Seanan McGuire (seanan_mcguire) wrote,
Seanan McGuire
seanan_mcguire

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Seanan's Adventures in The OCD Porn Store.

As I've discussed before on this blog, I have OCD, which manifests itself most specifically in pattern-formation and obsessive tracking. Oddly, you can use my tracking as a bellwether for my overall mental health: If I'm tracking, I'm good, and if I'm not, I'm probably getting pretty alarmingly de-stable, and should be encouraged to start counting crows and writing down my results as quickly as humanly possible. (I saw six crows yesterday, indicating gold, in case you wondered.) I am at peace with my diagnosis, and have learned to live with my idiosyncrasies just as much as "normal" people live with theirs.

Of course, part of managing my flavor of OCD involves keeping my tracking detailed, dependable, and most of all, consistent. Which is why I depend on Franklin-Covey's planner refills to keep me from snapping and killing everyone in an unformatted rage. Only there's one small problem:

Since they unexpectedly redesigned the "Blooms" planner pages in 2005, I've insisted on going to the Franklin-Covey store in person, to be sure that what I'm getting is something I can actually use. And both California stores have been closed in the last year, resulting in great dismay and sorrow on my part.

Enter salvation, in the form of Washington, and Ryan. Because there is still one store—one beautiful, wonderful store—in Redmond. It opens at ten on Saturday mornings. Which is why, at nine-fifteen, Ryan picked me up and drove me to that glorious wonderland I often refer to as "the OCD porn store."

On the way, we saw a bald eagle. Just sitting there. Being the stone-dumb symbol of our country. DUDE WHAT THE FUCK. I mean, seriously.

Finding the store was easy, and we were the first ones there, probably because we were actually there before they opened. The manager on duty was a friendly, well-groomed blonde woman, originally from California, who said we were lucky to have come when we did, as the store will probably be closing in January. My heart broke a little. While I can understand that high-end planner products are probably more economically sold online, I always spend more in the physical stores, because I can put my hands on things, and really understand why I might need them.

Case in point: a deeply discounted orange leather purse. I opened it. I peered inside. I commented on all the pockets.

"I can put my planner in here," I said.
"Yes," said Ryan.
"I can put my Netbook in here," I said.
"Yes," said Ryan.
"I can put Alice in here," I said.
"Maybe," said Ryan.
"What's an Alice?" asked the manager.
"My cat," I said.

Ryan produced his iPhone, and produced a picture, which we showed to the manager.

"Holy crap," said the manager.

I bought the purse.

It was a glorious morning, filled with victory (and later, with pancakes). We even saw the eagle again, flying over the water, looking for breakfast. I mourn for the loss of the OCD porn store, where I never feel odd at all, just really, really efficient. And Alice does, in fact, fit inside my purse.
Tags: alice, animals rock, friends rock, good things, in the wild, shopping, wild adventures
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  • 84 comments
I need a new planner. I keep screwing mine up. I'm a perfectionist, so when I screw them up I throw them away.

...

This is not necessarily a productive tendency. I use iCal, which since I can fix it on the fly works great. But it doesn't translate well to something I can carry with me.

I have been suspected several times of having OCD, but I don't *quite* fit and doctor types have been reluctant to slap me with the diagnosis because it might be the case that I developed an obsessive organizational and structuring streak because of my learning disability. If I am not fanatical about my details and how they ordered, I get confused and disorganized very, very quickly. That's a function of having a disability that involves a working memory disorder; I can only keep track of so many things at a time, so I have to create elaborate structures to "hold" data for me to work with later. That looks a lot like OCD. Not sure it actually is. Nobody's ever bothered to look into it too closely because it doesn't interfere with my functionality.

And I fifty-fifth the request to see the Pumpkin Maine Coon in the Pumpkin Bag of Holding.
May I highly recommend the Levenger Circa system? All the pages are individually removable and replaceable, and you can buy whole years or just quarters at a time.

(The initial investment is a bit steep if you want something other than the default plastic cover, but it's always worked for me and I find the two-year pull-out planner to be amazingly useful.)
I'll take a look. It would certainly help with my tendency to go "RARGH" and throw things away.