Monday, October 30, 2006

Tell me about your childhood

Enough text-heavy posts. Gotta conserve for my 50,000 word Nanowrimo experience starting Wednesday. Here is a photo instead:

Me at age 8, brothers at age 4 and 12. Yes I have a most hideous fro and seriously hideous pastel bow in my hair. I grew up in Nebraska, I'm sorry.



That little guy is going to be 21 in a week. Scary! Also note the stone washed jeans my big brother is wearing, and the country style wallpaper in our kitchen.

Sunday, October 29, 2006

Sundays, A Book Recommendation

Sundays seem to be the worst day of the week for me. They are a stark reminder of my solitude, and sometimes an entire Sunday will pass without me speaking a single word. Today was no exception - I woke up early because Melissa and I were going to run a 5K, but she got really sick and her bf's grandma just died, so we had to postpone our run. Therefore, I went back to bed, laid around until 11, got up, ate cereal, went back to bed because Audrey was being irritating, and woke up around 3:30. I did four loads of laundry, put on my flannel sheets (which are unfortunately Christmas themed), made spaghetti, ate alone, watched tv. My mom called. Ed returned my iRiver. My older brother sent me some cool old pictures of us he scanned. That was it.

I'm thinking about the holidays - probably because they are approaching and because of the stupid flannel sheets. The past few Halloween's Jake and I would get together with Juan and Patricia and binge on Halloween cupcakes and other junk food together. Another ritual that I no longer have. I'm thinking about Thanksgiving - I'll be in San Francisco again, but not for a Thanksgiving meal, and Jake wasn't invited to my family's outing that Saturday. I'm thinking about Christmas, and how I don't want to see my family, can't afford to do the New Orleans trip (at least I'm not sure I can yet), but I don't want to be alone in Chicago. Maybe a friend will adopt me and take me on their Christmas trip. Last year Jake and I made a gingerbread house, had our first christmas tree, got Audrey presents, and it was really nice. This year I'll feel pathetic getting my own Christmas tree. Not so little known fact - I LOVE Christmas. I love the irritating shoppers, the xmas lights everywhere, the stress, the cookies, everything. Love it. This is probably why its so hard for me to be alone on it. But that's almost three months away, I'm getting ahead of myself here.

Anyway, my original point of this post was not to carry on with my depressing blog, but to recommend a book that I've read a few times. I think Alycia would really like it, and I'm amazed I haven't reread it since moving here. Woman at War, by Dacia Maraini, is a book I had to read for my 20th Century Italian Resistance Lit class in undergrad. I loved it, and I've read it a few times since then. The back cover reads
Woman at War is the diary of a woman's growing self-awareness. Beginning as a passively absent narrator, Vannina encounters a fascinating array of characters during the holiday she takes on an island in the bay of Naples with her husband, Giacinto. When he returns to work in a garage in Rome, Vannina travels to Naples with Suna, a friend she has made on vacation. This startling character opens Vannina to the possibility of finding love through other women, and helps her reject the role of serving coffee to the men who would change the world through violence. Back in Rome, Vannina rejects her former life and moves toward a complete, if difficult, independence.[...] Dacia Maraini is one of Italy's best-known women writers. She insists that women's voices need to be heard beyond the clamor of political slogans. Here women grow in strength; the feminist values of understanding, intuition and compassion effect real change that transcends the wearisome struggle between the chauvinisms of political left and right.


The book deals really well with a female surrounded by "revolutionary" men (Communists in this case) who still see woman as their slaves, her struggle to free herself from her husband, her unsatisfactory sex life, her female friendships, and her growing independence. So duh, I'm kicking myself for not reading it since I've lived in Chicago.

