for a local club or lounge that wasn’t disgusting but wasn’t sterile either.  Please, we beg, don’t send us somewhere that has STDs on the walls, but we don’t want to go to a bar at the Hyatt either.  Tell us there’s middle ground!

“Head six blocks south on Granville and you’ll see Sip,” she explained.  “Totally hip but completely relaxed.  And no cover.”

So we start walking down Granville.  We intentionally dressed to impress in case of strict codes at any of the venues we visited, but we managed to wear weather-appropriate attire; not so for many of the other revelers of the night.  Apparently 35 degree weather doesn’t deter hundreds of Vancouver women from wearing mini-dresses with bare backs.  I am in a small dress too…but with leggings and a long, cream-colored wool trench — toasty warm and laughing with relief at not being naked on a winter’s night.

We are stunned as we go further and further down Granville; every single club we pass has velvet rope outside the door with fifty people waiting to get inside.  I look at Mike.  He looks at me.  We keep walking.

At last we spot Sip and approach the door.  Naturally, there is a black velvet rope preventing the passing public from mistakenly thinking they are welcome in this lounge.  I make the split-second decision not to act cool.

“Hello,” I say to the bouncer.  In my mind I can see my 22-year-old self running down the block to get away from the embarrassment of my 25-year-old self who couldn’t care less.

“Do you have a reservation?” the large man asks us.  I almost laugh.

“No, we don’t,” I say as Mike steps forward.

“Table for two,” Mike says, and the bouncer looks at his clipboard.

“Let me just check inside and see if I can get you in,” he replies, surprisingly politely.  It occurs to me that even though this whole charade is ridiculous, it still has the power to make me feel weak, like I’m at risk of being rejected from my own high school prom.

“I don’t have a table right now, but you’re welcome to wait upstairs until something opens up,” he offers.  We bite.  Upstairs we go.

Except that there’s not one vacant seat upstairs, even at the bar.  I turn to Mike and say “This is so not worth it.  Do you realize the heels I’m wearing?  I’m not spending $10 a drink to stand in five-inch heels.”

He visits the bouncer once again, and it works.  We scoot inside as Mike hands him some cash, but he politely declines it.  Maybe this isn’t New York after all; I forgot Canadians can be so nice.

We take a seat on the bench just inside the door, not caring in the least that we are technically still in the entry — we are just grateful to be inside while others continue to wait in the Line of Shame outside.

Just then a waitress looks over at us, horrified, and says “Why are you sitting there?”  We’re instantly ashamed.  What?  We don’t belong?  We’re not fabulous enough?  Is it that I’m not half-naked?

“You don’t need to sit there!” she cries.  “There’s a table for two right here!”  I thought I would melt onto the floor with relief.

Like I said, Canadians can be so nice.

After a couple of drinks and many more laughs, we’ve sipped Sip and we’re full.

We start walking down Granville toward our hotel, in search of our next spot, this time with dancing, we hope.  We stare agape at the lines that have grown from one hundred people to several hundred, lines that snake down the sidewalk covering half-blocks.

We finally come across a bar that seems super cool and doesn’t have a line, but is busy inside.  We step in and look around to confirm there’s dancing.  There’s definitely dancing, but it’s only coming from the girls on staff in top-hats, fishnets, and silky bras shaking from the balcony for everyone’s enjoyment.  Mike abruptly turns around and walks outside.  This is beginning to feel hopeless.

He turns to me when we’re in the cold air.  “There’s an insane party happening in room 711 at the Hotel Le Soleil.  There’s wine and champagne, there’s room service, and there’s an incredibly attractive redhead…want to go?”

Do I ever.

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Filed under AwkWORD (Humor)

Better than Apple Jacks

Not all men can be Shakespeare, and it’s probably best that most don’t try to be.

One of Mike’s most fantastic qualities is that he is utterly accepting of this fact.  Case in point:  he once promised me that he would never attempt to write me a poem; he thinks they are ridiculous, especially when written by the average adult male.

Since I am a woman who loves to write (though not poems), I don’t need my spouse to try to please me through my own medium — I’m happy to accept affection in other forms (unexpected gifts and vacations, natch).

Given all of this, one can imagine my shock last week when we got together with our friends Stephen and Jessica, and they said they had found a poem by Mike in their storage of high school mementos.

A WHAT?

Yes, a poem.  Mike’s face turned pink as soon as they mentioned it.  Then he burst out laughing.

“It’s horrible!” he said between laughs.  “It’s so bad you won’t even believe it was published.”

PUBLISHED?

He clarified quickly.  “We had an assignment to write a love poem, so of course I thought it was the stupidest assignment and I decided to be so over-the-top that they wouldn’t publish mine in the class book.  But they did anyway, and so it reads like I’m being completely serious.”

I considered for a moment whether he was just saying that to cover up whatever horrors lie in those stanzas.  The next day they emailed it to us, and I didn’t have to wonder — he was most definitely being ridiculous for the asinine assignment.

But judge for yourself.  And ladies, try not to swoon; this guy’s already taken:

How do you describe it?
Does it make you overjoyed?
Can you feel your heartbeat?
Does it make you do crazy things?

