tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-19324996044042015552024-03-05T20:15:52.945-05:00Premature Quarter-Life CrisisRyan R.http://www.blogger.com/profile/08378623745133269892noreply@blogger.comBlogger71125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1932499604404201555.post-87606943503137113272010-03-12T14:39:00.001-05:002010-03-12T14:40:40.888-05:00Of Ethically Appraising Persons and PeopleMore often than not, persons are kind, well-intentioned, and loving - even if they express it poorly or are ill-informed.<br />More often than not, people are nasty, ill-meaning, and self-loving - even if they accidentally do positive things as a result.<br /><br />Anyone who knows me can tell you I love almost everyone I know. This jives pretty well with the first of the two statements above. There are a few exceptionally mean people, but for the most part I posit that mean actions of persons typically correspond with imperfect information or ineptly expressed emotions. I'm sure we can all think of a few personal examples of both, and doing so helps to realize that it is likely often the same case in others. I believe most any individual can be said to "mean well" most of the time. One of the strong points of Kantian ethics is that good intentions are all that matters in ethical evaluation of an individual agent. It follows that most individuals are ethically good folks, even if they sometimes particiapte in ethically poor actions.<br /><br />What anyone who knows me may not be able to tell you is that my optimism for the kindness of individuals does not extend to collective consciousness. Groups of people, acting together, tend to show characteristics like discompassion, nationalism/exceptionalism, greed, and destructiveness. This group could be a nation, a corporation, a political party, a club (a Klan, perhaps?), or even a social clique.<br /><br />Taken together, I think these two statements constitute one of the most important "life lessons" I've come by since high school. That hateful people does not equal hateful persons is a vital realization if one wishes to go through life paying attention to the surroundings, but without becoming a bitter, solitary misanthrope. Conversely, it is also helpful to be aware that, despite perhaps knowing a multitude of beautiful persons, one oughtn't expect to see the same in the newspaper.<br /><br />An important caveat is that this idea does not preclude culpability. If you (I use the general "you" here) participate in any sort of group hatred, you may be an otherwise kind individual, but you are still guilty of being hateful. That is to say, you are committing an ethically deplorable action, even if you are an ethically good agent. For whatever reason, you think your hatred is "for the best." Well, perhaps musing on the kindness of individuals and the contrasting nastiness of groups will help you realize that it is not, and be a little more accepting. And perhaps we can someday solve the mystery of how a collection of persons, who are each kind and loving individuals, can become a people that is selfish and hateful. The world may never know.Billyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15382463539587875876noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1932499604404201555.post-14619313548797882702010-03-09T11:36:00.000-05:002010-03-09T11:36:12.898-05:00Years since high school: 7Christ.<br />
<br />
No, don't get me wrong - seven years seems like the absolute <i>minimum</i> amount of time it's been. Especially when you figure that I've got about six more of these seven-year periods left before I hit the average lifespan, it's hard to look at it all at once. And since I was ebriated* for practically the whole time - a rarity among my friends and acquaintances - it's hard to distill all seven of those years into "one life lesson that sticks out that I've learned since I graduated from high school." But fuck it, right? What's the worst that could happen.<br />
<span style="font-size: xx-small;">*This is the positive form of "inebriated," is it not?</span><br />
<br />
<span style="font-size: small;">After much (okay, the bare minimum of) thought, I've decided that this is </span>my life lesson:<br />
<blockquote>If someone isn't listening, just give up on talking.</blockquote>As with all life lessons and similar pieces of patched-together folk wisdom, <i>do not</i> try to apply this at all times or in all situations. Like, if you're talking to your doctor and somebody else runs up with an emergency, don't take that as a sign that you should find a new doctor (or, worse, abandon real medicine for homeopathy or Christian scientism). Okay? So don't sue me or my sometime hosts because you took my life lesson too literally.<br />
<br />
Here's the thing, though: most everyone you'll meet is going to have working aural mechanisms** and interpretive linguistic faculties to match. Further, most of that high-functioning group will also know certain basics about how to think and relate to other people - logic, open-mindedness, deference to evidence, empathy, that sort of thing. They might not always <i>use</i> these basics, but even Michael Jordan screwed up now and then.*** Still, doesn't it seem like people should be reasonable? Doesn't it seem like they should be helpful, forthright, giving of themselves, and sensitive to others' needs? How, in short, can a rational, open-minded, evidence-respecting, empathic person <i>not</i> display a certain level of kindness?<br />
<span style="font-size: xx-small;">**If those words are too big for you, substitute "ears."</span> <br />
<span style="font-size: xx-small;">***Another, related life lesson: playing baseball is <i>always</i> a misstep.</span><br />
<br />
Damned if I know. But we manage somehow.<br />
<br />
People, it bears repeating, are in general stupid, ill-mannered, lazy, and deceptive; put Hobbes and Sartre together and you'll get it about right: hell is having to deal with other people's nasty and brutish lives. Worse yet, other people are <i>necessary</i>. They're the ones who hire us and sign our checks, who farm our food, who build large cubes for us to sit in so that we don't freeze to death or get trampled to death by an irate ibex - fill in your own <i>Fight Club</i>-esque<i> </i>monologue here. Combined with how insufferable they can be, this reliance on people leads to a frustrating quandary: do you keep trying to get what/need you want from people who couldn't care less or do you settle for whatever they'll give you?<br />
<br />
The line, tragically, is not nearly clear enough for me to define it - not with words, not with actions, probably not even if you and I shared a psychic link. But I know this much for sure: the returns diminish <i>very</i> quickly when you look to other people. (See, as a particularly brutal but well-formed example of this, the excellent <i>A Serious Man</i>.) The shades of this phenomenon are myriad and not worth discussing; you'll know it when you see it. And no, I'm not going to say that the answer is always "in you" the whole time or that it's all a matter of luck: the former is plainly a lie and the latter makes morality a joke. All I can say is that <i>it's not your fault</i> when the people around you are unwilling or incapable and that it's foolhardy to continue using a crutch that you know has rusted through. Fall if you have to fall, and don't throw good words after bad trying to purchase a service that was never for sale.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1932499604404201555.post-13008766541906024292010-03-03T19:42:00.000-05:002010-03-03T19:43:22.466-05:00All the Kings Horses, and All the Kings Men...<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Times New Roman'; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:100%;">I despise silence and love it. The loud quiet, endless room for possibility, the unknown, future dreams. I can even, with focus, make the thoughts that trip over themselves in my head whisper whisper whisper until there is no sound in my mind beside the rasp of air as it moves through my lungs. </span><br /><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:100%;"><br /></span><div style="margin-top: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:100%;">I treasure the shared silences more. You, sitting there. Me, here. And nothing need be said because, in that moment, we know it all already. </span><br /></div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:100%;"><br /></span><div style="margin-top: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; text-align: center; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:100%;">Most quiet is almost always interrupted by the near constant ringing in my ears. Due to years of loud music pumping into my ears, there is now rarely a moment without a buzz and I try to stifle this silent lack of silence with contemplation and, ever since liz posted the call for blogs on life lessons, i've filled the quiet thinking on what i've learned. I'm making lists in my head, measuring what lessons are worthy of writing, struggling to be honest with myself. I've learned a million lessons in the past five years and have had to relearn some of them until there's that final moment of ultimate realization and I can add up all the wasted hours relearning what i should have had down to begin with. Tres embarrassing. But, through much (near) silent struggle, I've mangled the list until there is one lesson left that I've learned and still fumble with regularly: You fall, and you pick up the pieces. I do believe Jimmy Eat World says it best--- </span></div><div style="margin-top: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; text-align: center; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:85%;"><i><br /></i></span></div><div style="margin-top: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; text-align: center; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:verdana, helvetica, arial;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:85%;"><i>It just takes some time,</i></span></span></div><div style="margin-top: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; text-align: center; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:85%;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:verdana, helvetica, arial;"><i>little girl, you're in the middle of the ride.</i></span></span></div><div style="margin-top: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; text-align: center; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:verdana, helvetica, arial;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:85%;"><i>Everything, everything will be just fine,</i></span></span></div><div style="margin-top: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; text-align: center; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:verdana, helvetica, arial;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:85%;"><i>Everything, everything will be alright.