Tuesday, May 11, 2010

damn it feels good to be a (paper-pushing) gangsta

this is how i feel at work lately:


this is what i would like to do about it:

Monday, May 10, 2010

this blogs for you...rodney

happy 29th birthday my friend! I know that you generally only read this blog to find out if i am telling some story or another about you or if i quote you. so i thought i would use today's post for you. there are a few pictures i have culled from my facebook albums too.

what is there to say? you are a dependable and trust-worthy friend, you make my friend jessica incredibly happy and i am so glad you both moved to chicago. when you told me you would avenge my death (if something foul should ever befall me) this weekend it pretty much sealed the deal. we will be buds forever, even if that means going to your softball games on mondays and fridays, your improv performances (once you graduate) on whatever days those are and any other activity you sign yourself up for. i like that i get to watch guy movies with you and we can enjoy/mock them together, but for mostly different reasons. you are my favorite person to play wii with, even though half the fun for you is in beating me.
i also think you are pretty funny most of the time, except when you're salty. but you've kept those times to a minimum lately. also, our co-obsession with forgetting sarah marshall means that i never have to be misunderstood again when breaking into my impression of jonah hill's impression of russell brand as aldous snow. so i raise this glass of lemon flavored seltzer to you, rodney, for being so awesome!

Sunday, May 9, 2010

for lilia

looking extremely unfashionable in italy the 80s
most love their mothers for all of the obvious reasons. they nurtured and nudged you into pajamas and eating your vegetables and taking cough syrup when you were sick. they changed countless diapers on your behalf and lost their youthful shape (if only for a short time or perhaps longer) in the pursuit of having you. there were stories at bedtime and homemade meals on the table, rides to ballet and swimming and horseback riding and anything else that might have entered a child's imagination, if even for a fleeting moment. there were presents carefully written onto santa's list placed under your tree and carefully laid out outfits with frills and bows and other bits and bobs that embarrass you now but which she just couldn't resist then. when you are a teen there are the countless sleepless nights you know she spent wondering where you were and then knowing that those restless nights didn't end when your adolescence did. there are the bills paid and the laundry done and the countless times that she said i love you even when you know you didn't earn it. because that is what mother's do. love unconditionally.

i was lucky enough to have a mother who did all these things for me. above and beyond for more of the time than my snarky self probably deserved. perhaps it is because she didn't have the benefit of the same motherly touch in her own life, or perhaps it is because it is in her particular nature to cajole happy outcomes out of less than perfect circumstances.

for those like me, lucky enough to still have the care and comfort of my mother, there is the added moments that go beyond the mother/child experience. now that i am 30 my mother is also my friend. she is a person who's advice and opinion i trust and although i sometimes want to react towards her like the child i used to be, deep down i know that she respects me enough to trust in my choices. i am lucky. i am so very very lucky. and like with most things i don't say it enough, i don't tell people enough or stop and appreciate all the amazing things and people that surround me. and the funny thing is that since blogging and writing everything down it has made it even more evident that i need to understand my particular bounty, and instead of railing against the lack, embrace the tangible, the embraceable.

there are a million things that i love about my mother, so in honor of her on this, her 37th mother's day, i have complied a list (she does love her lists!) of just a few of those things:

1. she has the most beautiful name i have ever heard and reminds me not only of her, but also of my late grandmother who named her
2. the way she makes eggs
3. her strange brand of feminism
4. that she defends me even when it's not warranted (unless i actually murdered someone unjustly, then she would turn me in)
5. she loves her food super hot
6. she never drinks coffee or tea with sugar
7. she talks really loudly and emphatically as if everything she is saying is the most exciting thing she has ever heard
8. she values my opinion on things like fashion and books
9. she was as wonderful a teacher as she is a mother
10. she made me the most beautifully crafted quilt when she was pregnant with me and she isn't all that crafty
11. she does everything 115% of the way
12. she never says never
13. she loves my father, even when he is a pain in the ass
14. she loves my brother and i even when we are unbearable pains in the ass
15. that she sometimes curses
16. that she'll tell me small things in confidence and it feels so special
17. that she marches to the beat of her very own drummer
18. that she likes to use phrases like the one above
19. that she won't apologize for who she is
20. that she taught me not to either
21. the way she rocks red lipstick
22. how she fought for everything she has and never says so
23. her ability to laugh at herself
24. her eggplant parmigiana
26. that she plans on growing old gracefully, but never slowing down
27. the fact that she has no idea how beautiful she is
28. that she encourages every idea or whim i choose to pursue
29. that she has 15 different nicknames for me including cookie, bubie and brunhilda
30. the way she taught me how to love by example

this list could go on and on, but you like things to be quick and efficient so i'll just say i love you mama. thank you. 

Friday, May 7, 2010

one more fold in the brain...or not

long beach sunset fall 09
a short catalogue of current thoughts:
  1. apartment project for over my bed
  2. pie
  3. home
  4. isobel
  5. the dishes in the sink
  6. love
  7. julian casablancas solo album
  8. hash browns
  9. writing
  10. the cure
  11. paperwork
  12. money
  13. the ocean/sand/summer sun
  14. bills
  15. my mother
  16. rain/thunder/lightning
  17. summer clothes
  18. facebook
  19. tina fey
  20. my lunch sandwich
  21. my messy room
  22. teaching
  23. failure
  24. being in bed/sleep
  25. this blog

Thursday, May 6, 2010

fair's fair

last week i was talking to someone (i honestly can't remember who) about fairness and the way life doles out breaks and benefits and outcomes. the way that karma doesn't always seem to directly hit its mark, or benefit a do-gooder and that sometimes life's justice is meted out in uneven chucks. i can think of people on both ends of the spectrum. those who deserve more breaks than they get and those who haven't really had to suffer at all.

