i think. i shake my head; it goes woosh. i feel foolish, thinking my crazy thoughts.
- theCallowQueen
- In the down-hill tumble of life, I'm okay with the scratches and bruises; it's the broken bones that I'm trying to avoid.
Wednesday, June 29, 2005
wtf
The girl getting flipped is part of a female roller derby. The girl in the low-rise jeans is her sister. Yes, there was girl-girl fighting. No, I'm not posting those photos.
These girls are friends of a friend of a friend, and that's too close for me. I'd rather have at least six degrees of separation with these two.
Friday, June 24, 2005
hehehe
Wednesday, June 22, 2005
one of the matts
Nothing deep to reveal here. Just an unexpected link to the past for me today. A link that had me writing a general sum of the last two years of my life. How does one sum up such an expanse of time? What level of detail does one include? It's must be more specific than an obituary but more general than a diary entry. And this is assuming that I remember all of the key points in my life. I don't. Maybe I should have just provided a link to this blog.
Anyway, I provided a probably overly long response, to which he supplied an equally long missive. Brevity was never a strong suit for either of us. (I can be succinct in my editing and writing, but it’s a challenge made harder the closer the material is to home. All that means is I can be brief about the weather forecast or the latest news bite, but ask me about my newest shoe purchase, and I’ll provide a novel.) In this case, I’m glad he was equally lacking in brevity.
welcome summer
Today's the second day of summer. Sigh. Here comes the heat. Good-bye to the few nice spring days that we had.
Here are a few Googlisms on spring. My thanks to lizalou42 for the link (googlisms.com).
spring is sprung
spring is here
spring is late
spring is back
spring is springing earlier
spring is coming
spring is busting out
spring is sure to come
(People are so demanding of Spring)
spring is in the air (I can fly!)
spring is in the air whether he's pausing for an outdoor lunch or enjoying a bounce (I'm male? I can bounce? Am I Tigger?)
spring is like summer (Spring is often called Summer)
spring is colorful and sexy at the house of versace (Now this is more like it)
spring is bright for klein (I'd like to think I bright in general. I always did well in school)
spring is the period express from god (Sounds important. Am I happy about being the period express from god?)
spring is poem
spring is 100% minority owned source for wire forms (Who knew I was 100% minority owned? And what do wire forms want with me?)
spring is worth a mint (That's a gold mint, right?)
spring is eternal (Now, this is more like it.)
spring is the morning bird song (Comments like these are what puts Spring in the air.)
spring is friggin' awesome (Duh! Everyone knows this!)
spring is unwinding all around us (OK, I am a bit crazy at times.)
spring is (Yep, I think that wraps this up nicely.)
Oh, about the photo: I took this shot on the NYC subway on the last day of our trip.
Monday, June 20, 2005
news bite
COMMENTS: My favorite perfumes contain grapefruit. I wonder if this is my problem with men. They all think I'm too young for them!
Friday, June 17, 2005
don't buy analog
All I can say is don't buy an analog TV. Sure they're cheap. I know digital TVs are expensive. The prices should start to come down once Congress has set a firm stop date on analog signals. Right now it looks like it will be the end of 2008. After that you'll need a converter to use your analog TVs. The government is considering proposals to subsidize these converters for the poor.
Manufactures are saying they can make low-cost converters for $40 to $100 a pop. That's not very low cost in my book. What can I get for $19.95?
Why the switch? The government wants those frequencies back. At least 24MHz worth are earmarked for public safety officials. It has something to do with fighting terrorism and first responders.
Anyway, I'm not going to buy a new TV until this whole thing is sorted out. Then again, I'll have little reason to want a new TV as long as I have my roomie. She has a nice big, albeit analog, TV. I love her for more than her TV. She's quite a cook, too. ;)
Tuesday, June 14, 2005
nightmare on waffle street
This morning, I woke, shuffled down the hallway, and opened the freezer door. There sat the lone food item, my breakfast, my Eggo waffle.
Thanks to my roomie for not eating it. It was yummy. And I guess a trip to the grocery store is in order this afternoon.
Monday, June 13, 2005
my side, your side
Sick of the fighting.
Sick of the prejudice.
