I’m very obedient…
…and I always do as Chris asks me to do.
Random 10 (from a random iTunes shuffle):
1. Echo and the Bunnymen - The Killing Moon
2. Dido - Who Makes You Feel
3. Keane - Bedshaped
4. America - A Horse with No Name
5. George Michael - Careless Whisper
6. Electric Six - Danger! High Voltage
7. Supergrass - Cheapskate
8. Depeche Mode - Shake the Disease
9. Kosheen - Empty Skies
10. Pizzicato 5 - Twiggy Twiggy
What is the total amount of music files on your computer?
349 songs. I really like listening to entire CDs better, so I haven’t burned my very favorite ones onto the computer yet.
The last CD you bought is:
Well, I bought two at the same time, a few months ago. Jet “Get Born” and Stereolab “Emperor Tomato Ketchup.”
What is the song you last listened to before this message?
Lizzie West - Chariot’s Rise (I have been addicted to this song ever since I saw Secretary)!
Write down five songs you often listen to or that mean a lot to you:
Belle & Sebastian - Sleep the Clock Around
Junior Murvin - Police and Thieves
Pulp - Something Changed
Liz Phair - The Divorce Song
Elvis - Don’t
Name three artists/bands you adore:
Chris, you’re right: this one is hard.
The Cars - When I was little, probably five or six, my dad often put on a cassette of their greatest hits, and we would go to the living room, where there was a lot of floor space, and boogey around together. Dorky, I know, but it’s a great memory!
Liz Phair - She is just so, so cool. Or maybe was cool. I have not even bothered to listen to her most recent album, because I don’t want to be disappointed and get all sad about it, but her first three albums were just fucking awesome. Especially Exile in Guyville - I listened to it nonstop all through high school.
Pulp - Okay, Pulp made me want to go to London. Jarvis Cocker has the sexiest voice, and his lyrics describe the most amazing, exotic stories and characters.
Who are you gonna pass this stick to (three persons and why)?
Whoever reads this and feels like keeping it going, please have at it. And leave a note in the comments so we can all move on and read your answers.
1.29.2005
Oh, you wacky unemployed people.
Um…okay. So, my last day at work is April 29th, and for my last big project, I have to find, hire, and train my replacement. I have been dreading this for as long as I’ve known I was leaving (a year). More than dreading. I have been moaning and groaning inwardly, with the force of a thousand groaning, spitting zoo camels, at the thought of having to train someone in everything I do. I know I have to do it; after all, my boss and coworkers have no idea how to work the accounting software, how to code the invoices, how to blow their noses, etc., but still. The dread.
However that time has come. We have placed the ad and the resumes are coming in.
I will admit that this part, the call-and-response part of the hiring process, has actually been pretty eductional for me. First, my boss sent to all our colleagues and contacts a very nice email about how I am very helpful and beloved and cherished but I am leaving, and he attached our job ad and asked them to please pass it around. We got a few cover letters and resumes this way, and they were generally good-quality. Next my boss asked me to pass it on to a friend of mine who works in film editing and production, so that she could post it on this Women in Film list-serve thing, because a lot of our work involves graphics and video production. We got some good resumes this way, too. They might be looking for a position a little more specific than mine (which is basically receptionist-admin to four-accountant-IT girl-proofreader-editor, which is a hard title to fit onto a job ad, by the way), but who knows? One of them could work out.
Then it happened. My boss, who probably had been taking swigs from the bottle of scotch in his office, asked me to post the ad on Craig’s List, and I, apparently having just taken an especially excellent bong hit, actually did it.
I should have known better. He only wanted it there because it has a lot of exposure in DC and it is free. Basically those are his only qualifications, because HE is not the one who is going to be looking through the first wave of responses. And for those of you who aren’t familiar with the site, Craig’s List is great for finding used furniture, or for finding someone who is willing to pass out fliers downtown, but it’s not exactly a bastion of top-notch, serious jobs. So I was not too bright in not questioning his request.
Oh! the horror, the horror.
About twelve seconds after the posting went up, the emails started coming in. The putrid, foul emails. The emails that consisted of JUST AN ATTACHED RESUME, AND NOTHING ELSE. No cover letter or salutation or even “Attached please find my resume.” Nothing.
Now…okay. These people are idiots. Do they honestly think that anyone would hire somebody who is obviously sitting at that website, hitting “refresh,” and sending their resume to every job ad that appears? In the words of Cher from Clueless, “I don’t think so.”
That was the first wave. Since then, we have gotten about thirty more emails, some of which appear to have been sent by actual living, sentient, human beings. The others, I believe, were sent by algae.
In response, I would like to present the following:
A few tips to jobseekers
When you respond to a job ad calling for an “Office Coordinator,” it is a good idea to spell the word “office” correctly in the title line of your email. One of the tasks enumerated in our ad is the ability to proofread, and that is all I am going to say about that.
