Thursday, November 27, 2008

Thanks not spanks

As much as I would like to rant about the myths surrounding this holiday, as well as the bloated, empty consumerism associated with this time of year, I'm just going to chill the f out and do something we should all consider today—think about the things you are truly thankful for.

50 things I'd like to give thanks for:
[After, of course, friends, family, health, and cookies.]

1. Slammer Christmas lights
2. Pancakes
3. Darren from Cat Island, Bahamas
4. The homeless man who yelled "Now that's what I call saving gas!" as I rode my bike past
5. The playhouse
6. My boobs
7. Carlo Rossi
8. Adult-sized footie pajama manufacturers 
9. Maverick
10. Nap-time hallucinations 
11. When Liz relents and french braids my hair
12. People who still rollerblade
13. The way the night feels limitless after a few glasses of wine
14. King burrito
15. a.m. phone calls with the mother
16. The gloaming
17. Good lighting
18. Jeff's teeth
19. The ability to recall my dreams
20. Puppies that try to run up stairs
21. Foxhorn being pulled out of purses at a 3$ movie
22. Cheap rent
23. The few occasions no one notices when I say something really dumb
24. The movie Sleepaway Camp
25. That I wasn't actually taken away by twin clowns and their evil circus ambulance like in my dream last night
26. Pace's hand gestures
27. People with laughs like stories
28. My unemployment skirt
29. My introduction to Wizard People
30. Finding gatorade in an emergency kit your mom put in the back of your car when your super hung over one morning
31. Finding a gas mask in an emergency kit your mom put in the back of your car when your super bored in traffic
32. Annie and Martha giving me a dead seahorse they found on the sidewalk 
33. Ghost stories
34. That beer you discover in the waaaay back of the fridge behind the jar of sauerkraut when you were sure they were all gone
35. Kisses from Lizzie 
36. Concerts that haunt you
37. The architecture of my nose
38. Breakfasts at Beaterville
39. The four different people who called to tell me about the new live puppy cam
40. LOST Season 5
41. Having blond leg hair
42. The kind of warm you only get from hot toddies
43. No scar from the "macaroni & cheese microwave incident"
44. Unexpected snowy mornings
45. British accents—faking them, listening to them, etc.
46. My great-grandmother's furniture
47. Riding my bike in early October
48. Catching crawdads in June
49. Seersucker
50. You.


Sunday, November 16, 2008

Legends of the Fall

Perhaps it's that I'm no longer sitting at a desk for eight hours a day and therefore have more time to walk around, but I've noticed an increase in my tripping [James, read: falling down], and have begun to observe the nuances distinguishing these assassins of the vertical...

The Liberated Marionette: This is probably my favorite fall. Exclusive to days when I'm wearing my Danskos, this trip entails five feet, ten inches of unsuspecting mass quickly toppling over, much like a marionette whose strings have suddenly been cut. Can be easily identified by several robust thuds as the shoe itself slams against the floor at various angles. 

Slo-Mo Dansko: Similar to The Liberated Marionette, but slower. Usually occurs near a stable surface, such as a desk or wall, where one can catch one's self before the second thud

Stair face: This trip actually entails falling up. Rumored to have originated during high school years, when heavily back-packed, dexterity-impaired teenagers would hurry up the steps to class. Who amongst us doesn't remember rushing up a flight of stairs, late for calculus (or for me, geometry) when  suddenly one foot doesn't quite clear the step on its ascent and—slam—you're a quadruped with a Jansport.  

Be safe out there kids, and wipe your feet before running on tile. 

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Yesterday, I

Yesterday, I (in chronological order):

- Woke up in adult-sized footie pajamas.
- Found out my identity was not stolen, just accidently assumed by a man named Michael.
- Discovered, and promptly removed, a nail in my mattress. 
- Was "shooshed" by a homeless man*.

* I'm not actually sure if he was homeless, but he did appear unkempt, a bit addled, and was sitting against a brick wall in a side alley. I'll just call him an urban wallflower. 

Saturday, November 8, 2008

Tripping

Why do we purposely (though, perhaps subconsciously) make certain sounds when we trip—or am I the only one?  I'm well aware that we all look back or around, instinctively trying to locate what made us trip, since we can't bear to admit that it was just us. But today when I slipped on some wet leaves, I realized that I also make a sound when I trip. It's something like what I imagine a 50's housewife would utter upon discovering her husband in bed with another man—"oh, oh my." Very prim and contrived. Am I creating this faux falsetto to try and counteract the gangly spectacle? In actuality, I should be making a noise that more accurately mirrors the action of tripping—which for me, resembles a newborn giraffe being tossed onto a skating rink. I vow, from this day forward to provide a more honest, a more raw and guttural, oral representation when I slip, trip, or think a step is there when it isn't. 

Catchup [a list]

Unemployed but working.
Still typing.
Teeth showing more than the sun.
Good. That's Fall for you.
Feeling colors and dreaming again.
Short skirts and herring bone tights.
Trying to bend my knees more.
Enjoying life past 11 pm.
Lazy susans and hot toddys.
I want tiny birds to perch on my clavicles.
If I keep up with the treaties, they'll be homeless. 
Sidewalk vagabonds shouting economy-based cat calls.
I love it all.