Showing posts with label alphabet blogging challenge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label alphabet blogging challenge. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Spiderwebs

I can’t adequately describe the excitement I feel when I run into an old friend at the grocery store, the parent of a kid I coached at the coffeeshop. It took me years to understand  that not everyone has that reaction; it took me years to realize that community isn’t everyone else’s lifeblood. 

But it’s always been my lifeblood. 

The biggest achievements in my life – my friendships, my career path, coaching coups – are not blips that popped up on a radar out of nowhere. Each is an intricate, sticky spiderweb full of life-long relationships, almost-missed connections, out-of-the-blue text messages and friends-of-friends-of-friends-who-thought-of-me-who-thought-of-you. 

And so, when one of those almost-missed connections, a friend of a friend, became my boyfriend almost overnight, it made perfect sense to me. Though I was inclined to take it slow, both my heart and head immediately saw him for who he was - a potential partner. 

The problem was that he lived a plane ride away, and that’s where he had to stay. My life – my stable life, the community that had surrounded me for decades – would have to bottom out in order for him to fit in. The weight of the next questions nearly crushed me. 

How can I leave all this behind? 

And most importantly.

Who am I if I'm not here?

The answer, of course, is me. I'm not merely a pixelated composition of the people, places and experiences that have come so far. Those are all a part of me. 

But I'm also the brazen liberal biproduct of two apolitical parents, the dancer in the midst of athlete brothers, the girl who once forced a group of rugby players to talk about domestic violence in the back of a crowded Wisconsin college bar.

In two weeks, I leave behind Minnesota. And context. 

I'm scared of what comes next, of course, but I'm relieved that I get to bring myself with me when I go. 

Because, as it turns out, I have created my community, I was not created by it.

Monday, December 2, 2013

Reinforcement

My friends and I have been undergoing some major life changes this year, and we've been handling our new realities through the tactic of reinforcement. For example, in August, I moved from the bustling-ish city of Minneapolis to an outlying suburb, Prior Lake, with my friend Jenna and her new husband. For the last four months, we've been sending texts like this:

“I’ll be home at 7. Home being Prior Lake, where I live, with you and your husband, in Prior Lake. Because you’re married, and you live in a house, with your husband and me, in Prior Lake. Where you own a home. With your husband. And I currently live there.”

To clarify, I’m not a homeless troll who forced my way into the home of my newlywed friends. In fact, the move to Prior Lake (with my friend and her husband) has been part of a longer transition. Because in a month, I’ll be moving to Berkeley, California.

BERKELEY! 

CALIFORNIA!

As you can imagine, the reinforcement for this particular move has been a lot more intensive. Purging, packing and job searching is all top of mind, but my main coping mechanism has been to send reinforcement text messages to Jeff, my boyfriend and soon-to-be-roommate.

“Are you at home? In Berkeley? Where we live? In Berkeley? Because we have a home in Berkeley, California, where we will live together. In Berkeley. Where we will live. In. Berkeley.”

To his credit, he responds with minimal judgment and his own brand of repetition. In fact, I don’t think we’ll get over the novelty anytime soon.


Berkeley, California. I’m going to live there. In Berkeley, to be clear. Stay tuned. 

Friday, November 22, 2013

Quick lesson

In the summer of '97, my friend Cassie and I formed a calligraphy business. Having taken a six-day course in early June, I expertly hocked the goods to our ever-expanding client base... guilty parents.

"Would you like your stationery to have the Victorian border? Or the double Victorian border, available for just 2 cents more per sheet?" I'd ask sweetly. 

The client knew to order the double Victorian border. And at ten cents a sheet, boy did they order them. The common request was for 50 sheets per customer, likely because they felt bad offering us anything less than $5. 

We began working for several hours per day to fulfill the hundreds of pages, always listening to Hanson's Middle of Nowhere album.


After a week or two of this, our hands began to hurt. My muscles were cramping and on occasion, searing pain shot through my digits. That's right. I had a classic case of Eleven Year Old Calligraphy-Based Carpal Tunnel Syndrome. 

