Thursday, February 22, 2007

Not all my days suck!

Ever have one of those days where you just seem really lucky? Like...you have two projects due that day, but you only get one of them done...then you park illegally (and really close to the building) and slip into the room just as the professor is starting to take the attendance. Then there ends up not being enough time in the class period to go over the project you haven't finished. Then you get to your car and there's no ticket.

After class you go to your closing shift at work, and everything is practically finished when you walk in. You're working with awesome people, and you end up getting out 15 minutes after the place closes.

I love days like that. Too bad they don't happen more often.

Saturday, February 10, 2007

Some random updates

It just occurred to me that some past posts may warrant updates, so I just thought I'd throw those down while I'm thinking of it.

The Charm Bracelet - I got one for Christmas the same year I posted that entry (2005). It was given to me by two people I've never even met in person, a couple from Oregon I met on a message board. We did an online Secret Santa exchange, and they'd picked up on the charm bracelet thing, and sent me one, along with a little silver starfish charm. It's awesome and I love it. Now I just need to fill it with more charms. My mom gave me a cat charm and a shamrock charm for Christmas, but there's lots more room on it! I was browsing a charm shop online and saw some really cool ones. My birthday is in May, folks. And, not that it matters much, but Valentine's Day is next week. Surely there's a secret admirer who wants to give me one of these, no? ;-)

The Viscom project/Last semester's grades
: The travel kiosk was a bomb. And not as in "the bomb," either - it was just a bomb. I ended up with a C+ in the class. BUT...I rocked that Anthro final, landed an A in that class, along with a B+ in each of my other classes. Final tally=3.24 GPA. So I still pretty much rock.

Canine Senility: Alex is getting worse. She has to be confined when I'm not home and now when I'm asleep, too. She won't eat the food in her bowl but is happy to tip the food bin over and spill it all over the floor, and she's even happier to empty my pantry of as much of its contents as possible. Last night she got into a box of spaghetti, a container of salt, a bottle of olive oil, and a box of cereal. THAT was fun to clean up off the floor. Not.

And I'm still not in love. Or maybe I'm just in denial.

Saturday, February 03, 2007

What is my deal, anyway?

It must be a Gemini thing; you know, that whole "twins" issue. I used to say of myself "Behold the living dichotomy!" but lately I've been noticing that my life has gone beyond dichotomy and has moved into just plain chaos.

I wish I could be one of those people who is just one thing, who has set parameters and static opinions. But I'm not, and I suppose that's what makes me who I am, right? My whole life I've never been able to stick to one "image." One day I'm a hippie, the next day I'm a biker chick. Tuesday I'm a librarian and by Wednesday I'm just a scuzzy old slacker. I sometimes feel like I don't wear outfits, but rather "costumes" to reflect what kind of mood I'm in that day. This might not be so bad, but I'm 35 years old, and I sometimes dress like I'm 14. I think it has some deep-seated roots in my parents' constant squelching of my self-expression during my most formative years. Sometimes I think it has to do with my hugely diverse musical tastes. I've never been one of those people whose CD collection contains only one genre. Spend a few minutes shuffling through the playlist on my iPod and you'll hear Joni Mitchell, Henry Rollins, Tracy Chapman, Alice Donut, Ice Cube, Cake, Kool and the Gang, Laibach...you get the picture.

At nearly 36, I'm still struggling to figure out who I am. While most people my age are married (or divorced) with kids, stable jobs, established careers, and homes of their own, I'm floundering about in a sea of self-doubt and second-guesses. I often think about how different things might have been if I'd made different decisions along the way. Like, what if I'd not moved back to Buffalo? What if I'd stayed in Chicago and toughed it out? What if I'd moved to a different city? What if I'd chosen a different career path? What if I'd stood up for myself and pushed harder to explore my interest in advertising when I was in high schoo,l instead of meekly accepting that I would be what my parents wanted me to be (and then failing)?

What if I'd not done the things that led to the failure of one relationship after another (because yes, I do blame myself for many of them)? What if I'd given so-and-so a chance? What if so-and-so had given me a chance? Would I be married? Would I have kids? I've decided that, indeed, marriage and children are not my thing. But did this come about because I never got the opportunity to have them, or did I not open myself to the opportunity because I knew in my heart of hearts they weren't what I wanted?

There are so many questions and so few answers for this shit. I didn't mean for this post to become so philosophical and depressing; in fact it was supposed to be about how weird I am. Well, I guess I just reinforced that, didn't I? I promise my next post will make you laugh.

Wow, the first post of 2007!

I can't believe it's already February. It seems like just yesterday I was posting that "first post of 2006" about LePew. It's been a year!

It really is true what our parents told us all those years when we were little and so impatient for the time to pass; the older you get, the faster it flies.

(Speaking of time flying, I'd like to send out wishes for a very happy 6th wedding anniversary to my dear friends Gus and Lynne)!

Anyway, dear blogwatchers, the new semester is well underway now, and though I don't want to jinx myself, I must say it's going pretty well. My portfolio review is coming up, though, so hopefully that trend will continue. I haven't quite begun to stress out about the review yet - but talk to me in a couple weeks and I'm sure my tune will have changed!

So what's in store for the new year? Lots of stuff, I promise! I've made some resolutions, some anti-resolutions, and some changes. Expect to see some sorting of it all right here on the hallowed pages of As Planet Deedums Turns. I'm sure you can't wait.