Saturday, October 28, 2006

relations

Last night was good and bad. I saw my friends band, May or May Not, do this special Halloween band night, where each band goes as a different band of their choosing. May or May Not went as Daft Punk, and it was incredible. They were so tight, they were having so much fun, the costumes were impeccable, and the audience loved them. I was so proud of them, and just feeling so great about all my friends that were there. Miller and Torri made a surprise appearance too, which was really exciting. Unfortunately, that hour was the best of the whole night. I had told a few other friends I'd go to a different show to see their bands play at this hellhole bar, Ronny's. The bands were good - I had never seen either one before, and was impressed yet again by the talent my friends possess. The bar itself was disgusting. I had to fight with the bartender who gave me 3 dollars back from a 20 dollar bill, for 8 dollars worth of drinks. The place was so overflowing with cigarette smoke, and the bathrooms were some of the worst I've ever been in. Everyone said they felt like they were in high school, and you know? That's not a fun feeling, I'm too old for places like that. Worse, they were cooking fried chicken in this wok up front, so the place reeked like fast food. There was also this defunct tiki bar obstructing most of the view of the band. It was just awful. As a result I wasn't in my usual jokey-mood, where I can handle getting shit from people, and got really pissed off at someone by the end of the night. I'm over it now, but I was really angry last night, which is rare for me. I went home and spewed the following cliched-crap onto a word document:

I’m sick of going to smoke-filled bars, sitting there for a few hours, thinking about how I’m all alone, watching everyone around me be with someone, and then come home to my dog and a bowl of cereal. It only makes me feel uglier and fatter than I already feel, like nobody wants me. Do I come off as untouchable to others? Damaged goods since Jake? I don’t understand.


So yeah. I was pretty angry when I went to bed. Then I slept for 11 hours, and when I woke up the Coping zine made by Alycia was in my mail. I had a submission in it, as well as a quote from an email I sent her. I was excited to read everyone else's submissions. I worried that mine was too open and too personal, but it turns out most people had narratives like mine and were open. Mine came off more crass than I remember writing it, but I still like it. I read the zine front to back in one sitting and reflected for awhile on the stories contained inside the cover. It made me want to ask my friends and acquaintances the same question: What did you do to cope with a major change in your life? Be it booze, therapy, books, music, positive, negative, nothing, everything, I want to know what people close and distant to me did. Are any of you readers and friends interested, or do you think anyone would really write something for me? One thing that sometimes disheartens me about many of my friendships is how little I know about the inner-workings of so many of my very old friends. I've known some people since freshman year of college, but don't feel like I really know them and what makes them tick. I'd love to hear how my friends have handled majors changes in their lives, considering I've gone through nearly every major change a person can go throw, and I did them all at once. Of course some of my friends I know better than myself, yet I would still value their submissions in more ways than I'd ever be able to verbalize to them.

Lately I've been really hokey with some people. Nick and Alycia are my most recent victims. I'll call them or email them to tell them how much I value my friendships with them, how important they are to me. It'll just come gushing out of me (for Nick the alcohol contributed to me being super sappy). I'm annoyed that I feel ashamed to express my value to people. I was told by a friend that in a grief counseling session (s)he attended, one exercise was that they each had to tell the other people in the room why they valued them, what they appreciated about them as if it were the last time they'd ever see the person. Apparently the exercise was very intense and emotional and freeing. I'm thinking of doing this, telling everyone I know why I appreciate them, and not worrying about how much they make fun of me or think I've become a Dr Phil follower or something. There have been some times where I could really use that sort of validation from my friends, and occasionally I get it, just not as much as I could use. On the other hand, I feel like a major charity case to some people here and it makes me feel pathetic.

Despite my writings on here and some of my actions, I think I am the strongest I've ever been in my life. I've discovered who I am, I'm comfortable with who I am, I'm ok with being alone for the most part (and for those of you who know my serial monogamy, this is incredible), I'm in love with my friends and my job, blah blah blah. I'm succeeding at living alone under the terms I want to live, which many people can't say. Every minute of each day is my choice, no compromises for others. And everyday I feel myself getting more comfortable with who I am, and eventually I see this crap I just wrote above disappearing. I can't wait.

Wednesday, October 25, 2006

Upcoming Shows

Sorry for the triple posting today, I'm bored and wanted to get this out there before I got lazy and forgot. Here are some shows I'd like to go to in Chicago that I bet none of my other Chicago friends want to go to. What I'm getting at is, if you live in Chicago, and you want to see either of these bands please please let me know.

Gang Gang Dance this Friday night at the Empty Bottle. You can still see the May Or May Not as Daft Punk show and get to the Bottle for the Gang Gang Dance hipster hell dance party. Actually, I wouldn't call it hipster hell, but it'll probably have some serious fashionista and outsider-art types there that make for great people watching.