The promise of straight cash - nearly $30 each* - and some intrepid efficiency methods kept us going through our darkest hours. 

We started to listen to one Hanson track, Lucy, on repeat. "It's better if we don't know how much time has passed," we reasoned wisely. 

When the pain proved too much to handle, we would numb our hands in a bucket of ice water we kept in the sink.

Common sense set in, and we stopped taking clients shortly thereafter. But we did fulfill all outstanding orders, on time and as promised. 

I learned three important business lessons from this endeavor:

1. Soundtrack is crucial
To this day, I have very specific music needs when I work. If I need to crank something out in an hour, I put on the Garden State soundtrack. If I'm working on something I hate, I ramp up productivity by listening to Nicki Minaj because she can make anything fun. If I'm having a crisis of confidence, I go all millennial and listen to R. Kelly's World's Greatest on repeat.

2. Partner with people who won't give up - and who have good snacks
I vividly remember wanting to toss in the towel when I became temporarily hand-crippled, but Cassie made me keep going. She also acted as quality control by tossing out pages that didn't meet our high standards. Perhaps most importantly, Cassie had endless supplies of Cool Ranch Doritos and Tab soda, which we raided constantly to keep team morale high. 

3. If you're doing twice the work, charge twice the amount
The double Victorian border was a series of cursive "Cs", with a second layer running below in the opposite direction. I risked PTSD of the phalange-al variety to recreate it for you:


Charging only 25% more for the "DV" was foolish. It's a gorgeous, original creation that exquisitely exudes the time period after which it is named. Plus, it was a bitch to get the corners to match up perfectly.

Lemonade stands are for amateurs. Who else has a badass entrepreneurial story to share? 

*Yep, we calligraphied over 600 pages of paper in a month and made $30 each.

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Pandas playing on a slide

I did the letter "O" two times, which is unfortunate because that means I could have posted this video of pandas going down a slide almost a week ago when I first saw it. 

Whatever you do, watch until the end. If you don't laugh out loud (not a sad LOL but a real-life chortle), then I hate to admit to you that you are a sociopath. Or you maybe have some kind of PETA-esque objections to this video, which I do not want to hear. No one will rid me of the joy of this video. NO ONE.


Outfit

I'm trying this new thing where I only let myself buy an item of clothing if I can incorporate it into five outfits already sitting in my closet.

This seemed like the best way for me to avoid moments of Squee! in Target, where I purchase $50 worth of ill-fitting clearance clothing because I am incapable of saying no to anything that is less than $8. Even if it is a puce-colored blouse that my friend dubbed "The Peter Pan" when I wore it out to the bar.

I digress. The five-outfit plan is working out pretty spectacularly, and I recommend it to anyone who lacks self-control or a wardrobe with versatile basics. The one unexpected downside is that I'm wearing almost exclusively navy blue and white/cream. Considering that was my uniform for 14 years (what up, Catholic School, pre-school through high school!), it seems like I may have had enough of that. But I just can't seem to quit you, navy blue.

Here's a photo of me in navy blue and white, performing the kindergarten smile (show ALL the teeth), while excitedly holding a Honeycrisp apple half the size of my head:






Monday, September 30, 2013

Omit

I omitted sugar from my diet a few weeks ago. It went so well that I celebrated by eating the sweets –all of the sweets– this past weekend.

Last night, I suggested to gal pal Jenna that we go on a one-month sugar cleanse to prep for our friend Emily’s wedding in early November. Bridesmaid dresses and professional photography and all that.

Jenna: Sugar cleanse? Is that the Whole Foods way of saying you’re giving up sugar?

Me: That is accurate, yes.

J: Can I have sugar in my coffee?

Me: Well, my soy milk will have a little bit. But I think no straight sugar or flavor syrups.

J: NO FLAVOR SYRUPS? Okay, but we have Kevin's wedding this weekend. We can have wedding cake, right?

Me: NO! That’s even worse than flavor syrups, probably. But now that you mention it, Jeff and I were planning to bike to the bakery tomorrow. So I’ll have a pastry tomorrow, and you have wedding cake on Saturday and we’ll call it even. 