when i think about these scenarios, the name paris hilton comes to mind. i'm not really sure why. but i think, there is a girl who has had every privilege this world can offer. she was born into a family with money and power, she is thin and blonde and is not completely unattractive and has a trust fund, and despite her obvious need to receive attention from the media and the public to achieve some sort of perverted celebrity, her life is pretty charmed. she couldn't even handle sitting in a jail cell for what 30 days by herself, because she had probably never been asked to be alone with her thoughts for that long. or suffered the indignity of being grounded by her obviously indulgent parents. sure, sure i know what you are saying, who am i to judge anyone's circumstances or life experiences or know what they go through on a daily basis? fair enough. but i am guessing that hilton never worried about where her next meal was coming from, or her next soon-to-be-neglected pet for that matter. the harsh words the media throws her way are generally fair, deserved and she is the one that put herself in that position in the first place. she never worried about a roof over her head or a retirement fund. she never even had to think about an actual career. she can walk through this world with her head in the clouds and still end up, at the end of an 80 year run, on top. one could even say that her lower iq is a benefit, because she doesn't even have to recognize how useless and disposable she really is. ouch.

and so you don't think i am just hating on paris, i too have lived a fairly charmed life. besides a bout with lyme's disease that left me perpetually sick for several of my formative years and the curse of being a chubby adolescent in a society that worships the thin, i have had a pretty good run. i can pay my rent, put food in my mouth, clothe myself and once in a while go out to a nice restaurant or the movies. i have also had the benefit of both my parents as both an emotional and monetary safety net, underutilized yes, but ever present. my childhood experiences have made me resilient and sensitive, yes, aware of the physical and emotional pain inflicted on others by circumstance or trickery. either way is wicked and fate is a fickle mistress. but knowing that my parents are there when i make a misstep and fall off the tightrope we all walk, permits me to live the highwire lifestyle i have taken to in the past. i paid for graduate school myself, took on the loans, the crushing debt that i will be paying for until i am 65 and probably far beyond that (no exaggeration), but when my plane landed in the states, they were the ones who picked me up at the airport and it was their house that i lived in until i could get back into the workforce. others aren't afforded these benefits. i know that the fates have smiled on me thus far and i am thankful, i just wish others could get the same treatment.

my mother's life is a good example of the random assignment of pleasure and pain by the universe. when she was 5 my mother lost her mother to ovarian cancer. but that wasn't where the loss ended. my grandfather, who i suspect was always a selfish man tempered by a caring, giving and traditional woman, spent no time disrupting the lives of his children. my mother's siblings, much older, were out of the house by then, but my mother too young to even understand what had happened, was shuttled to her aunt's house, so that her father could return to italy. her aunt only spoke italian and i am sure that the transition was scary and frustrating and through it my mother learned to be accommodating and pliable and, in some ways, invisible. and although both of her parents were italian, my grandmother had only allowed english to be spoken in the house so their transformation to typical american family could be complete. when my grandfather returned to the states almost a year later, he had a new wife and she was with child. my mother returned to their home, but all traces of my grandmother were removed from the house. the rest of my mother's childhood and adolescence was marred by incidences of unfairness and bitter remarks and soul crushing cruelty at the hands of loved ones.

just thinking about it makes me want to scream and cry and throw things around and i turn beet red and want to write letters and make phones calls and change history. my mother, however, remains calm and accepting in the face of her own memories. she tries to recall the brighter moments of her formative years. don't get me wrong, she recognizes the emotional inequity between say her childhood and my father's. she knows that things didn't happen like that for other kids her age. perhaps it was the skills she acquired in that year that she lost her mother, where she learned to take things as they come and not ask why of someone or something  that can't answer back. i don't think it is a coincidence that she doesn't believe in god.

i think of my mother often in times of other's hardships. i compare their reactions to hers. she has never complained, she is not just a glass half-full person, she is a glass overflowing person. i used to wake up each morning to a knock on my bedroom door and the words "rise and shine!" she is the personification of positivity to the point of annoyance. but however she chooses to approach the world she has earned it, and even in my crabbiest of moments i have to remember that.

but the universe didn't throw all shit experiences at my mother. i feel that in some ways, there was an evening out of the karma imbalance for her in the form of my father. she met him at 16. they have been together for more than 40 years. they love each other like couples at the end of hollywood romances love each other. they spend all of their time together. sometimes my mother complains that my dad needs to get his own life, he is all up in her shit (my words not hers) and that his retirement is really cramping her social life. but this is their banter. this is the way it has been since she was a lovestruck teenager or should i say she still is a lovestruck teenager. and for my father's part, he gets it. he gets her and understands the quirks of her personality that were borne out of those childhood years. he admires her for her resilience and fortitude and all of these other attributes that helped her survive in tact and with a smile.

i have friends that have lived charmed lives, some recognize it and others not so much. i also have friends that just can't seem to catch a break, life keeps lobbing them grenades and as much as they try to avoid them, some shrapnel this way comes. i don't know how it works out there in the universe, i don't know how to turn the tables or alter the course of events, i don't even know if karma and fate or anything exists, although i feel like there is some sort of energy out there. and since i don't believe in god, or allah, or whatnot what do i have but my weirdo new age mumbo jumbo? i do have control of my own actions and through my words or advice, hope that i sometimes inspire the positive actions of others. but sometimes there is nothing you can do and bad things happen to good people and good things happen to bad people and the only thing that gets you through is that one day you'll see the roles reverse. and the people who have wronged the ones you love get there's and the people you love find people to love them as much as you do. 
this is what popped up when i googled karma

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

i can see you


so as sam, amanda and i were discussing our blogs and writing them and reading them and others reading them (so meta and circular we are) i pondered if there was a blog site hit counter. amanda said that indeed one existed. i said sam should most definitely get one on her shit because she gets a bagillion hits each time she posts, because she is awesome. currently her counter stands at 778 and i installed that shit at the end of last week. impressive. it is interesting to see how many people track you even if they don't technically "follow" you through blogger or whatnot. and although this blog host should give you feedback like facebook does for the administration of a fan page, it doesn't.

i went a huntin for one of these new fangaled contraptions and found me a fancy one. see it at the bottom of the page. although sam rejected this one because it was too busy or too annoying or for whatever reason she gave me, i love this one simply because i can see all of you by location. now that doesn't mean i actually know who is reading, but it gives me a general idea. for example, i think steph's sister read the blog i wrote about her because she is the only person that i know that lives in the city that she does. i know that my friend in wichita has checked it out and also a bunch of people in illinois suburbs that i have never visited. it also lets me know that my ex-boyfriend and now just friend (i guess i should just start referring to him like that) is perhaps stalking this site now (he can be a little ocd) because i have a large number of hits from dublin. either that or he thought my writing was so impressive he got our mutual friends there to read it too. either way i am flattered.

for those who live in larger cities it is harder for me to figure out, but at least i know more people than my 12 "followers" are reading. i was happy with just the 12, but now i really feel honored. so thanks for thinking i am somewhat interesting, or at least odd enough to check out every once in a while. i will attempt to live up to the recognition and stick with this thing for as long as i can. so far it has been a little over a month. wow a year is a long time to commit to something. but don't be shy, click the follow link and i'll show up in your google reader AND i'll know who you are for definite. it's a win win. and if that is too much of a commitment i understand, but just know that i'll be stalking my counter contraption waiting for your town name to pop up.
  