Mouse on Mars November 7th, Empty Bottle again. These suckers are from Germany, so its probably something I shouldn't miss. Granted, they've been playing music forever so they'll be back. I wouldn't die if I missed them, but I bet some cute nerdy exp/laptop rock guys will be there like when I saw Pan Sonic. Good time to stare at dudes.

And I got my Hot Chip tickets for November 10th! I can't wait to see them!

Incredible Negative Campaign Ad

The YouTube video of an anti-Melissa Bean ad playing here in Chicago is so priceless to me. There are so many gems about it: the term "liberal democrat", the Golden Gate Bridge in the background, the need to insert that Pelosi represents San Francisco (I love people who think SF is totally insane), the characterization of Pelosi as liberal (most true 'liberals' don't like her in San Francisco), and on and on and on. I'm so glad someone put it up on YouTube. I don't even know who Melissa Bean is, and I'm not voting here (I'm absentee voting in CA), but if I were voting here Bean would get my vote as a result of this ad alone. Can I put any more parentheses in that last paragraph? I don't think so (but I've been wrong before). Can this paragraph have any more grammatical errors (probably). Do I care? No. Just wanted to highlight an awesome ad that is near and dear to my SF/Chicago lives.

Winter coat

Lynda found this amazing coat for me, and I just ordered it. Winter, here I come!

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Pavlov lives in my house

Audrey has never had a forced air heater before my current apartment. Within the first hour of it turning on and off, she got all Pavlov's Dogs on me. Now, as soon as she hears the heater click on she stops whatever she is doing to sprawl out on the ground in front of it. It makes me think maybe she is really cold, but she isn't shivering. She probably just loves the heat blowing on her. Audrey is totally calm during this time too, its a nice break from her constantly wanting to play fetch with that rubber foot Kevin got her.

Work is now officially de-stressed which is great, and my exercise/diet has been on track. I should hopefully fit back into all my clothes by Thanksgiving as long as I don't screw up. With no baseball game hot dogs and a decrease in drinking I should be fine and back to normal soon.

I was talking to some guy friends last night, and started to worry that maybe I've become the "guys' girl" - the girl who is always friends with guys but never the girl they want to date. Doesn't do much for my self-esteem. Do I really talk about turds and baseball and gross sex moves that often these days? I was thinking about the possibility of a dichotomy between the "hot girl" and the "cool girl." Everything swirling through my head got me pretty upset, and kept me from sleeping very well. But at the same time I would never want to date someone who only wanted some major hot girl (and they would never want to date me if that's all they wanted as well). I had it much more well composed in my head this morning, but a busy work day has erased what I wanted to type.

And in the irritating cycle that is Audrey and my life revolving around her - she has brought me every toy she owns in the past five minutes and thrown them on my laptop's keyboard so I'll get off this thing and play with her. Smart dog! And of course I'll comply. Who's training who here?

Sunday, October 22, 2006

Dogs, Baseball, Boredom

I slept almost the entire day Saturday. I even slept through the Tigers getting crushed by the Cardinals. Then I slept in some more today. I guess I was tired, or just really bored.

I took Audrey to a small dog play group this afternoon, and was yet again reminded of my distaste for small dog owners. They are such snobs! The owners were all gushy over the purebred dogs, and ignored Audrey. My dog is cute too! And she was the only dog who was instigating any good play time, yet wasn't mean like that nasty little pug there. I was pretty annoyed, but Audrey got worn out, so mission accomplished.

Today I've been down on myself and down about dudes. Yesterday I was really excited to live alone, and felt like I could totally be cool with becoming some old crazy cat lady. I wish I could find the medium between these two feelings. I also wish I could stomach hanging out with couples when I'm single a bit better. I'm getting worred that sooner or later I'll become a total recluse as a result. Further proof I'm not 100 percent better yet.

Cardinal's catcher just got hit in the nuts big time. Better go watch this and laugh. Announcer just said "came up under that protective cup" LOL!

Saturday, October 21, 2006

Happy 1 year puppiversary!