When we say “Please send responses to {my name} at {first.last@mycompany.com}, that means that you are sending your email to a person with a first and last name, and, in fact, that we have come right out and TOLD YOU that person’s name. Therefore it does not speak well of your level of common sense if you address the email to “Dear Human Resources Manager,” “Dear Sir or Madam,” or “To whom it may concern.” Just a tip.
If the ad calls for “proficiency in Microsoft office,” and you call me up to ask whether, even though you “barely know Excel,” you should still apply, and I say “Oh, by all means,” I am just being cordial. You are toast.
Furthermore, when you do then send your resume, the body of your email should not say, and here I have cut and pasted your message IN ITS ENTIRETY:
“Thank you for reviewing my info hope to hear from u soon”
(Yes, I am serious.)
Moving on. To the one girl who responded to the ad with a resume (good!) and a cover letter (great!) that was coherently written (I love you! Bear my children!), alas, you still made two fatal mistakes. When you misspelled my email address, it by default got sent to my boss, who forwarded it on to me. That’s not so great. however, I could overlook that, had you not, horrifyingly, said that you “had read about our ad in the Washington Post.”
We did not post in the Post. You are confused. Also, more egregiously, you have given me a heart attack.
I will explain. When he forwarded your resume to me, my boss wrote this message: “You listed in the Post?? Your life is over. You will be hounded to death…” I have to tell you, dear girl, when I read those words, my life DID flash before my eyes a little bit. Had I listed on the Post somehow? In my sleep? Had someone taken our ad and put it there FOR US? What was going on? And, where could I hide (Russia? Maldives?) where I would be safe from the inpending FORTY-TWO FRILLION BAZILLION CALLS AND EMAILS I WAS SURE TO GET???!
I ended up going to the Post classifieds site and searching for a long time, and of course it wasn’t there, so I was very relieved. And also very indignant at you, possibly irrationally so, but the fact remains that it was one unfortunate proofreading error you made. So, keep on looking.
End of tips.
1.27.2005
My new favorite show, and a CRAZY LADY.
Have I said how much I love that “Project Runway” show? No? Well, a lot. I don’t know if anybody else is watching it, but it is excellent. It’s a reality show, but it’s the only one I’ve seen where people get cut solely on the basis of merit; any interpersonal stuff or “popularity contests” don’t influence the judging at all. What I love about it is that you see the whole design process, from them buying materials to drawing and cutting their patterns, to working on the mannequins, to using the sewing machines…all under a tight deadline.
I just think it’s fascinating. I love hearing the contestants describe their vision when the challenge starts, and then again as the working session goes on; how they have to adapt as they see how the materials respond. And at the end there’s a fashion show, with professional models and hair and makeup, and the judges deliberate, and one designer gets cut by Heidi Klum. She always says the same spiel: “In fashion, you are either in, or you are out. Jay, you are in. So Robert, you are out. Auf wiedersehn (sp?).” So robotic! So German! She kisses them on the cheek and they go home. Oh, it is superb.
On a different note, a very weird thing happened today. A little background: ever since we moved into our swanky new office suite, I have noticed that I am the only receptionist who leaves our hall door open. Everyone else shuts theirs so that visitors or delivery people have to ring a bell to be let in, which I think is overly formal. Plus since I am sitting in the front hall, with no windows, I like having the door propped open so that I at least have something to look at. Now, it is my decision to have the door open or closed (this is just one of the many perks of my job, another being that I get to clean the coffeepot every night. Bliss!), so it is sort of a joke in my office now that I am this social butterfly who just loooves to see people as they enter and exit the restrooms just outside our door.
So I had the door open this morning as usual, and a middle-aged woman just walked in, pointed at the one chair we have next to my desk, and asked if she could sit down. I was like, “Okay? Um, can I help you?” and she said that her daughter had an appointment at the temp agency down the hall but she didn’t want her waiting in there, so could she wait for her here? And I said okay, because she seemed a little kooky and flustered and like she really needed to sit down, but I had a bad feeling. I have been to appointments at temp agencies before, and they take forever. Those women (it is always women) put you through more tests than the CIA!
And…yeah. The woman sat there for over two hours. Staring at the wall. Just…sitting. We don’t have any sort of “waiting room” to speak of, any table or magazines or anything, just one chair. And she just sat in it. I sort of hinted a few times that the temp agency probably had a waiting room where maybe she would be more comfortable, but each time it just sent her into a Rain Man-esque speech about how her daughter “definitely didn’t want me in there, no, they definitely can’t see that I’m there with her, no, that definitely wouldn’t work.” Like, okay, I get it.
So the whole morning was awkward and weird. The printer is behind me, and periodically my boss or coworker would come by to pick up their documents, and each time they would hustle back to their offices and IM me: “she’s still there!” “she’s creeping me out!” “wait til she goes to the bathroom, then lock the door!” That last one came from my coworker, and I think she was actually serious, which freaks me out a LOT.