Sunday, December 17, 2006

When Bad Habits Attack!

So after all the craziness of last week, I took a trip over to the doctor to see why I haven't been feeling any better despite the antibiotics I was prescribed earlier.

Well, turns out I have asthma. Heh. Looks like all that bodily abuse of the last twenty or so years is finally catching up with me. While smoking hasn't been an issue for a while (but was for more than half my life), and my drinking was brought way under control once school started (I have a tendency to drink a lot in the summer and hardly drink at all during the fall and winter months) it's mainly my weight that's plaguing me now. Looks like that's the source of all my troubles. First the bad back (which wasn't caused by the weight but is certainly exacerbated by it), then the migraines, now asthma...what's next, diabetes and a handicapped parking permit? Well, sure. Why not? Throw me a cane while you're at it.

*sigh*

I guess I'm going back to Weight Watchers. Happy Holidays, indeed.

Being fat sucks. Being fat with asthma sucks even worse. Hindsight sucks the most balls ever. Take better care of yourselves, gentle readers. I wish I had.

More on this later. My steroids are calling me.

Thursday, December 14, 2006

Another semester under my belt!

As of 7:30 this evening, my semester officially came to an end. Looks like it was another relatively good one grade-wise, though I won't know for sure until grades are posted next week. I hate that they make you wait so long to find out! Talk about nerve-wracking!

I was going to post this morning, after an extended cram session that involved a shit-ton of work, reading, and stressing out and not so much sleep, showers, or nutritious food. Alas, as I sat down to write it all out, my body decided to scream a hearty "fuck you!" at me, and I crashed. Hard.

See, I was working on this project for my Visual Communications (or VisCom as it is more commonly known by those of us who just can't bear to expend the energy for eight whole syllables on a class name), and it hadn't been going very well. It was a 4-paneled advertising kiosk for a travel agency, with graphics on all eight surfaces. For the last couple weeks I struggled with design and construction problems, mostly born of motivation issues stemming from a raging case of Decemberitis and exacerbated by an otherwise hectic schedule. Then two days ago I discovered that my flash drive was missing. It must have fallen off somewhere, and though I spent the entire evening retracing my steps, I turned up nothing.

So yesterday morning I found myself no closer to being done with the thing than I was two weeks ago, and so I took a deep breath, thanked God that I'd had the wherewithal to back up all my files on disc last week (how's that for irony?), and got to work. The timeline went something like this:

6:30 - I drag myself out of bed for my second final of the semester, my Color Theory critique, which goes from 7:30 to 9:30 a.m.

Between 10 a.m. and noon, I run around gathering supplies I was going to need for the project. Then I run a few necessary errands, and by noon I'm on my way back to campus.

Noonish - 1:00 p.m. Fart around, check email, talk to some people, extract the files and organize my thoughts. Freak out a little but remind myself that I've got all the rest of the day to finish this thing.

1:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m. one panel has the graphics and text finished and laid out, three of the four inside panels are printed.

3:00 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. I take a break to run a few more errands, come home to walk the dog, make a phone call, and stop and get some dinner.

5:30 p.m. I realize I've got exactly 24 hours and 10 minutes to get this thing finished.

4:30 p.m. - 7:30 p.m. Graphics for second panel (a photoshop collage extravaganza) are done and laid out. Still needs text, though.

7:30 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. I screw around a little, get up and stretch and walk around for a minute, then one of my classmates comes in and I end up chatting with her for a while before deciding to take another break. I go and get some coffee, stop home to check on the pets and change my shirt (I'd been wearing this huge sweater and that studio gets hot).

9:00 p.m. - 4:30 a.m. Finally finished with the layouts and printing of all eight sides, the piece is ready to for the construction phase. I decide to do this part at home, because at this point I'm really sick of the inside of Upton Hall room 203. I've had enough. I have bags under my eyes, my vision is blurring, my left eyelid is twitching, my back is stiff, and my right hand is permanently formed into the shape of a mouse.

4:45 a.m. Stop at Tim Horton's for coffee, and for the second time in two weeks, I pull up to the drive-thru only to be shot down. Who knew they closed every night from 4:30 to 5:00? Damn it!

5:00 a.m. - 6:30 a.m. Prints are mounted onto board. Boards are cut and slotted and fit together. Turkey the cat keeps jumping on me, the piece keeps falling apart, and I'm getting increasingly agitated. Finally, at 6:30 a.m. - 17 hours after I started, and 24 hours since I'd last slept - the thing is finished. I'm so damn proud of it, I take it to Starbucks with me when I go to get coffee. My coworkers are slightly baffled as to why I do this, but I wanted someone - anyone - to see the fruit of my labor. Unshowered since Tuesday, skin a sallow shade of gray mixed with the flush of sleep deprivation, looking like I'd been socked in the eyes, rocking indigestion from gallons of coffee and some horrid fried chicken strips, and on my 25th hour with no sleep, I am a picture of creative psychosis.

6:30 a.m. - 7:30 a.m. I still have two books to finish reading for my Anthro exam, which is happening in six hours. I'm confident I can do it, since they're short books with interesting subject matter. Plus I'd been to all the lectures and figure I can just skim over the contents and pick out the stuff I think he's going to test us on. At 7:30, however, my body just gives out, and I literally drop the book I'm reading onto the floor and walk, zombie-like, into my bedroom where I curl up on the bed, clothes and all.