One year ago today, Jake and I got Audrey. This is what I wrote then:
Introducing the newest member of our family: The Nameless Female Chihuahua Mix! We think she has some dachshund and some min pin based on her long body and long legs. She has the cutest wrinkles on her head, she's so soft, so friendly. All she wants to do is sit on your lap. She doesn't bark, is happy and outgoing. Perfect dog! We haven't decided on a name yet. She has a curly tail too that wags and wags. She also has a high jump, that we saw while she was in her room at the shelter.


We named her Audrey after Audrey Horne from Twin Peaks, since she had black hair and I wanted her to be a strong gal just like Miss Horne. The "she doesn't bark" bit didn't last long, and she actually has a very loud bark for a ten pound dog. She can still jump up to my belly button, still has the curly tail, and her wrinkles are less pronounced now that she is balding. I've been reading my entries about Audrey (here is where tagging my entries would come in handy), and its fascinating to read about our progression together. I remember the days where she didn't know how to sleep in, couldn't hold her pee for more than a few hours, had separation anxiety, learned she hates rain, on and on and on. I also read about the Bum Brigade, the bum dog owners at my old park (Duboce Park) that always tried to get Audrey to be their friend. And the owner of Best in Show, the frou-frou dog shop, who swore he knew Audrey before we got her. Her first trip to Fort Funston, her first off-leash experience...so many happy memories of Audrey and me (and Jake) together. I've always wanted a dog, but I had no idea how much love I could hold for something else. People who knew me before the dog say that I really changed/grew after getting her, and I think they are right.

So, to celebrate my doggy anniversary, here are pictures of our time together:

Jake and Audrey chasing geese in Alameda


Jake and Audrey fighting for the cow head


Audrey digging a hole at Fort Funston


Christmastime for Audrey


Audrey soakin in the rays


Our favorite pasttime - napping together


Audrey humiliated

Thursday, October 19, 2006

sucks being bummy (guess that lyric and win points)

I've been out the past 9 nights in a row. I can't wait to just sit at home tonight, watch tv, make a real dinner, and wait for my peapod grocery delivery to arrive. Grocery delivery services? Awesome. And since I've been out so much, I'm sitting at home all weekend. It's cold out, I'm exhausted, and my dog misses me. I'll watch BSG Friday with the normal watchers, assuming that's on, but otherwise I'm home. I need to save my money so I can see Hot Chip in a few weeks, as well as go to the "Evening with Crispin Glover" at the Music Box. I need to know more about the connection between Glover and Herzog. Is it just mutual adoration that brought them together? Glover does a ton of Herzog's dvd commentaries.

Our Pub Quiz team Tuesday was really strong. We almost made it in the top 3 teams this time, but botched the General Knowledge Round. Still, it was fun, and it looks like more people got converted into the Pub Quiz world.

Last night I saw Project Runway at a gay bar. Sounds bad, but uhh...I miss hanging out with gay guys! There was a bear there showing my friend naked pictures of himself on his Sidekick, an underwear fashion show, and lots of screaming at the tv for your favorite designer. It was crowded, which was annoying, but the atmosphere was good. I've never really participated in that sort of tv-as-event experience.

I totally dropped the ball on a big thing at work, due to anxiety and annoyance at having to do it in the first place, and now I'm working crazy amounts to get it done. However, boss isn't mad and understands why its bogus that I'm doing it, so at least I got that going for me.

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

more lists

Stuff I try once a year just to see if I still hate it (all recently tried):

oatmeal
any and all boots
fruit-at-the-bottom yogurt
cheap under-eye concealer
sushi

Anything on your list? Am I the only one who tries stuff even though I previously hated it in the hopes that I've changed? I really really wanted to like oatmeal, so I'm disappointed. And my wallet would really really like me to spend less money on concealer.

