Thursday, March 09, 2006

thoughts for a nearly-spring day

My hob nobs are getting stale.

My pants are getting wet from wintry days.

My bangle is banging against the fake-wooden desk.

My contacts are drying out in the stale office air.

My patience is wearing thin.

My rice pudding is nearly gone.

My fruit-and-vegetable-eating is non-existant.

My desire for something new is emptying my bank account.

My CPK make-your-own pizza wasn't worth five dollars.

_____________________________________________________________

Springtime is nearly here.

Sushi for 3 bucks was yummy.

Make Yours Like Mine is deliciously good.

I'm not sick of all music.

Good shows are coming up.

My friends/family have started playing with garage band.

The IC is cool.

The semester is half over.

I can sometimes go to the other French section.

The snow is pretty and probably won't last long.

I'm saving my money to travel this summer (or will be once my next paycheck is in).

I have a friend in the diamond business.

I am deciding now to do a lot of fun things soon- like camping.

My car's back window is fixed, after having been shot by a trained assassin with a bb gun. The assassin missed me though.

My duffle bag of warm weather clothes came out.

I don't have to pay rent for a few months.

I might get a gym membership.

Life is good/great/beautiful/magnificent.

I'm going to start taking more pictures.

Last friday was lovely.

Saturday, February 25, 2006

my favorite rice and a stomach ache

I finally woke up this morning with the sun shining through my window. My apple green room cluttered with rubbermaid boxes of genealogy, the sheets in their usual disarray after having me as an inhabitant, Binford hair covering the bed spread because I needed him at 3.30 this morning when I wanted someone to cuddle with. My sleep was the kind where you wake every 45 minutes, realizing you should wake up but you keep sleeping because you can.

In the early morning hours, 2.50am to be precise, I sent Heidi a text message, "Are you still awake?" I waited a few minutes. Nothing. I called. No answer. Heidi is never asleep this early. Just my luck. I've had this fear since I was a child left alone at home, that my family will just disappear. Desert me. At the very moment I need them or feel the loneliest. Last weekend my car's back window was completely shattered. Carly called at 10.30am, but I didn't pick up. She came in my room and told me to come look at my car. I stood there confused for a few minutes, assessing the damage, then let her go to her parents house and I walked back to my room to call my mother. I called multiple times with no answer. I called every single person in my family in desperation. I left messages. I waited for over an hour, when finally my little brother, the last person I would've expected, called me back. He was playing basketball, my parents were cleaning the chapel. Theory disproved, again.

I phoned my dad at 2.55am. It went straight to his answering machine. He's probably avoiding the hospital calls he gets at all hours of the night, I thought. I called my mother. I let it reach her answering machine. Hung up. Picked up my cell phone again and held down "3" in my yellow-and white tiled bathroom. It rang twice and she picked up, sounding exhausted, "Hello?" I tried to stifle my voice, but bathrooms only create a loudspeaker. Someone was sleeping on the couch in the front room, one guest was on the floor, another sharing a bed with Tiff. I started crying, "Mom, my stomach hurts. I can't sleep. I've tried for an hour and a half. I took my roommate's ibuprofen, and I still hurt. What should I do?" She calmly helped me, went through the problem, consulted my father, and said she could only help me if I went home. We arranged for her to pick me up. I went back to my room. Turned on the bedside lamp and waited. I got impatient and called her, "I'm here honey." I opened the front door in the dark, locked it back up as I entered the cold 3:15am air, hood up, slippers on, and then trudged to the car waiting for me. We reached home after hitting every red light. My parents gave me drugs which I gulped down with Snapple Apple juice, and I shut their door dragging Binford along with me.

My mom entered my room, Binford had left four hours prior (he's an early riser and barker). "I have some sad news, Saffron is dead." My bright yellow, darling canary who suffered a lot of neglect and poor cage cleaning, was dead. About 5 1/2 years old, he'd lived a good long canary life. He'd survived a cross-country move, being locked in a moving van, taken care of by neighbor children, chased by yellow labs, and eating a poisonous plant. This little man was a trooper. He had been more active in the past few months than I had ever seen him. Orange slices and classical music could be the reason. "He lived a good life, and he was happy. He sang with me this morning. But I came back and he was collapsed in his water feeder. Tail feathers straight up. You're going to need to bury him. Your dad and I need to go to a funeral of your dad's aunt who we haven't seen for 27 years."