11:30 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. I wake up in a panic, thinking I'd overslept. I look at the clock and realize I still have two whole hours before exam time, so I read for another half hour and then go back to sleep for another 45 minutes. Then I get up and - for the first time in two days - take a shower. Not since the shower I took after hitchhiking for 12 hours in 90-degree weather from Mansfield, MA to Rindge, NH in 1989 has a shower felt so good.

A short time later, I sit down to my Anthro test, and I know all but a few answers. I hope I am right and not just delusional as a result of the previous day's activities. But I'm done in 15 minutes, and walk out feeling pretty confident that I'd done okay. Shortly thereafter I meet with a professor who has agreed to look over my portfolio and advise on some things I can do with it over break in preparation for my review in February. He has lots of advice. I'm going to be busy. Anyone got a copy of Illustrator for PC they can give me?

And then...the answer to the burning question that has you all on the edge of your seats right now: How did I do on the kiosk project? Well...my classmates seemed to like it, but the prof panned it. Not totally, I mean, he didn't tell me it was the biggest hunk of crap he'd ever seen or anything like that, but he had lots of "suggestions for improvement." Basically I'm going to have to do it over again before my review.

But for now, I'm just going to get some sleep. I deserve it.

Wednesday, December 06, 2006

I'm not in love, so don't forget it...

Don't read too much of anything into this, dear faithful blogwatchers, it's just some weird philosophical musings while I procrastinate working on my final projects for school.

I was given the advice on one of my previous entries to "stop looking for love." And then I started thinking...Maybe I don't want love. Or maybe I do. And then I starting thinking that it would depend on one's definition of love.

Why does "love" have to be such a black-and-white thing? Why can't you love someone even if you don't want to run off and marry them or have their babies? Why does saying "I love you" strike so much fear in the hearts of so many? It's like saying it automatically evokes a sense of entitlement and attachment and commitment and forever-ness. But it shouldn't.

While some of us use the word with reckless abandon, and throw it prematurely, apathetically, or even with some twisted cruelty at people we don't really mean it for, some of us are so afraid of it that we doubt we could feel it at all. Or we start to feel it and we run away and shove it deep down inside because "oh my god, it's scary!" It's not supposed to be scary, though, it's supposed to be wonderful! Fluttering hearts and bluebirds and sunshine and rainbows and all that puke-inducing stuff. Right?

Right?

So why, when we feel so strongly about someone, when our hearts race and the bluebirds orbit our heads, are we not supposed to say we feel this way unless we are fully prepared to commit to this person? What IS it about those "three little words" that holds SO much power and control over us?

Three (and a half!) decades on this planet have shown me that "love" does not always equal happily ever after. It does not always equal a serious or lifetime commitment. If it did, I'd have been married a long time ago. So those I have loved in the past (and to this day still believe truly did love) are to be discounted because I didn't end up with them for the rest of my life? And am I to believe that they did not also love me, because our futures didn't align? And what about those who don't want to be married? Ever? Are they not allowed to love or be loved?

I love lots of people. I'm not just talking about my family (because let's face it, if you know me you know there are more people in that group who are not loved than who are). I have great friends whom I love most dearly. I love my pets to death. I love peppermint gum and little greasy pepperoni. And it's okay for me to say "I love you" to my sister, my best friend, or the slice of pizza I'm about to shove down my throat.

But if you're dating someone and those three words slip from either of your mouths at the inappropriate time or place, it's like the god damned world screeches to a halt and all hell breaks loose.

I guess we'll never know. Because I don't think anyone really knows what love is - or at least there aren't that many people willing to look at it a little more objectively, anyway.

Okay, back to my schoolwork. I love you all. :-)

Sunday, October 08, 2006

It's a breakthrough! The DVD is hooked up! And this post is REALLY long!

Long overdue post, I know. I've been busy, plus I guess I just haven't been feeling very inspired. However, today is a joyous day for me, and I must rave...I finally hooked up my god damned DVD player. And I feel like a total idiot because it has taken me nearly TWO YEARS to get around to it.

Yes, two years. Now, you all know my penchant for making a short story very long, so settle in - here's the whole sordid story of my DVD player's journey from twinkle in Deedee's eye to actual, functioning member of Deedee's Audio-Visual setup:

*cues cheesy background music*

Back in September of 2004, I had just started working for a company in an area where the most convenient place to get lunch, unfortunately, was McDonald's. McD's had just come out with the Chicken Selects, you know those really outrageously delicious and overpriced "real" chicken strips, and at the very same time had just fired up the year's "Monopoly" game. So I became hooked on the Chicken Selects (and the occasional Quarter Pounder) and started collecting the Monopoly stamps. The promo that year was a tie-in with Best Buy, wherein no matter what, you earned at least one "Best Buy Buck" or something (I can't remember what they were really called, I think because all that processed food has shorted out parts of my brain). I never won anything on the other stamps, of course, because that's how they rope you in. Everyone gets all nuts because everyone - everyone is just "one stamp away" from a million dollars. But I digress.