</i></span></span></div><div style="margin-top: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; text-align: center; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:85%;"><i><br /></i></span></div><div style="margin-top: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; text-align: center; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:100%;">There have been moments, countless, in which i've let this depression strangle me until all i can see is what is lacking and what is broken. Instead of finding some emotional super glue, I would assume that what is broken is beyond repair and let myself flounder in self-pity and desperate sadness. Always, I'd cuddle up to this pessimistic world-view: happiness is ever unattainable and you flounder and drown until you find your way to the grave. Every failure was the end of the world. It is easy to live in such a world view because nothing is ever your fault. This and this happened. So and so broke your heart. No one understands you. No one loves you. It is all so tragically poetic to you, and that, at least, is something.</span></div><div style="margin-top: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; text-align: center; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:100%;"><br /></span></div><div style="margin-top: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; text-align: center; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:100%;">I think this might be a lesson everyone learns, or needs to, at some point, even if you are a happy, emotionally stable human being. Because, many times, we let mistakes we make go by unnoticed, ignoring the things we break, perhaps shuffling them under a rug. We let hurt pull us under.</span></div><div style="margin-top: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; text-align: center; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:100%;"><br /></span></div><div style="margin-top: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; text-align: center; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:100%;">You fall. YOU. And you are capable of putting your life back together again. Or your broken heart. Or your slightly damaged GPA. We are all in the middle of some kind of ride, whether it is some terrifying rollercoaster or a merry-go-round. We are in the MIDDLE, nowhere near the end and you have so much time to make use of, so much life to live that slight creaks and groans in the mechanics of it all shouldn't bring you down. There's always WD-40, you know. And, with work, everything can be just fine. But it takes work. You don't, for example, find out your grandfather has died and <b>magically </b>be happy one day somewhere down the road. </span></div><div style="margin-top: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; text-align: center; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:100%;"><br /></span></div><div style="margin-top: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; text-align: center; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:100%;">You have to make yourself better. And there's hard work there. </span></div><div style="margin-top: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; text-align: center; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:100%;"><br /></span></div><div style="margin-top: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; text-align: center; "><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:100%;">SUPERFLUOUS SIDE NOTE: every time i write a post for this blog, i jumble metaphors and allude to vague things that i never mention again. there is much confusion in what i write, but also much confusion in my head most of the time. So, let's just call this mess stream of conscious. Or something... </span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size:100%;"><br /></span></div></span>Deshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07639321478798689849noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1932499604404201555.post-30051162565120858152010-03-02T11:21:00.002-05:002010-03-02T11:39:42.411-05:00Time to put on your try hard pants.It's been quite a crazy start these last 3 months. I've moved out, suspending my employment, and made up for lost time. The weekdays have been spent doing school work, which I've never done before, and the weekends are spent partying. Sacrificing your weekend nights serving really puts a strain on your party life. So I've put some time into catching up on all the things I missed. <br /><br />The apartment is still a naked shell with only shreds of furniture and objects in it. At least I have a coffee table I can put my feet up on, even it that means possibly spilling my water. There are still things that are missing; I would like to get a dinner table so I have a place to throw my junk mail or invite guests over for dinner. Also a nightstand to put a little lamp on and for someplace I can hit my alarm clock off. A bookshelf would be nice but not necessary, but I would like to display all my smarty pants books. I want all this stuff in order to fill up the empty void of space. I want to feel like I'm walking into a "home" and not feeling like a hotel resident. In time things will start to materialize, but I don't think I'll truly be satisfied until I buy my own home and there is a dog running around in the back yard. The future is a scary but exciting thing to think about.<br /><br />Something to munch on for Tuesday's Lunch. Words are part of a balanced diet.<br /><br />If you don't want a full meal, you can always check out my tumblr for little snacks during your day.<br /><br /><a href="http://repptar.tumblr.com/">http://repptar.tumblr.com/</a>Ryan R.http://www.blogger.com/profile/08378623745133269892noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1932499604404201555.post-67417002744217732272010-03-01T00:05:00.010-05:002010-03-01T01:44:17.920-05:00We Want You For Our Second Blog SeriesMarch is going to have a theme. I'm really interested in life lessons. Let's all help each other and learn.<br /><br />Matt had one of his high school yearbooks out yesterday and I realized how long ago high school was for me and for pretty much everyone else I know. I mean, long enough ago that we've all changed probably almost entirely but not so long ago that we can't summarize the highlights and remember the things we've accomplished and information we've processed and experiences we've had.<br /><br />So, I want you to pick one life lesson that sticks out that you've learned since you graduated from high school or a life lesson that you think is the most important thing you've learned since then or a couple lessons that go together that you feel are particularly significant in some way that you picked up since then or anything else that goes along with that type of theme. I'm sure you get the picture. We're just using "since high school" as a somewhat arbitrary measure of time to focus these lessons a bit. This is the spot for all premature quarter-life crises, after all.<br /><br />It's crazy to me to think about how after high school we kind of branch off and do our own things. We separate from the pack more than ever and start our life journeys. Whether you went to college or got a job right away or traveled the world or anything like that, I'm curious to know how it changed you. I want to time capsule this shit because in another 4-8 years, we're going to realize how long ago it was that we were in our early twenties and at that point, I'm going to hunt you all down again and make you reflect once again and then compare. Because in 4-8 years, we'll all be entirely different than we were all over again.<br /><br />Also, with your entry, please include the number of years since you graduated from high school. I'm just curious about that. It's for my own personal self-indulgence. And maybe others will find it interesting as well.<br /><br />Send any contribution or inquiry/comment/concern to bettermakeitfast@gmail.com or contact Ryan and/or I directly. If you have your own blog, we can add you as a blog contributor and you can post under your own account. Also, spread the word. Tell your friends to do it. I'd love to have a variety of entries.Lizziehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17334938313757023018noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1932499604404201555.post-61023568219583186482010-02-28T22:52:00.009-05:002010-03-03T23:16:07.381-05:00I Wish I Could Do Better By You 'Cause It's What You DeserveCan I take all that back? Let's just forget Feburary 13th happened.<br /><br />I came home from New Orleans. I drank a lot to have fun because Pittsburgh didn't seem fun enough on its own. The jobless misery set in again right away and I was bumming. Still depressed as fuck. It was like going away did nothing to ease that like I thought it would. I came home more angsty than ever. I still felt useless.<br /><br />And I was totally ok with how I was acting. I was acting like a petulant child and I knew it and I had no intention of changing. I really had no desire to pull myself out of it. I probably dug myself in even more because I refused to accept the fact that I was back and it was still snowy and I still didn't have a job so then I decided to hate everything else too.<br /><br />So, I kept up with this bitter thing for about a week. 'Til it all clicked in my head and I made one of those lists of all the things to be thankful for and it re-grounded me. Unfortunately, the aftershocks of the damage that I'd wreaked were yet to come...<br /><br />On Friday night, I got PLASTERED in a way I've never been plastered before in my life. Earlier that day, things had changed and I was happy again. I was focused again. I accepted Pittsburgh and my life again. So, it seemed like a night that was fit for celebrating. And I started early and drank almost an entire bottle of vodka by myself and passed out by 10. I mean, I rallied again with the help of some friends and was back downstairs at the party by 1. But there were definitely parts I'm ashamed of. I hate who I am when I'm that drunk. Personally, to me, a lot of my drunk behavior is really kind of unacceptable. Blacking out is never a good idea. So, that night combined with two South Side outings last weekend during which I also said and did things I don't remember basically add up to me feeling like an immature piece of shit. I'm 22. Shouldn't I be over this by now? So, the first aftershock is a personal one. I feel like I've let myself down.<br /><br />The second primary aftershock is the worst because it involved me hurting other people. Especially one of the people I care about the most right now. And we've all experienced that shitty feeling that happens after you've done that. And it makes you not want to do that ever again. If you're depressed or bitter or angry or sad and someone cares about you enough to be close to you and see all that and experience it in tandem, you kind of drag them down with you. Which is the most compelling incentive for not being depressed or bitter or angry or sad that I've ever encountered. Sometimes when you are that way, there's nothing you can do to help it. I know that depression is a real thing. And I'm still bitter and bumming. But hearing these things from someone that I care about makes me want to try 100,000,000 times harder to be better and happier and not focus on the negatives. And motivation is the first step in recovering.