After minutes of explaining what I must do to bury the bird, taking care not to have the cat or dogs to dig him up, we settled on a blank checks box as a casket of sorts and throwing the entire bird cage and the green-leafed fabric cover my mother had made in the trash. Saffron deserved a proper burial. We settled on the tree near the recycling, yard waste, and garbage cans. I tried to dig his grave on my own, but discovering a massive earthworm, screamed and scared the neighbor's dog. I employed Heidi's services. In pajamas the triple-H oversaw his burial. We covered the spot with a stepping-stone nearby. Said our goodbyes. And left him to the elements and the nearly-spring day.

Tuesday, February 14, 2006

i ran away

think I might've played Playstation for about two and a half hours last night. Most of which was spent singing songs that never should've been written. "Cause you're everywhere to me. When I close my eyes it's you I see. You're everything I know that makes me believe. I'm not alone, oh whoa whoa. I'm not alone." But my Valentine is a mighty good singer, so that makes up for it in the team competitions. And, I dare say, I got a little more competitive than the last attempt at Cameron's, my voice was shaking, I threw 8 months of voice lessons out the window, and sang "You're the one that I want, doop doop doo doo doo. Hoo hoo hoo. [Repeat] The one I need. Oh yes indeed." at the top of my lungs.

I'm kind of nostalgic lately, deja-vu-(y). I want to be in Chelsea petting my dear canine friend Woody. Or on the beach of some Mediterranean island. Maybe even in the city of love, although my last experience with it lead me to believe it wasn't so much love but a lot of dirty old men who like to grab butts of unsuspecting/innocent females from Idaho. Even Disneyland would be ok. My dear Hilleroy will be leaving me in about a day to go there. I lack the funds, the necessary time off school and work, transportation, people who would seriously go, and the impulsiveness to just leave. Sometimes I wish I had that.

It's been three years since I've been. Princess parades, Peter Pan rides, over President's Day weekend. Downtown Disney. Strangely appealing to me. From the french food to the trees covered in twinkle lights. I can't forget the unpaid actors on Valentine's Day. The two of them about 17, girl in a white top and a flamingo pink polka-dot skirt, boy wearing his straight-leg jeans with fifties rolled pant legs and fifties shoes. Chasing eachother through the little corporate-planned imitation of a street, past the people buying eclairs at the cafe, past the high school students eating their spicy-shrimp and fries, without a care. I wanted to be in that. Not just an onlooker to a pure and innocent love, or what I've come to embody as such.

My itunes brings up a familiar song on shuffle. I Ran Away, an obscure Coldplay b-side. One that I played on repeat on my blue panasonic cd player, the kind that plays burned cds only when it wants to. It was the theme song of the vacation. A little melancholic, a little wistful. But it sums up what that trip meant to me. Reminding me of where I am, sitting in my spotted office chair. Spots from some unidentified food consumed in the laziness that exists in the slow hours at the office. Avoiding cataloging the artifacts of some archaeological find. I am longing for a place I hardly know, the unfamiliar. Fifties attired, high school couples, the fabricated perfection of a street in LA. I'll sit here, three years later repeating the same song I did then. Dreaming of escape, of somewhere else that I may not even love, but which sounds much more appealing than anything else today.

Tuesday, January 10, 2006

Things I Learned Yesterday

Life had a lot of lessons for me yesterday. Here are just a few I can remember...

I am perfectly incapable of eating a clementine without losing at least 20 seeds on the carpet of my work.

If you wear a red sweater (that looks like Christmas) and hop in the shower afterwards, don't get scared and think you're bleeding if there's lint all over your armpits.

Accordion playing at your apartment can become an every day event. (In addition to Jewish engagement parties that last for about 10 scary minutes).

Don't have family home evening in an apartment with a broken couch.

For some reason the f-bomb isn't as offensive when dropped by Australian people.

Any mention of the word "gold digga" becomes the reason for 5 minute laughing spurts.

Facebook won't log you in if you're writing your address @nm.byu.com instead of @nm.byu.edu.

Every game of Wise and Otherwise (and Taboo for that matter) must include at least one mention of the movie Elf or just elves in general.

You can make eight thousand dollars off dumpster diving for Wendy's cups.

Suriname is pretty much equivalent to Narnia.

Everytime I drive Amy's car I break something (ie. steering wheel, window, the starter).

Don't order a salad at Olive Garden. It comes free for just sitting there.

Pray and fast about every family home evening you attend.

Mr. B. is now an appropriate name for my father. (Mrs. J is beginning to become acceptable for my mother.)

Games till 1ish in the morning are probably bad for school nights.

