Wednesday, December 21, 2011

GPOMyself.

The blogging paradox: the longer you go without posting, the greater the pressure to post something good, but the less likely you are to have something proportionately great to say.

It's the last day of finals and I have an exam and two papers left; it's a perfectly reasonable time to post here, no?

...psyche. (I'm bringing back '90s slang! Word up.) If you read that first paragraph above, you should have realized that it functions as disclaimer for the fact that I have nothing of value to share here. That said, here are some gratuitous pictures of myself over the past semester, courtesy of Photobooth and the inability to focus on academic work for any reasonable (read: longer than 30 minutes) period of time:

Great sweater, or GREATEST sweater? Please note the chicken on the bottom left, and the pie on the upper right. Verdict: GREATEST sweater. (Little itchy, though.)
I got a haircut, then it rained, then I made this stupid looking face and for some reason, adjusted the exposure levels of a webcam picture. I really have no explanation.
I would like to draw attention to the fact that I successfully "did" my hair (what a weird expression) here, but I don't blame you if you're distracted by my painful inability to smile symmetrically. Cross "print ad model for lipstick companies" off my list of potential careers.
#myhipsterlife
"Crushed by the weight of expectations?"
These took an embarrassingly long time.
Do I look unhappy? Because I am. This picture is from about 20 minutes ago. (P.S. I made that scarf.)
I hate pictures of myself. Why did I do this?

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Hey, remember that time I partied with Hellogoodbye?

Wait, back up. There's a story here.

ACT I

To set the scene: Allegheny College, November 5, 2011. Cold outside; warm inside. Saturday night, Shafer Auditorium in the Henderson Campus Center. Ace Enders, lead singer of not-dead-just-hibernating band The Early November, opens with an incredible acoustic solo performance. However, a restless crowd of young adults isn't in the mood for a wistful singer-songwriter, even one with such self-deprecating charm. A foot from the stage, a 5'1" girl with dark hair pulled back into a pragmatic ponytail frowns and hopes the girls in front of her will stop loudly expressing their shock that the 29-year-old musician onstage with the face of a teenage boy is married with children, at least long enough to let him play a song or two in peace.

Ace Enders and my friend's guitar.

Cut to a wide angle shot of a fully lit stage featuring three men whose hairstyles alone exhibit more diversity than the average liberal arts college student body. Seated behind the drums, sideswept dark hair that definitely required some styling wax and careful pre-show arrangement to get it just right; stage right, a curly-headed beanpole bassist with Woody Allen glasses and a Woody Allen smile; front and center, the short-haired, spectacled star of the show in flannel and loafers. They play mostly new songs, though they concede to some old: Shimmy Shimmy Quarter Turn rouses some interest from the audience, but not even Here In Your Arms can break the twenty-somethings' resolution not to look too into music they listened to in high school. It is nearly impossible not to notice the one girl's ponytail bouncing haphazardly as she throws concern for social censure to the wind and dances alone in the crowd, unwilling to let the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity pass by with her arms crossed. Fade to black as the music fades.

Hey, Hellogoodbye...hey.

Fade in: the brightness of the campus center lobby is startling in contrast to the dimness of the auditorium. The audience has mostly dispersed, leaving only a smattering of fans lingering in clusters, hoping to catch the band on their way out to wherever they're going, some even optimistically planning to invite them to hang out for the night. The faithful are finally rewarded as Forrest Kline himself saunters through the open double doors and receives the first eager fans with the grace of a musician accustomed to the excitement generated by his mere presence. Mike soon follows, revealing himself to be far more petite when upright than when seated behind a drum set, and Augie wanders out after, almost as if he were looking for a bathroom and just happened to stumble upon a flock of college students wanting to take his picture.