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

nashing my teeth

last night i went to kate nash's all ages show (as evidenced by the older man in the center of this picture) and it was dynamic and interesting and it made me like her more than i thought i ever could. during her second to last song, as she stood on a pitch black stage, one flashing red light intermittently lighting her face, growling into the mike i am electric i am electric i was transformed into a 15 year old fan girl, smiling in the dark at the inspired words of my new girl crush. i especially liked the message (minus the mention of cocaine) of mansion song. the lyrics of which i am posting below.

mansion song

I fancy the hip rock 'n' roll scenester
I wanna be fucked and then rolled over
Cause I'm an independent woman of the 21st century
No time for nits, I want sex and debauchery
I read glamour and the guardian
I like flowers and I'm hardy and I take cocaine
I don't give a fuck about her
I want your name
I can get fucked like the best of men
Like the best of men
Like the worst of pain
Inflicted on another young girl again
Impressed by another guitar hero
He's a top score and you're a zero
You're out of your league
There ain't no rubber on the tracks it's gravel
You fall hard, cut quick and it's an STD, a cut knee
You're a side of stage grasp, a laugh
An aftershow party in a bath
Fucked and expected to be fucked
A gasp from an uninformed intruder
The crowd go wild and things get ruder
They're already out of hand and there's no-one here to take your hand.
It's a cold shower and a scramble for a dirty pair of knickers,
don't get yours mixed up with hers now get out of bed, get out of bed, get out get out get get out of bed
Get up, get down and get undressed!
Cause that's what you do best, strip, strip strip n shag, fuck get fucked 'n drag, and be impressed,
by the better sex, take a piece of raw vegetable and hold it to your breast
and say you stood for nothing.
You were just a hole that lacked passion, another undignified product of society.
That girl should have been a mansion.



Monday, May 3, 2010

the tenseness of future past imperfect

so i have mentioned briefly here and there that i have been attempting to date in this city. it has been a lackluster endeavor so far and not one that i really wish to chronicle. my hope is that one day i'll just start writing about fun things i'm doing with so and so and in that way it won't have to be a huge announcement. but my last two dates got me thinking about the evolution of my current dating life and the oft left out proper rules of dating that our parents benefited from, but seem to be alluding us in this fast-paced interneted world.

i remember when i moved back to my hometown. i landed there after dublin and felt stuck in every aspect of my life. i was back in my parent's house, working at a florist/hospital gift shop, dating my then boyfriend long distance from IRELAND and trying to figure out what the fuck i was doing with my life. one day as i was sitting in the relative calm of the hospital gift shop when an old high school classmate's mother walked in. now this woman was never very nice. not to me, my parents, my best friend, other classmates. she saw me as competition always. her child didn't always see me this way.

the girl seemed to discount me as any real sort of competition in school and for college placement not based on my intelligence but my relative disinterest in academics. she saw me, i think, as a comedic foil to my other friends. i tended not to pick up the required readings, kept papers to their stated minimum and never over prepared for anything. in my junior and senior years i carefully planned my schedule so that is was the perfect blend of ap classes, art classes and study halls (which i would also spend in the art room). while others learned the intricacies of physics i was unfurling rolls of film in a darkroom. i had long before given up the notion that i was going to be some great scientist, dressed in lab coat white and full of new discoveries. i pondered the idea of being a geneticist for a hot minute because that shit fascinates me, but i liked words better than formulas and calculations and dissecting poor, preserved animals.

i think i have digressed.

anyway this woman walked into the store and gave a surprised look and said something like, 'well what are you doing here?' and i was all 'duh, working. do you need a get well card or perhaps this large lollipop to shove in your obnoxious gob?' no i didn't say that. i smiled my sickly sweet 'if you know me, you know i fucking hate you right now' smile as she said something else like 'well what have you been doing then?' as if this couldn't possibly be it, this couldn't possibly be your JOB, but not in a flattering way, it was more in a way that said, 'well i always thought one wrong turn and you would be right here.'

so i very matter-of-factly let her know exactly where i had been, in just the right way, not bragging see, because that is gauche, but using key words in combination with the right delivery. if performed correctly it would puncture her bravado and be like a slow steady leak of her big balloon head. it landed just as i had wanted and upon learning of where i had been the previous year she pursed her lips and said 'oh well then isn't that nice.' after a beat she proceeded to walk backwards out of the shop. i think she knew if she turned her back on me i might just lob an ohenry bar at her head. you can't shame someone that doesn't have any bitch.

i knew that my position at the gift shop was only temporary and that made it easier to get past my own inner 'what are you doing here?' thoughts. it also helped me deal with the fact that i was still living with my parents and that my relationship was costing me both monetarily and emotionally. after our breakup, i made a move to be in a more career oriented job, i moved into a house with my friend and starting living my life back on one continent. but all of these decisions to be more permanent, more adult, more tied to my hometown just made me feel more stuck.

my first year after the breakup was a blur. the new friends i had made at my new job, blended with old friends who had returned home post-college and combined they tried to shake me out of my malaise. but everyday was like walking through thicket, a fog-filled field with no beginning and no end. i was easily turned around, easily broken down, easily separated into parts that hardly functioned and parts that didn't function. i wouldn't emerge from the rubble of my past unscathed. my inability to shake my feelings and my desire to continue speaking to my ex did me no favors and my friends found it difficult to stand by and watch. there were lines drawn, silent wars waged. and all the while, beyond the crying jags and the constant feeling that my heart might just rip right down the middle, with the friend complications and pressures of a busy job, the overwhelming feeling of never getting free, of being mired in the present by the choices of my past were unshakable. unbearable. my feet were locked in concrete shoes of my own design. i had chosen to move back, i had chosen to wait it out and give my relationship a chance. i played the odds and ended up with a middling result.