J: Wait. Wait. Wait. Does this mean we can’t have PUMPKIN SPICE LATTES?!

I have been friends with this girl for nearly two decades and I have rarely seen her this worked up.

Me: Jenna. You must definitely CANNOT have a pumpkin spice latte. That’s the worst possible thing you could have on a sugar cleanse. That drink involves TWO flavor syrups and a pile of whip cream. 

J: Listen. I’m not doing this sugar cleanse unless I can have pumpkin spice lattes.

So there’s that. With the exception of PSLs, bakery treats, wedding cake and assorted coffee flavor syrups, we’re totally sugar-free in our abode. No exceptions.

Thursday, September 26, 2013

Nothing good gets away

I hope you're all familiar with Letters of Note, a site where a fine gentleman reposts letters written by famous people.

The loveliest one I've read is from author John Steinbeck to his teenage son, who has fallen in love at boarding school.

An excerpt from the beginning:  
First—if you are in love—that’s a good thing—that’s about the best thing that can happen to anyone. Don’t let anyone make it small or light to you.

Second—There are several kinds of love. One is a selfish, mean, grasping, egotistical thing which uses love for self-importance. This is the ugly and crippling kind. The other is an outpouring of everything good in you—of kindness and consideration and respect—not only the social respect of manners but the greater respect which is recognition of another person as unique and valuable. The first kind can make you sick and small and weak but the second can release in you strength, and courage and goodness and even wisdom you didn’t know you had.

My second favorite part: 
You say this is not puppy love. If you feel so deeply—of course it isn’t puppy love.

But I don’t think you were asking me what you feel. You know better than anyone. What you wanted me to help you with is what to do about it—and that I can tell you.

Glory in it for one thing and be very glad and grateful for it. The object of love is the best and most beautiful. Try to live up to it.

The end:
And don’t worry about losing. If it is right, it happens—The main thing is not to hurry. Nothing good gets away.


Nothing good gets away. I just adore that line so much, and I think of it often. 

You can read the full letter here. 

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Maintenance

It's time to admit to you guys that I grew up in a broken home.

Wait wait. My parents are still together, and they're pretty much obsessed with one another.

But everything in their house is broken, and has been for quite some time.

Issue 1:  Lightbulbs burn out, and aren't replaced - including in the refrigerator, which has been void of wattage for at least six years now.
Back story:  Bulbs burn out at an alarming rate in that house, even though electricians have said we don’t have faulty wiring. We choose to blame the ghosts of my paternal grandparents, because a psychic once told my aunt that they were fighting for my dad's affection from the grave.

Issue 2: For a few months, we had an enormous piece of hockey tape holding the dryer door on after a screw fell off.
Lame excuse: No one could find the number for the home warranty hotline. Once that was located, no one wanted to stay home for the repair appointment window.

Issue 3: Any time a printer is needed, it requires a 45-minute process of downloading drivers, adjusting settings, shaking print cartridges, and screaming at my father, an IT guru who is somehow rendered useless when the technology is coming from inside the house.
What gives? Nothing. I think my dad is just sick of fixing stuff by the time he gets home.

__

In short, we’re not so good at maintenance. As an adult, I'm realizing I'm also a hot mess.

Rather than labeling my mailbox as directed, I waited until the mail carrier wrote a threatening letter to me seven months after move-in. (I didn’t have any tape.)

One month after we started dating, Jeff forcefully drove Suze the Subaru to AutoZone to see why my check engine light was on. What were you going to do?  he asked incredulously. Just drive it until it blew up?!

NO. I said calmly. I was going to drive her until the light went back OFF, as it has several times before.

(This was not the answer he was looking for.)

Anyway, I turn 28 tomorrow. And this shall be a year of maintenance, people. I will back my phone up to the Cloud. I will sew the buttons back onto my favorite fall coat, which I wore last year as an open blazer. I will permanently fix the piece of plastic that falls onto my passenger’s laps when I drive Suze.