Not fifteen feet away from the band stands the dark-haired girl from before, her enthusiasm now subdued under the fluorescent lights. She is accompanied by a tall, sleek-haired boy in a light blue child-size Superman t-shirt and grey jeans. Both are anxious; both are attempting to appear otherwise. They mean business, as the boy confides to the girl: "I want to tell Forrest that his music helped save my life." They wait together as various groups and camera flashes come and go, sorority sisters and roommates and couples clustering together for photo ops with the smiling, compliant band members, but nearly miss their chance as Forrest turns away with a sense of finality. The girl calls for him to wait!, and she and the boy close the distance to request their thirty seconds of attention. Sure, no problem, Forrest and the guys would love to sign your CD and take a picture with you and hey, thanks for coming out to the show. No...thank you.

To state the obvious: the girl is me.

Me and two guys with nice hair, one of whom is famous.

ACT II:

Now, picture me huddled uneasily on a beige couch in an off-campus, fraternity-affiliated house. I'm wearing a grey cardigan, red scarf, dark blue jean shorts, slashed black tights, and red flats. The coffee table is littered with bottles. To my left is a friend who hadn't even come to the concert but tagged along for the aftermath; one of our friends is across the room perched on the edge of an armchair, wine glass in hand, as his brother and his brother's girlfriend hover in the vicinity of the door -- as high schoolers, they're even more out of place than I am. The remainder of people in the room are an assortment of vague acquaintances and strangers: the blond surfer type from my English majors seminar who barely acknowledges my hello, and not without an unsubtly skeptical glance thrown in; the friend of a friend whose presence mostly justified us cavalierly inviting ourselves into someone else's house; and Hellogoodbye, no longer separated from their fans by a four-foot-high stage. Forrest is on the couch, Mike is next to him, and we are next to Mike but for the two girls piled atop each other who are trying to appear both smart and sexy by discussing Communism with the drummer while hiking their skirts up and their shirts down. I am uncomfortable, but I am five feet away from Hellogoodbye.

I am the paparazzi.

Close-up of an iPhone featuring a black-and-white photo of someone (identity never determined); slowly zoom out to show that the hand holding the phone is the bassist, Augie's. He, Forrest, and Mike surface after a brief whispered conversation among themselves to point the phone in our direction and their fingers at my friend's face: "He looks just like him!" We disagree with their conclusion, but none of us are unhappy about receiving their attention.

Briefly, a flurry of overdressed -- or under-dressed, depending on whether the term refers to situational appropriateness of outfits, or the actual ratio of clothing to exposed skin -- freshman girls appear on screen, just long enough to give the band members a reason to leave. Half of the wraparound couch is now empty and lonely. We stay where we are.

The rest of the scenes in the house would serve best cut together into a montage of the waiting that followed, alternating between slow and fast motion effects as various minor characters enter the room and move around, leave and come back or sometimes not. My friend and I remain a singular unit on the couch, both unwilling to relinquish our prime seating and lacking any reason to move elsewhere. Interspersed with views of the living room are occasional cuts to upstairs, whatever it looks like, where the band spends an hour smoking as an increasingly large crowd presses in on them. Augie briefly reappears, expressing his relief at having escaped the crush of people: "I'm the same age as you guys! I just wanna chill!" Enticed by the invitation to punch the wall in the adjoining room (drywall, easily gives way to the force of a fist, relieves stress, is replaced every year by the brothers who pay rent), he does so, but disappears again shortly after. We debate, over and over, whether we should give in and go home, and each time we decide to wait a few more minutes. It's worth it.

The band returns downstairs, significantly less sober but also trailed by a smaller crowd of admirers. We invite them to get food with us at McKinley's, and our timing is just right: they accept.

The group is walking now, and the camera follows along as the entourage crosses the campus in the November night towards light, warmth, and food at McKinley's. Between the familiarity of the campus center and the foreignness of strolling casually a step ahead of Forrest Kline, it feels like an episode of a reality TV show, the mundane made momentarily less so. If anyone's curious, Forrest orders onion rings. More people come over and more people leave, and the nights winds down as every Saturday night at Allegheny College does: with fried food in cardboard boats and soda in compostable cups, but Hellogoodbye just happens to be there. We request one more autograph, we smile and try not to openly fawn over them as we take our leave, and we call it a night.