Sick of the hell and damnation.
Sick of the self-righteousness.
We humans are so controlling. We want to define what is and what isn’t. We want to put limits on ourselves and limits on our gods. The more we confine ourselves, the more we box ourselves in, the safer we feel. But entrapment doesn’t bring a person closer to the divine, just closer to suffocation.
Thursday, June 09, 2005
regular schedules
flowering thoughts
1. We miss you too!
2. Try not to read the synopsis for Lost. It the show is good, but waiting for all of the bits of the plot to emerge might just drive you crazy.
3. It was so good to see you.
4. This photo's really beautiful.
5. Miss you. Love you. Wishing you well.
bland blogs
I had actually been sleeping well since I started my new job. Mystery of mysteries, when I’d lie down in bed, I’d fall asleep within a half hour--consistently. But this past week, I’ve fallen back into the old ways--staying awake for an hour or more, waking up very late, and carrying my tiredness through the day with me.
What had changed? Two things.
First, this newsletter I’ve been working on. It’s one I’ve picked up from an ex-co-worker. I had major program problems switching the files over to my laptop. I thought I wasn’t going to be able to do the newsletter at all at one point. Luckily it worked out to an at least manageable end--I thought--until I was told someone had forgotten that an extra half-page ad needed to run. So I redesigned the whole thing last night. Stress. I haven’t really had that since I left my old job. Stress keeps me from sleeping.
Second, I’ve been on ex-co-worker overload. Last Friday, you’ll remember that I met up with a whole slew of my former co-workers, including my ex-boss. That brought back the flood of memories. A flood of regrets. Yes, I’m happy at my new job, but I’m still sad about what I left and how I had to leave it.
Then out for our usual drinks on Tuesday (which is an ex-co-worker event), one of my former managing editors found out that my ex-boss and I had “communication issues.” She hadn’t known. I preferred it that way, I guess. I feel like I’ve hurt things enough there; I don’t want to further pollute the relationships that must continue there. Then, I started thinking about what she, and the others who don’t know the true reason, must think of why I left. Do they think me restless, undedicated, or simply desiring more before I deserved it? Many in that office, especially the old timers, strongly believe that if you stick at your job and do it well you will be recognized when recognition is due. They’re about dedication and faithfulness. Odd thoughts, I know, but those were the thoughts I had.
So, I’m off to lunch with more former co-workers today. I’ll probably have a movie night with another on Friday. I’ll see another group for lunch next week. There’s always Tuesday drinks. And then there’s Book Club and Dinner Club at the end of the month.
Maybe I should stop. Maybe, if seeing them brings back all these stresses, I shouldn’t see my ex-co-workers. But take away them and the newsletter and I’m left with blandness. Nice blandness. Pleasant blandness. Content blandness. But not much to write about. Besides, they're not just my ex-co-workers; they're my friends--well most of them.
Maybe that’s the point. I’ve been so busy living in the stresses of life, in my ups and downs, that I haven’t learned how to shape my own interests. Now that I don’t live for my job, I can find my passion. My passion was my work. Now I have the opportunity to find passion outside of work. I have the mental and emotional resources to dedicate to it—whatever it may be. I just have to figure out what that is.
Tuesday, June 07, 2005
reason no. 53 to keep my job
Monday, June 06, 2005
group error
Why I almost didn't join: The apostrophe in the group's name is out of place. Tourist's is singular possessive. Collections is plural, requiring tourists plural. More appropriate names would be: New York tourist photo collections or New York tourists' photos.
I'm contemplating mentioning this gaffe to the group administrator. Or am I just being an editing freak?
talking with my ex-boss
I hope that with continued pleasant conversation, perhaps this burned bridge may slowly be mended to the point I could use it (though be it a tightrope) if I ever needed it.
a family reunion
It was like a big family reunion that makes a person feel happy and sad at the same time. I got the feeling of home, while knowing that home isn’t really there anymore.
my replacement
So how did I meet Replacement? Well two of my ex-co-workers quit their jobs last week (GO TEAM!), and we all met up at a bar after work on Friday to say goodbye/celebrate/muorn.