Sunday, October 15, 2006

Visitors and Jesus Camp

Big weekend at Casa Rus-trick. Jake and Jay were in town as a stop on their three week tour. I haven't seen Jake since I left SF in early May, and I've been nervous about this weekend for a long time. Would I be overcome with regret? Be happy that I left? I was very unsure. I've spent the past few months consummed with thoughts of my decision to leave, and this weekend I feel like I finally put those thoughts to rest. I saw Jake, and was certainly happy to see him, but in a brotherly way not in a love way. We hugged, and I felt nothing. We joked around like we hadn't missed a day together. But the romantic feelings or any sadness were nonexistant. We shared my bed with Audrey and it was like being on a vacation where I have to share a bed with a friend. If anything I felt sort of smothered. When they left late Sunday afternoon I wasn't sad. I felt like I was saying goodbye to all those regrets I had and to the mourning of the death of my relationship. I finally feel like it was good and right for me to be here. Last night at his show, I really wanted to be with my friends. That is exactly what I wanted to feel. I adore my friends, I love living alone, I love my job, and I'm OK with being by myself.

Audrey definitely remembered Jake. She jumped and wagged her tail like I haven't seen her do in a long time. She looked so calm and at ease with him around. He had a lot of fun playing with her, and I could tell she was so excited to see him. We walked her to the pizza place, and he made her sit at each corner which is something I should be doing. She was so bad at it, that it made me feel bad for being so lax in her training. Seeing her confidence and peace skyrocket with Jake here made me more committed to training her again. We did 15 minutes of sit, stay, down tonight and she was loving it.

Ettrick (Jake's band) did a great job. Jake just keeps getting better. I was amazed at his skill, and he's added some cool stuff to his sound. I was proud of him. They seem to be having a fun time on tour, and he seems to really have come into his own. Watching him shmooze with the other exp/noise kids made me feel like his mom, just so happy he is doing what he wants to be doing. And happy that so am I. We both seemed freer, lighter. As if we finally came into our own. So why am I crying right now? Probably just a release of all that pent up anxiety.

Speaking of crying...Jenny and I saw Jesus Camp. There was a lot of crying kids in that film. David Byrne's journal entry about the film sums up my opinion and reaction to it, so I'll leave the high quality writing to him. I left terrified. The main children, Levi and Rachel, really really disturbed me. Everyone should see this movie.

The previews had some interesting choices. There's a movie version of Fast Food Nation coming out that looks really good. They also showed a preview of The Bridge, a movie about suicides off the Golden Gate Bridge. This topic was very controversial when I was in SF - lots of debate about whether to build a barrier around the bridge so people couldn't jump, and lots of talk about whether the movie was wrong. I'm going to have to see it when it comes out.

This week is going to be so busy. Monday night is a show at the Empty Bottle with May or May Not, Rollo Tomasi, and Dialogue - all bands with my pals in it. Tuesday is Pub Quiz. Wednesday is the season finale of Project Runway, and we are all going to some gay bar in Boys Town to watch it. Good thing Audrey got her play time in this weekend.

Thursday, October 12, 2006

Snow, Ho-Tep, Psychics

It snowed today. First falling snow I've seen in four years. It was blustery, white, fluffy, and wet. And very very cold. People at work thought it was pretty funny to see me get all excited to see it out the window, then get all crabby to actually experience it.

I ran after work, and ran way too hard. So hard I wanted to barf everywhere for quite some time afterwards. But I had no time for vomit - Joe was coming over to watch Bubba Ho-Tep. This movie came to me via netflix all the way from San Jose due to Netflix not having a whole lot of copies. We were going to watch it last week but his house flooded, so I've put the movie off for over two weeks. That's fine. HOWEVER! When I opened the mailer, I discovered that the DVD was completely cracked in half. BUMMER. I could have watched probably four movies in the time I was sitting on that. Luckily, Joe has a Facets membership, so we raced to the movie store and rented it.

The movie was pretty funny. I think I liked it more than he did. It's about Elvis and JFK, who both are still alive and in a nursing home. They have to fight a zombie soul-sucker who sucks your soul out your ass. Yes, its that odd. I was glad I had wine for it.

Its my first two day weekend in awhile, so I'm excited. Too bad I'll have almost no time for rest, as Jake and Jay are in town with Ettrick to play a show Saturday. I can tell Audrey can't wait to see her dad. The other day I walked in the door and she was dragging around the t-shirt he left in her crate!!! She's never done that before. She's psychic!