Mark my words. I’m pulling it together. Just as soon as I can figure out which computer I last backed up to six months ago.


Monday, September 23, 2013

Lottery

Gawker recently reported that an ex-crack addict had been swindled out of a $5 million lottery payment several years ago; the state lottery board tracked him down to make it right. The man was given the option between a lump sum payment of $2.1 million after taxes, or $250,000 annually for the next 20 years.

I surveyed my friends to see which option they'd take.

Grad Student living on a stipend: I think I would get paid out in the allotments because I'm boring. I just think I would like to receive a S--- ton of money every year. It'd be like winning the lottery for the rest of my life!

Co-worker with a semi-crippling shoe addiction: I REALLY wanna take it all in the lump sum. I just really, really, really do. I can't help it.

Boyfran with a left brain the size of Texas: Lump sum FOR SURE. You never know how much taxes or inflation will affect the annuity in the future, so you go for one payout. Then you invest the lump sum wisely so it ends up being even more than the $5 million you originally won.

Me: There is no way on earth I'd be able to take the annuity. In fact, make sure I have a good financial planner who advises me against getting my lump sum in gold coins or I WILL live out my childhood DuckTales fantasy.



Co-worker: F-that, we're going swimming!

Boyfran: Fine, we'll dive into our money and THEN invest it.

That's what you call a win-win. Here's a fantastic and hilarious article on how you would actually recreate the Scrooge McDuck Gold Dive in real life.

Monday, September 9, 2013

Kale smoothies

I've been semi-regularly drinking green smoothies for the last year and a half. I'd like to report that these smoothies, which are largely comprised of antioxidant-rich kale, have made a huge difference in my overall health and well-being. Unfortunately, I continue to drink 500 calorie coffee drinks with alarming frequency, so it's been a bit of a wash. However, I'm dedicated-ish to drinking these green monsters for the foreseeable future.

Here's an Instagram photo my mom took of me, making fun of me drinking said smoothie while also swiping a Poptart for later. (Side note: Do not miss my mother's amazing caption.)



Below is the recipe I've been using. The cilantro and mint go a long way to making the smoothie taste fresher and less like ground dirt. In other words, don't skimp on tha herbz.

- 1/4 cup water
- 1/2 cup ice
- 2 cups kale
- 1/2 cup spinach
- 1 banana
- 1 green apple
- 3 stalks celery
- 2 large carrots
- 1 pear
- 1/4 cup grapes
- Literally anything else that might make it taste better, including: Cuties, oranges, limes, lemons, fresh or frozen berries, cucumber, pineapple and mango
- 1 handful each parsley, cilantro and mint (add at the very end)

Step One
Blend all but the herbs using your friend's $400 Vitamix blender. Really, don't even bother making the above smoothie if you don't have an blender with horsepower equivalent to your car or a semi-truck. In the loving arms of the Vitamix, the smoothie is homogenous and darn near edible. When handed over to a Black & Decker that you bought at Target for $39.99, for example, your smoothie will need to be chewed like cud and you will dry heave in your kitchen at 6 a.m. Don't blame me; it's science.

Step Two
Thank and bless the herbs as you gently sprinkle them into the top of the mixture. Then blend them in. Seriously though. Forget those herbs and you will be awash in a sea of regret.

Step Three
Drink 16 oz. or more, making sure that at least one gulp is in the presence of someone who finds the whole thing to be repulsive.

Step Four
Separate the remaining into mason jars or other clear containers that will eye you with judgment every time you open up the fridge and don't drink from them. Finish it off and repeat from Step One until your skin turns green.

Jubilation

Truth be told, I've been a bit crabby lately.

What is causing this Case of the Mehs? When I get busy, I start coding every activity as an obligation. Everything from meetings to dance performances to happy hours are being scheduled into similar-looking-blocks on my calendar, all with the same precision. As a result, my brain is on auto-pilot getting from one thing to the next.

In reality, most of the things on my schedule are on there because I want them to be. No one is forcing me to coach this team, and I of course want to attend social functions with my lovely friends. So, rather than feeling like my schedule is an Outlook Calendar Straightjacket, I'm going to approach each day with jubilation. 