people encouraged me to date. my friends would take me out, get me drunk, introduce me to strangers and point me out to eligible men. it was ineffectual. i ended up in too many corners of too many bars to count. my parents also wanted me to move on. they wanted me to find a job and a home that they didn't own to live in, and happiness with some guy who would want to stay on the east end. i raged against this. i had never wanted to return and i saw the disappointment in the eyes of old friends when, upon seeing me around town, would say, but you were supposed to get out.

i half suspected that my parents thought i had an expiration date. my particular brand of uniqueness makes me, initially, what they call a hard sell. i am stubborn and opinionated. i don't really feel the need to people please and generally like to call bullshit on bullshit people. they both constantly mention that i will need a "flexible" guy. by this they mean someone that will bend to my will. although it is a running family joke, i generally do not find it funny. mainly because it is not in the least bit true. i never respect people that let others run roughshod over them. and i also think dating a pushover would get really boring super fast. for example i found my ex's desire to be difficult about the simplest things both the worst and the best thing about him. in return, he didn't let me get away with anything, ever. i do have plenty of positive attributes but when weighed with my age, looks, debt, gross income and gardening and housekeeping skills, i guess they thought i better get myself the hell out there and quick. but i was having none of it. i think i felt as if dating someone would make it all permanent and tangible in a way i never wanted it to be. i lingered in that state for most of my time on long island.

i dabbled with a slight crush here and there, but overall i stayed single and untethered. i wanted my next move to be on my terms, a location of my choosing at the time of my choosing, for reasons of reclaiming self-possession and purpose. my love life, i reasoned could wait out this period of my life with me. with both the emotional and forward looking parts of myself left unsatisfied for so many years, i would make moves more quickly towards what i wanted.

it still took four years.

when i was saying goodbye to co-workers and friends during my last weeks at home before moving here, i had a running joke. people would ask, 'you hoping to find love out there in the midwest, with those nice milkfed boys?' or some variation. and my response was always, while living here i was able to say it was the lack of decent eligible men that kept me single, but if i go out there and still can't get a date, then i am going to know it's me.' but i didn't ever consider that it really was me.

but for the first year and a half here my still dateless/boyfriendless existence was starting to prove my hypothesis. it could be me. i would return home or visit friends in other cities and they would ask expectantly if i was seeing anyone new. it got easier to let them all down as time went on, eventually i just learned to cut them off in the introductory paragraph to my life update.

i'm doing good, nothing too exciting happening, jobs good, still not dating anyone, bought a new bookcase, have a standing date with my friends every thursday, been reading at this show every few months or so. moved out on my own, thinking of bringing my cat to live with me here.

and in this way it cut off the possibility of the conversation.

but then a few months ago i realized it really was me. but not for the reasons i thought. all these years i believed that i was a hard sell. that it was going to take a really special someone to get me and love me and take me for who i am. and that may still be true, but the fact was that i wasn't even letting anyone know who that was. i was someone completely different with strangers and acquaintances than i was with closer friends. my representative was awkward and closed off, not open to newness and change, impatient with certain personalities and judgemental of others all in an attempt to keep the unknown at bay, my heart closed and my nights desperately free to ponder why, in fact, no one ever asked me on a date. i was stagnating in my belief that no one was going to love all of me ever again. not really recognizing that it was a self-fulfilling prophecy. and then one day i cut off all my hair and everything changed.

i will admit to you internet ether, what i only told a few close friends at the time. i had kept my hair long for so many years on a promise to myself that i would not cut it short again until i was married. at first, it was just a silly thought, a whim that i was passively satisfying. but it soon began to weigh on me. each year, as inches grew, i felt more and more burdened by its very existence. it was always my most coveted asset, my hair. it was the thing, in my mind, that made me beautiful to others. people throughout my life, would remark on its texture and thickness, its ability to look great with minimal effort and the color oh my god the color! when i was younger i wasn't allowed to cut my hair, my father forbade it, subscribing to the traditional labels of femininity or some shit. by 16 i walked out of my bathroom, down the stairs and into the living room clutching a thick, long, reddish brown ponytail that not five minutes before had been attached to my head. my dad looked horrified, my mother seemed to brace herself on impact. one of them uttered why? i answered something like, i wanted to.

and just as i had felt that day, so too had i eventually reached the end of my proverbial hair entwined rope once again. last may i decided to shed my mane and forgive myself for not sticking with the silent pact i had made. and with the ponytail seemed to go a fair amount of self-censoring.

no longer able to hide my face from anyone, everything i thought or felt was now writ large upon it. i made moves, broke previously erected barricades and started, after several months of mental preparation, going on a series of blind and semi-blind dates. and it was awkward and painful and silent and sometimes not silent. but it was all new and that adrenaline high was the feeling i kept with me while recapping the evening with friends, especially when the date went just so-so. and this leads me to the original idea that started me on this long and winding road.

dating etiquette is a difficult thing to navigate, especially in this day in age when it is so easy to ignore those we deem unpleasant or not second date worthy. i myself fell prey to this after one first date. before we parted from the first, the boy, who my friends and i have dubbed swiss cheese, asked if i would want to do it again. i said sure, because i feel i never make a great first impression. afterwards, i emailed him to say thanks again for a good time (note: not great!) and he responded asking again if i would like to meet up. i replied asking what was he thinking for a second meet up. no response. i was heading out of town for a bit, so i thought maybe he would contact me when i returned, i even emailed him to let him know when i arrived back in chicago. nothing. and although i wasn't wholly devastated from the passive rejection like i would have been months before (this open dating policy has taught me to take things in stride) i was still aggravated by the person's obvious inability to be polite. i wasn't asking for an explanation, just an email back that said hey, i'm no longer interested. especially since he initiated talk of a second date!

in a desire to set an example or change dating karma or just be a decent person, i made a pact with myself that i would never do what swiss cheese did to me. i would be upfront and if at all possible, honest within the parameters of niceness. it is the harder thing to do, but don't we owe it to each other on some sort of basic human level?

so this weekend, after the second of two just so-so dates with this guy who had stated that he wanted to see me yet again, i decided i had to just bite the bullet and make a move to stop another date. i decided to email him and let him know that i thought he was very nice, but there was no chemistry between us. blah blah blah. it was difficult and awkward and it took me a full 20 minutes for wordy me to write two sentences just so, but it had to be done. it was the right thing to do. and i was happier knowing that he wasn't going to wonder forever why i didn't return the voicemail that was sure to come on monday.

just as that mother had made me feel less than for working at the gift shop, and swiss cheese had made me feel less than for whatever reason he gave himself, i never want to make someone feel less than. because sometimes things just work out or don't work out. sometimes life leads you in directions you never thought you would turn and sometimes you cut off all of your hair because you need to be free of something or everything that it stood for and discover that what you thought defined you, only held you back and that people may just like the new you better anyway.