Wednesday, October 11, 2006

Random Lists

I had a lot of lists in my head this morning on the train, so I figured I'd dump them on this dump of a blog:

Memories that I should remember more often:
1. All my trips to michiganfest and columbusfest/more than music whatever you call it, and those totally dorky feelings of community, total freedom, and feeling like you are at something that cannot be replicated that comes with them. Oh and staring at hot dudes.
2. Chocolate martinis at the tornado room
3. Any trip to Puerto Alegre with Jake
4. Seeing David Byrne a few years ago at the Fillmore
5. The day we adopted Audrey, and the bonding process with her
6. The feeling of excitement I got from starting over when I moved to Madison, SF, and Chicago
7. Fish frys in Madison

Stuff that's making me happy right now:
1. My friends, both old and new, the fact that I even have new friends
2. Seeing that I am actually effective in teaching students to research/seeing them using the databases correctly on their own
3. My increase in reading
4. Listening to Cursive's "Happy Hollow"

Stuff that sucks right now:
1. Finances
2. Having lost control over my dog
3. No boyfriend, no options
4. My haircut
5. My fatness since moving here
6. The onset of winter
7. My insecurities

Stuff I am looking forward to:
1. The very first snowfall, but only if its powdery and peaceful.
2. My vacation in November
3. Kevin's potential visit in November
4. Reading the zine I have a piece in
5. Starting my writing in November

Monday, October 09, 2006

Strange Dreams and Wuss Rock

I've had some seriously off dreams lately. A few days ago I dreamt that Audrey spoke english and her and I had a heart to heart about her behavior. We talked in my dream! It was very odd. Then last night I dreamt that airplanes kept exploding everywhere and I kept almost getting hit. These are very vivid, one side effect of my meds. However, its a side effect I love! I love goofy dreams. However, I woke up totally delirious and thought that I had set my alarm clock wrong (thinking I didn't have to wake up at 6:30), so I was really pissed when I realized that yes, it was time to get up.

That may have lead to my decision to listen to wuss rock all morning. So far today it's been Mineral, American Football, Lullaby for the Working Class, Cap'n Jazz, etc. Maybe not so much wuss rock but 90s emo. It's pretty funny. I've been using the Last.fm player, where you tell it to play tracks by artists such as ___ or genres such as ___. I'm wondering if there are better internet radio players out there? I'd even be willing to pay for one, as I listen to it 8 hours a day Monday through Friday.

Sunday, October 08, 2006

I'm too busy

Last week was busy!

Tuesday: Pub quiz
Wednesday: Lost party
Thursday: gym and passing out
Friday: battlestar galactica and the Hungry Brain
Saturday: CJ's BBQ
Sunday: work

And it looks like much of that will be happening again this week. I need to stay home more, I can't afford going out this much. Also, being out a lot leads to things like Thursday night and all day Saturday where I just slept for hours and hours. And now I have no clean clothes, and the washing machines are full at my building.

The melatonin hasn't really had an effect on Audrey. She isn't that much calmer unfortunately. I'm getting pretty desperate. She's so expensive and so time consuming and I have no money and no time. At what point is it better for her to have a home with people who are available? How bad does it have to get here that abandoning her to a new home is worth it? This dog loves me, but maybe she'd be better and happier somewhere else? I feel like Doggy Protective Sevices needs to take my case. I'd miss our mornings laying in bed together, our connection where I know what she wants/is thinking, the joy in her face when I walk in the door, her excitement whenever we go outside. I need to figure something out. I'm hoping that maybe sometime in the coming months I'll find a roommate, one who would want to help out and loves dogs. So far I haven't found that yet.

Reading

I’m reading The Riddle of the Traveling Skull by Harry Stephen Keeler, a native Chicagoan. My boss recommended I read it one day when we were looking at the “notable alumni” of the school that employs me. Keeler has had a very odd life:
When Keeler was a young child, his mother inexplicably (most likely due to an inability to adequately care for him) committed him to an insane asylum, thus fostering both his interest with the insane, insane asylums and the sane who had been committed to such places and a life-long violent antipathy towards the psychiatric profession.

Keeler also influenced much better known scifi writers such as Neil Gaiman. The last time I read a mystery book was probably 6th grade when we were required to read some Agatha Christie. I’m not a big fan of the mystery genre, and I’m having some trouble staying awake for this one. However, it takes place in Chicago and has just enough quirks to keep me going. Also my boss said it was one of the weirdest books he’d ever read, and that says a lot considering his taste. So I trudge on.