Like a moment borrowed from someone else's life, tonight was so surreal and so cinematic that I can't quite believe it happened to me...but it did, and it was so great.

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

I'm a Mac.

"We are deeply saddened to announce that Steve Jobs passed away today.
Steve's brilliance, passion and energy were the source of countless innovations that enrich and improve all of our lives. The world is immeasurably better because of Steve.
His greatest love was for his wife, Laurene, and his family. Our hearts go out to them and to all who were touched by his extraordinary gifts."
-Official Apple statement
If you had asked me a few hours ago, I wouldn't have thought I'd be so sad about Steve Jobs passing away, but the very fact of my typing this entry on a Macbook Pro right now with iTunes open and ready to sync my iPod is a testament to the incredible legacy he left behind. He was a brilliant man who built a history-shaping corporation with his innovation and sheer determination to create the best possible product on the market, or if necessary, to establish a market the world didn't even know it needed or wanted.
“We’re here to put a dent in the universe. Otherwise why else even be here?” 
I didn't know Steve Jobs, so it would be inaccurate to say I'm in mourning for him, per se. His death is sad for everyone who did know him; despite his cutting all of Apple's corporate philanthropy programs and an unusual fondness for black turtlenecks, I'm sure he was a loved man. He was an infamous control freak, perfectionist, and micro-manager, sometimes called "a benevolent dictator, but a dictator nonetheless," and he knew it:
"My job is to not be easy on people. My job is to make them better."
He was also the kind of person whose personal experience auditing a calligraphy class in college inspired him to offer a variety of fonts for computer users to choose from -- a feature taken for granted today. Steve Jobs didn't believe in focus groups; he believed in Steve Jobs, with a confidence that led him to tell an interviewer that "it’s not the consumers’ job to know what they want.” Fortunately for us, he knew what he was doing.
“Here’s to the crazy ones, the misfits, the rebels, the troublemakers, the round pegs in the square holes… the ones who see things differently — they’re not fond of rules… You can quote them, disagree with them, glorify or vilify them, but the only thing you can’t do is ignore them because they change things… they push the human race forward, and while some may see them as the crazy ones, we see genius, because the ones who are crazy enough to think that they can change the world, are the ones who do.”
Steve Jobs really believed in his technology's potential to change the world. In courting PepsiCo exec Steve Sculley for the position of Apple CEO almost thirty years ago, Jobs won him by asking, "Do you want to spend the rest of your life selling sugared water or do you want to change the world?" He saw the potential in a little computer graphics company that, under his direction, became Pixar Animation Studios; without Steve Jobs, there would be no Toy Story. He didn't even believe in the perceived Mac/PC rivalry (though he once disdained Microsoft products as "really third-rate" -- ouch), striking a deal with Microsoft in 1997 that exchanged their $150 million investment for his promise to pre-load Internet Explorer on all Apple computers, claiming that "we want to let go of this notion that for Apple to win, Microsoft has to lose" -- not only the ultimate display of corporate symbiosis, but evidence of a desire to succeed in the name of progress, not profit.
"Being the richest man in the cemetery doesn’t matter to me.… Going to bed at night saying we’ve done something wonderful—that’s what matters to me."
Apple is a brand, but because of its founder, it was and hopefully always will be a little bit more inspirational than just the average company.
"Remembering that you are going to die is the best way I know to avoid the trap of thinking you have something to lose. You are already naked. There is no reason not to follow your heart.”
Steve Jobs: February 24, 1955 – October 5, 2011
“We don’t get a chance to do that many things, and every one should be really excellent. Because this is our life. Life is brief, and then you die, you know? And we’ve all chosen to do this with our lives. So it better be damn good. It better be worth it.”

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

They call me ResLife, 'cause I got no life.