<br /><br />And this blog was probably not of any use to anyone but myself, but it felt cathartic and like it brought closure to all that stupid angst that previously came out of my head.<br /><br />But here's the take home lesson which actually may be of use to someone: Focusing on negatives and how you'd rather be anywhere but where you are or in any situation but the one you're in makes where you are seem even worse than it actually is. This can be anything from a physical place to a work environment to a bout of bad luck or anything else. Embrace the good people that are around you. It's been my experience that people can make anything worthwhile. Refusing to recognize all but the bitter aspects of life hurts the people you love the most. They'll help you (to the best of their ability) pull out of it, but 90% of the work has to come from you. You can push people away faster than you think. Ultimately, if you continue on in your depressed and bitter ways, you could lose them. And it will be just one more thing to be depressed and bitter about except then it will have been all YOUR fault. And that's actually really something to be depressed about. Finally, alcohol in excess is never a good idea, whether it be to take the edge off the bitterness or to celebrate that it's gone.<br /><br />It's likely that I will continue to be depressed for some time because that's just the nature of this kind of thing. I'll still cry for no reason. I'll still feel absolutely frustrated and useless. But after dealing with these two different types of consequences, I think I'm ready to refocus and start to pull myself out of it. For the sake of my well-being and the fact that I owe it to the people I love to be happy. Because they're nothing short of wonderful. And there are still SO many lessons to learn. I kind of thought my growing pains were over until now.<br /><br /><span style="font-size:100%;">I hate 22. It's hard.<br /></span><span style="font-size:100%;"><br /><br />"Confront the dark parts of yourself, and work to banish them with illumination and forgiveness. Your willingness to wrestle with your demons will cause your angels to sing. Use the pain as fuel, as a reminder of your strength." - August Wilson</span>Lizziehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17334938313757023018noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1932499604404201555.post-56038582686126868012010-02-13T18:09:00.004-05:002010-03-03T21:32:02.740-05:00Farewell To The City And The Love Of My Life<span style="font-style: italic;">At least we left before we had to go</span><br />- Ryan Adams, New York, New York<br /><br />Wow, two part entry tonight.<br /><br />2 feet of snow will do this to you. Years of missed opportunities will do this to you. Plus, I have to skip sake bombs tonight because I'm broke. But then again, I'm only that broke because I'm going to New Orleans to live wildly with Julia next week and experience Mardi Gras for the first time. So, maybe that's not really a significant factor. But, I mean, bummed out moods make you do crazy things.<br /><br />Moving on the actual point here, I've expanded my employment search. It's now a national search. Fuck you, Pittsburgh. One application to Oregon put in. That way I can get law school connections. Two applications to NYC are pending. That way I can be closer to my sister.<br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">The world won't wait, so I better shake</span><br /><br />I'm not wasting my time in this place. I'm not staying here until something happens for me. It's not that people don't matter, because they do. Experiences don't mean anything unless you can share them with someone. I learned that hardcore when I lived in Chile for a summer. So, if I get a job in Pittsburgh, I'll stay for sure. I don't actually hate it here. It just feels like I do right now. But I'm not limiting myself to staying. Who knows what could happen way out there in other places with other people. I sincerely love the people I know here, but Pittsburgh used to be a new place. Maybe I can fall in love with other people just as much or even more. Sometimes I'm afraid I'll love other places more than I could ever love another person. I wish I could just have both. I usually end up kicking myself in the face with regret with every decision I make which is why I'm hesitant to make them. But the pull to leave is there. And no matter how much regret arises, there is always something so substantially rewarding about a new experience that you can write off the regret as negligible after the memories subside. I really do feel almost absolutely nothing for WNY at this point. As sad as it seems to me right now, maybe I'll feel almost absolutely nothing for Pittsburgh someday.<br /><br /><br />"Loving is not just looking at each other, it's looking in the same direction." -Antoine de Saint-ExuperyLizziehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17334938313757023018noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1932499604404201555.post-1909592925053161542010-02-13T17:18:00.002-05:002010-03-03T21:34:45.174-05:00And The Four Right Chords Can Make Me Cry<span style="font-style: italic;">This is a song about Susan</span><br /><span style="font-style: italic;"> This is a song about the girl next door</span><br /><span style="font-style: italic;"> This is a song about the everyday occurrences that make you feel like letting go</span><br /><span style="font-style: italic;"> Yes, I think we've got a problem</span><br />- Everclear, So Much For The Afterglow<br /><br /><br />These first three are all related. To be concluded in Part 2.<br /><br />1a) I hate winter. I wake up looking like a dead depressed skeleton of a person. It's cold as fuck, my skin lacks the ability to bounce back and look alive, and I have huge dark chronic circles under my eyes which no amount of cover-up could ever fix. And I'm super pale, as per usual. Seeing that face in the mirror every morning just amplifies the seasonal affective disorder or whatever it is that physically or psychologically prevents me from being happy in the winter. And goddamn, the wanderlust is bad.<br /><br />1b) I love my iPod. I emotionally react to music when it's loud. And when American Hi-Fi shuffles up, things get messy. It takes me back to being 15 and then I start feeling immature and then the music gets loud and then I want to ruin boys like I did when I was 17 and 18 and 19 and 20. RUIN THEM. Yeah, this music thing... it gets out of hand. I don't even like American H-Fi. It's music for 12 year olds. Anyway, it's good that I rarely listen to music anymore. Music used to be my thing. I used to be way fucked up too. And I can only imagine that my emotional reaction to the music nicely intensified the situation. But on a more rational and less personal level, how could you not react to <span style="font-style: italic;">Flavor of the Weak</span>? GOD HELP ME if I ever sit around waiting for a boy to want me (we all do this at least once... often more than once). Seriously. I want to get blitzed on Friday night and swing dance on Saturday night and go to the aquarium on Sunday. Girls, go get blitzed, go swing dance on Saturday night, and go to the aquarium on Sunday whether you have a boy or not and whether you want a boy or not. We all relearn this lesson at least once. Often more than once. If you don't take care of your entertainment needs, you'll be unhappy. Take your boy if he wants to go, of course. But if he doesn't, just go do your thing. Not every day of the week, obviously. But enough to make you happy.<br /><br />1c) I'm going to New Orleans for Mardi Gras to spend some time with my best friend Julia and live it up because I'm 22 and that's the best age to say, "Fuck this," and do what you want. So, fuck this, I'm doing what I want.<br /><br /><br />2) Recipe for disaster: skeletal/hollow self + wanderlust + loud music + unemployment + everything is snowballing into "I need something else." All of that (minus the unemployment) is the January-February norm, but this year I'm hoping to get the wanderlust and the SAD and the self-imposed cage all out of my system and go be wild like I am during the summer and how I used to be before other things happened so that maybe I can enjoy the rest of winter. What better place to be wild than in New Orleans with my best friend Julia (who I miss 20,000 moments a day) during MARDI GRAS. Goodbye, savings. You aren't worth the wasted opportunities. Plus, I'm helping out with stuff (here I come cabinets) which is my favorite thing of all time. I'll probably be a gold digging whore in 5-10 years just so I can live off my husbands salary and spend my days volunteering.<br /><br /><br />I LOVE 22. Get me on that Amtrak.Lizziehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17334938313757023018noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1932499604404201555.post-37277557303749336522010-01-23T15:22:00.006-05:002010-01-23T15:51:40.118-05:00I'm With CocoLast night, Conan O'Brian hosted <span style="font-style: italic;">The Tonight Show </span>for the very last time. And while it was hilarious as all his shows always were, he went out honorably. He had nothing but thanks and gratitude for the opportunities he had with NBC. Yes, he <span style="font-style: italic;">thanked</span> them in spite of everything. He's a real respectable guy. Admirable. Kind of like Jesus. He nearly teared up when thanking the fans and he pointed out that he's been able to do things that other people dream of doing. But the point I want to emphasize in this blog is what he said about cynicism which really hit home and so I'm going to share it with all you blog fans because I think it's something that we should really take to heart. I mean, I feel like the most cynical of all people sometimes, but what he said made me want to approach things differently and get back to the way I used to be when I still believed in things every day. He asked this of the fans (as he noted, particularly the young ones). I think we owe it to Conan to follow through, so listen up:<br /><br /><span style="font-size:130%;">"Please do not be cynical. I hate cynicism. For the record, it's my least favorite quality. It doesn't lead anywhere. Nobody in life gets exactly what they thought they were going to get. But if you work really hard and you're kind, amazing things will happen. I'm telling you, amazing things will happen."</span><br /><br />If you go to the episode on Hulu or something and watch him say this, it's quite motivating. He particularly emphasized the kind part. Be kind and work hard and don't be cynical. Amen. He actually is Jesus. Do it, yo.<br /><br />Conan got canned by NBC. Now that it's all over, the "I'm With Coco" movement has no point. There's nothing we can do. As an alternative, let's give another meaning to the movement by being kind and working hard and not being cynical. I'm still with Coco. Do what he told us to do because it's goddamn good advice.