I also finished Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close and will definitely put it on my favorite books list, which has not yet been formed. I recommend it to anyone.

I’m still working on Jacob’s Wet. It’s hard for me to prioritize books that don’t have due dates, but I’m getting through it! It’s an easy and fun read.

After this Keeler book and Jacob’s book, I’m done reading so I can move on to novel writing month in November.

Wednesday, October 04, 2006

Pub Quiz, and Blogging vs the Sexes

I partook in my first pub quiz ever last night. My team was JP, Matt, and me. We did pretty miserable. I think we got 15th place out of 17 teams. Oh well! It was a lot of fun. I had no idea pub quizes were fun! Kept me occupied for a few hours, I sort of used my brain, and I laughed a lot. I'll go next week, and our team will dominate. I'll even study in advance.

Time to discuss my blog content as of late. Or my blogging history, perhaps. I've had a blog for 6 years. First few years were basicall nonsense - college friend drama, drunkenness, school procrastination and whining. Whatever. I look back at those and sort of laugh. Then I moved to San Francisco, and it was really bleak. Boring writing, mostly "what I did today" stuff that was really boring because I had two friends. Not much thinking behind any of the posts. Probably some more whining about grad school. I'm a big whiner, oh well.

So now onto today. Since moving to Chicago, I've gone through a lot. A break-up, a major cross-country move, job search, new apartment, new friends, new debt. Almost any stressful situation other than the death or a loved one or physical assault has happened to me. I have a lot of time on my hands to write now that I'm alone, and a lot of stuff to work through as I start my new life. And in some way that I don't understand, putting my thoughts on here has really helped me to think about my issues better. So as a result, my blog becomes one that gets mocked to no end I'm sure, just as I mock other emotionally open blogs.

But here's where it get's strange. I've had several females, even females I don't know, make an effort to tell me "thanks" for my blog. I've heard lots of "I'm going through the exact same problems" or "I wonder about those things too" and "I really appreciate your writing about these things, I don't feel so alone about my troubles now." When I hear those things, I feel really good about myself. Like I'm helping facilitate discussion and consoling other women that I think are awesome. The Women's Studies phrase "consciousness raising group" comes to mind when I get in these discussions with people regarding some content on here. And I remind myself of what these women have said to me whenever I write something that may be embarassing. And largely because of these talks, I continue to be open.

Then on the opposite end, my male friends (as far as I can surmise, they don't talk to me about it) just make fun of it. You can see it in the comments the guys leave, the little jabs. And that's cool, I can take it. I'm not looking for support from them specifically. I laugh at some of the shit on here too. What I don't understand though, is this division among the sexes. In many ways, it only reiterates sex stereotypes: men don't like sensitive talk, women only want to talk about feelings. Or perhaps mid-20s males don't have the same issues facing them that mid-20s females do? Or maybe my guy friends aren't making fun of me, and I'm just paranoid, and they are just too timid or quiet to talk to me about anything I've said on here.

Writing this post has made me feel self-consciously self-important, and I don't think that my blog is that important. You can tell by the low number of hits I get in a day (around 30). I'm just thinking about some in-depth conversations I've had as a result of things I've written.

However, I'd love to be able to talk to more people about some of these things so I don't feel so alone in some problems. Alycia has been wonderful for much of it and extremely supportive of me writing, but there are more of you out there I know. I don't know why making this public is more therapeutic for me than writing in a personal journal (which I've never had the motivation to do), but it is and so I keep doing it.

Monday, October 02, 2006

A Sign from God?

Today I had two odd encounters with God (I feel funny capitalizing it, considering I'm atheist but whatever).

1. I went to a psychiatrist today so I can get back on my anxiety/depression medication. Yes I'm crazy, and you already all knew that. It was a new person, obviously, as I don't live in San Francisco anymore. The office had no receptionist. Just a waiting room and a sheet that said "If this is your first visit with Dr X, fill out the green packet and wait." So I filled out the green packet. And waited. And waited another 10 minutes. And another. Dude was half an hour late, which is disconcerting when you have no receptionist to ask if you even are at the right place or at the right time.