That's right. J is for jubilation.

"Have to" becomes "Get to."

"Am supposed to be" becomes "Am excited to."

You get the point. It's time to start feeling jubilant about life, instead of being bogged down by it. After all, I have a pretty fabulous life.

Last week, I may have focused on how hard it is to get to my dance practices on time, or how we're still facing heat index warnings in our non-air-conditioned gym in mid-September.

Instead, I'm focusing on how I get to hang out with 31 hilarious, talented and genuinely nice teenage dancers today. And I'm happy that we'd already earmarked today as a low-intensity practice, with plenty of water breaks and lowkey team-building activities.

Jubilation. It probably shouldn't be forced, but I'm going to try to anyway. Stay tuned.


Friday, September 6, 2013

In the Aeroplane Over the Sea

Continuing on this alphabet challenge, I stole a page from MM's playbook and peeked into my iTunes to see what my most-played "I" song was.

Then I laughed aloud. Several years ago, I shared the song "In the Aeroplane Over the Sea" with a guy I was interested in dating. I breathlessly recapped how the entire album by Neutral Milk Hotel was based on the story of Anne Frank, and how stunning this particular song was.


He responded by sending me his favorite song, which was either a parody of Electronica, or the worst Electronica ever... and I was reminded how very little game I have when it comes to the fellas. Nothing says "Date me" quite like admitting on Day 2 that you sometimes listen to songs about mass genocide for funsies.

Not all the dudes are turned off by my flimsy flirting, though. Last year, my friend came over to eavesdrop on a conversation I was having with a guy I'd met just hours previously. From afar, I appeared to be batting the lashes, taking tequila shots, and gesturing wildly. Then she got close enough to hear me.

YES! Hillary Clinton is THE BEST Secretary of State OF ALL TIME. She is a diplomatic GENIUS...*

Zero filter as always. But this time, the reaction was different.

You're damn right she is! I can't wait to see her leverage that role in 2016!*

We've been together ever since. And he likes depressing music, too.

*Paraphrasing, because tequila.



Thursday, September 5, 2013

Harboring expectations

If you've picked up a newspaper in the last five years, you'll know that Gen Y is comprised of entitled jerks who freeload off their (helicopter) parents and hop from job to job with reckless abandon. If you're a member of Gen Y, you know that the "job hop" is usually a necessity - until you find a company willing to hire you full-time, you take on internship after internship, knowing you'll likely be replaced by a new sucker after six months. All this, as the weight of student loans bears down upon you - is it already the 15th of the month, again?

Listen, I'm not the 27-year-old who believes that we should be given a cookie and a McMansion upon completion of undergrad. But I graduated in May of 2008, and the first job offer I was received was as a professional grocery shopper for the elderly. (One hundred thousand sparkly rainbows to my mother, who agreed to pay my September 2008 student loan payment so that I could avoid adding "Adept at locating low-sodium navy bean soup mix" to my resume.)


Through what can only be described as a CareerBuilder Miracle, I landed a front-desk position at an ad agency. I became Fed Ex's best customer and maintained supplies of hard and soft licorice bits so as to appease my fellow employees' discerning candy palates. Once, I gave our client - the CEO of a food company - an expired Diet Coke and he called me on it. I learned that "New Business Research" was code for trolling LinkedIn with the voracity of a stalker ex-boyfriend. (The day they added the "who's viewed your profile" feature was a bleak one indeed.)

I leveraged that role into a writing-focused position at my current company, where I've happily stayed put for three years. On paper, I look more established than the statistics report - I'm a loyal and long-time employee, I don't live with my parents, and I pay my bills on time.

Here's the thing - it's a big fat lie. I purchased my car from my stepgrandma to avoid taking on another loan. I recently moved in with generous friends so I don't have to pay more in rent than I would on a modest mortgage. I swing by my parents' house to steal fresh fruit like Aladdin in the open-air market. And perhaps in the most millennial move of all, I work side jobs so that I can put money into savings without skipping sushi night with my girlfriends.