Finally at 12:15, I lied just a little and said, “I’m so sorry, but I have to shut the office now for lunch, and nobody’s going to be sitting here, so I have to lock the door…” And she gathered her things and huffed and puffed at me a little and walked out. And I felt bad! Because I am a doormat!
However a few minutes later, as I sat in the conference room (because it has an amazing panoramic view) eating and reading my book, my boss came by and informed me that a minute ago he had passed her out in the hallway, where she was just standing around, and when he greeted her she responded by cutting her eyes back at him. So I did not feel bad anymore, because she obviously was a TOTAL LOON, and I cannot be responsible for all that.
1.24.2005
Two examples of how I am only barely functional in society.
One: After work, at the photo shop
Friendly Older Salesguy: Hello! How can I help you!
Me: (Losing brain cells rapidly.) Um. Yes, do you have those things for slides? Those things, like when you’ve already written on the cardboard part around the slide, but you need to write more, so you need labels SHAPED like the cardboard to put over top? And then you can write more?
Friendly Older Salesguy: (Blinking and probably wondering how I have managed to survive so long.) Ah yes. I just saw those recently, and I was just thinking that they were in the wrong place, and I can’t remember if I moved them or not, and I…HERE THEY ARE!
Me: Oh, goody!
Friendly Older Salesguy: (Pulling out a packet.) So, we have a HUGE PACK OF THEM for $15.99!
Me: Hmm. Do you have, like, one of two sheets, for less?
Friendly Older Salesguy: (Blinks.)
Friendly Older Salesguy: We have a HUGE PACK OF THEM for $15.99!
Me: Ah. Okay, I’ll…take them?
Friendly Older Salesguy: (Heading to the register.) Student?
Me: (GOD DAMN this stupid cutesy ski hat from Delias. I probably look like I’m seventeen.) Yes!
Friendly Older Salesguy: Got your ID?
Me: (I have no morals I have no morals I have no-) Uh, nope.
Friendly Older Salesguy: You don’t? You’re so bad! You’re SOOO BAD!
Me: (A little frightened.) Yes I am! Bad! I’m bad!
Friendly Older Salesguy: What school do you go to?
Me: (Shooting high.) The Corcoran.
Friendly Older Salesguy: So, who’s the president at the Corcoran? Who started it? Who provided the funding?
Me: Um. MIZ CORCORAN? Ha ha ha.
Friendly Older Salesguy: Hmmmmmmm.
Me: (Gives my best smile.)
Friendly Older Salesguy: What’s the school song?
Me:
Me: There’s no singing in art school!
Friendly Older Salesguy: HA HAHA HA! Okay, here’s your discount.
Me: (Worn out from working so hard to save, like, a dollar.) Thank you very much.
Two: Later, on the phone to the Indian takeout place
Phone: Ring ring!
Not my usual guy at the Indian place: Hello, zsrlg lghuell kebab!
Me: (Oh, god. Why is my hearing so bad?) Hi! Can I order a takeout, please?
Not my usual guy at the Indian place: Yes! Dloduhrglsd ;dzrg ;dz af;f?
Me: Ah! May I have the chicken tikka masala?
Not my usual guy at the Indian place: Wijs; or ;s;bo?
Me: (Thank god I have memorized the order of the questions.) Spicy.
Not my usual guy at the Indian place: Ohhhhhh, very good ma’am. VERY GOOD. Spgzslig.
Me: Yes! Very good! Very good and spicy!
Not my usual guy at the Indian place: And salg;’ /sg wholewheat naan?
Me: Yes, wholewheat naan, thank you.
Not my usual guy at the Indian place: Okay, skguhl; kr. See you soon.
Me: (Needing to get my hearing checked, like, yesterday.) Bye bye.
1.20.2005
So hard for the money, and Inauguration Day
I am extremely glad I took this past Monday off. I think what I like even more than having a three-day weekend is the subsequent four-day workweek. It is like a second gift. You get back to work on Tuesday, Tuesday zips by, and oh look! it’s already “Hump Day” (which is fun in its own right). Before you know it, that week is over and you’re at another weekend. Excellent.
I don’t attribute this to The New Year and Resolutions and all of that corny stuff, but something has definitely lit a fire under my lazy ass. This is not to say that I’ve been exercising; that would be too easy, and I never do things the easy way. No, in my typical back-assward way, I have become a Superwoman in all ways except fitness. In the last week, I have:
– Worked really hard at work, like staying late and taking ten minutes for lunch and NOT SURFING THE INTERNET
– Begun finishing up all my half-completed paintings
– Started a new, really big painting
– Made that dreaded phone call to my admissions officer at school in order to ask all the questions I have been thinking up over the past month
– Cleaned my apartment
– Yes! I totally did! First time in years months a while, okay?