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh6VvjaIMixcHV8wiMCtMjXSVHWvKy8wO14D2J021oUusrvtOQxNK9zh1L5zGOay3HhhsNo06GBcww3fMht_7W09us8xZwadUv9faORXQCLriSjz19p1gjHx4ITflKG5lIH5egCQdHIYWg/s1600-h/conan03.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 258px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh6VvjaIMixcHV8wiMCtMjXSVHWvKy8wO14D2J021oUusrvtOQxNK9zh1L5zGOay3HhhsNo06GBcww3fMht_7W09us8xZwadUv9faORXQCLriSjz19p1gjHx4ITflKG5lIH5egCQdHIYWg/s400/conan03.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5430040370301305042" border="0" /></a>Lizziehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17334938313757023018noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1932499604404201555.post-78100359107139050312010-01-18T03:41:00.010-05:002010-01-18T16:07:15.014-05:00You're An Asshole And Everyone Else Is A Secret Super Sleuth<span class="body">"The truth does not change according to our ability to stomach it.</span>" - Flannery O'Connor<br /><br /><br />After painfully trudging through <span style="font-style: italic;">Wise Blood</span> in 12th grade AP English, I cannot give Flannery O'Connor a second chance. Yes, the dissatisfaction lingers and it's just as acute as it was 5 years ago. However, just like everyone and everything else, I'll probably take that "never again" thing back and read <span style="font-style: italic;">Everything That Rises Must Converge.</span> At the expense of my own suffering, of course. Regardless of how much I loathe her writing, that quote up there is definitely one that I live by.<br /><br />Nevertheless, this blog is not about her. It's about truth. Not necessarily truth in the "having to deal with the realities of actuality" sense as the quote would suggest, but more so (for the majority of this blog) in the Nathaniel Hawthorne sense that your secrets will EAT YOU ALIVE at some point. Unless you have a pathological condition in which you feel no remorse. Read up on antisocial personality disorder to understand how that's cognitively possible. I guess O'Connor kind of covers the "reconciling with your conscience" thing too, but doesn't she beat you over the head with it like Hawthorne does. I really hate both of them so I'm not sure why they're at the top of my thoughts right now to the extent that I feel like using them set up what I'm about to say here. Let's just stop that nonsense and get to the point.<br /><br />I believe in truth and honesty and openness more than almost anything when it comes to the people that I love. I mean, if you're a random and insignificant part of my life, then fuck you, yeah, I'm gonna lie. If it's advantageous to me to conceal the truth and you're nobody to me then I'm gonna lie in a fantastically convincing way because I don't actually care about you so that sinking feeling of hurting you or getting caught by you won't be relevant.<br /><br />And even when it comes to my loved ones, I probably tell the truth for all the wrong reasons. It's a survival thing. It's an ego thing. It's getting what you want at the expense of absolutely everybody else thing. As much as we think we're in this for each other, we're really in this for ourselves. We do things because they make us feel good. End of story. But that doesn't nullify the fact that we have real connections with people and that there are some people we care about getting caught by more than others because we care about them more than the others. Basically, we care about ourselves number one, but we care about other people at varying levels and it's easier to lie to those we don't care about.<br /><br />Do I really honestly truly believe that I tell the truth because I think people deserve it or because if we all told the truth the world would be a better place? No, probably not. This is probably just a superego cover-up for the subconscious truth that I just don't want to get caught. Because it is my understanding (based on experience) that if you lie about something big enough that you actually dread the moment when you will get caught, then you will most likely get caught at some point or another. This is sometimes referred to as the instant when "the shit hits the fan." And the longer you go without getting caught, the worse it is in the end. Lie about something for a day, whatever. But lie about something for a month or half a year or a year or 10 years and you're in "failed relationship" territory with the person that you lied to.<br /><br />And even if by some seemingly fortunate twist of fate, you DON'T get caught (even though you probably will), the fact that you live constantly under some degree of pressure in terms of dealing with trying to avoid getting caught is even more of a punishment than being exposed may be. As Hawthorne (hate you) seems to indicate, coming clean is actually LESS painful than living with your "secret sin," if you will. It will build and you'll feel more pressure every time you're confronted by it. If that confrontation is frequent, you're gonna end up throwing in the towel for sure. And if there are any other people that know your secret, you also have to factor into the equation their potential behavior and as a result, you're just pretty fucking screwed. All of a sudden your dealing with a huge mindfuck.<br /><br />Let's take cheating as an extreme example here (in pseudo-thought experiment form) to illustrate some of these vague and unsupported ideas. Person A and Person B here can represent a slew of non-cheating situations also in the sense that the decision to lie is basically made as a result of being presented with a set of incongruent choices that can't coexist. Cheating is just a clear situation that almost everyone understands so I'm running with it.<br /><br />So, you're with Person A and you enjoy their company. But there's also this Person B who is appealing to you in some way as well. You don't want to lose Person A for what you have with them but Person B is just too compelling of an option to ignore. You care about both Person A and Person B so you decide you can have your cake and eat it too. You live for awhile seeming to enjoy the fact that you have them both. But there are, of course, costs. Nothing is free. If you get caught, you lose one or both of them. So, you try to avoid getting caught as much as possible which is also a cost because it can be taxing. You have the stress of covering your bases, being more secretive than usual, arranging times to be with both Person A and Person B at different times, accounting for their erratic behavior (say one decides to surprise you with dinner or something one day while the other one is over), et cetera. Even though you may learn to manage the situation on some level as most people do with almost all long-term stressors, the fact is that it could become a burden. Close calls, having to think fast in certain situations, et cetera. All of a sudden, are you really having your cake and eating it too? And in that moment that you get caught and lose part or all of what you wanted anyway, was it really worth it?<br /><br />Moral of the story (because I don't feel like rambling on about this anymore or trying to explain things any more clearly) is that you PROBABLY WILL get caught if your lie is significant enough. And this will TOTALLY SUCK when your loved one or friend or whoever that you care about finds out that you lied to them. You might lose them. If nothing else, it's gonna hurt you to hurt them. And even if you don't get caught, you're still going to have to pay some costs. I guess, you just have to figure out if the sacrifice of lying outweighs the reward.<br /><br />Maybe this doesn't apply to everyone or even anyone. Maybe I'm just way too goddamn truthful. But to me personally, living with guilt is one of the worst states to be in and it usually never even pays off because THE TRUTH ALWAYS COMES OUT and it sucks because you're no longer getting what you want (what the lying was trying to achieve) and you've lost a lot in the process.<br /><br />In terms of the secrets about people that I know, most, if not all, of them emerge and the truth is exposed. And you never think it's going to happen, but it does. Just be straight. Seriously.<br /><br />Keep in mind that the truth doesn't always change according to our ability to stomach it and that it sucks to both give it and receive it a lot of the time. But as I said before, the longer the lie goes on, the more painful and difficult it is to reveal. The truth hurts. But goddammit, being lied to hurts even more. Ignorance is bliss until you know the truth. Then it's like finding out the truth magnified by 10 or 100 or 1,000.<br /><br />We're not compelled to tell the truth because we think people deserve it. We're compelled to tell the truth because we don't want to end up getting caught in our lie because we understand that having to come to terms with the truth is an unavoidable and unfavorable fate.Lizziehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17334938313757023018noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1932499604404201555.post-32718497524660631982010-01-04T15:45:00.006-05:002010-01-12T16:43:53.152-05:00(732): i find it simply astounding you spelled drunken wrong but pterodactyl rightMore experiences in post-grad life.<br /><br />1) On the subject of choosing coffee table books for our new 30x50 coffee table that we bought from IKEA for $40...<br />Liz: Can I put these (<span style="FONT-STYLE: italic">Oh! The Places You'll Go!</span> and <span style="FONT-STYLE: italic">Where The Wild Things Are</span>)<span style="FONT-STYLE: italic"> </span>here?<br />Ryan: *sigh* I guess.<br /><br />Clearly, I'm not really an adult yet. But these books are visually pleasing and communicate perspicacious and motivating life lessons. AND they're beloved classics so who wouldn't be excited to flip through one again! I hope that people come over and find inspiration for their lives from these. I also put my Calvin and Hobbes books there to smack our guests with wit and profundity. Ryan has sophisticated items for the coffee table book pile, like street art collections.<br /><br />2) On the subject of flavor and nutrition...<br />Today's lunch: Ro*Tel canned tomatoes on my pasta for lunch because they were a charitable contribution from my mom and real pasta sauce costs money.<br /><br />3) On the subject of daytime TV....<br />C-SPAN is currently showing a British House of Commons session from 1989 and I'm watching it because I already completed my required hours at the old part-time job for the day. Apparently, I don't understand British people at all. And Margaret Thatcher kind of depresses me. C-SPAN has never made me feel so despondent before. But it's better than watching Passions.Lizziehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17334938313757023018noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1932499604404201555.post-63400919120250314452010-01-02T10:00:00.001-05:002010-01-02T15:04:26.773-05:00Turn the page....I've officially moved on to the next chapter of the book called "My Life" and took the leap out of the nest. I'll now be writing in PQLC headquarters alongside co-author Liz "Fuc*ur gate". The lead up to the move was long but the journey short. The emotions I felt throughout were wild and free. Let me give you and analogy that sums it all up.