I continued to collect the Best Buy stamps and filled up a whole card with them, totalling 20-some-odd dollars. I think I also racked up about 20 pounds during my little stamp-and-chicken frenzy, but that's a separate story altogether. I kept the card in my car with the intention of using it the next time I had occasion to be in Best Buy, which I figured would be soon, since Christmas was right around the corner. My boyfriend at the time had asked for CD-R's for his recording projects and I had my eye on a couple of CD's to which I thought I might like to treat myself, and so I figured I would just hang on to the thing until I got a chance to get over there - or was forced to redeem it before it expired.

I did redeem it on the expiration date - December 11, 2004. It's pretty sad why I actually remember that date, but I had found out the day before that the above-mentioned boyfriend had another girlfriend and had pretty much broken up with me - he just hadn't gotten around to telling me yet - so it was a pretty memorable date. Anyway, after a night of tossing and turning and being really upset, I woke up the next day and said, "Fuck him. I'm buying a DVD player!" and off I trotted to Best Buy to redeem my little stamp booklet, a small paper testament to 6 weeks of eating pounds and pounds of deep-fried, breaded chicken strips and french fries, drinking buckets of Hi-C orange drink, and soothing my new-job stress with M&M McFlurries (God, Judith Moore and Wendy McClure would be so proud of me right now, I think).

So with my red eyes, sore nose, and pounding head (I cried a fair bit over this asshole), I walked in and began to wander around, looking for a good deal on a DVD player. I found one, too - it was on sale AND came with a rebate, and so I bought it. Now, if you know me, you know how proud I get when I score a great deal. So when all was said and done, I think I ended up paying twelve dollars for the thing. Serious bargain. My elation, however, would be short-lived.

Shortly after the killer aqcuisition, I plunged into a pretty deep depression. First the DVD player sat in the back seat of my car for a good couple of weeks. I only took it out when I did because I had to clean out my car for the trip to my sister's house for Christmas. After Christmas, I got worse. The DVD player sat, unopened, on the floor of my living room for quite some time after that. My mood darkened, and I got increasingly sadder and sadder until my house grew an incredible mess around me, and I just didn't care. The poor DVD player was buried under newspapers, junk mail, clothes, and whatever else I'd thrown on it, until only a tiny corner of the box could be seen through the mess. I finally, sometime that spring (we're into 2005 now, dear readers), picked the box up off the floor and set it on a shelf, where it stayed for about a year.

In April of this year (yeah, that's right, I'm talking about 2006), I finally got the house cleaned up and took the DVD player out of the box and put it in the entertainment center. But it wasn't until today, October 8, that I would actually hook the fucking thing up and use it. What was holding me back? Laziness, mostly. Laziness and fear. I was too lazy to pull the TV and everything out, afraid that I wouldn't be able to figure it out, afraid that I wouldn't do it right and would screw it up, scared that I'd be too lazy to put everything back together and set the impetus in motion for another catastrophic mess (because this is usually how they start). I'm saying this, by the way, based on the fiasco that has been my VCR every time I move. It's all based in truth, folks, not just my neurosis.

So in a brazen move, I decided today that the DVD that came with my new Beck CD simply HAD to be watched. I pulled out the package of cables and owner's manual, and I set to work. In a matter of 10 minutes, I was hooked up and ready to go, and the DVD was spinning smoothly in its tray, projecting images of Mr. Hansen all over my TV screen, and I was one happy girl.

The reception on my TV is now worse than ever, though, which kind of sucks...but then again, there are only two shows I like to watch, and now I can always get the entire season when it comes out... on DVD!

Thursday, August 24, 2006

Busted at the buffet!

As anyone who knows me is well aware, I don't cook. It's just something I was never really good at - or interested in - doing. Oh sure, I can boil pasta with the best of them, and I'm a self-proclaimed mac-n-cheese gourmet, but mostly I eat out. Not the best thing for a broke person with a weight problem, but whatever. I'm lazy.

So one day last week I got hungry around dinnertime, and I started thinking of what I wanted to eat. I was sick of pizza and Mighty Taco, and not at all in the mood for fast food, in fact. I decided just to get in my car and drive around until something struck my fancy. As I drove, I passed two grocery stores and thought about just breaking down and buying some actual groceries to cook myself something cheap and nutritious. That thought passed quickly, however, and I kept driving. I thought about going for Indian food, but again - not in the mood. I was hungry, and my stomach was screaming at me to feed it like Audrey II to Seymour Krelborn. But I just couldn't figure out what I wanted. All sorts of stuff sounded alternately good and awful, and then finally it came to me. The answer to my dilemma - the buffet.

Now, buffets depress me. Even the really swank casino buffets bum me out. Something about all that food and all those people shoveling it into their fat faces (myself included) just really makes me cringe at the level of gluttony. I also have this really weird hangup about eating in front of people (which is why I eat out alone most of the time), and an almost paralyzing fear of tripping and dropping my plate. Alas I went, by myself, and as I usually do, I started with a salad. No sooner had I speared the first leaf of romaine with my fork and brought it up to my gaping maw when I heard a familiar voice, "Hey, what's this lady doing here all by herself at the buffet?"

Good God. It was my coworker. I should have known, given the fact that I have this uncanny knack for running into people I know no matter where I go, that the odds were with me that I would see someone I knew. I'd actually had a fleeting thought to turn around on my way there, because something in my gut told me this would happen, but my hunger pangs were stronger, so I forged ahead. And look what happened. I was mortified.