I'm not alone - 35 percent of employed millennials have started their own businesses to make ends meet. By my count, I've spent at least half of my PTO running my "side businesses" - which include coaching a dance team, and taking on marketing and writing clients that don't conflict with my non-compete. Every time I hear about how lazy and entitled we 20-somethings are, I mentally relive the four hours of vacation time I spent huffing school bus fumes on the way to dance camp.

By circumstance and yes, because we buy $5 lattes too frequently, members of Gen Y are still less stable than previous generations. But I've found that with a strong support system, a surprising amount of cunning, it's possible (and unbelievably fulfilling) to piece together a life that resembles the one I'd always expected.

Monday, August 26, 2013

Goosebumps

The first time I heard Macklemore/Ryan Lewis' "Same Love" was in November of 2012. I cried about eleven times that Election Day, while maniacally refreshing the data on Minnesota exit polls. I was optimistic that my state would do the right thing by voting against a ban on gay marriage. We did, and as of August 1, 2013, same sex marriage is legal in my home state.

Only nine months later, this song is being played on every pop, alternative, and R & B station in the country. A friend recently said they were soooooo sick of hearing it.

Everyone is entitled to their opinion, of course, but if this song still doesn't give you goosebumps - even when you hear it for a third time in one day -  then you're crazy.

After years of stagnation, the changeover in public support for same sex marriage has been swift and (at least in my opinion), inexplicable. A year ago, I never would have imagined that my gay friends could be getting married in the state I call home - just as I never would have believed that uber-commercial outlets like MTV and Clear Channel Radio would be playing a song like this. So for me? G is for goosebumps, every time.

Here's the group performing their hit on the VMAs last night.





Friday, August 23, 2013

Funerals

Everyone should read this article called, "Always go to funerals."

Like the author of the above article, my parents have always instilled in me the importance of saying goodbye, and of supporting the families and friends of the recently passed. Of course, my uncle and grandfather own and operate funeral homes, so it's likely that I am closer to the issue than most.

Over the last few years, I have witnessed and experienced colossal, devastating loss. Even when there is a chilling absence of peace and comfort, each funeral and visitation has offered a powerful sense of community, and of love. Even when the condolences are awkward, they are heartfelt. Even when the grieving family cannot offer you a smile that would ease the tension, they are grateful for your presence.

So, F is for funerals. It's not a glamorous topic, but it sure is an equalizing one. Like the author, I urge you to attend them. Even more, make others - your spouse, your children, your friend who "thinks it's creepy" - go with you, too.

Monday, August 19, 2013

Emilio Estevez

Jeff and his college buddies have a thing where they tell jokes about Emilio Estevez. It's nearly impossible to explain, so here's an example.

What do you call Emilio Estevez when he gets a job as a stock broker?

          Emilio Invest-evez.

Here's another example.

What do you call Emilio Estevez when he puts on his clothes for the day?

          Emilo Is-Dressed-Evez.

As you can imagine, there is no real end in sight for this game. That is, until I released the greatest EE joke of all a few weeks ago.

What do you call Emilio Estevez when he joins a sorority? 

          Emilio #Blessed-Evez.

{Drops the mic.}

{Picks it back up to share this photo with you.}


Anyway, you should probably all share your favorite original Estevez jokes in the comments. 

Friday, August 16, 2013

Decisive

I've mentioned before that coaching a dance team was the best thing that ever happened to me, from a decision-making standpoint. There's no pressure quite like the one you feel when 30+ teenage girls are staring at you waiting on an edict.

When I first started coaching, I was an assistant. I was the nice coach - and boy did those gals love me. I spent that year listening and appeasing. When I entered the room, I was greeted with a chorus of them yelling, "Geeeeeeeeen!"

It was delightful. They complimented my outfits and my hair. It was basically like a daily shower of appreciation.

Then I was hired as the head coach, which is essentially being hired as the "bad cop." You have to be strict and fair so that everyone is showing up, on time, and doing the work. And you have to make a thousand decisions - decisions about apparel, practice times, facilities, budgets, captains... and that's before you ever even get to practice.