Friday, December 30, 2005

Hazel Eyes

My mom asked me to go for a drive with her today. This was out of character from this past week's behavior. Let's just say when I corrected her pronunciation of Milan, after she pronounced it meee-l'anne, she wouldn't speak to me the rest of the drive home from Nicoitalita's (a very fine pizza place). I asked her why she wanted to go on a drive. In past experience I've gone on a "drive" with her and ended up going to my Great Aunt Artis', who didn't hear 20 minutes of a conversation my mom had with her and had never met us before (or remembered doing so). My mom ran off the list of things she needed to do on this drive, mostly delivering bills, and I agreed to go with her. What the heck! 7.40 on a friday night. Life is pretty lame with school being out and working full time. I went.

Joseph made me a lovely cd of songs he's listening to, so I popped it in and started listening for about the 10th time today (they're really groovy). We got to "Hazel Eyes" by the Darkness. Let me just give 100 cool points to the Darkness for this Chinese/Scottish/80s rock/Queen sounding song. It's pretty much amazing. The lyrics, which are mostly inaudible, have this classic rock chorus "girl with the hazel eyes... ah ah ahahahahaha." (I'm not sure I can represent it in lyrical form, you'll have to give it a listen). I start track number 10, listen very carefully because my mom hates the music turned up. I have to fight with her anytime I want to hear a song. I've become used to my music having 1/200 lines on the volume indicator, and my mom's terrible version of "My Favorite Things" on at least 172.5. But, low and behold... my mom turned up the volume! On my music! This is extremely out of the ordinary. Not only that, she started rocking out and singing, "girl with the hazel eyes, ah ahahahahahah". I was scared to laugh for fear she might resort back to her, you make fun of me everyday comment. But, nothing. "It grows on you," she replied when I asked her if she liked it. I just chuckled to myself and sang along at the top of my lungs.

After the song finished I could see her fidgeting in her seat and looking at the cd player. "Do you want to hear it again?" I asked her. She nodded. So, we listened to it again. Anyone who hears this song once must hear it at least 2 more times in the same outing. We listened to it at least 4 more times on this trip. My world and day have completely changed.

My mom likes a song I like.

Thank you, the Darkness.

Monday, December 26, 2005

Nice Green Papers You Get While Speeding on the Interstate

The Day is December 26, 2005. Some know it as "Boxing Day," but I guess that's not super important. I had a family party, a little after Christmas get-together. Family parties have become one of those obligations that are awkward and usually spent trying to make decent conversation, perhaps a round of Apples to Apples somewhere in there. There's usually a lot of bad food and fake smiles. This party I made a breakthrough. I convinced my parents to let me leave on my own time, not make an entire day out of a lunch party. So my two younger siblings came along in my mom's car (her "baby"). There was a lot of, "Be careful. Obey the speed limit. Don't listen to your music too loudly" before I left.

The three of us hopped in the one car while my parents left at some other time in the other. We got to the party in good time, minus the fifteen minutes trying to figure out the address to my Aunt Anna-Clair's house, and eventually discovering the party was at my Uncle Daniel's. We still beat my parents. Well, games and food were fine, and we actually made a nice exit. So we were headed down the interstate making really good time. I always speed a little, because you have to to keep up with traffic and as sad as it is... who really goes the speed limit? But sometimes you have this notion something bad is going to happen. You're checking your rear mirror every few seconds, making sure there's nothing in front of you, to the side. Well, somehow I got caught up in a song that was playing. Next thing I know, I look up there's a sign for 55mph because of all the blasted interstate construction. Next, right by the sign there's a cop. Sitting there, waiting for unsuspecting, or maybe unexpecting, drivers to speed right by. I glance at the speedometer. Crap, I'm doing 85ish in 65, nearly 55. I slam on my breaks trying to reach a reasonable speed. His lights turn on. "That's not for me is it?" I ask Hillery. "I don't think so." I'm watching my rearview mirror. I'm not sure what he's doing. He follows me. "Crap." I pull to the side, changing lanes as quickly as possible. Sure enough, he follows. Somehow, waiting those seconds for him to get out of his car, hustle to the passenger window, and ask for my licence and registration are nerve wracking enough. He says, "Do you know why I pulled you over? You were going 83 in 65. I saw you slow down when you saw me. So you knew you were speeding." "But I honestly just saw the 55mph sign right before I saw you and slammed on my breaks because I didn't realize I was going that fast." "Ok. Well, I'm gonna go fill out this paper work." He takes his time, maybe 7 minutes of just sitting there complaining to my siblings. Hearing, "This sucks." repeatedly.