So as I sat there stuffing my face, I tried to think of all sorts of clever ways to hide what was on my plate, or create diversions so that this coworker and her family would not see how many trips I made (I think it was three...four if you count the cup of horrid coffee). Mostly I prayed that she wouldn't go to work that night and announce to everyone that she'd seen me there. Because they wouldn't understand.

Note to self: next time, just go to the fucking grocery store.

Saturday, August 19, 2006

Not-quite midlife crisis...in ink.

Behold my homage to the great Henry Rollins, plastered (painfully, I might add) on my back:



(Here's the original, on the man himself):


Lots of people have asked, "why?" I can't say I blame them. I mean, who gets tattoos of band logos on their backs, not to mention the logo of a hardcore band typically displayed with "Search and Destroy" above it? Certainly not 35-year-old women! Well, call it another phase in my not-quite-midlife crisis, but it definitely was not a whim. Like all my other tattoos, it was a well-thought-out decision and was years in the making before finally happening. And, for the record, my first one was the Urban Blight logo on my shoulder...so band logos are not anything new to this bod.

I've tried to explain it every which way I can. Rollins Band is my favorite. Henry Rollins is my hero. The album which sports the logo on its cover, The End of Silence, is one of my favorite RB albums (Come in and Burn is my favorite and means even more to me, but the razor skull x-ray just wasn't as appealing...) and is deeply significant to me. The details of the significance are personal, private, and profound. But you know what? At the end of the day, I needn't have to explain it to anyone.

As Henry himself said, "It'll destroy you if you try to make it mean anything to anyone but yourself."

So there. Search and destroy, indeed.

Friday, August 18, 2006

Death of a Memory


This past Wednesday morning I was reading through the paper, and I stopped to read the obituaries, as I normally do. Call it a morbid obsession, but I read them every day as part of my daily paper-reading. Anyway, I spotted the name of a childhood pal and thought, "no, that can't be the same guy." Sure enough, it was. It didn't say how he died, only that he'd passed away in the hospital on Tuesday.

Donnie was 25 days older than me, and we were in every class together from kindergarten on up through 6th grade. We grew up together, lived just a couple blocks from each other, and were constant buddies. Kids will be kids, of course, and we were teased for being friends (nyah, nyah, ... sitting in a tree, K-I-S-S....blah blah blah), but of all the friendships that came and went throughout the school years, ours was one of the few that endured and remained constant. We did hook up on and off during junior high, but it was more a matter of convenience than actual attraction. We were just really good friends.

So high school came around, and I went off to my hoity-toity private school, and then I moved to a different town, and I lost track of most of my old friends. I tried looking Donnie up a few times after I moved back here three years ago, but never really got around to calling him. It was more a "hey I wonder what ever became of him" sort of thing than a real desire to rekindle the friendship.

The wake was yesterday. I went. The waxy, pasty embalming process notwithstanding, he looked exactly as I'd remembered him from 20 years ago, only with shorter hair and a fuller beard. I stopped at the casket, said "Hey Donnie" and signed the guestbook before mustering the courage to go talk to his brother. Apparently Donnie had had quite a drinking problem and basically died of cirrhosis. At 35 years old, his liver just couldn't take it anymore and shut down. Fucked up.

The weird part was how I was like, "oh wow, that's sad and it sucks" but in a sort of "disconnect" mode while I was at the funeral home...and then halfway home I just burst into tears over it. As I shed my tears, I realized I wasn't necessarily crying for him, per se, because it's not like my life is affected directly by his absence in it. It was like it suddenly hit me that this kid I grew up with, was good friends with, played with, fought with, laughed with, partied with, and I'm sure talked about our futures during all of this...it's all gone for him. And he was just so goddamned young. I keep moaning and groaning about how I'm "so old" but man, it's not time to die yet.

Rest in Peace, Donnie Roehling: 1971-2006. Don't give Miss Sinnot too much trouble up there, okay?

Tuesday, February 28, 2006

Please read the archives!

The archives are full of cool stuff that I really wish people would read. As I approach the one-year anniversary of Planet Deedums on Blogspot, I've concluded that last year's stuff was way more entertaining and engaging than my most recent whiny-diary entries. If you've been here all along, you've likely seen it, too.

So please, indulge yourself in some classic musings of yore. You'll be glad you did!

Monday, February 27, 2006

Too bad I don't get free earplugs anymore

It's occurred to me recently that I've become a little self-absorbed in my posts, mainly obsessed with the dating thing. (Yeah, I know, I hear you all going "a little?!" Quiet now, the lot of you). It's like this quest for a decent, smart, childless, nice guy has become this all-consuming thing; it's less about the actual guy and more about the pursuit at this point. While amusing and entertaining, it's also exhausting and frustrating. Therefore I shall put it aside for a while.

You're welcome.

Anyway, I've got a new obsession coming up right around the corner - I start my drum lessons on Thursday! I am told I should wear earplugs when I play, which I'm kind of thinking is a little like telling a blind person to put on sunglasses. But yeah, I wish I'd done this back when I was working for the safety place and could get earplugs for mad cheap - at least then I could give them away to my neighbors.

Friday, February 24, 2006

Time to vent the spleen!

Ever put your foot so far into your mouth you’re not sure if you’ll ever get the taste of shoe leather out? Well, yeah. That’s what I did recently. But that’s not what this entry is about, since I’m more or less hoping it’ll blow itself over and life can proceed as normal. Until I open my big mouth again, that is. So much for resolving to stop giving a shit what people think of me.