How do you describe it?
How do you describe love?
I think it’s a completely selfless expression
To put another first in everything.

It’s finding someone tastier than Red Vines.
And Hot Tamales.
Someone better than Apple Jacks.
Or peanut butter M&M’s.

It’s finding someone worth spending even just a
moment with, yet after you’ve searched
a lifetime to find.

Someone who when you look into their eyes
You find yourself closest to heaven.
Someone who if they died,
You would continue to love until the rest of YOUR life.
That is true love.

– Michael Reph

Believe me, there was some serious negotiating before I was allowed to share this with anyone outside of our home.  But I pointed out that I have shared my own humiliating moments (here, here and here) so what’s a poem between friends?

What’s funniest about this isn’t that he’s joking, or that it’s cheesy, or that it uses such silly references to candy.  What’s funniest is that it inspired the use of humor in his vows to me.  A sample:

“If there were no more chips and salsa or Mirror Pond in the world, I’d still be happy if I was with you.”

People laughed out loud at our wedding when he read that to me.  It was a total departure from what was otherwise a very serious vow statement.  Little did people know it was Michael Reph quoting Michael Reph.  He really should give himself more credit.

So honey, since Sunday is the two year anniversary of you saying those vows, I can say without a doubt that the poem you wrote at 16 turned out to be spot on.  You have proven to be tastier than Hot Tamales and you’ve made me feel my heartbeat.   You’ve shown me love as a completely selfless expression, and you’ve put me first in so many things.  Fortunately for me, you didn’t take a lifetime to find.

I know that I’ve made you do crazy things, but I hope, for your sake, that I turned out to be better than Apple Jacks.

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Filed under AwkWORD (Humor)

My Homeland Security

After handing the gate agent our boarding passes at LAX, Mike and I headed down the little gangway for the plane.  There were still 50 people ahead of us, so we had to wait in the tunnel until the line moved along.  We were small talking, the kind of talk when you know everyone around you is listening to your every word.  All of a sudden, the gangway jolted.

Jolting is not a preferred feeling when boarding an aircraft, particularly when it’s a mere 48 hours after a near-major jolting over the Atlantic.

We gave each other a worried look, and then looked at the other passengers who were just as bewildered as we were.  One midde-aged Chinese-American woman turned around to face us.

“Did you feel that?” she asked, somewhat panicked.  “I felt that!  I saw the plane move too!”

“Yes, what was that?  Why did this tunnel just move?” I asked in reply.  “Like we really need this sort of alarm after the scare on Friday.”

Apparently I thought it would be smart to remind everyone of the danger we were surely encountering.  I’m sensitive like that.

Neither Mike nor I gave much thought to flying despite the thwarted Christmas day terrorist attack.  We both have a very practical, somewhat unspoken agreement that we won’t live in fear of the things we can’t control.  Do I have control over the odds that I will board the same plane as a terrorist?  No;  I am too busy controlling the hyper-increased security check to make sure none of my orafices are searched.

It was all the more surprising then that the lady in front of us told us she DID have control over the terrorists.

She replied to my statement, “They’re not taking ME down.  We fight back,” she said assuredly.  “If there is a terrorist on this plane there is no way he would get away with his plans.”

Suddenly I felt a surge of love for this woman, this small person who was in no way small, who represented the collective anger and strength the US has endured the last eight years.  Here she was, knowing in all certainty that no person hell-bent on hurting her would ever succeed in doing so.  She was ready to give her life to prove a point.  She would go down fighting.

Her “FEAR NOT!” stance didn’t look anything like our “fear not” stance.  We choose to assume that what will happen will happen, and we’ll deal with it as it comes.  This lady has a battle plan laid out, practically daring a radical to be assigned to the seat next to her so she can show him what’s what.  That is courage.

This lady is one reason why I board planes without trepidation.  I know there are hundreds of thousands of people like her, people who would never sit in fear while an extremist lights a fuse in front of them.  Just last Friday passengers saw smoke and pounced on the offender before any harm could occur.  Why?  They’re angry.  They refused to be treated like sheep hunted by wolves.

Me?  I’d like to believe that I would leap from my seat and attack a terrorist with whatever I could get my hands on, and if nothing, then just my bare hands.  But when I’m honest, when I really picture a large man yelling at me in a foreign language with explosives in his hands, I hesistate.  I fear.  I see a more accurate picture of pulling myself under a seat so I can just pray or escape being shot.

And that’s not a pretty picture.

After all, since I know my soul lives eternally, why do I fear death?  I considered this for some time, and realized that it’s not death that I fear.  It’s much more that I love my life.  I love my husband and family, and I would hate to see this rich adventure come to an end so soon.

I never learned where the jolting came from, and the flight proceeded smoothly.  I was able to obsess over my glossy People magazine without worrying about my safety, and that’s exactly how every flight should be.  But unlike every other flight I’ve taken, this one reminded me of my God-given right to demonstrate courage.  Thankfully, I didn’t have to; we made it home safely.  But that initial shake-up did serve a purpose — it jolted me awake.

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Filed under One WORD (Current Events)