 One of my obligations as a Resident Advisor is to keep my staff, residents, and any random passersby who come to my room looking for me informed about my approximate location/actions at all times by way of a "Where Am I?" sign posted visibly next to my door. Each RA makes his/her own, so our personalities really come out in what places and pursuits we choose to include on our sign, e.g. the RA whose sign includes an option for "Beating people up (at rugby practice)." I'm not much for beating people up, except maybe verbally, so that's obviously not on my sign. I do, however, have an option for "at the library," which I only included because most other RAs do and I didn't want to seem any less studious than anyone else; honestly, studying in the library stresses me out. Still, with the exception of the option indicating that I "fell down a well; please help," most of my Wheres are vague, nonspecific, and vaguely dishonest about specifics. If I were to be completely truthful, the sign would read something a little more like this:

-Taking an afternoon nap but am ashamed to admit it
-Lounging casually in my underwear
-Watching Glee
-Watching YouTube videos and, embarrassingly, actually LOLing
-Singing to myself
-Skyping
-Facebook stalking
-Really focusing on painting my nails
-Listening to one song on endless repeat, hoping no one around can hear
-Engrossed in non-required reading and will probably become violent if disturbed
-Eating dinner alone from a takeout box with a flagrant disregard for table etiquette
-Huddled in bed, recovering from an excess of interpersonal interaction and, quite frankly, avoiding you all

Ah, well. Another semester, another few months of lying to my residents about my whereabouts.

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Summer reading 2011.

These are the books I read this past summer, presented in chronological order and with minimal commentary because I'm currently occupied with much less recreational reading. Critical thinking on writing composition theory, anyone?

Italics indicate books I had read previously; bold type marks my recommendations. [If I re-read it, that's a recommendation in itself.]

The Truth About Forever -- Sarah Dessen
Prague -- Arthur Phillips
How Did You Get This Number -- Sloane Crosley
What Now? -- Ann Patchett
Nine Stories -- J. D. Salinger
Mrs. Dalloway -- Virginia Woolf
Special Topics in Calamity Physics -- Marisha Pessl
On Chesil Beach -- Ian McEwan
The Russian Debutante's Handbook -- Gary Shteyngart
The Phantom Tollbooth -- Justin Norton
A Widow For One Year -- John Irving
Someone I Loved -- Anna Gavalda
I Am Charlotte Simmons -- Tom Wolfe
Indecision -- Benjamin Kunkel
The Luneberg Variation -- Paolo Maurensig
Love in the Time of Cholera -- Gabriel García Márquez
Selected Stories -- E. M. Forster
The Forgotten Garden -- Kate Morton
The School of Essential Ingredients -- Erica Bauermeister
Old School -- Tobias Wolff
The Day I Ate Whatever I Wanted: And Other Small Acts of Liberation -- Elizabeth Berg
Still Alice -- Lisa Genova
Picnic, Lightning -- Billy Collins
The Elegance of the Hedgehog -- Muriel Barbery
Interpreter of Maladies -- Jhumpa Lahiri
The Music Lesson -- Katharine Weber
One Day -- David Nicholls
Little Bee -- Chris Cleave
The Fortune Cookie Chronicles: Adventures in the World of Chinese Food -- Jennifer 8 Lee
The Classmates: Privilege, Chaos, and the End of an Era -- Geoffrey Douglas
A Moveable Feast -- Ernest Hemingway
Eats, Shoots, and Leaves: The Zero Tolerance Approach to Punctuation -- Lynne Truss
The Most Beautiful Walk in the World: A Pedestrian in Paris -- John Baxter
The Hunger Games -- Suzanne Collins
Never Let Me Go -- Kazuo Ishiguro

Sunday, July 31, 2011

"Congratulations! You are magical."

At 3:57 a.m. on July 27, 2011, a webpage validated my childhood.
I don't know why I chose to refresh the Pottermore tab when I did. I'd almost written it off and gone to bed, at least for a nap, but I've never really been able to shake the feeling that I'm going to miss something wonderful in my sleep. It was silly to even stay awake that long, knowing full well that the clue could be posted at any hour of the day, British Summer Time (BST). One click later, I was clambering up on my pile of laundry to reach for my copy of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone -- the same copy I've had for over ten years, for over half of my life. The spine is just barely intact.