No, kids, what today’s entry is about is…food. Yeah, food. And men. But not just any old food, not just any old men. I’m talking about my love affair with Thai and Indian food, specifically, and the fact that I’ve discovered that the single male population of this area has an outright aversion to Eastern cuisine. Thai and Indian are my favorite foods ever, and obviously I don't really get to eat that stuff unless I go out. So when someone asks me out to dinner, I immediately suggest Thai and their reaction (at least the last three guys I've gone out with) has been "Ew, NO WAY." It's really disheartening. My third choice is Middle Eastern, which gets shot down just as quickly.

So that's why I get stuck eating *yawn* Italian. Or, *snore* "American" food. Don't get me wrong, that stuff is good, too, (and hell, let's face it, if I don't have to cook it or pay for it, I'll eat it), but shit, where is people's sense of adventure? Maybe it's because I grew up in a totally white-bread, Anglo family with a mom who cooked straight out of the Better Homes and Gardens cookbook (you know the one, with the red and white checkered cover, uh-huh, yep, that one), but I've found that people who've done so can go either way: either they crave more variety and interesting things (like I do) or they stay stuck in their meat-n-potatoes rut (like the guys I seem to be hooking up with lately). I’m finding a lot of compromises being made at my expense lately, and frankly, it’s really beginning to piss me off.

Now, my faithful blog-watchers, you all know that I'm a strong-willed, fiercely independent, opinionated, feisty, stubborn woman. I might not be the prettiest flower in the garden, I'll never be on the cover of Cosmo, but I'm sharp and I'm fun. But you know, deep down inside is a girl who just wants some company, someone to talk to and hang out with and go places and do stuff with, someone besides my friends (though I love them all), and someone who's not just a (sensitive readers, pleas avert your eyes) “buddy with benefits” (yeah, I totally edited that). I want the total package - intellectual, emotional, and physical stimulation and fulfillment. Someone who can be a companion and help share the things in life that bring both of us joy. However, I'm finding that the things that bring me joy (music, art, history, architecture, books, coffee, wine...) don't bring single men my age the same kind of joy they bring me - and in recent cases are actual sources of repulsion for some. This guy I went out with last night - a metalsmith/jewelry designer, no less - told me he's never been to the Albright-Knox because "Honestly, there's nothing there that I can't see in a book." Oh. my. god. And he calls himself an artist. Wow. That'd be like saying you don't want to go see your favorite band play live because you can just sit home and listen to the record.

I’m no art snob myself, but there is something honestly breathtaking about standing in front of an original piece of work. What immediately comes to mind is Pollock’s Convergence. No image in a book can ever command the kind of feeling you get standing in front of the original – the thing is a beast! It’s like 13 feet wide and 9 feet tall. There is an energy, an excitement, a certain emotional response that is evoked from stepping up and looking at an original Van Gogh, a Mondrian, A Lichtenstein...or how about Chuck Close's Janet, the nuances and details of the hundreds of tiny circles that make up her face, her hair, her earrings, her glasses, and knowing that the guy painted this from a wheelchair with a fucking brace to hold the brush to his hand...you just can’t get that from a book, I’m sorry. You just cannot.

Anyway, my last relationship having been long-distance, I'm used to being alone, used to going out alone or with friends to do stuff, not really used to combining the two things. So when I finally got over jerkface and decided to put myself out there again, I realized how much I don't know about the opposite sex, about the game and how to play it. I'm learning quickly that "Sex and the City" isn't so fictitious. I just can’t decide if I’m a Carrie or a Samantha.

I suppose it would be whichever one really likes Thai food.

Sunday, February 05, 2006

First entry of 2006: Warning, it's a downer.


Fear not, faithful blog-watchers, I am back. A lot can happen in two months, and while I will attempt to pace myself and break the "catch-ups" into several shorter entries, there's a lot to cram in here.

So anyway, you may want to sit back and get comfortable for this one - it promises to be quite lengthy. And as promised in this post's title, this is not going to be my typical wry witty stuff - so if depressing stuff isn't your thing, you might want to skip this one and wait for the next entry, which I promise will not be so bumming.

*takes deep breath*

Okay. As most of you know, my beloved kitty, Lepew, passed away three days before Thanksgiving. It's been a rough adjustment for me, and while I've been longing to write out my feelings about losing her, I really just hadn't had the strength until now.

As we approach what would have been her 19th birthday (February 28th - we'll never know the exact date, but that's the one I'd made up based on the vet's estimation of her age when I got her), it's starting to only now really sink in that she's gone. If you knew Lepew, you knew how she had this awesome resilient, enduring, almost magical, other-worldly quality to her - like she was going to live forever. Starting with the circumstances under which she came into my life (thrown out of a car as a malnourished and abused kitten,left for dead in a ditch outside my house, and narrowly escaping life in a shelter by a completely shocking display of sympathy by my father), she was a weird but miraculous creature (not to mention the cutest one ever). She would disappear and reappear seemingly out of nowhere, like she could walk through walls. She was strictly an indoor cat, but would escape and put me through hell trying to find her, only to turn up right behind me, looking at me as if to say, "what are you freaking out about? I've been here the whole time!" If she weren't so damn cute it would have been creepy.