<br /><br /><blockquote>It was like going from your hotel down to the beach. You pack all your gear, snacks, and beverages and then gather the troops for the short march. You're excited as hell because living in arctic conditions for 3-4 months is bull and all you want to do is swim and play Godzilla. So you find the perfect spot to set up base camp and then take off towards the water. Before your toes touch the water you hear your mother's voice calling you back ordering you to lather on the sunscreen. "You wouldn't want to get burned now would you? And don't forget your ears." And then comes the talk about water safety. "If you're ever in a rip current swim parallel of the beach...blah blah blaaaah. Before she can finish you've already taken off towards the water, running and eventually tripping into to surf. Glorious! The sharks, rip tides and occasional dunking are in the back of your mind but you're too busy enjoying the waves. You finally walk out of the surf rubbing water from your eyes and with a faint taste of salt. Exhausted but happy at the same time.<br /></blockquote><br /><br />This pretty much sums up moving out for me. I'm still really nervous about doing the things that were done for me and having to do them myself. Things such as cooking, cleaning, shopping, and laundry. What I'm most nervous about is transitioning into my new job. I hope the people are as cool as my last one and that taking the bus isn't as strenuous as I think it will be. I may be out of the nest but I feel like my wings are clipped because of the lack of a vehicle. We'll see though. I'm excited for the future and see great things this year and I can't wait to go swimming!<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEguGp_uRsS96I3jCETmixHZQCVHipktpaXQgYkV-X-BdNJ2w2QQ840E_MmwjkvsnF-P-fvgmMcwHx27geg1ro1DgVbX481byTazsmR5o7VEBNb0l7J_hqR-mZR_P7g20ROmftwBlHkXmC4/s1600-h/39067069_6594324371_o.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 334px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEguGp_uRsS96I3jCETmixHZQCVHipktpaXQgYkV-X-BdNJ2w2QQ840E_MmwjkvsnF-P-fvgmMcwHx27geg1ro1DgVbX481byTazsmR5o7VEBNb0l7J_hqR-mZR_P7g20ROmftwBlHkXmC4/s400/39067069_6594324371_o.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5421984840417828610" border="0" /></a><br /><br />Until next time...Ryan R.http://www.blogger.com/profile/08378623745133269892noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1932499604404201555.post-65353245772424988952009-12-28T15:34:00.001-05:002009-12-28T15:36:39.419-05:00And On Earth, Peace. Goodwill Toward Men"St. Jude’s Ranch for Children serves all abused, abandoned and neglected children and families, creating new chances, new choices and new hope in a safe, homelike environment." (<a href="http://www.stjudesranch.org/about_overview.php" target="_blank" rel="nofollow" onmousedown="'UntrustedLink.bootstrap($(this),"><span>http://www.stjudesranch.or</span><wbr><span class="word_break"></span>g/about_overview.php</a>)<br /><br />Which is why my 2009 holiday mission is to get as many people as possible to donate their holiday cards to St. Jude's. All the info is here: <a href="http://www.stjudesranch.org/help_card.php" target="_blank" rel="nofollow" onmousedown="'UntrustedLink.bootstrap($(this),"><span>http://www.stjudesranch.or</span><wbr><span class="word_break"></span>g/help_card.php</a><br /><br />As they point out, donating your cards serves two primary purposes:<br />1) It helps the kids<br />2) It helps the earth<br /><br />So, please consider participating this year or making it a new holiday tradition! If you don't want to take the time to gather them and send them you can:<br />1) Get your mom or dad or grandma or grandpa or crafty aunt or easily coerced sibling or anyone else to do it<br />2) Give them to me and I'll send them out with mine. In fact, the less materials we use by combining shipments the better<br /><br />They sell cards for other occasions and thank you notes and that kind of thing also (check the site for specifics) so if you have any of those laying around, send them along as well.<br /><br />The deadline is february 28, 2010.<br /><br />Even if you don't personally want to do it, consider mentioning this to someone else in passing. :)Lizziehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17334938313757023018noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1932499604404201555.post-38998292989467664942009-12-21T01:34:00.017-05:002009-12-29T01:46:38.803-05:00Watching Cops at 2AM: My First Experiences In Post-Grad Living<span style="font-style: italic;">Bad boys, bad boys. </span><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">Whatcha gonna do?</span><br /><br /><br />I'm not handling the prospect of not working very well at all. It's an aspect of the Premature Quarter-Life Crisis that I haven't experienced until now. Which is why I've naively formed this defense mechanism mentality of "Yes, I'm going to get a job right away because I want it more than anyone else and I'm a hard-worker and powerful, independent woman who was born to have a successful career." The power of positive thinking? No, probably just filthy lies to myself which won't get me anywhere. I know how to do things. I don't know how to sit around.<br /><br />Remix!<br /><br />I love that I don't know what's going to happen. I love that I have nothing holding me back. I love that I'm going to have a job which will allow me to save for traveling to all the places I've wanted to go. Maybe not all. I'm not being foolishly optimistic here. But if I can take my two weeks of vacation and head to Peru for awhile, I'm there. I might not see the whole world like I've always dreamed of, but hey, I might make it to Cambodia at some point. Do what you can. Don't let the fact that you can't do it all hold you back from doing what you can. This is my ultimate mental obstacle. If a task seems too huge to take on and complete to perfection, I'm resistant to doing it. Sometimes you just have to dig in and get out what you can. No waiting 'til you have a million dollars and three years to see the whole world. Three new countries with whatever limited vacation time I have is just fine with me. And if I somehow get to see more, we'll consider that bonus.<br /><br />I love that I still think it's possible for me to do anything. I love that if I find out that I hate what I do, I can do something else. I love that I've learned invaluable lessons from the jobs that I've had even though my work experience looks kind of limited and crappy on paper. I love that I'm willing to do anything and see where I end up. Maybe there's something out there that I love more than how much I love the prospect of policy research. I can't think of one field that I haven't been interested at one point or another so we'll see how many of those areas I end up working in.<br /><br />I love that I have time to power through books during this interim period. Sometimes I wish I could live forever just so I could read through the whole library. Skipping the romance section, of course. And probably most of the Sci-Fi section. I have my own real-life romance going on and my own real-life sci-fi imagination.<br /><br />I love that we're all so young and it's tough sometimes because of that. Most of us are struggling to make a reliable living. Maybe the economy's getting better and maybe it isn't. But these are lessons we'll learn that will make us appreciate the times when we're living comfortably. And this will be the baseline for the rest of our lives. I love that even though we don't have money, we still find ways to have a good time and head out on Friday and Saturday night to wherever life may take us. I appreciate those times we have so much more because we work so hard to make sure they happen. Not having what you want and even not what ou need sometimes makes you even more grateful for the surprises. People help you out. We're all still alive (Well, most of us. I'll take those odds). I can think of 10 people right away who've overcome some incredible disadvantages and I can think of 10 people right away who are currently overcoming some incredible disadvantages.<br /><br />Last Christmas, Nonnie asked us all to go around and say what the best Christmas gift we ever got was. None of us could come up with anything. We had always gotten more or less what we wanted. If we didn't get everything we wanted, it never really mattered for very long because we never really wanted it that badly. We'd all been relatively spoiled. Nonnie proceeded to tell us the story of her all-time favorite Christmas present. She was relatively little and it was during the Great Depression. Her family, just like all the other families, didn't have much money and it was kind of understood that there would be no presents that year. However, for some reason, her aunt (I think it was her aunt. This part of the story is kind of vague) was able to buy presents for Nonnie and the siblings. That Christmas, she got a Shirley Temple doll and a doll baby carriage. Shirley Temple was her favorite then and probably still is on some level. Hearing Nonnie talk about how she didn't expect to get anything and understanding that it just wasn't possible but then being surprised with her most favorite thing of all was absolutely flooring to me. I realized that never in my life had I appreciated anything like that. Everything was insignificant to me.<br /><br />Ok, wow. Regroup. I have no idea how I ended up at that. This was a very unplanned ramble blog. Well, it's a good story anyway so I'll keep it. And only proceed to say that I'm in love with this not-knowing thing. We'll see if my failure to find a job beats me down to reality. But until then, cheers to full-time employment and being 22 years old and finally a real person. For the first time, I'm not aching to be 17 again. 17 was so insignificant. 22 is where it's at. When I'm too old to have the energy to work full-time and have fun full-time, then we'll reassess. But for now, let's live it up.<br /><br />PS - Ryan and I live together now. I'll coerce him to blog by threatening to eat his food and things of that nature.<br /><br />PPS - Upon rethinking this and trying to connect the dots, I guess the Nonnie story was supposed to illustrate that things in our lives will be significant and we'll have histories and memories and experiences because nothing means anything if you always have everything that you want. I can't explain it in words. I hope you get what I mean. Not just financially. It applies to all things. For example, even though it feels like people have dropped like flies in terms of dying and leaving and that sort of thing in the last five years, I've come to appreciate every single person and moment that I still have. And in the struggle of trying to push people out and away to avoid the hurt, I've learned how good people are and how deep you can go with them in the most unforeseen ways. You can either obsess over what you don't have or you can kick yourself out of the pity party and focus on what you do have. And that way, you'll be ready to appreciate the surprises and treasure them. It's hard. I know. I'm guilty of all the pity-parties we fall into. The more you force yourself to kick them, the easier it becomes. I promise. So that I don't sound condescending and like I have it all figured out, here's a disclaimer: I suck at life just as much as everyone else. I hope that somehow I'm getting better and less bitter. Thank you all for making me want to try harder to be better.