The clue: "How many breeds of owl are on the Eeylops Owl Emporium sign? Multiply this by 49." Chapter Five: Diagon Alley, page 72, US edition: "A low, soft hooting came from a dark shop with a sign saying Eeylops Owl Emporium -- Tawny, Screech, Barn, Brown, and Snowy." Five times forty-nine. I did the mental math, held my breath while I did it again, then typed quill.pottermore.com/245 into my address bar, which redirected me to...
"Try to catch it to enter." YOU TEASES.
Obviously, I wasn't expecting the Sony homepage, but the floating feathers seemed about right. For the record, the Magical Quill is the glowing one. I mean...duh. Having maaaybe just the slightest difficulties with my small motor skills, I had to click around a few times before I actually got it, but of course, the point is that I GOT IT.
OMG OMG OMG.
Even the wizarding world has paperwork, though I only wish most forms in life could be as easy to fill out as this one:
Who do they think they're asking? I mean, come on.
It's a miracle that I managed to make it through all the submission forms without misspelling my name or any other pertinent information. If a Quick-Quotes Quill could turn Ronald Weasley into Roonil Wazlib, my name was just rife for keyboard fumbling errors. Then, finally, this screen:
"Congratulations! You are magical."
Has there ever been such a thrilling sequence of words? In league with phrases like "I love you," "it's a boy/girl," and "your hair looks great today," J. K. Rowling once again managed to choose exactly the right welcome to the wizarding world. Congratulations, because you are magical. It's just what we've all been waiting to hear. "Yer a wizard, Harry."

"FrogBludger" sounds vicious. So does "ChaserDragon," actually.
In the wake of more embarrassing Harry Potter-related confessions (see previous entry), I have no qualms now admitting that my first email username was "phoenixfeather4." I loved Harry Potter, I loved mythology, and I loved alliteration. Choosing "PhoenixProphecy184" from a randomly generated list of Pottermore usernames feels like coming full circle.
A log-in page to the WIZARDING WORLD.
I still didn't really believe it, but the screen doesn't lie:
"You've successfully validated your early access Pottermore account."
Be still, my beating heart.
I AM MAGICAL. ϟ

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Herm-own-ninny.

Everyone has some skeletons in their closet. This is one of mine.
(Double posting today because I wrote this on the way home from Chicago and just remembered it now.)

I remember my first foray into the Harry Potter universe with what can only be described as shame. Having caught Potter fever in its early but decidedly dire stages, I was finishing up a much-labored-over presentation on Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets to my fourth-grade class, who I imagined could have been nothing less than enraptured with my inspired recounting of the story. This was, for the record, likely also the first but not last instance of my burning the midnight oil to finish a paper to my insane personal standard of satisfaction. Digression: two years later, I would find myself embarrassed with the gentle criticism on a twelve-page analysis, so-called, of Louis Sachar’s Holes that my English teacher informed me was a good effort, but more a retelling than a report. Considering that I had doubled the recommended page length and had an un-athletic sixth-grader’s difficulty applying adequate force to the stapler when it came time to hand it in, she wasn’t wrong. At the time, I thought myself some sort of feverishly inspired literary journalist, duty-bound to inform the masses of the brilliantly rendered coming-of-age story that I had already read twice that summer; actually, I had just babbled on for pages and pages with my keyboard only too willing to cooperate in an embarrassing outpouring of seriously-no-one-cares. I only made that mistake once. End digression.