One time in Chicago I spent an entire day canvassing the neighborhood with flyers and kitty treats after discovering my back door wide open and Lepew nowhere in the apartment, only to come home to a message from my upstairs neighbor telling me that he'd found her in the hallway outside his door. Mind you, this was the inside hallway, the door to which I could not recall opening at all that day. Another time when we lived in New Hampshire she got out and we found her stuck in the wall in the boiler room of our house. Just shortly before she passed away, I woke up in the middle of the night to the dog whining to go out. When I opened the door and stepped outside, I looked across the street and saw Lepew, scampering across the street like she owned it. She apparently had gotten out earlier that evening, undetected.

No matter what, when she was lost or sick or even when her age started catching up and she began developing problems with her thyroid and her kidneys, she always came through with flying colors. So when she got sick so suddenly that Sunday night in November, I just couldn't process the finality of it. It never really sunk in that it could be the end. Even as I watched her struggle to walk, as I watched the "third eye" creep over her beautiful yellow-green eyes, as I wiped the drool and snot off her face and begged her to be okay, I just couldn't believe it. I just kept thinking it was going to be okay, she was going to get better. I was going to wake up the next day and she'd be yowling for food, climbing on my head, drinking from the toilet again. Even when she wasn't fine the next day, even when I called the vet and made the appointment for the following day to put her down, even as I prepared myself by shutting all the doors in the house so that if she needed to die at home she wouldn't crawl off and hide to do it, I just kept thinking it wasn't going to happen. I was going to come home from work that night, and everything would be fine. Alas, it was not to be.

She died while I was at work, something I felt so terrible about, because I'd wanted to be with her in her last moments - the only consolation I was deriving from deciding to put her to sleep was that it would allow me to do so, in fact. She just couldn't hold out, though, and died in front of the fireplace in the living room. She was not alone, I kept telling myself. She was in the company of Alex, her canine companion of more than 13 years. I'm sure that her old canine companion, Digger, and her Cousin Tootsie came to get her and showed her the way over the "Rainbow Bridge," (that special place, for those of you who may not be familiar, where our pets go when they leave us).

Even still, nearly three months later, I expect to see her sitting on the toilet seat when I open the shower curtain. I reach up to pet her when I'm lying on the sofa. I still, in my half-awake state every morning, instinctively try to be careful to not trip over her as I make my way to the kitchen, where it still invokes a sense of slight discombobulation when I don't see her bowls on the floor or her food on top of the refrigerator. I still call out for her sometimes, like I'm expecting that she'll just come walking through the wall when she's good and ready to come out . . .

And you know, maybe that's because she really is still here -- I just can't see her. She really was a weird little cat. :-)

Monday, December 12, 2005

The Final Countdown...

Great. Now I have that stupid Europe song in my head.

Anyway, I know I promised another entry way back there at midterm, and now look, it's finals week and still no new entry! Sorry about that, but I promise you there's one coming soon; I have lots to say, just no time to say it all!

They say time flies when you're having fun, so I must have been having a ball this semester, because it feels like it's over before it even started! Seriously - where did the last three months go? Just one of the many topics I'll be exploring during the next month when I have time to actually think about this kind of shit!

Watch this space...actual, substantial entry coming soon, I swear!

Tuesday, November 08, 2005

Aaaah! Stop!

If the world would stop spinning so god damned fast for like, oh, 30 seconds, I might actually post a new entry. It's midterm, folks, and I'm in the thick of shit, big time!

But not to worry, my loyal and faithful blog-watchers (all three of you, lol)! There is a new entry coming very soon, I promise!

In the meantime, I hope you all voted today.

Friday, October 14, 2005

Yay me!

I quit smoking a year ago today. Now, technically I can't say I've been "smoke free" for a whole year, because I did break down a few weeks ago and smoke one lousy cigarette. It was awful, it tasted like crap, it made me cough, and it reminded me how much I don't want to smoke again. So in a way maybe I had to do that as a kick in the ass to keep it going, I don't know. But I don't know if I should count it against me or not. The people on the support site where I hang out from time to time are sort of split on it. Some say that I should still go ahead and celebrate a year, others are of the camp that I should start from scratch beginning with that day I slipped up. But since I didn't give in and allow that one slip to become a relapse, *I* think I'm entitled to say I've been quit for a year.

Whatever. The fact remains that I'm still a non-smoker. And anyone who knew me for the 21 years that I surrounded myself with a constant cloud knows how hard it was for me to become one of those. I'm proud of myself. I guess that's all that really matters, isn't it?

Oh, and I've lost 35 pounds to boot. Look out, world, she's on fire! And who knows, maybe some hot fireman will come to put it out! I've always wanted to date a fireman, just so I could crack hose jokes.


Thursday, September 29, 2005

Enough, please!

"Fallin' in love is such an easy thing to do,
but there's no guarantee that the one you love
is gonna love you."

-Aaron Neville

I am SO damn frustrated right now, I can't even think straight. I don't know why I do this to myself, but I continually fall for men I can't have. Why? Why? WHY?! And then when I meet one I could have, he's gotta have some dealbreaking trait?

And why do people INSIST upon blasting me for my standards? If one more guy decides to tell me I'm missing out on his great self because he has a kid (kids are a dealbreaker for me), I'm going to go out of my mind.