Friday, April 30, 2010

magenta with envy...

i saw this show for free.

Thursday, April 29, 2010

because i'm a crafty mutha*ucker


i have no desire to be witty or wordy here today. last night four of us moved a futon, 2 chairs, a table, a coffee table, a microwave and various other items. today i am tired and cranky from a week that has taken more space from my apartment, gas out of my car, liquor out of my cabinet, money out of my pocket and one best friend out of chicago. i am exhausted and feeling a little overwhelmed. but i thought i would share something with you today anyway. before sending her off to that east coast city i used to call home, i made steph a little present to remind her of the city she adopted almost five years ago. because i am crafty and low on funds i usually try to make my gifts, but often i don't leave enough time. i planned ahead for this one and think it came out pretty cool.

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

this is the letter i would write


dear bride's magazine email subscription services lady/guy:
please note that i have never signed up for your magazine or email blasts because i have never gotten married. i also have never really been properly engaged and seeing as that, at times, can be a sore subject for me, your seemingly benign email blasts about new wedding features, dresses, shoes and traditions (?) are really quite obnoxious.
it's like you are rubbing it in. are you rubbing it in dear bride's magazine email subscription services lady/guy? because i'll tell you something i don't need you or your magazine. you know what you should send me. new issues of jane, because there was a magazine i want to read. can you resurrect that publication for me bride's magazine email subscription services lady/guy?
because i like to look at wedding stuff as much as the next girl, but really in the middle of a work day or even worse, a bad date, to get your 'how to really enjoy those precious honeymoon nights (wink, wink)' emails is making me sick.
sincerely,
seriously and sublimely single

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

yes i said yes i will yes

i haven't blogged since thursday and it was starting to feel weird. i was hoping that i would have some time on friday to lay down some words for the momentous occasion of my best friend stephanie being blown out of the windy city in order to take a bite out of the big apple (had to be done!). alas, i have been so busy giving her a proper send off on friday and most of saturday that i didn't even get to write her a card to go with the present i made her. and i know how much stephanie loves a well written and thoughtful card, mainly because i have received many from her throughout the 7 (!!!!) years that i have known and loved her...and sometimes yelled at her ;), but always with love. i was sorting through my cards and notes and photos the other day, for a new apartment project that i have thought up (stay tuned for that one!) and came across so many of steph's postcards, birthday cards, notes and life’s marginalia collected during the four years we lived apart, me in new york and she in chicago (ironic i know) that i wondered how we had anything at all left to say to each other.


i met steph seven years ago when she literally landed on my doorstep. we were part of a group of foreign students living in a four-story dorm style apartment complex called trinity hall. it housed a virtual united nations of 20-somethings from south africa, the states, canada, sweden, england, spain, wales, and even the odd student from the west of ireland. we lived a lot like a big family. my flatmates and i often hosted champagne and pancakes breakfasts, hosted spontaneous afternoon tea and more than once even a knitting circle, cramming 20 or 30 into our small kitchen/living area to eat, drink and bask in the relative ease of student life. and all the while we were able to learn about other cultures and areas of academic study without really trying. my flatmate sarah and i would spend weekend nights knitting hats and scarves while discussing boys, food and her dissertation on the historical impact of knitting on cultures. seamus taught me what fry-tex was and i learned from my friend shane that not all military men are cut from the same tunnel-vision cloth as their commander in chief. i don't have the right words to explain how my year in ireland, in dublin and at trinity (where steph and i earned our matching degrees) shaped me. it all sounds trite and overwritten and flakey when i try to express the way the people and experiences, even how living in that flat changed me.


steph rang the door bell and was all gussied, done up for a night in dublin, i opened the door to my future and it was a fair-skinned freckled redhead. she and one of her roommates came to ask if a few of us wanted to go out that night. i said when are you leaving? she said on the next bus, which is in 3 minutes. i was in my pjs and thought well what a bitch she obviously doesn't want me to go out at all because i get ready quick, but not that quick. we laugh about that night. she told me she did want me to come out but that she didn't realize that it had gotten so late. a trait that i would understand as i got to know her. i passed on going out that night and i think the next time she invited me out too, because sometimes i like to play hard to get. but steph was relentless. she wanted me to be her friend, she told me later. i was flattered, but didn't see what the big deal was. i was no great shakes. sure i was fun, but i can be moody and morose, bitter and my honesty can, at times, be less than flattering. these are all things that steph would come to find out later. as for why she wanted to be friends with me then, you would have to ask her what she saw in me exactly.


but i can tell you a million reasons why i became friends with her.

i'll use the past tense, even though she remains today all of these things and more.



she was whip smart and interesting. we had fun. she was open and emotional and loved chocolate. she liked my room. she liked my movies and was always finding cool shit for us to do. she was feisty, sometimes even when the situation didn't warrant it. she could drink with me and try to keep up. she would drink beer with me, but preferred milkshakes. she never once judged me for being scared to do things, especially when it came to boys. she always encouraged often with warm hot chocolate and a story or two from her past. we both liked to watch sad movies while under warm covers in dark rooms when it was cold outside. she became a matchmaker for one time only and it was for me. she liked to talk about books and poetry. she never apologized for being smart, bookish and academically inclined. she never let me apologize for it either. she tried for an entire year to get me to read and love james joyce, never relenting. she never teased me for wanting to shop. she opened herself up without pretense to a relationship that scared her. she went with it and made it beautiful. she never wavered in the face of criticism, although she always bit back. she was fearless, weightless, beautiful because of it. a fighter that goes down punching, if ever at all.