I remember distinctly the boy I argued with: Billy Morris, forever engraved into my memory as the teasing little twerp who called me “Pancake,” which certain current friends of mine have appropriate into more a term of endearment than the bizarre juvenile disparagement it was originally intended as. (Thanks, friends.) I can’t vouch for much wit on my part as a generally speech-shy fourth grader, but I know that most comebacks I made to that round-faced blond kid inevitably played on the pun of Billy Morris living in Morristown. Clever and also hilarious! Or maybe not, but I’ll never forget his name. Unfortunately, that means he stands out in my admittedly selective memory as my antagonist in a heated debate over the correct pronunciation of Hermione, the bookish, smart and occasionally smart-alecky female best friend, with whom I and thousands of other readers inevitably identified: I was, and here comes the confession, a proponent of the “Hermy-own” theory. I have absolutely no idea where I came by this pronunciation, and even less regarding the origins of the particular conviction with which I self-righteously and incorrectly corrected he who dared to challenge me. But seriously, what a little creep: was I the one giving this report, or wasn’t I?

The release of Goblet of Fire, with Rowling’s sly lesson in How To Correct Widespread Misperceptions About Your Main Characters (or alternately, “Get Your Shit Right, Readers: 101”), dealt a devastating blow to my argument. For the benefit of more casual Potter fans who can’t quite remember the scene I’m referring to, not even Hermione’s Yule Ball date Viktor Krum can get her name down, and Harry hears her correcting the clueless foreigner on the dance floor: “Her-MY-oh-nee,” she enunciates. I went through a few stages of grief after that scene, not least of which was denial: “What a stupid way to pronounce it!” If arrogance were one of the stages of grief, I could check that one off, too: “My way is totally better.” I came around, eventually; a fifth-grade independent study I conducted on all things Harry Potter (my school district really let Gifted & Talented kids get away with anything) inspired an exhaustive exploration of character name origins, leading me to discover the beloved authoress’s habit of adopting literary names, Hermione having been appropriated from the queen in Shakespeare’s A Winter’s Tale. When confusion ensued about character names during a read-through of the play in my senior year AP Lit class, I basked in the knowledge that this time around, I really was right about Her-my-oh-nee.

Until the very end.

It's been a while since my last update. Sorry (to all three of my readers). I spent the last few days in and around Chicago, trying to relive Ferris Bueller's Day Off with limited success, although I did learn a lot about art and architecture along the way. On the home front, I've been trying to mentally and emotionally prepare myself for the greatest cinematic event of my lifetime:

I couldn't exaggerate my excitement if I tried. When I was in fifth grade, I spent half a year researching for an independent study on all things Harry Potter, compiling a hefty biography on J. K. Rowling (stands for "Joanne Kathleen" -- her publishers suggested she use her initials to avoid alienating young male readers; lacking a middle name, she adopted her grandmother's first name), creating a collage larger than my entire eleven-year-old upper body, and becoming irritatingly Hermione-like in my inability to stop blurting out the origins of character names in casual conversation. I got an A++++. True story.

There's not much point to this post but to stall until I start re-reading Deathly Hallows again, one last time before everything changes. Of course, after the movie ends, I can just start all over again, and again, and again.

Saturday, July 2, 2011

Zorbing.

It's 5 a.m. on a Saturday. Two movies, three slushies, and a pack of Oreos later, last night bled into this morning. Thanks to a wholly engrossing crossword puzzle that kept four of us slumped around my friend's kitchen table in varying states of wakefulness and denial far longer than we'll admit, it was lighter outside when we left than when we arrived. The sunrise drive home through otherwise quiet streets, singing along to "Anna Sun," came straight out of a John Hughes movie -- at least, even if the lighting was a bit dim and casting atypical (for movies that inspire so many slumber parties, the Brat Pack movies feature surprisingly few interactions between female friends), I like to think we got the feeling right.