<br /><br />PPPS - I love that I've moved out of the 233 house and away from people who haven't learned how to be adults yet. I'm not talking about the termination of painting stupid pictures and frolicking in parks. That's stuff for all ages. Basically, 24 year olds just shouldn't have temper tantrums. I think that's something we can all get behind.<br /><br />PPPPS - Happy Holidays. Coming soon: Recycling your holiday cards to help some kids and help the earth.<br /><br /><br />Good Lord, what just happened?Lizziehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17334938313757023018noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1932499604404201555.post-14032674001416317552009-11-03T11:19:00.008-05:002009-11-03T11:57:59.884-05:00All The Words Are Gonna Bleed From Me And I Will Think No More"Mishaps are like knives, that either serve us or cut us, as we grasp them by the blade or the handle." - James Russell Lowell<br /><br /><br />This is a positive little upper about blessings which rise from the ashes of what you had once fancied to be misfortunes.<br /><br />Today I realized that there is absolutely no way I can get a 4.0 during this final semester of my life.<br /><br />Back story: Why did I think I needed a 4.0?<br />- To prove to myself that I could work and get a 4.0 at the same time because apparently I'm not good enough for myself just the way I am<br />- To graduate with a 3.5 and be able to put Magna Cum Laude on my resume because I am absolutely TERRIFIED of not being able to find a job immediately after graduation<br /><br />Back story: The rationality which I ignored.<br />- What a stupid low self-esteemed capricious goal which is susceptible to external factors of all sorts<br />- I'll get a job and Magna Cum Laude isn't that big of a deal. And even if I don't get a job and Magna Cum Laude actually is that big of a deal, I'm sure I can count that "misfortune" as a blessing also. Because then I'll grow some balls and leave the U.S. for a bit and flee to South America because there will have ceased to be anything "practical" to hold me back which I might have foolishly considered to be tempting.<br /><br />Now I can't get a 4.0. So, I can stop killing myself for it. I can sleep, I can relax, I can half-ass everything and be content with Bs and maybe even a C or two.<br /><br />I'm in love. I want to devote time to enjoying that.<br />I self-educate. I want to devote time to developing my understanding.<br />I have other things to deal with. I want to devote time to fixing them.<br /><br />The blessing is that now I can do absolutely all of that.<br /><br />Grades are just numbers. Paychecks are just numbers. It seems so simple to understand, but so difficult to accept.<br /><br />And now that the unfortunate circumstances of having an awful professor has bestowed upon me this forced reality check, I can stop, reflect, appreciate, and move forward in the way that I should have been moving forward anyway.<br /><br />Sometimes it's better when your tunnel caves in before you reach the light at the end of it because then you can dig yourself out of the rubble and stand on the top of that fucking tunnel rubble/rubbled tunnel and feel like you've conquered something more than just getting to the end.<br /><br />What a stupid metaphor elaboration that was. I floor myself everyday.<br /><br />Well, continuing to the end, I'm not going to tell you to always find the positive things when everything looks bleak and I'm not saying that this is going to be my mentality for everything from now on and maybe this entire appreciation is really just a defense mechanism for dealing with the fact that I have failed at my goal. However, if these kinds of feelings do happen upon you and all of a sudden you feel good instead of bad, embrace that. It doesn't matter why or for how long. The comprehensive point here is that there's absolutely nothing wrong with feeling awesome every once in awhile.Lizziehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17334938313757023018noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1932499604404201555.post-42331566409625866462009-10-29T22:49:00.008-04:002009-11-03T11:21:14.875-05:00How To Become Number One In A Hot Party ShowRyan Repp is a good best friend to have because you can text him about pee and he doesn't mind.<br /><br /><br />For lack of time and topic, here's a quick little post about how we came up with our beloved URL.<br /><br />Ryan and I were sitting around in the library trying to come up with something intriguing. Hipsters will talk all day about how they don't try. It's a lie. Everyone tries. Everyone tries very hard. Well, we tried for 10 minutes. But it was 10 minutes of very hard trying. (We're not hipsters by the way. I was just calling them out because they think they're the personification of awesome and that irritates me.)<br /><br />"Push It" by Salt-n-Pepa is a motherfucking classic. Ed and Ashley disagree and considering that I respect their opinions way more than most people's, perhaps I should listen. I want to believe them, but I just can't. I love it way too much. But all tangents aside... on that day that Ryan and I were giving birth to this humble creative outlet, I just happened to be obsessed with it. And the lines<br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">Yeah, you come here, gimme a kiss</span><br /><span style="font-style: italic;"> Better make it fast or else I'm gonna get pissed</span><br /><br />were ringing through my brain. "BetterMakeItFast" just seemed to fit with our vision (or at least that's how I fallaciously justified it because we don't really actually have a vision) and after testing several other options so as not to make a rash desision, we selected the best one. I told you, we really only tried for 10 minutes. It seemed unnecessary to waste more time than that on something as stupid as a URL.<br /><br />We could have made it http://www.prematurequarterlifecrisis.blogspot.com but we didn't. I'm not sure why. We just didn't. Probably because it sounds lame as hell so I'm happy we didn't. I wish I could say that it was some planned and intentional thing, but it wasn't. What's more PQLC than not having a plan and coming up with something quick to fill the void?<br /><br /><br />I wish I could embed the video here but the people who run Universal Music Group are assholes and don't allow it. The only thing I can offer is the link: <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0se4PpfOP7o">Push It (1988) - Salt-n-Pepa</a>Lizziehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17334938313757023018noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1932499604404201555.post-33018500019187122242009-09-14T21:18:00.002-04:002009-09-14T21:24:17.307-04:00Urban FarmingSummer, throughout the history of civilization, has meant growth - at least, in the climates in which the word "Summer" can be said to apply at all. I'm not talking growth like the mantra of corporate culture - gross! I'm talking plants, yo.<br /><br />Are you aware you can grow your own shit to eat? A shocking number of people aren't. It comes from the supermarket, and that's about as far as it goes. For how few nowadays eat meals for which they personally oversaw the cutting and cooking of the constituent fruits and vegetables, fewer still know what kind of a plant a pepper grows on, how to harvest a potato, or how to recognize delicious wild mint (I almost guarantee there's mint growing within a block of your house/apartment).<br /><br />But how can we fix this, being the city slickers we are? Do we give up? People elsewhere in the world did not. Look at any high-rise in Spain, for instance. It's spotted with green fluff so perfectly, one almost wonders if it was designed that way. No, it's not part of the "green building" movement. Spaniards who had to make do with their limited space and take to vertical living simply refused to let that spoil their historical penchant for growing their own damn food. The lesson? Even if you live in an apartment, you can grow stuff to eat. Hell, even if you don't have a patio, there are still options (I hope you have a window).<br /><br />The backyard of my beautiful Past-Boulevard home of 2 years is all brick. For this I hate the owner or whomever made that decision. The house down the street even has an all-concrete front yard, for "ease of maintainance" I'm sure. Eyesore yes, but also an egregious waste of land. So how did we get 15 pepper plants, a tomato, and 5 herbs growing outside? Built a planter out of wood. Found a discarded pot. Asked a bakery for its empty food-grade buckets. Saved and cut up our plastic liquor bottles. <span style="font-weight: bold;">All you need is some containers. Got them? Good.</span><br />Next, <span style="font-weight: bold;">get some holes in the bottom of that shit.</span> If it's a pot, it should already have some. Home-build planters should be built with a little gap at the bottom. Otherwise, <span style="font-style: italic;">drill baby drill.</span><br /><br /><ul><li><span style="font-weight: bold;">Put about an inch of gravel at the bottom.</span> This helps it drain properly without clogging. You don't want a clogged planter.</li><li>Go to the nursery on Swineburne Street in South Oakland. Yes, we have a NURSERY (just like your parents used to drag you to) within walking distance. Fuck home depot. <span style="font-weight: bold;">Get some potting soil</span>, or find a recipe for it online and make your own using regular soil (which is cheaper or free). <span style="font-weight: bold;">You'll also want compost</span>, of which they have good stuff there. Bonus: I've started a worm composting bin in my basement recently, so I should have a ton of extra worm poop (the best fertilizer ever) by next season. Ask me!</li><li>Finally, you'll likely want some plants. I love doing peppers, but that's because I use an absurd amount of them in cooking. Them, tomatos, zucchini, broccoli, cucumbers, whatever. Don't get your hopes up about fruit, as most of it needs trees, but berries (though their bushes can take some time to cultivate) can be great in a small space - even indoors! Salads can be grown indoors, so save your outdoor space for the really outdoor plants like peps and maters.</li><li>Herbs are very forgiving. Grow them wherever the hell you want in whatever the hell you want.</li><li>Are you growing stuff indoors, or even out for that matter? <span style="font-weight: bold;">Build a self-watering container.