they were halcyon days. heady with the promise of discovery...see it never works to try to write about it like that. together, in combination with two other close friends laurel and erin, we broke barriers, mended fences, started fires and extinguished them. we walked miles literally and figuratively. we drove through green lands looking for hidden treasures in the irish landscape, found love and lost it and found it again. explored castles and ring forts and scary mountaintop hostels. we discussed poetry and fashion, listened to music and had madcap barefoot drunken adventures through the streets of dublin. together we sat in an irish pub at 3 a.m. and watched janet jackson's nipple slip. together we were taught the words of swift, beckett, joyce and edgeworth. visited martello tower. spoke the words of steph's literary hero, molly bloom. we wrote and read and listened to eccentric old professors who knew everything and sometimes nothing. we ate curry chips at 4 a.m. and cried about missing family and friends. we learned how to love more openly and love at all. together we learned how to speak up for what we want, fight for it. later we would learn that maybe it wasn't worth fighting for but never let the other apologize for the effort. we were young and free, unbound by the history we had built for years in a home thousands of miles away. friends would visit, people would write and see pictures but they didn't know. they weren't there. they couldn't possibly understand.



we didn't know then what would become of us. sure some of us painted pictures. i started to sketch mine early on, it featured dublin and books, babies, gardens and my now ex-boyfriend. steph wanted to go back to the states, to the career path she had started. she drew in broader strokes, but at the heart of it was her wish to live in new york. she chose love first. and love brought her to chicago, when i reminded her of her new york lifescape she said i know, but for now this is where i’ll be. but she always knew she would get there eventually. and so did i.

steph was my first real editor. she would go through my academic papers with the zealousness reserved for those who love the written word. that is how i know she is good at what she does, because she loves it wholeheartedly. and when i gave up on my aspirations to write and edit because it was too tough to find a good job here, she never judged. she has held on to the dream. and i admire her for that. i also know that she will be successful in new york. and although she worries sometimes that the city will swallow her whole i know she'll have it wrapped around her finger within a year.

in nyc
when she first realized that this move was real and she was getting the job and we were once again going to live apart as we had done for four years after leaving dublin, i noted the irony that we had, in effect switched places. and i know that she feels at home here, and in the last two years has brought chicago to its collective knees with her mix of persuasion and panache, but it was never a permanent stop. just as dublin was just a waystation, so too was chicago. but she brought me here and for that i will be forever grateful. just as she had done with our friendship, so too had she made it impossible for me to say no to this great city. with guided tours and delicious meals, fine friends and well-stocked museums she wooed me here. it took four years, but i made the leap and survived. she told me the other night during our last sushi dinner as co-chicago residents that she thought i had been so graceful about my move and she didn't think she could do the same. she obviously forgot the weeks on end of sweats and unkempt hair. but nevertheless, she could never be anything but graceful, after all it is built into her name.

i often feel like i forget to tell my friends how much they mean to me. especially those closest to me. steph and i have gone through a lot of highs and lows, love and loss some at the hands of others and some at the hands of each other. but these are the things that shape us, that create the forms that move forward to carve out new future selves. and whether those selves are in the same city or not we are always with one another, connected by a shared experience… and the phone, and text, and bb messaging and facebook and this blog.

so steph this is just to say that i love you and good luck and slainte. and whenever you call, i promise to pick up. just remember the words of ms. bloom when you walk down the streets of that sometimes daunting city. yes i said yes i will yes. and it will be so.

Thursday, April 22, 2010

be a mother (earth) lover

happy earth day to the trees, the sky, the flowers, the grass
the water that rushes from oceans into smaller paths
the ants and beetles that march along
and to the birds that sing their morning song.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

the hate locker

this post was inspired by a ridiculous response one reader had to my friend samantha's most recent blog post at http://www.bitchesgottaeat.com/. her post was honest and open and took her some time to write because of it. it is hard to do what she did. she chose to write about her body image and associated items. it is not a comfortable topic for her and she admitted so in her response to said commentator. but she did it because she is trying to be as honest as possible on her blog baby. this person's words were cutting and mean and meant to shame sam into submission for not subscribing to societal pressures. samantha is a good friend, an amazing writer and one of the nicest, sweetest people i have met here in chicago. i often feel that we are so similar it is like having found a counterpoint in the universe. that said, i felt it necessary to respond in some way. the words of that awful commenter reverberated in my head all day yesterday and i choose to respond with some heartfelt honesty of my own, although i think the response of some of sam's other friends were shorter and more on point.



 monday night melody

it is easier to be mean. being nice takes effort and control and reasoned thinking and, ultimately, having feelings yourself.

ever since the mainstream awareness of mean girls and the like, movies and books have been touching on a subject women have known about for decades, most likely centuries. girls can be mean, so mean as to be cruel. last month a young girl killed herself because a group of girls hen pecked her into such a state that she didn't want to live. she didn't want to live. breathe. smile. cry. laugh. swallow. blow her nose. sleep. kiss. make breakfast. walk. get married. read. have sex. hop on one foot. play games. have babies. breathe. anymore. all gone. because people couldn't keep their mouths shut. because jealousy prevailed and words can be vicious.

i know because i too used to feel their wrath. obviously not the words of those particular girls, but a group just like them. you all know them. wrapped up in the facade of their perfect picture lives, their skin-tight jeans and well-manicured hair. the girls who made middle school a place of dread and angst, rather than of education and exploration. i was like a nail that couldn't be hammered down in middle school. my parents were both teachers at the school i attended, i had an older brother who was a little off-beat and known for his academic excellence. i too was considered smart, although i don't think i was ever nerdy. i was however chubby, which in many ways is worse. i straddled a line between acceptance and repulsion by a group i didn't even want to be in. by girls who only knew one way of looking at the world. i wouldn't keep my mouth shut and i often, as i was taught by my parents, defended those around me who could not or would not stand up for themselves, often at the expense of my own popularity.