"Zorbing" is a song that should have appeared on my summer playlist, had I discovered it in time. I'm at least two years late, considering it was originally released as a single in June 2009, then re-released on Stornoway's debut album in May last year, but cut me some slack; not even this Anglophile can keep up to date on British bands in addition to American ones. The song comes off as quintessentially English, not only with regards to the obviously un-American pronunciations, but the actual vocabulary of the lyrics, e.g. what are conkers and where is Cowley? (horse chestnut seeds, here more commonly known as buckeyes; about 58 miles northwest of London in Oxfordshire) Most importantly, is zorbing an actual thing? Is it some kind of veiled drug reference or regional sexual euphemism? Happily enough, zorbing is pretty much exactly what it sounds like if you stop to imagine your own definition for it, disregarding the absurdity of the thought: "Zorbing (globe-riding, sphereing, orbing) is the recreation of rolling downhill in an orb, generally made of transparent plastic." Think hamster ball, think Jake Gyllenhaal in Bubble Boy, think the real-life incarnation of your greatest childhood fantasy...unless maybe that was just me. Whatever. Basically, zorbing sounds like the best thing to come out of New Zealand since Nobel Prize winner Ernest Rutherford, and an awesome pastime that the United States should adopt posthaste. It's also a really great song that I've had on repeat for a week.

Zorbing - Stornoway [lyrics]

Lying in your attic
I can feel the static
The storm has broken, Heaven's open
So electrifying, oh, I'm nearly flying
Lost my heart between the sheets of lightning

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Miscellaneous thoughts.

[None of these merit a full entry, but hopefully the sum is greater than its meager parts.]

Acne doesn't take into account gender, race, sexuality, socioeconomic standing, or disability/ability status. It is an equal-opportunity face destroyer.

The Da Vinci Code is Twilight for men.
"I indirectly blame Catholicism for the Da Vinci Code."
"I'm sure Catholicism is more upset about it than you are."
"You underestimate how much The Da Vinci Code upsets me."

In relationships and in shopping, there are such things as dealbreakers.
e.g. The shoe fits, but for one minor detail: toe cleavage. (See #firstworldproblems, below.)
Conversely, certain attributes are also dealmakers.
e.g. These flats were $6.99. Deal? Done.

 The #firstworldproblems Twitter hashtag is the ultimate indulgence of an over-privileged class. It says, "I am worldly enough to acknowledge that my troubles pale in significance next to the deaths of malnourished children and freedom-fighting revolutionaries, et cetera, but I still want to complain about how long this barista is taking to prepare my iced latte! I have internet access, freedom of speech, and the disposable income to purchase a brand-name coffee drink, but it still shouldn't take five minutes to pour espresso over ice in a cup, am I right?!" The kid who made the First World Problems rap knows what's up: "I have to add water to this cupcake mix, then bake it?"

Then again, complaining is essentially a basic human right. Tweet on, all you people with 99 problems (but standard of living ain't one). [Full disclosure: I use that hashtag all the time. Like, ten minutes ago.]
 
Is it possible to speed-read poetry? Doesn't that sort of defeat the purpose?

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Old books and movies, but she can't stop thinking.

"Here is a procession arriving to honor you with music and torches. Here come the men and women whose names you know. The mountain is awake, the river is awake, over the race-course the sea is awaking those dolphins, and it is all for you. They want you--"

-E.M. Forster, "The Celestial Omnibus"

I haven't been writing because I've been reading and reading and reading, and also I really have nothing to say. I'll post for real the next time I surface for air.

Monday, June 13, 2011

Ch-ch-changes.

Maybe I'm considering using WordPress instead?

http://romabutnotitaly.wordpress.com/

[Update]
I'm leaning towards Blogger at the moment. I'll keep you posted (on both sites) until I decide.

Friday, June 3, 2011

Hard times for dreamers.

The longest, strangest dream of my life occurred mid-afternoon today, after an unplanned nap in the middle of rereading Nine Stories, immediately after finishing "Pretty Mouth and Green My Eyes," in particular. It involved my mother, a nunnery, grocery shopping, Meyer lemons, someone I know from my college life, a theatre troupe, someone I know from my home life, a celebrity I've never met, a completely fictional character whose name I definitively "knew" although of course I must have made it up myself, medieval torture, a boarding school of sorts, bike-riding, spirit animals, balloons, flying, someone I just met this weekend, a fictional character, swooning, a medical emergency, and true love.

I'm taking this as a sign that it's time to start this blog.