He comes back, "I wrote you down for 9 over. That's half of what you were doing. You'll have to go to traffic school, get in contact with the court. But your fee is the lowest you can have for speeding. Drive safe." Grrrrrrrrrrrrr. What do you say to that? Thank you? You have a nice day?" Just hit your steering wheel once he's out of earshot. Turn up the one song on your cd with profanity, still trying to edit the F-bomb, but instead turn it up (really on accident). Drive 55mph, which no one in the entire state of Utah has ever driven while in a construction zone. And think about how terrible your death will be when your parents find out. And how low your bank account will be once they take out the hundreds of dollars they'll pay the cop with who pulled you over.

I'm staring at the green half sheet of paper that says Lehi City Police Department, and announces my first misdemeanor, or the first one I've ever been caught doing. Sometimes life sucks. This is just another example of why.

Tuesday, December 13, 2005

Finals Week

Finals Week


He stumbled onto the 8th floor. Checked the sign as he walked through the door. Blue and green plaid, short sleeved shirt. And jeans that looked like his mother had purchased them. Slightly attractive, slightly confused. His little boy, big blue eyes barely open.

"I need to turn in this paper for professor Hartley."

"You can drop it in his box," I pointed. "Two doors down on the right. There are two boxes, his is the bottom."

He stumbled in the direction I pointed, "one, two..."

He stopped and turned around. I rolled my grey-green office chair back to see what happened.

"I'm really tired," he said as he turned to the left.

"It's on your right. There are boxes on the wall. His is the bottom one." After a few seconds pause, he turned around and scanned the wall. He turned left, looking down the hall further.

"Right there."

He somehow managed to put his paper in the box and staggered back toward the door.

"Have a nice afternoon!" he said, half way there.

"Thanks. You too." I smiled at 10.54 am.

"Think happy thoughts."

"Thanks. You too," I smiled.

He pushed the button the the elevator, mumbling to himself. When the red arrow pointed downwards, he touched the doors, and pulled the crack between them. They opened. He stepped on.

"Think happy thoughts."

Thursday, July 28, 2005

British/American Word or Phrase Fettish

Talking to my British friend Jon has opened up an entire new word bank for me. One that is quite thrilling really. We discuss the differences between British and American question asking, emphasis on words, words I've never heard in my life. We both found ourselves talking out loud figuring out how these bizarre dialect differences work. But I thought I would mention the words entering my vocabulary and those I've introduced to him. But most Americans wouldn't object to sounding British, there's something so proper and witty about it. So here are some pointers.

British:
"whilst" (I do believe it means while still)- a clever combination two words that just sounds so dignified, "bits and bobs"- a phrase Jon uses often, so just bits of things (Heidi said it had to do with money... that's a possibility), "cheers" or "cheers mate" or "cheerio"- cheers is one of those great words that has multiple meanings: thank you or goodbye. and is interchangeable. "bloke"- a dude or guy (definition assistance by Amy), "nappies"- diapers, "trainers"- tennis shoes, or I'll insert "crazy hounds" because that's one Jon uses and I think it's funny; it can mean just crazy people, those weirdos, or something... I don't believe it's negative though :).

American:
"super cool" which I'm informed doesn't go so well with a British accent because you sound sarcastic. "stoked"- people tell you that you sound like you're too American and think you're stupid. "rad"- this one works out alright, or at least Jon uses it quite frequently. "coolio"- he uses this as well, one I haven't used since about 7th grade. "Your mom"- one I'm sure most of you know I hate, or can't stand anymore. Once an insult it has now just become the response to everything. "What did you eat today?" "Your mom." "talk to the hand"- oh the good old days of elementary school (I believe it's primary school there). 3rd grade, this phrase was introduced into my vocabulary. "Talk to the hand cause the hand won't talk back." (Warning... clueless phrases will follow) "As if..."- a phrase that denotes frustration. ex: "My boyfriend broke up with me. As if...", "whatever" which can be accompanied with both thumbs and pointer fingers forming a W. Same usage as "as if..."

Utah (a special category, all its own):
"twinners"- if you're wearing similar outfits or think the same thing you are now "twinners".
"Oh my heck" replaces other expletives. or Oh my goodness or something of the like.

Just for your info:
(Keyboards in the US start off with qwerty in the UK it's azerty. This is if you start on the left hand, top row of letters. And in place of the @ symbol is the £ symbol. This made my life difficult in the internet cafe.)