At practice, the clock is ticking. The arms are folded. You can see the scoffs and protests lying in wait deep in their throats, ready to come spewing out.

D is for decisive. 

Make a decision, and stick with it. Try your best to recognize your opposition, ensure they feel heard, and then move on. No time to look back.

I guess what I'm saying is, when a gaggle of girls is telling you at the beginning of the season to speed up the kick tempo, it's best to keep it at 145 beats per minute. Trust me on this one, you guys. You don't wanna see what happens at 155 beats per minute.

Monday, August 12, 2013

Coffeeshop convos

Two weeks ago, I worked remotely in San Francisco, which was an all-around delightful experience. The only real issue is that I ended up having to work longer hours than expected because of coffeeshop convos.

C is for coffeeshop convos, which can consist of eavesdropping on strangers in coffeeshops, or striking up your own conversation with strangers in coffeeshops. I did my fair share of both during that week.

At Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf, for example, a Frenchman decided I look positively San Franciscan, and asked me for advice on what to see and do in the fair city. I gave him a few ideas before admitting that I was actually from Minneapolis.

"Minnesota?" he remarked with surprise. "I know that place! The um, the show... there was the show with the twins who moved from Minnesota. Such a long time ago... 90210!"

"Yes! Brenda and Brandon Walsh," I affirmed.


"We loved that show. We love all your shows," he offered back. Then he went on to tell me how disappointed he was when he visited New York, and found out that Central Perk, the coffee shop from Friends, wasn't real.

"It was filmed in L.A.! It wasn't even in New York at all! I asked everyone and they all said it was filmed on a stage!"

We discussed fictitious sets for awhile, and I told him that if he ever wanted to see Cheers in person, he could go to Boston. I also told him that he could visit a Central Perk replica in Beijing, China, if his travels ever took him there. That seemed to satisfy him.

Last, I taught Etienne (which he told me was the French version of "Steve") the word "snooty," and mapped pretty much his entire trip for him on my computer.

He seemed grateful and relatively surprised that I would spend fifteen minutes finding him a Radio Shack within walking distance. In fact, coffeeshop convos with non-creepers are pretty much my favorite way to pass time.



Friday, August 9, 2013

Barrier

We have an old and not-very-funny joke in Minnesota that goes something like this:

"How many seasons are there?"

"Two: winter and road construction."

Go ahead and take a minute to compose yourself after that knee-slapper.

Okay, so B is for barrier. The road construction here is out of control right now, and I had to take a total of seven detours yesterday to get through my day. 

Manfriend informed me that the large orange and white plastic barriers are called "water-filled Jersey barriers." These barriers are light enough to carry when they're empty, but heavy enough when filled with water to stop a car.

Jersey barriers are jerks

Do not confuse jersey barriers with crash barrels, which are usually filled with sand.

Crash barrels can be jerks too

How's that for a knowledge bomb, my friends? 

Seriously though, these barriers and barrels are a barrier to my happiness and general sense of well-being. For example, at 6:15 a.m. yesterday, I let out an aggressive string of expletives when I hit my first detour. While I do love a good curse word, I love them less when they come freely before I've had coffee or a single human interaction. 

Barriers, be gone.

Thursday, August 8, 2013

Advent

Should I really say I'll participate in this blogging challenge? I've had a bad track record over the last two years, and I worry that my good blogging pals KC, LH MM, Et al. have had enough of my shenanigans.

Still, I miss blogging - I always do - and an alphabet challenge seems like it could be accomplished relatively easily. Here goes.

A is for advent. Next week is the advent of my dance team season. For three lovely months, I'll spend my non-work hours leading a team of 40 dancers as they kick, turn and leap their way to high school infamy.

There will be pom poms, there will be tears. There will be pep fests. There will be a social media policy.

And by god, there will be a music splice that forever binds Selena Gomez and Justin Bieber, just as they are forever bound in our hearts and minds.

Anyone who thought I'd choreograph a dance without incorporating this horribly catchy reggaeton beat hasn't spent enough time around me lately.