Look, there are some very special kids in my life. My 2-year-old niece is awesome. My friend Jenn's 3-year old, Maeve, is just about the coolest kid you could ever meet, and I love her to pieces. I'm an honorary aunt to Caitin and Kevin, Sofia, Elizabeth, and surely more to come (in fact there are two more on the way as I write this). But I do NOT want children of my own. It's a choice I have made based on the fact that I am irresponsible, immature, selfish, and prone to wanderlust. I have enough to handle with my pets; for me to take on the responsibility of a child would be the most irresponsible, unfair thing I could ever do to another human being. Therefore, I have a rule about dating men with kids. I won't do it.

I hate that people push this issue with me. When explaining my standards, there are people who will actually tell me that they're too high, that I should lower them if I want to "catch" a man. What they're failing to understand is that a man who does not meet my "high" standards is someone I don't deem worth catching anyway. It's not like I'm asking a lot. I don't care about his car or his bank account or his job. I care that he can drive, that he's not on a loan shark's hitlist, and that he has some source of income that isn't going to land him in jail. There are others, too, concerning education and hygeine, but the big one is kids. He simply cannot have any.

I have very little free time. Practically everything I do needs to be scheduled, sometimes down to the very minute. When I finally do get some downtime, if I have a significant other, I would like to spend it with him. If he's got custody of the kid that weekend, guess what? There goes my time. What if I decide I want to pack up and move halfway across the country? Can't do that if there are kids involved. Part of him will always be attached to his ex, the mother of his kids, and holidays are stressful enough without having to listen to him fight with her over who gets the kids for Christmas. I don't want them with me, that's for sure, so he gets to fight with me, too. Or even just a Friday night movie - god, it's been so long since I've been taken out on an actual date...just imagine my reaction at the news "sorry, I have to cancel - Emily is sick and my ex-wife has to work..."

Bottom line is that I would rather be alone than spend time with someone who can't give me 100% of his attention. If that makes me a selfish bitch, then I stand guilty as charged.

I'm going to go beat my head against the wall now.

Blar. Oh, but I've lost 28 pounds. Go me.

Wednesday, September 21, 2005

Stuck in the Middle

“I’m too young to be old, and too old to be young. Maybe I’m just goin’ crazy!”
-Evelyn Couch, “Fried Green Tomatoes”


I'm having serious identity issues lately. My whole life has been this kind of tug-o-war between two poles. I’m pretty sure it’s a Gemini thing, since we see everything with two sets of eyes, essentially. We are “dual citizens” of the astrological world, if you will. A Gemini sees everything from two sides, form two (often opposite) opinions on things, and as such can be opinionated but sympathetic.

Sound confusing? Okay, well, try being one.

“Behold the living dichotomy!” I used to like to say of myself. Growing up I was always stuck somewhere in the middle between accepting groups. For example, as a young teenager with my strict parents, Garfield book bag, and non-designer jeans, I was too much of a nerd for the cool kids – but my cigarette smoking, recreational drug use, concert t-shirts, and headbanging made me too cool for the nerds. I’ve always been too dorky to be cool, too cool to be a dork, too smart to be a dumb kid, too dumb to be a “brain.” I never quite fit in anywhere.

Even my body is a betrayal to itself. I’ve never been fat enough to be a “BBW,” but never thin enough to be considered “skinny.” But then again by most shallow men’s standards I’m fat no matter what I weigh. And my height? Oh, forget it. I’m just under 5’5”, like 5’4-5/8” or something. Just screwy enough that I’m too tall to be petite, but too short to be average. So all my pants are too long or too short. And since I usually opt for too long, most of them have dirty, torn hems from being dragged under my feet. I used to remedy this by wearing heels to compensate for the height:inseam issue, but man, I walk all day long now. No way am I sporting the 3- and 4-inch heels anymore!

Now that I’m back in school, the issues are becoming even more noticeable to me. I’m in classes with a bunch of 18- and 19-year-olds, and the girls are nubile and scantily clad, the guys are sideburned and hiply dressed…and I’m sure they’re all looking at me in my nondescript Old Navy and Target clothes, my “I insist that I’m still young enough to clip my bangs back” hairdo, and my slightly sagging face and thinking, “wow, that lady looks like my mom.” Even if I had the body to wear that kind of Abercrompostale stuff they all wear (which I never will, unless I win a spot on “Extreme Makeover,”), I’d look ridiculous – like I was trying to be something I’m not.

So how should I dress? Jeez, I don’t know! My typical “uniform” is a button-up shirt or a t-shirt, jeans, funky socks, and black Mary Janes. Sometimes I wear dress pants or khakis or even sometimes a skirt, but gone are the days of day-in-day-out business casual. It’s mostly denim these days. And while I swore I wouldn't do this, I have worn sweats to class on a couple occasions.

The hair is usually clipped back on the side to prevent the bangs from falling in my face. Jewelry is worn to a minimum – one or two rings, a necklace, a couple of earrings (not all 12 that my ears are pierced for), occasionally a bracelet. I’m thinking lately that I’m going to start wearing the nosering again – simply because I can.

I'm also thinking I need more ink. Too bad money's such an issue right now, or I'd get started on that backpiece that James always said would be the dealbreaker in our relationship.

This is a stupid entry, now that I look at it. I don't really know what the point was, other than to mull over my identity issues and try and work them out somehow through writing about them. It didn't work. I'm still confused. And I'm still stuck in the middle.

Blar.

But hey - I lost 23 pounds!