– Reorganized my boxes of files and art supplies and sketchbooks
– Not spent a lot of money. I am going to have a lot saved up for school after all!
– Made chili
– Finished that dreaded, dead-boring task at work that involved looking over all our invoices for 2004 to determine how much each 1099 vendor actually received in salary, not expenses, because you see, when preparing a tax ret…zzzZZZzZZZZz…
– Shaved my legs
– Recycled the huge pile of plastic carrier bags I had accumulated, grandma-style, for months. (Did you all see that episode of Queer Eye where the guy had a plastic bag which bulged from containing many many other plastic bags? Um…yeah.)
Also, and I am not including it on the list because it would be too meta, but I have been pretty good about writing long entries lately, right? Right? *Cue the tumbleweed blowing by*
So you see, I have been working hard for the money, with the one glaring exception of not having been to the gym in forty years. I think this would make me feel lazy if I were just going home to couch, but since I’ve turned a new leaf in terms of Taking Care of Stuff I think I’m doing okay. In fact, I am going to go one step further in this whole “not working out” project and actually cancel my membership. It will save a little money. And it is all about the money! And the showing me of the money!
Re: the inauguration. A city block’s worth of Bush protestors walked past our office earlier today. They were very raucous. I watched them out the window while I was on the phone with the tech support for our crazy/powerful new voicemail system, trying to set up our “day message” and “night message.” I was too distracted by all the colorful signs and chanting to really pay attention to the guy, so I have no idea what our outgoing messages say now. It is entirely possible that I have told callers to “Press *2 to dial by last na - oh look at that sign! ‘Party down, frat boy.’ HA!”
It’s DC; the callers will have to just deal.
Walking home after work was pretty insane. Tourists are so demanding! “Which way to 21st street?” “Which way to the convention center?” On and on. A pet peeve of mine is when strangers ask you questions without first saying “Excuse me” or even just “Hi.” I think it’s too aggressive to just bark questions at someone with no warning or introduction.
Near my apartment there is a big church that frequently is the site for demonstrations and rallies. Tonight was no exception; each step on the huge staircase outside it was lit up with a row of candles and there was a crowd listening to a woman talk through a bullhorn. I went home, got my camera, ran back, and tried to take a photo.
Unfortunately I got this:

So I turned the flash on and got this masterpiece:

Please try to contain your jealousy of my mad photography skills! Ah well.
But it really was an amazing sight. As I listened more to what the speakers were saying, I learned that each light was next to a pair of boots, each of which represented one person who has died in Iraq. (On the American side, I assume, since nobody really knows the number of Iraqi casualties.)
The area was also full of people en route to one ball or another, wearing tuxes and ball gowns in the 4 degree weather. At one point, the guy leading the anti-Bush rally on the church steps said “Turn around everyone, and look at the people celebrating this atrocity!” Which personally I thought was sort of a schmucky thing to do, but that’s just me.
1.15.2005
No, I mean I LOVE the 80s.
Okay, I think the dreams I have been having lately all indicate that I am terrified of my boss. About a week ago I dreamed that I was at work and it was getting to be 5:30 so I told him I was leaving, and he was like, “No! You can’t leave yet - I have a big project for you!” and then everything changed and we were at his house, and there were his wife and kids. He and his wife left for the theatre (which, already, no. He would never go to the theatre) and I had to baby-sit for his two little sons. I haven’t baby-sat since maybe 9th grade, so I was a little rusty. Also I was too scared of my boss finding out about it to pull out my patented Keep the Kids Happy Maneuver, namely, sledding down the stairs.
(Hey, in my defense, NOT ONCE have I ever damaged anyone’s house or child doing this. The secret is to tie a long rope to the top of the bannister and hold onto it, so that you can pull yourself and the sled to a stop before you hit any walls. Come on, I was young. And every kid I baby-sat for asked to have me back, so that’s a good thing, right?)
So anyway, I played with the kids. When they got home, I was exhausted and I asked if finally I could leave, and his wife said, “No no no! Now I have a project for you!” and she put me in a maid’s costume and suddenly I was transported into that movie Mary Reilly and I was, like, scrubbing the stairs with a brush and a bucket of water, and sleeping in the scullery maid’s room. Then the dream ended.
Then, Thursday night, I dreamed that I was riding a Greyhound bus somewhere, and that guy from the “I love the 80s” shows, Hal Sparks, was there. He came and sat with me and we hit it off and before you know it, we are having sex right there on the bus. As you do. Nobody around us seemed to mind, so that was good. (This right away is weird, because when I watch that show I’m always kind of like, oh he’s cute and funny, and then I forget about him five minutes later. Why am I dreaming about him? I guess I like him more than I was conscious of. Anyway.)