</span> They're not hard, they're super healthy for the plant (draw its roots nice and deep), and you only have to put water in them like once a week. Just google it; there are recipes everywhere.</li></ul><br />Do you actually have a yard, and are wondering why I'm spending all this time talking about container gardening? You lucky bastard. Mulch that shit and plant, plant, plant. You have no idea how much food you can squeeze out of a little space. Pick your favourite veggies and read up on them. Grow a <a href="http://www.kiddiegardens.com/bean_teepee.html">bean teepee</a>. Stick carrots and radishes in every little between-plants spot you can find. <span style="font-weight: bold;">If it's a grassed lawn, tear it up.</span> How often do you use that lawn, honestly? How often would you, instead, eat some food from it? If it's bad soil or filled with "weeds," just stamp them down and cover them with a hearty, overlapping layer of cardboard or cotton sheets or something that will decompose. If you're going to put in rabbit or worm poop, do it under this cardboard. Then, put regular mulchy stuff (shredded pine or whatever) overtop of that. You can plant in this by poking X-shapes with a trowel.<br /><br />Other fun ways to better understand what you eat and drink:<br /><ul><li>Brewing your own beer (been doing this for years now and never had a bad batch, not even my first)</li><li>Incubating your own yogurt (a self-sustaining endeavour: milk + yogurt = more yogurt!)</li><li>Making your own jam and pickles, and other types of preserving</li><li>Baking your own (basic) bread - you may never buy bread again</li><li>Cheese!</li></ul><br /><br />Why should we want to do any of this stuff? All of this stuff is great practice for the apocalypse, when you'll have to do it for real. Why do you think I got so into it? Besides that, it really puts you in touch with nature, with your own body (through what you eat), and helps you to better understand the world around you.<br />In most cases, these things also save you money. Even if the potting soil seems really expensive at first, just stick with it (it should never need to be replaced - just put some worm or rabbit poop on it each season). Same goes for any other capital costs. Finally, you get to stick it to the sick, terrible American food industry by not buying their stuff. A great resource for why you should care about that bit is Michael Pollan's book <span style="font-style: italic;">The Omnivore's Dilemma</span>. Highly recommend it.<br /><br />Speaking of books, a great idea book for folks who want to do this kind of stuff in an urban environment is <span style="font-style: italic;">The Urban Homestead</span> by Kelly Coyne and Erik Knutzen. It's got some step-by-step guides, but it's strongest trait is its wealth of fantastic ideas - great for the urbanite who wants to grow her own food but doesn't think it's possible without two acres of land.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">I hope that after reading this post, you feel you are out of excuses.</span> I hope I have motivated you to at least give this a whack. I earnestly think that everyone, somewhere inside, has some urge to bring about their own food. This feeling is often, I feel, misinterpreted into the "bringing food to the table" idea. Though being able to earn money to feed yourself and your family is certainly not without merit, it's time to <span style="font-style: italic;">really</span> bring some food to the table.Billyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15382463539587875876noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1932499604404201555.post-88303125405626900492009-09-02T12:17:00.000-04:002009-09-02T12:18:18.626-04:00I Fucking Hate SummerSteph's blog is up!<br /> <br /><br /> For some people, ok well most people, summer is all about the outdoors, sports and general recreation! Yeah cool! For you!<br /> For other part albinos, like me, summer is literally hell. Heat waves, bikinis, and unfortunate sweat stains make it all but impossible for us to enjoy the summer! So here's what I do and what I'm telling my other summer-haters to do:<br /> Step 1. Become a Vampire. I don't mean that literally, you twi-tards. What I mean is stay inside and sleep during the day. Unless you want to self-combust (or sparkle according to the literary genius of Stephanie Meyers) wait until the sun is setting to venture outside. That's when the summer heat is perfect, everything's cooling down and all the parties are about to start. Plus this means no weird tan lines or bubbling "The Fly"-like skin! Be warned, you do stick out at aforementioned parties more often than not since you basically become fluorescent in contrast with all the orange surrounding you.<br /> Step 2. Get thee to an interneterry! I'm serious about this one (despite the Hamlet reference) because you can experience all the fun of summer virtually! Play "Lemonade Stand" online or watch viral videos of human walruses flopping around a Slip-n-Slide! Read about how many ways you can die from too much heat and rejoice in your reclusiveness! Better yet, Skype with your friends who are too far away to hang out! That way you have a semi-legit reason to hold off going out with your friends to that awesome outdoor concert at high noon, because you have some catching up to do with your buddy. (Really it's the a/c but they don't need to know that)<br /> Step 3. Discover the joys of Comcast OnDemand. Listen. There is a reason you live in a city where almost all of your friends have OnDemand. It's because it's fucking sweet. All your favorite shows come on at night when you're out socializing but OnDemand is there for you making sure that while you hide in your 64 degree room to nurse your killer hangover you can get up to speed with some of the best summer shows, like "Rescue Me", "Psych", "Being Human" or my favorite, "Mad Men". This way you can stay up-to-date with your shows and have something to fill the void that is daytime.<br /> So I guess what I'm trying to do here is say it's ok to hate the summer, it's ok to be a hermit crab because for some of us the summer just isn't our thing and honestly it's better if you don't try to drag us outside with you to, I don't know, live or something. People like me look, feel and act better in the fall where the weather is warm but because of the crisp, bitter wind it always feels like room temp. Autumn, where you can still wear summer dresses and get away with scarf accessories and not be considered a hipster!<br />(WARNING: TANGENT) Now, I know some of you summer-lovers are dreading September the way junkies dread detox but Steph Shamp is here to end this submission on a happy note. My happy note is this: Halloween. H-A-double L-O-W-double E-N spells Halloween bitches! This holiday, at least, should leave you appreciating the "great frosting" ("Thumbelina" reference, anyone?) as much as us summer haters do.Lizziehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17334938313757023018noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1932499604404201555.post-57352611772571976672009-08-26T09:12:00.011-04:002009-08-28T15:33:28.920-04:00You Couldn't Give Me Enough Cash For This Clunker<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg2AMkchcpQCEEZgRF_WFU5wRIuM6FdeLIt863ji4JjwzOa0wtEBCRLvEtl8c8oiUKRzgNVZ9bwbu_dqjUveZvpPSvIewgEkdQtwCw5uaVqzOaKsG9q4Ka3uFUYZIUZ8Km7exhZGRguAmc/s1600-h/0724091836.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 10px 10px 0pt; float: left; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg2AMkchcpQCEEZgRF_WFU5wRIuM6FdeLIt863ji4JjwzOa0wtEBCRLvEtl8c8oiUKRzgNVZ9bwbu_dqjUveZvpPSvIewgEkdQtwCw5uaVqzOaKsG9q4Ka3uFUYZIUZ8Km7exhZGRguAmc/s400/0724091836.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5374263152022553346" border="0" /></a><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />Mike's submission is series of photos he took of his Cadillac this summer! Absolutely beautiful.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi9ad9DNcIcwnDMQNTRMPO2rPj13sdA99ZsWVdPXQmSnEAdMDi_4HKgKfyNnlAKQkQBLs95eucOaxqpRJVrHr_XrJRbBd65EhwqMjdZ5RwJsa12yesWlscQVW2zpWrX8cY960e6KxvpJ-k/s1600-h/0724091837.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi9ad9DNcIcwnDMQNTRMPO2rPj13sdA99ZsWVdPXQmSnEAdMDi_4HKgKfyNnlAKQkQBLs95eucOaxqpRJVrHr_XrJRbBd65EhwqMjdZ5RwJsa12yesWlscQVW2zpWrX8cY960e6KxvpJ-k/s400/0724091837.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5374262598659320898" border="0" /></a><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgaD0H1I8rQSSGDlC_Gd24ORHrPpDN6yYUn1bEMd2Y_fTjnuvXU68X4xRUcu8DbZ4dZ5SI4cR6JCPPeH0EtVLHYCX0qQzIXDtRCONEFUjNTsrQ3PA_UX0r5-Yc9S6K8K2jrDTMOz1oQmIw/s1600-h/fin.JPG"><img style="margin: 0pt 10px 10px 0pt; float: left; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgaD0H1I8rQSSGDlC_Gd24ORHrPpDN6yYUn1bEMd2Y_fTjnuvXU68X4xRUcu8DbZ4dZ5SI4cR6JCPPeH0EtVLHYCX0qQzIXDtRCONEFUjNTsrQ3PA_UX0r5-Yc9S6K8K2jrDTMOz1oQmIw/s400/fin.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5374262455028887442" border="0" /></a><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgkHnmdzibTNkQhhBpcY8VrN9Q13E958yojHEFAC8OBSwQBL_MmP99WsPBL2IpGO-iqP3gxYmsxBBTlgy8_cNjCYcgA3DwAfSLfhQv197M8pUQD1DimYLANQLqq_ce96LxQM1jRKsapKEk/s1600-h/from+behind.JPG"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgkHnmdzibTNkQhhBpcY8VrN9Q13E958yojHEFAC8OBSwQBL_MmP99WsPBL2IpGO-iqP3gxYmsxBBTlgy8_cNjCYcgA3DwAfSLfhQv197M8pUQD1DimYLANQLqq_ce96LxQM1jRKsapKEk/s400/from+behind.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5374262111095167122" border="0" /></a><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhgk5vfoJxsze7TwVCYwA32OLg8wfQ75wyEKJJVqpO08LbTVojGEE9Iba73W4aRSg6kMO62JRqQAlTxvxMjsjpX0VajDuUXg9FcdgIatTtq1LiXOfAdfvWvDplhZKxyRpv4kc0APlpxFb8/s1600-h/headlightECU.JPG"><img style="margin: 0pt 10px 10px 0pt; float: left; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhgk5vfoJxsze7TwVCYwA32OLg8wfQ75wyEKJJVqpO08LbTVojGEE9Iba73W4aRSg6kMO62JRqQAlTxvxMjsjpX0VajDuUXg9FcdgIatTtq1LiXOfAdfvWvDplhZKxyRpv4kc0APlpxFb8/s400/headlightECU.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5374261330736205986" border="0" /></a><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjeC8XwXutfv5zlvrbde5YHs4GAT9IMLCoThqON5EZiW69kmCKjiNHEksFFUE3D-ZVoKBgohyFYE8mJvNiGmw0vy4-AK1bJex0Zrz-f0a1P6DM1qu81fwKPuPEspDCEuvL1u8mdUedUNyA/s1600-h/Lake+Caddy.JPG"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjeC8XwXutfv5zlvrbde5YHs4GAT9IMLCoThqON5EZiW69kmCKjiNHEksFFUE3D-ZVoKBgohyFYE8mJvNiGmw0vy4-AK1bJex0Zrz-f0a1P6DM1qu81fwKPuPEspDCEuvL1u8mdUedUNyA/s400/Lake+Caddy.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5374260461646959490" border="0" /></a><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi8U8e4wGrV1S1TwC2rFu3OkKjrJdFF8kvWCVX-lI4iJAXPTUw2YViFECwziffXL36EqHafsUSaovveip2UvtabVPFuChXpEKHLQlvkA4Y11pAno9yq9a7NY0QZbOUX0pWnYHAhW9QQdN4/s1600-h/look+at+the+size.JPG"><img style="margin: 0pt 10px 10px 0pt; float: left; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi8U8e4wGrV1S1TwC2rFu3OkKjrJdFF8kvWCVX-lI4iJAXPTUw2YViFECwziffXL36EqHafsUSaovveip2UvtabVPFuChXpEKHLQlvkA4Y11pAno9yq9a7NY0QZbOUX0pWnYHAhW9QQdN4/s400/look+at+the+size.