Well, if you can think of any fabulous ones I've omitted, please submit them. Anyday's a good day with a new word in your vocabulary ;)

Listening to Athlete-Tourist and Benjamin Gibbard-Home. Both appropriate for this blog entry- Athlete- quite British, Benjamin Gibbard- a fabulous American artist (often rare)

Tuesday, July 05, 2005

Las Vegas - the blow drier and Fourth of July Frustration

So, the Weezer & Red Hot Chili Peppers concert was rockin'. Can't say I love Las Vegas too much with its unbearable heat, ridiculous gambling, and strip shows everywhere, but I did like staying at Maggie's house. She definitely has some adorable nieces. I've always thought Weezer and the Peppers were cool, and now I have a newfound respect. They are awesome performers. Anthony Keatis is a very toned man, my goodness... his dancing was fantastic. If you get a chance to see the Peppers, take it. Free concerts are always a plus. I've loved both bands for so long, but not exactly realized it until I saw them in concert. There was such an amazing energy.

Even though the temperature was about 109, the temperature of a blow drier, the concert was fun. There was a lot of tv watching indoors because of the terrible temperature. Live 8 was on, the same day as the concert in Vegas so we watched a bit of that. I have found myself frustrated with the United States. Perhaps it has a lot to do with traveling abroad and seeing that America isn't all that spectacular. Our culture, or lack of culture in my opinion, seems to be taking over... in a negative way. Everything needs to be bigger in order to be better, fast food is the way to go, huge corporations are taking over the world. Sometimes I have a hard time identifying with the American identity. There are good things about it. I do enjoy cheaper things, waiting for items I've been eyeing to go on sale, making something out of dreams if you work hard enough (which is not always true, but you can work your way up), and all the American dream-like ideals. But I am frustrated when I see George W. on tv saying, "We will not be pressured into helping a poor helpless continent even if our allies are. We will do what is best for America." Everything is best for America, but we're letting an entire continent suffer because we can't exploit some natural resource. Our foreign policy has largely been concerned with helping the U.S. What is that about? When did we lose sight of helping others not because it is in our best interest but because it needs to be done. What is this America is bigger and better and can beat the crap out of anyone mentality? I'm frustrated. And needless to say that my frustration was heightened by that celebration where we buy expensive fireworks and show off in huge parades because we're proud of our nation. But here I am ranting in a free country, where I am able to express my opinion about foreign policies and a moronic president. That doesn't mean we don't need to do something, because things don't get better without an effort.

Thursday, June 30, 2005

And I Begin...with chocolate bears

So I've been debating for a few days now whether to start one of these. The idea first popped into my mind when I was in London, and Heidi (my sister) used her blog to keep simple updates. I decided it was a somewhat good idea. Here I am with no idea about what I'm going to write, but who says I need something to write.

Last night or this morning (as I find my dreams are really when I keep waking up in the morning and going back to sleep until I wake up at some terrible hour, 10:30am this morning, and stumble out of bed remembering vaguely the bizarre dream I just had). Let me start that sentence again... Last night or this morning I dreamed about getting chocolate bears with Caitie in a special combination trail mix called, "The Hitchhiker." Why can't I think of great inventions like this in everyday life, when I need a brilliant idea for a new trail mix why can't I think (and there is a finger pointing upwards, and a light bulb lights up to the right of my head), "The Hitchhiker is the perfect name for a trailmix and it should definitely include chocolate bears." By now I would be a millionaire. It's too bad I haven't submitted these genius ideas for copyright and to candy companies. I have to say chocolate bears would be excellent, preferably in Lindt chocolate or maybe even Cadbury or Galaxy. Why oh why is European chocolate so much better than American chocolate?

Moving on... I have this ridiculous obsession with maps. I never knew it was such a problem till I brought my handy, red, Rand McNally World Atlas that was given to me by Amy's mom when the elementary school decided they were out of date. Some country had changed it's name or borders or both. It could have even been multiple countries. I wouldn't put it past them. But I brought that thing everywhere, the beaches of Alghero, Sardinia, the plane ride to Spain so I could see the countries I was passing in my blue and yellow RyanAir, knees-hitting-the-seat-in-front-of-me chair. It might have gotten a little out of control when I'd pop my companion out, show him to the Dublin men on the white sandy beach pointing to where Utah is, or to Jon, from forty minutes outside of London, in order to see where Cyprus was. It does come in handy though. As nerdy as I may look carrying around an atlas, I still love knowing where I'm going or where things are located. Now the search is on for a pocketsized atlas.

(Listening to "Bitten by the Tailfly" - Elbow, "Soir de Fete" (circumflex on the first e in fete) - Yann Tiersen from Amelie (accent aigu on first e in Amelie), and "Wonderful Tonight"- Eric Clapton)