So then my cell phone rang and it was work. I was like, ohhhh, sorry, I gotta go. But he said he would come with me, so we got off the bus, and suddenly we were in Boston (?!??). We went to “my office,” which was a huge office building I worked in for my first job out of school (which was here in the DC area), except that it was my actual current job. It was somehow years in the future, because we were no longer a start-up with four employees; we were an enormous bureaucratic corporation (basically, the company I worked for my first job out of school). So Hal and I are racing around the building holding hands, looking for my boss because everyone keeps stopping us to tell me that HE NEEDS TO SEE ME in the board room.
The board room keeps moving! We keep getting to the door and then it would just disappear and we’d have to keep running. Then we were in the boiler room and I was scared, and then we were in a hedge maze, still looking for the damn board room. (Like, a HEDGE MAZE. Could my dreams BE any more “you are feeling lost and conflicted??") And I am freaking out, because the buzz all around the office is that the boss is NOT HAPPY AND I BETTER GET IN THERE, LIKE ASAP.
Thank god Hal Sparks was there, because he was totally nice to me and very reassuring and also we kept stopping to make out.
In fact, when I woke up, after finally having found the stupid board room, which was filled with cigar smoke and portly besuited elderly white men, just like in the movies, my first feeling was disappointment in the fact that Hal Sparks was not actually my boyfriend anymore. I thought, “Oh Hal Sparks, you were so witty with all those one-liners, and also so sweet to help me out at work and calm me down by making out with me in the boiler room. I wish it could have gone on like that forever.”
So it was yesterday morning that I woke up from that weirdness. When I opened my eyes to hit the snooze button, I saw a small movement on the floor. Now, I have really bad eyesight without my glasses or contacts, so it was just a dark moving blur. But of course it was another roach. SO NASTY. I ran to get the roach killin’ spray and chased it around, spritzing it, until it stopped and started twitching (ew!). Then I ran to the bathroom to get paper to throw it away in, and when I returned, the body was gone. I was like, “Huh? Hunnnh?????” and spun around in circles, like an idiot, peering closely at the dark parts of the carpet to see if it had moved a little and now blended in.
I COULD NOT FIND IT. There was now a roach carcass somewhere in the carpet. I drove myself crazy looking for it and then finally I had to get ready for work, so I gave up. All day at work I was skeeved out thinking that someday I would have a guest over to my house (such as, completely for example, my new boyfriend Hal Sparks), and THEY would be the one to find the dead roach carcass, and then they would know that I live in a roach den.
However, when I walked in the door that night at 1-something, drunk, I of course locked eyes on it right away. It was definitely dead. It was also definitely TEN FEET away from where I had “killed” it, which means that, ew, it crawled around a lot. Grody. I am going to have to live in a tin shack when I move to Savannah, I think. I can’t handle this whole “vermin in the walls” situation.
Have a nice Saturday, everyone!
1.11.2005
Countdown to Sav : 4 months left!
Holy lord. I am living in filth.
A day or so ago, I started hearing that familiar scratching sound in the walls, the one that means there is a rat. So I did what worked so well last time: I put out the traps with Honey Nut Cheerios™ on them. Well, no mice have appeared as of yet, but just now my eye was caught by some motion on the trap. Close inspection revealed it to be a roach. A ROACH, people. A roach, crawling on a trap meant to catch a RAT. Isn’t that, like, seven levels of grodiness and flith? I cannot believe that this is my living environment. And I cannot believe I am telling complete strangers that I live in filth.
Anyway, since I’m moving to Savannah in May, I’ve decided that once a month until I go, I’m going to write about something I will miss about DC. And other than the infestation of wildlife, I really love my apartment. First of all, it’s the perfect size for one person. When I first went apartment-hunting, most of the studios I saw were those one-room types, a rectangle with a tiny kitchenette at one end. I was sort of reluctant to live in such a layout; it seems so depressing to have to sit on your bed to watch TV, and to have to look at your kitchen at the same time.
After touring a bunch of those places, I took the time to look in a slightly less “proven” neighborhood and ended up with the perfect place. There is a rectangular main room, big enough for a bed and a sofa and chair, so that I can entertain, which I love to do. The kitchen is a separate room off to the side, so the whole place is shaped like an L. Also there is a walk-in closet. Scratch that; it’s a walk-through closet, because you have to go through it to get to the bathroom. Weird, but whatever.
Also I have one small window in the kitchen and a large one in the main room, so there is lots of light. I live on the first floor, which in DC means the rent is cheaper than if I lived in this layout on a higher floor. This is because there are bars on the windows.
Now, yes, I realize that “window bars” are not the most sought-after architectual feature known to man, but, and I type this with complete honesty, these bars are sort of cool. They aren’t the standard “prison-style” vertical bars; they actually are in a funky, art deco pattern. So, they can stay.