As a result of the waiting, I got stuck in the following situation: a middle aged woman enters and looks confused. She says "what, no receptionist?" I say "I guess not" and go back to reading about Steve Irwin in an outdated People. She says "well I don't have time to wait," which I find odd assuming that she was there for an appointment. Instead, she says "I'll just put one right here" and drops a Holy Bible by the Gideons on the counter with O! and Sunset Magazine. I instantly think "oh fuck." She reaches back into her tote and pulls out a pocket New Testament. She looks at me, as the only person there, and says "can I give you a copy of the New Testament?" I shake my head no. She says, with crazy eyes, "BUT ITS THE WORD OF GOD!" as if that will somehow change my mind. I stare back at her, and with the meanest meanness I can muster for a stranger, snap back "I'm at a doctors appointment get the hell out of here," at which point the lady scurries out. I was infuriated, and it takes a lot to infuriate me.

So what the fuck? Who does that at a doctors office on the 9th floor of a high rise on Michigan Ave?? How did she even get in there? The place had a check-in desk on the first floor. I wonder if she singled that office out because it was a psychiatry office - you know, all Tom Cruise-like.

2. Then, I get to work and as I exit the train I'm swarmed by old men in suits with more pocket Bibles. Again, wtf? Get off my campus. They were so pushy too! This can't possibly be an effective means of conversion - shoving your shit onto someone who isn't interested. I'd love to know the true conversion rates for tactics like that, not rates the church supplies.

Writing



Yay! I signed up for National Novel Writing Month. Come november I'll be starting that amazing chick lit novel! This should be fun! Exclamation points for everyone!

Sunday, October 01, 2006

Stanger Got Married LOL


My friend Brian from college got married. The photographer was really into classic cheesy wedding photos. That is one of them. Anyway, the wedding took place in Woodstock, IL. Steve, Stacey, Matt and I drove together. The drive there took over two hours, and we were sure we would be late. Thanks to being stupid and thinking the wedding started at 2 and not 2:30, we actually ended up being right on time. The wedding was the first time I've been inside a church in a loooong time, and I had some difficulty maintaining my composure during the Longest Song Ever. Torri asked if Evanescence sang it, which made perfect sense. It really was never ending. We were perfectly horrible wedding guests, passing notes and snickering in the back row. Despite the rudeness, nobody else noticed us and the bride and groom got married with no objections.

We had a few hours to kill between wedding and reception, so we drove to McHenry to the Arby's we saw on the way in. Eating a roast beef sandwich with 7 of your friends all in wedding attire in the middle of the afternoon sort of rules. The Arby's was the fanciest Arby's we'd ever seen, with really strange counters and art with religious-undertones. Steve spilled his drink. Way to go Steve.



Still more time to kill...I was getting semi-bored at this point. We went to a local Woodstock bar, which was everything one would expect out of a small town bar in small town Illinois. Lots of leather white reeboks, fluffed hair, and Packers or Bears gear. People gawked with no shame at us. Matt made friends with a dog, and the owner was so excited about it she took photos of him. After the photo shoot, she forced him to give her his mailing address so she could mail him the photos. I hope she includes some nudie shots too. The bar had 7 dollar pitchers of High Life. Seven Dollars! Maybe I should be living in a small town.

Finally it was time for the reception, which was across the street in the Moose Lodge. There was this freaky picture of a boy kneeling at his bed, praying to his god above, with a light shining down on him. It was replicated inside stars hanging on the ceiling too. And the bathrooms had tons of "artwork" as well.

The reception was dinner and dancing and slideshows and cake. Pretty standard reception. Some toats were made, and Steve and Jacob got up to do impromptu toasts of "memories" about Stanger. The toasts were a bit like that game Two Truths and a Lie. People ate, people drank, people danced. I drank a lot. It's hard to turn down an open bar. This is what happens when people drink a lot at a wedding:

Around midnight the party ended, and we drove back to Chicago. I passed out in the car for most of the ride. I woke up very ill and hungover, and checked out some hilarious texts I sent the night before, my favorite one being "susudio" which I sent to Jake.

So, Congratulations to Stanger and his new wife Sherry. It was a very nice day, and I'm glad I got to be a part of it. Here's to Stanger procreating.