i never wanted to be boxed in. sure i wanted friends, i wanted to belong and be invited to make-out parties and have boys like me. i just wasn't willing to do it at the expense of myself. even from a young age i knew who i was, what i wanted from the world and more particularly those around me. i was never going to let some twit change the way i thought. consequently middle school often felt like one long screaming voice going into a dark well. no one to hear me on the inside. i was always going to be the chubby girl, even if i had lost a ton of weight one summer and come back a new svelte version of me, i knew the score. instead of poking fun of the way my shirt hugged my pre-adolescent curves, they would talk about how i used to have those curves. you could shed all the pounds, but in their eyes i would always be that girl. and i know because i am still that girl now. reflected back at me. same curves, same feelings. no difference.

i feel i might be painting the wrong picture here. i did have friends. and one very good friend in particular who i have been best friends with since kindergarten. together we were able to tough it out. our own tiny band of outsiders. there were others too, that i was close with. women that i am now happy to have on my facebook collective. but there were others that came in to my world and tried to torch it, burn it down and make me feel less than. little did those bitches know i was fire retardant.

i was able to make it through those years because of the few close trusted friends i had, that and the words of adults around me who saw my pain and my frustration. adults who told me it would get better, that when i was older, these things wouldn't matter. sticks and stones and dumb hoes and all that (well not exactly their words). and i believed them. i really did. i thought, well we all grow up and realize that words hurt. a lot. and don't do it anymore. i think this has been the worst disappointment of my adult life. santa, the easter bunny, even the fairy tale of perfect love were all easier to accept than the idea that we still love to tear each other down and often over petty bullshit.

i am what people like to call a straight shooter. some people like to call it bitchy. i like to call it honest.

i am never going to be cruel to you. the reason: not that you haven't deserved it or my anger pushes me to it or my rational frustration tells me it is allowable under the circumstances. no. i am never going to be cruel because i am always going to be honest. you may not like it. the words may not be sugar coated or wrapped with a bow, but they will come from a place that is hard for some to fathom. i feel no need to lie. lying is a pretense i don't stand behind. i only lie to save someone unnecessary anguish. i am a discriminate liar. i have one thousand rational reasons lined up before i do it. otherwise i just want to tell you how i feel. and i try not to make it about something it's not. if it is about how you treated me i am going to tell you that. i didn't appreciate it when you said this about me, etc. and i'll say it so calmly you might freak out. because people don't like to be confronted, especially with someone with the calm of a buddhist monk. a fact i learned in middle school, when mean girls, confronted with the boldfaced truth scattered to the four winds or stood stock still wishing they could melt into the floor. because i am also good with words said in anger. if you pick on my friend you are picking on me and nobody picks on me anymore.

we are 30. we are supposed to be adults. we are supposed to understand that the struggles of this world are difficult enough without the added pain of your poorly chosen words and the motivations behind them. we are supposed to understand that everyone carries baggage. i'm sure even those mean girls with their faux louis vuitton luggage know that. broken families, broken faces, broken self-image. i always try to understand the motivation behind someones cruelty, if only because i bore the brunt of it for so many formative years. i also don't think that it is an excuse. because i know plenty of people that didn't get enough breaks in this world and they never say a negative thing about anyone.

now i am not saying i am perfect. i have spoken out of turn, been guilty of aggression towards friends and enemies alike. there are some things i would like to want to take back, but i just don't want to. i do things with purpose. but most of all i do things with kindness. if i let you in, i'll fucking kill you with it. i am tough as nails, wrapped in an impenetrable nutshell, but once you are in i am one of the best friends you'll ever have. and i stick. this lady is for life, unless you screw me over then i'll cut you out like a fast-growing tumor and never speak to you again. it's true. ask those i've left behind. just don't ask me where they are because i don't keep tabs on the dead.

people confuse being a hard-ass or not a push over as being mean or a bully. i am not a bully. i know because i could never be after having been on the receiving end of their words and actions for so long. i think we are divided into categories when we are young, shaped by the way we respond to the actions of our peers in middle school. there are the bullies, the brave ones, the jesters and the watchers. i think it is possible, but not likely that we can grow up and move past these labels. it would be a rarity, but i have witnessed it once or twice. i know where i stand in this crude pre-adolescent adult heirarchy. do you?

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

just peachy

inspired by the addition of 4 new cookbooks, including thomas keller's ad hoc, and the promise of dinner guests i decided to bake this delicious cobbler. it was supposed to be blueberry, but since i don't love baked blueberry anything i decided to make it peach. its also gluten free like everything else i bake. i hope i made mr. keller proud.



Monday, April 19, 2010

burning down the house

this weekend was a good exercise in remaining calm in the face of conflict or natural disaster or the happenstance of the walls collapsing around you with no way out. it is kind of funny given that i was already planning on writing about my apartment in this post, i feel that after yesterday, however, this blog will have taken a decidedly different turn than i first intended.

i am house proud and not ashamed of it.

i remember someone once telling me my parents were house proud as if they were low down dirty thieves or something, people who dared to steal others possessions in the dead of night for their own gain or as if they were poseurs, squatting in some life that they didn't deserve or worse, hadn't earned. i hadn't even heard the term before. it sounded strange to me, like an obvious thing to be. why was it being said with a sneer? a house, and moreover a home, is something to be proud of, especially if you own it. you've earned it, brought it up like a child. in the case of my parents most of their homes were raised from the depths of their imagination, each door position chosen carefully, each window placed to the maximum effect. i have several vivid memories of my parents at the dining room table poring over blueprints for their next house. there was always a next house. i didn't know it then but they were the earliest version of house flippers. before that nutty ocd guy on bravo who yells at everyone and those two married nuts with 7 children on bravo who don't seem to yell enough. my parents were seen as nutty, but they had a mission and we as a family were on the wild ride, freely purchased ticket or not.

i have personally lived in three homes with my parents. those being homes we owned. that does not count the various apartments, bungalows and cottages, a term i apply loosely here, that we moved into every summer for the rental season. each may i would pack up my things, all of them, save the framed pictures on the walls, into boxes and store them in the attic. i have said goodbye and hello and goodbye and hello again to many things, tchotchkes, blankets, clothing, stuffed animals, beds, pillows, door frames, favorite backyard hangouts. i have done this dance with my things for as long as i can remember. but i am not sad about it or angry. when i was younger i didn't understand the trade we were making. now i see what saying goodbye and hello again was able to get us. my family was given, or i should say my parents gave us, new cultures, tastes, experiences, languages, dreams for things we didn't yet know existed, a future. my undergraduate degree was paid for with goodbyes and hellos. my relationship with the italian side of my family, all of whom live half a world away, was built with goodbyes and hellos. but i still can't help but love my things.