And the actual apartment is just…nice. No cracked paint or broken tiles, like in a lot of city buildings. Before I moved in, they did all new Berber carpet, and repainted in a nice warm buttery color. I have cute Ikea furniture and all the furnishings are red, black, white, pink, and orange - very 60s and fun. Also the walls are made of, like, steel. I never hear a THING from my neighbors, and this alone, I know, makes the place a steal.
Living on the ground floor does mean there’s sometimes a lot of noise from the street, like the occasional gaggle of prostitutes laughing it up, or that annoying car alarm whose ring pattern I have memorized and sometimes have nightmares about. More frequently, I am woken up at night by the familiar flashing lights of an ambulance parked at the building across the street. It is a senior citizens’ home, and every now and then an ambulance arrives with lights but no siren. We all know what that means…one, it’s not in a hurry, and two, there’s a vacancy across the street.
In general, the neighborhood is lively and interesting. It’s changed a lot just in the year-and-a-half since I’ve lived here. Broken-down strip malls have come down and luxury condos are taking their place. There are new art galleries, coffee shops, movie theatres, and hotels. However, the neighborhood has definitely not yet lost its grittyness. There is still that grocery store a block away that is so nasty. It stinks like dead pigeons when you walk in the door, and I am not joking. That place is so gross I have actually chosen to shop at Whole Foods instead. And then there is that smoky, hole-in-wall bar frequented by cops that serves the best melty sandwiches ever. And the take-out Indian place that I love and have written about so many times it’s just sad. (Ironically, a new building of condos has just gone up RIGHT NEXT DOOR to it. Can you imagine paying $300k for a studio apartment to begin with, but let alone next door to a takeout place? Talk about an up-and-coming neighborhood.)
So when I move, I will miss my lovely apartment, all done up the way I like it with interesting prints and paintings and collages. I will miss the soundproofness, which, believe me, I am definitely grateful for. I will miss our androgynous security guard who answers my “Hi, how ya doing?” with a lazy “Aaalllll right, I’m aallllll riiight,” every single time I see her. I will miss the beautiful church on the corner, and that building down the street that used to be a Victorian-style boys’ school and is now being gutted to make…yup…condos. I will miss that retro 60s-style hotel a few blocks away that serves chocolate martinis with a Ding-Dong on the rim as a garnish. I’ll even miss the one major road I need to cross to get home from the metro, the street that takes FOREVER for the light to change, and I never get there at the right time so I always have to wait.
And, I might even miss the prostitutes outside my window on the warmer nights. But I will NEVER miss that repulsive dead-pigeon-smelling grocery store. It is foul, for real.
1.8.2005
Comment wrap-up and the Divorce Generation
Okay, dudes! Thank you to the people who commented on my grasping for comments post. It was great to hear from you new people, and of course you regulars too. Thanks so much for conquering what turns out to have been, for some of you, an almost crippling fear of hitting that OK button. I hope you have had few if any after-effects from it.
But thirteen comments for Southeast Asia??! Good god, some of you are difficult to budge. What do I have to do for you, people, open a vein? I know you are there; I totally have more than thirteen hits per day. I mean, there is that one person alone who shows up like nine times between 3 and 4am.
I don’t have lots of spare cash, but I can definitely send more than $13 for this relief thing. So I am just going to, um, artificially inflate the number in my head and send some more. Also my boss has said to us that he will match anything my coworkers or I send, so it’ll be doubled eventually anyway.
I went to see Life Aquatic with a few friends last night, and had a very good time. I am not such a die-hard fan of the Wes Anderson movies as my friend Anne, but I did like it. I have love for Bill Murray from waaay back, from Scrooged. I would see him in anything. (Except Garfield. Sorry Bill, you fucked up bad with that one.) The movie was quite long, so you have to steel yourself for that, but it is basically the same formula as the other ones: lots of interesting detail and sight gags, deadpan delivery, excellent costumes and sets, and conflict.
My friend Poppy had brought a bag of nuts to the theatre for us all to share, which was very thoughtful of her. Unfortunately, they were pistachios. So we spent the time before the movie frantically cracking them and leaving all the shells in the side pocket in one of our handbags, so that we would have a baggie of just nuts to pass around when the movie actually began.
When I got home it was sort of late but I went online for a few minutes before I passed out, and it was only then that I learned that Brad Pitt and Jennifer Aniston broke up. I was actually a little sad about it. They looked so happy in their wedding photos and all. I mean, obviously, if there’s ever a time you’re going to look beautiful together, it would be in the wedding photos, but still. Long-term marriage just seems less and less possible as time goes on.
I mean, think about all the kazillions of marriages there have been, and now half of them end in divorce, but even before the second half of the 20th century when divorce became socially acceptable, how many of those couples were actually fulfilled and satisfied with their marriages for their whole lives? Do you think it was most of them? Is it even possible to be married to someone for ten, twenty years (let alone an entire lifetime), and still have some of the same feelings for them? I know what everyone says, that the “passion” and “lust” parts inevitable die off and you become more and more companionable over the years, but is it a rarity to even have that? Would you still have that desire to be around the other person, and would you look back on the years with tenderness or would you feel that overall it had been rocky?