I made a point of sitting down with Replacement and getting to know her. She is indeed sweet and soft spoken. And she is, as I was, in love with the office. Replacement was surprised I had left. I smiled my reply, dancing around the office politics of the true reason I’d made a change. She needn’t know all of the mess.
I explained my departure like this: This place was like my home. I was raised in this office. I began here as an intern. And after four years of nurturing, I found it was time to leave my co-workers—my parents and siblings—and spread my wings.
So, I like her, I approve. Replacement will fit in well on the staff. She told me I couldn’t have my old job back; she liked it too much. I didn’t have the heart to tell Replacement that I, of course, didn’t want the job back. I felt a little ache, remembering that love of work that I once held.
Friday, June 03, 2005
asleep or awake?
I was awake but hit the snooze once, twice, three times.
I was asleep but I would be late if I didn't get out of bed before the fourth alarm.
I was awake but I lay down on the couch while I watched the weather forecast.
Forecast: rain, and not cheerful spring rain, but dreary stormy rain.
I wanted to wear my pjs to work. I wanted to not go to work.
I comforted myself with the fact that today was my first Friday with summer hours and I finish work by 1 p.m.
I still wanted to go back to bed.
Sitting at my desk, my mind drifts, as obvious by this post.
Sitting at my desk, my eyelids feel full of lead pulling them down, down.
Sitting at my desk, I confuse my manuscripts, wait, what was I working on?
Sitting at my desk, I think of going home, going to my bed, going to sleep.
If I get to leave work at 1 p.m., do I still get a lunch break? And if I leave for lunch at noon, would I have to come back at 1 p.m. just to leave again?
photo enjoyment
Thursday, June 02, 2005
for lizalou42
Wednesday, June 01, 2005
sorry no stories
My attempts to describe seem empty. So here's the shell of my vacation:
We stayed at the Welk Resort, you know, Lawrence Welk?
We saw the sunset from the shore of Table Rock Lake.
We rode the ducks. They have tours of Branson on DUKW amphibious vehicles that take you on land and then the water of Table Rock Lake.
We went to Celebration City, it’s like a mini Worlds of Fun. There was an overly patriotic show at the end that combined fire, fireworks, images projected on a wall of water.
I got a call from my roomie that made me sad and want to return home.
Silver Dollar City hasn’t changed except for maybe a few more rides.
As we were leaving the park, I saw a lesbian couple. My first thought: Huh? What are they doing here? And I wondered if they felt out of place, marked as different, unwanted in this, the heart of moral Christian thinking. I thought they had a lot of courage, but if it were I, I’d find a different place to spend my vacation.
We went through two caves.
We drove home past trees, farms, cows, and horses.
We went to New York City.
We stayed at the Chelsea International Hostel on 20th St. between 7th Ave. and 8th Ave. It was small, sparse, clean for a hostel, in the heart of lower Manhattan, and cheap for New York.
Nancy’s cousin took us to the new Chinatown growing out in Queens for dinner.
Nancy and BK took a 2 a.m. bus to spend the day in Washington, D.C.
The G-man and I went the Met, walked through Central Park, took and double-decker open-topped bus tour of lower Manhattan, and saw Avenue Q. We both loved the show. I knew I would, but I was glad I hadn’t wasted the G-man’s money.
We tried to see the Statue of Liberty, but couldn’t. The Ellis Island museum was good, informative, and long. We got very hungry. We ate at a Japanese noodle restaurant near Broadway. We all went to see La Cage aux Folles, a revival of the musical that the movie The Birdcage was based off of. The chorus line (men in drag, of course) was fabulous. We sat in the sixth row off to the left.
Gilbert said he was beginning to develop an expensive habit. That makes me happy. Now maybe I’ll have someone to go see a show or two with me when they come through Kansas City.
We ate sushi. We walked through Greenwich Village at night when it’s at its liveliest.
We toured the U.N. We waited in the most horribly long line at the Empire State Building. We ate Indian food at a microscopic little restaurant in Greenwich.
We ate dim sum in Chiantown in a huge ballroom-sized restaurant. The host and hostesses had walkie-talkies to communicate across the loud, busy restaurant.
The G-man and I left for the airport. I left Nancy, and for that I truly have no words.