perhaps it is because i had to pack and unpack for so many years, or because, as jessica once told me, i am "a lover of beautiful things placed in a beautiful way," that i now cherish each and every object in my apartment. they are my oject d'arte. my beautiful things. my personality transferred into iron and wood, fabric and ink.

i took offense to the house proud comment and the spirit in which it was said. the person was saying that my parents cared too much about their things, the home they built from the ground up, the baby they had imagined in blueprinted paper labeled with that great architectural allcaps handwriting that says this bathroom will be both functional and beautiful. my father especially used to yell at me a lot for not taking care of my things. for leaving my bed unmade and my clothes on one side of the bed in a pile (full disclosure: this is a bad habit that i have to this day, although i try to keep said clothes confined to a chair in my bedroom). he said it showed that i didn't appreciate the things i was given. that i didn't understand the labor and struggle those clothes represented. he once got so mad (and he is a particularly calm man) that he took all of the items and threw them out the front door onto the brick and lawn. i thought to myself that before they were on my clean bedspread, now they are dirty, laying out in the elements, in the dirt. but his point stuck with me. i knew i would never take my home for granted. that i would take care of the things that i surrounded myself with.

my father, as fathers are wont to do, used to tell me stories about his own childhood during moments in my own to demonstrate his point. when i used to complain about the yearly ant invasion or a rogue spider, he regaled me with stories about how when he was a child he wouldn't go to the bathroom at night for fear that he would step on thousands of cockroaches. that his daily shower ritual turned into a fight to the death with gargantuan water bugs the likes of which i could never imagine. he told me these stories in an effort to make me appreciate that said small spider was nothing comparatively. however, he would still call my mother in to kill it.

i was haunted by these stories growing up. but not for the reasons that you think. the cockroaches and water bugs disgusted me yes, but they were a far away nightmare in a far away city from a far away time. they haunted me because they were from a past i would never fully comprehend. experiences that were so far from my day to day that as a child i could only mumble an apology for the struggles of my father and his two bedroom apartment, one bathroom, 7 people, 4 brothers and 3-to-a-bed childhood. but this (and the equally humbling story of my mother's childhood) is for another post.

knowing the stories of my parents. what they grew up without and how far they have come, shaped me even if i myself didn't have those same struggles. i never had to put myself through high school, or buy my own clothes, suffer the close quarter living of a brooklyn apartment or the lax personal boundaries of a large family. but i knew the effects of all of these things. and i knew how to combat them, if that is indeed what one wanted to do. i was raised with a work ethic and common sense. i was raised to appreciate everything i was given and everything that i earned, because it wasn't a right. it is never a right, but a product of earned effort.

i joke that i grew up in a museum.

in part because the house was always "being shown" and in part because my father is a neat-nic (a product of his childhood presumably amongst dust and junk and the items of 7 people in a two bedroom apartment), there was a museum quality to the look of my house. add in my parents penchant for antique furniture, rugs and decor and the place looked like a showroom. but it was always comfortable. i was never told not to touch anything or was yelled at for spilling something, unless i was expressly told i wasn't allowed to eat the red sauce on the white couch and then did so anyway. i was allowed to have food and drinks in my room and we were never a 'no shoes' house, a concept which both my parents catalogue under ridiculous. my father, for all of his annoying cleanliness faults lives by the philosophy of 'never let your stuff run your life'.

of all the weirdo axioms he has passed on to me in my 30 years, i am learning this may be one of the top five. much to the amusement of my parents, i am house proud. when i moved into my own place in october i decided i wasn't moving again until it was into a house or apartment i owned. this would be my place, my home, my space to make my own. it would be comfortable and welcoming and homey. all the things i loved about my parent's home, but with my own style and most likely more dust bunnies.

i have succeeded in this effort. i knew that i had succeeded last weekend when jessica's friend lauren who had never seen my place, sat on my chair, curled her legs under her, took a sip from her glass of wine and declared that my apartment looked like an anthropologie catalogue. and i took it as a compliment because everything in my entire apartment probably costs what one dresser does at that store. my parents also seem to like it, bemused by my yelling at them to make the bed when they visit. although my father thinks that it is weird i like to decorate in the style of furniture he grew up with, that the objects he remembers as cheap alternatives to the fancy, unattainable ideal, are now considered "cool." i don't know about cool, i told him, i just know what i like.

i also like the way lauren said what she did--comfortably lounged on my furniture--as much as what she said, because we can't let our things dictate our lifestyle. at no other time was this phrase made true than last night during the first paragraph referenced events. as devin and nichole and i sat back to enjoy some sunday afternoon wine and chit-chat, the day disintegrated into a series of accidental assaults on my furniture and decor. first red wine was spilled on my beloved cream shag carpet, a carpet that took me two years to find. a half hour of seltzer, oxyclean and 22 wine soaked dishtowels later, the stain seemed to disappear. we pulled up the rug, but the assault continued. there was bbq sauce on pillows, blankets and my upholstered chair. i remained calm but incredulous as to how the klutziness could have continued for so long. i think the wine helped. by the time michael, who joined the party at some point, spilled his entire juice based cocktail on himself and my couch i just laughed it off. they kept asking if i was okay. all of them apologized profusely and seemed to be waiting for me to explode and make them leave. but i think i was impervious to the destruction. sure the lack of attention to not spilling things on my beloved items was frustrating, but we are just humans. i was and am one of the most spastically klutzy people i know. things happen. it is just stuff. and even though i love it, it is all replaceable. what is not are the memories of devin, nichole and i in the seconds after the wine was spilled. all three of us splayed on the floor, trying to triage the wound and bring my beloved shag back to its former glory. devin, as always, was assuredly hopeful; nichole, as always, was sensitively sweet; and as for myself, i just shook my head, lightly laughing as i surveyed the apartment i had decorated with such beautiful things, my apartment of the anthropologie catalogue beauty, and it was in that moment, surrounded by my friends, spilled wine and laughter, that it was most definitely a home.