I don’t know, it just seems that more and more, marriage seems to be something that you are lucky to sustain in the long-term in title only, and that anything more, like even the smallest thing more, is unlikely. I would love to get married someday, but issues like these terrify me. I know there are no guarantees in life, but just think, every couple who gets married thinks, at the beginning, that’s never going to be us, we’re always going to communicate and stay close and we’ll be fine, don’t worry, we have each other, we’re more in love than anyone has ever been, that’s never going to be us, and then half of those EXACT couples will end up divorced. And god knows how many else will end up unfilfilled. (Man, I cannot believe how wrung out I have gotten over Brad and Jennifer.)
Somebody help me out with all this. As an aside, can you tell that everyone in my family has been divorced at least once? Is it that obvious? Ha ha. Okay, that’s not very funny. Adios for now.
1.6.2005
Hey guys, wait up! Hi! Hello? Oh, okay.
Man oh man, of all the days where I am so insanely frantic doing actual work while at work, it had to be yesterday. Which, as I have JUST DISCOVERED, because I never was cool, was International Comment-Leaving Day or something. D’oh! But, the brilliance! A scheme where everybody benefits: all of y’all who usually lurk leave a comment, which pleases me greatly, and you in turn get a nice email and/or comment back, and I send $1 for each comment to a relief organization for the tsunami reconstruction. (I have not chosen a specific agency. Perhaps you can comment on that?)
Well, okay, I missed the official day. But I was really really busy at work, did I mention that yet? When 3:30 rolled around and I hadn’t yet taken time for lunch, my boss actually left the office of his own volition and spent actual cash money of his own (except that I will probably end up processing that $4.26 in his next expense report) and came back with a Subway sandwich for me. Oh, the joy and the rapture! It was the best veggies and mustard on bread I have ever tasted. At that point in the day, even a veggie sandwich is indescribably beautiful (tm A Christmas Story).
But yeah, um, the commenting thing. Look at the cool button that was included in that post:

And,

La la la! I could do this clicky-linky thing all the live-long day!

But I won’t. You see, there was one more image on that page and I did not include it here. I actually restrained myself. I was not a complete button glutton (oh man, I…love that phrase. Okay, focus.).
Even though I technically am eighteen hours too late for the official Leave a Comment Day, maybe I can tweak the rules a little bit, for the benefit of Southeast Asia? Yes? Is that a good enough reason? Alrighty then.
Leave a comment, yo.
1.5.2005
He was forty years too old for me, anyway
Okay, I need to cut it out with the horror movies, for real. First there was that incident with Session 9, and now I have gone and watched Dawn of the Dead. At night. Alone. Gah! Oh, it was horrible. Has anybody else seen it? Did it take years off your life too?
Anyway, I just got home from seeing my friend Anne for what was supposed to be happy hour, but we both worked very late so it ended up being normal dinner time by the time we actually met up. We went to McCormick and Schmick’s anyway, even though the hamburgers were no longer $2. (Is that not the best happy hour special ever? They also have “oyster shooters,” which is a raw oyster and cocktail sauce in a shot glass. They are sort of gross, but I eat them anyway.) I hadn’t seen Anne in forever; she is getting married in a few months so she’s been busy planning that. It was really nice seeing her. We had Bloody Marys, as is our usual, and talked about books and work and her wedding, and Project Runway and this guy I had a date with last weekend.
There was this fairly elderly guy sitting a few stools down the bar who called down to us and tried to buy us a beer. We did that “Oh, no thanks, we’re fine!” thing, and then turned back to each other and made “yikes” faces. Right before we left, he walked over and tried again. He pulled out all the stops this time. You know, that old “You two must be sisters!” line. Nice.
He did say one funny thing though; he told me I looked like Dana Delaney, which I used to hear pretty often but haven’t for a while now. I just thought it was funny because she is the only celebrity anyone ever compares me to. And what has she been in? China Beach, yes, but that was before my time. No, the only thing I remember her in was this really awful skinemax-type movie with Rosie O’Donnell. Oh lord, the flashbacks from that horrible movie, they are upon me! Dear god, make them stop!
Maybe if I watch Dawn of the Dead again?
1.2.2005
What I did on my Christmas vacation
My stepmother is really sick. The doctors aren’t sure why this happened, but somehow she contracted a virus a few years ago that over time destroyed some of her lung tissue. Lung cells do not regenerate. So she is on oxygen twenty-four hours a day, and has to do hour-long breathing treatments every few days, and the estimate for her survival is fuzzy but generally accepted at two to five years after being diagnosed with her specific lung ailment.
She is, in a lot of ways, more of a mother to me than my real mother, and if she is not around if/when I get married or have kids, I know that I will always feel like those events were somehow lacking. So when I go to Georgia it’s to visit her as much as my dad, and being nearer to her was a definite factor in my decision to move to Savannah this year.
I don’t really talk to a lot of people about her being sick. Certainly not to my mom or her side of the family; they are sympathetic but they really don’t get why she and I are so close. And not to my dad, because he and I are both those types of people who keep things really close to them, and if we ever were to really sit down and let it out, how bad we feell about it all, the world would probably spontaneously combust. I do sometimes talk to her about it though; she likes or needs to talk about it and she told me that I’m the only one who doesn’t try to avoid the subject with her. So, sometimes she tells me how sad and scared it makes her to know that she’s going to miss certain milestones in her kids’ and grandkids’ lives, and I don’t really know what to say back, or maybe I do, sort of, but I don’t want to feel like I’m hijacking the discussion or anything, so I just let her talk, and it seems to help us both a little.
So, this is all a long-winded way of saying that I spend a lot of time with her whenever I visit Albany. On this past trip, however, I was with her even more than usual, because my dad and I got into a big fight halfway through the week and then avoided each other until the night before I left, when he came to talk to me and we had a big teary discussion, and things are fine now. I really don’t feel like talking about our fight. I think we fixed everything so I’d rather not revisit how I felt those three days when I thought we’d never be freinds again.
Shit, that was all it took, now I’m crying on my keyboard.
So, for the secong half of the week I was there, he went back to work every day, and I stuck with my stepmom. She retired last year, a few years early because of her disability, and now she spends her good days gardening or driving her grandkids around after school, or meeting friends for lunch, or going shopping or doing errands or whatever. Her bad days she spends in bed.
I did most of the driving on the days when we left the house. We went to the monagram shop once. Since she has to carry around a portable oxygen tank when she leaves the house (where a huge oxygen machine whirrs away in the living room), she has an assortment of tote bags (to match her outfits, yes) and each one is monagrammed. I think monagramming is very big in the south. She also gave my (step)niece, who is ten and horse-crazy, some pillows covered in horse fabric and monagrammed with her name, for Christmas.
Other than the monagram shop, we visited her daughter at her job at the bank, and went to lunch with her, and went to the mall once or twice, and some fabric shops and a nursery (plants, not babies) and her hairdresser and her old job, so she could drop in and say hi. She used to be the director for a battered womens’ and childrens’ shelter, and it was because of this that I came to have my photo taken with Gloria Steinem, and listen to her speak, at age fourteen.
I guess it is true what they say, that you can’t go home again. Driving around, all I could think about was all the shops and landmarks I remember from my childhood that are no longer there; they have been replaced by other shops, in some cases, or by big chain restaurants, in more cases. The lumber shop, with the animated electric sign of the man hammering a plank of wood, was still there. As was the Coca-cola bottling plant, the otherlumber shop with the huge man-in-overalls statue outside, and the local theatre (plays, not movies, although there is one of those too). But the shop where my mom got me those barrettes I loved, with the apple cores hand-painted onto them, and my first diary, was gone. As was the old train station-turned-city museum, the place where I used to take ballet lessons, and the Italian restaurant where the famous I-ate-a-jalopeno-pepper incident took place.
The way my dad tells it, he and my mom and I were eating there once when I was maybe four, and I always loved olives so he gave me what he thought was a big green olive from his salad, and I took a big bite and started wailing and tearing up, and they handed me my glass of chocolate milk to drink, and I took a big gulp and then spat it out and wailed some more because it was soured. And they both had glasses of beer in front of them, so nothing for me to drink, and there was a big kerfuffle while they hustled to get the waiter to bring a glass of water, and apparently I was pretty mad at my dad for giving me that pepper for a while. When he tells the story now, he laughs so hard he can’t go on, and I just sort of roll my eyes, all “oh jeez, here we go again with that pepper story,” because believe me, he will tell that story to anybody who will listen.
And that field where we used to watch Fourth of July fireworks is still a field, thank god (if it had been in a town around here it would be a subdivision by now for sure), but now they set off fireworks near the huge convention center down by the river that separates Albany from East Albany.
I wonder how the people who have lived there continuously all these years feel about the town changing so much, since it’s happened right under their feet, but for me, coming back once a year since I was eight, it’s sad. I don’t know what I expected really. For time to just stop in the year when I moved away, so that I could always have my childhood frozen in time? Not really. I guess I just wish I had known then, when I was seven and we moved to Maryland, that I should have looked around really closely and memorized everything and everyone, and that nowhere I would ever live again would be quite the same as that town, and that I should have appreciated how big a deal that would be to me now, now that I have lived in a bunch of places.
Because it’s true, nowhere else is quite the same as that town.
~Home~
What's going on with me?