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5374260151248152850" border="0" /></a>Lizziehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17334938313757023018noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1932499604404201555.post-47489864728033322572009-08-22T12:59:00.003-04:002009-08-23T12:11:37.443-04:00Dear Hollywood: Please Stop Sucking<span class="GBThreadMessageRow_Date"></span> <span class="GBThreadMessageRow_BranchLink" bindpoint="branchLinkWrapper"></span> <span class="GBThreadMessageRow_ReportLink" bindpoint="reportLinkWrapper"></span> <div class="GBThreadMessageRow_Body"> <div class="GBThreadMessageRow_Body_Content">Our next submission is from Aaron!<br /><br /><br />If you talk to me for more than 10 minutes (admittedly, this can sometimes be difficult, as I'm a bit of a weird duck), it becomes quite apparent that I am startlingly fond of movies. I would use the word love, but this word has also been applied to breakfast food and watching that barefoot homeless guy obstruct traffic and then flip off cars that honk at him, and thus it feels as though it cannot convey the full enjoyment I get from cinema. I'm far from an expert, the whole of my film education being a french film class in undergrad, in which I got a B- (though in fairness to me, I did have to write my papers in french), but I have viewed and enjoyed a great many movies in my 26 years. From Jackie Chan before he got U.S. fame, to La Marie Etait en Noir (for the language stickler, I know I'm missing the accents, I don't care), to any of a dozen awesome and insane explosion fests, to various and sundry horror films of varying quality (but not the Saw films, or Hostel, because if you want to scare someone, use some goddamn subtlety, instead of strapping someone to a precision engineered death machine, or cutting off toes), I have absorbed them in particularly sponge like fashion. So, I am usually looking forward to summer with a level of excitement that makes me squeal with noises most commonly associated with excited school children who have forgotten their ritalin. This summer, however, has felt more like Hollywood felt like I needed an extended 2 month disappointment-and-punch-in-the-dick-athon.<br /><br />For several summers now, my face has been consistently rocked off so hard I've spent a week finding the damn thing. 2005 gave me Batman Begins, Madagascar, Mr. and Mrs. Smith, War of the Worlds (I consider it high praise for the movie that it made me forget how completely shit-flingingly out there Tom Cruise is at the time when he initially snapped and started peddling his crazy to anyone who would stand still), The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (which I will say only that I greatly enjoyed it, as anyone who knows me knows I am overwhelmingly biased in favor of anything which Douglas Adams was in the least involved in), Madagascar, and even Fantastic Four (not brilliance, but it had fun moments).<br /><br />2006 had Pirates of the Caribbean 2, Superman Returns (shut up, I liked it), Clerks II (which I found to be so good I almost completely forgot about nearly being run over on the southside by some jerk in an SUV, in a rare moment of me not jaywalking or otherwise daring the less than sane to run me down), Lady in the Water (again, I'm one of about 5 people who liked it, but it's my face being rocked off here) and myriad others which I've heard good things about, but haven't seen yet.<br /><br />2007 had The Bourne Ultimatum (no other move has made as amazingly brutal use of Kali as a fighting art, and such utterly brilliant improvised weapons, and then there was actually a decent movie under all this Matt Damon death machine action), another Pirates of the Caribbean movie (not as good, but still awfully fun), and Harry Potter of the Order of the Phoenix.<br /><br />Unfortunately, this was also a summer in which some atrocious piles came out. Spider-Man 3 landed during 2007, which I dearly hope Sam Raimi regrets, because there was a single redeeming moment in the entire film, Eddie Brock praying for God to kill Peter Parker. It was not enough to redeem the epic-fail otherwise contained in the film. Alvin and the Chipmunks and Transformers also came around at this time. This is to say nothing of whatever crap Uwe Boll may have been up to at this time (looking at his filmography, it doesn't seem anyone has trusted him with a summer release, in a glorious moment of uncharacteristic intelligence for Hollywood).<br /><br />Summer 2008 landed. I had Iron Man to start it off, which immediately kicked my ass so hard it required medical intervention to remove the cheeks from around my ears. It had the Dark Knight, which proved that a comic book movie can succeed as an actual movie, not to mention gave everyone with a fear of clowns some of the most horrid nightmares imaginable. Wall-E was utterly fantastic, being cute, fun, and startlingly socially conscious, and poking some impressive fun at Bush the 2nd. Hancock came out of nowhere to surprise me, and be much better than I expected (I'm sorry, but the initial ad campaign felt like "we made a black superhero...and your very first image of him is in hobo clothes drinking liquor on a bench threatening children." Great work guys. But it did grow up as a film by the end, and I was quite happy with it. It had it's short comings, but all in all, I was blown away.<br /><br />Summer 2009 came at last. Sadly, I can't count Watchmen in this, first for my overwhelming bias due to Alan Moore, and other obsessive reasons, but also that it wasn't in any way in the summer. That's really what screws it over. Because that alone could have made my summer. X-Men Origins: Wolverine had about 2 minutes total that made me not think of it as shiny crap, not to mention they took the cannon of Deadpool and completely trashed it. Star Trek was a notable exception, it was fucking brilliant, and JJ Abrams has once again made me the happiest girl in the world. I wasn't ever going within 50 feet of Underworld: Rise of the Lycans. Poor Rhona Mitra, constantly getting attached to/stuck in shitty films with vampires (or just shitty films. I'm looking at you Doomsday). Terminator Salvation made me hate the series. So far, you have made an endless run of convergent and divergent paradoxes (some which cause each other) to the point that an attempt to make a timeline for the terminator series would require you to make several mobius strips have some sort of bizarre mutant mobius strip child which defies any and all forms of logic and reason, and would probably give most people tension headaches if they looked at it to intently. Angels and Demons...I can't throw it down the proverbial stairs, but neither was it as awesome as it should have been for the overwhelming pile of great actors they had. Up was almost the highlight of my summer (like I said, Star Trek), proving once again that Pixar can make anything awesome, fun, believable, just utterly wonderful. Then came Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen. I personally feel we should be allowed, as a people, a nation, a collective victim, if you will, to roll up newspapers and smack Michael Bay like a naughty puppy that just pissed on every single carpet we own. Did we learn nothing from Jar Jar Binks? Honestly, the highlight of the entire film was the college girl robot seduction machine that goes all scorpion attack on Shia LaBeouf. But this did not break my summer. Until GI Joe. Thank you, Stephen Sommers, for clubbing my youth to death with a rock. You took one of my favorite actors (Christopher Eccleston) and somehow on screen you brought him across in such a way that he seems like a complete tool. Not as a character, but as an actor and person. You paid so little attention to the actual production of the film you managed to have, in the middle of a chase scene involving soldiers in robotic ninja super suits chasing a humvee with a cowcatcher on the front throwing cars down the streets of paris, exchanging gun and missile fire, and all this is happening on the streets of paris, which have enough trouble accomodating a Renault, and there are people in the street waiting for a bus with completely no reaction. You made a super advanced jet fighter capable of running down missiles that go at mach 5, but to use the weapons, you basically had to yell "BANG BANG BANG" like a 7 year old playing army, and not only that, but you put it in a foreign language, just to make it sound even dumber.<br /><br />So this is my open invitation to Hollywood to stop making substance-free "he blowed up real good!" summer films. Star Trek, Iron Man, Dark Knight. Lots of stuff blew up, and I still managed to care about the characters. We're paying you enough, get it right. </div></div>Lizziehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17334938313757023018noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1932499604404201555.post-12487298387540269832009-08-21T23:29:00.006-04:002009-08-22T16:23:04.048-04:00Forget Christmas in July, we want July at ChristmasLet's start with the results of a totally unscientific poll that I conducted just now regarding the seasons:<br /><ul><li>"I am a summer person": 213,000</li><li>"I am a spring person": 10,900</li><li>"I am a winter person": 127,000</li><li>"I am a fall/autumn person": 23,660</li></ul>(Source: Google)<br /><br />Point being, if voluntary internet accounts are even close to representative, summer is a more popular season than every other season put together. So you have to ask: why? Well, in the words of our esteemed hostess, because "summer is crazy awesome in general." Insightful and succinct as always, but somewhat lacking in specifics, yes?<br /><br />So, really: why? Allow me to present my theory: because summer, at least for those of us in the good ol' U.S. of A., is the season of independence and rebellion. Don't believe me? Ask Ashley, for whom "<a href="http://bettermakeitfast.blogspot.com/2009/08/something-to-believe.html">summer vacation first and foremost meant no school. What you did with your time instead of school, of course, was up to you.</a>" Even under the ostensibly watchful eye of camp counselors, babysitters, or other so-called authority figures, it was never hard to be, <a href="http://www.songmeanings.net/songs/view/3530822107858656007/">in the words of The National</a>, a glowing young ruffian. But as high school and college and (guh) real life roll around, we start our long trudge up the corporate ladder, every rung removing us one step further from the adventurous and life-affirming freedom we feel is our summertime right. I guess for some people this journey isn't so bad: it's fulfilling enough to collect closets full of pastel-colored button-up dress shirts. But I suspect that that kind of person won't be reading this blog, so let me address the rest of you.<br /><br />You want autonomy, the power to determine your own course (if not through life, at least through the day). That requires time. But you also have a strong sense of your own value, which means a life of easy freedoms will do more harm than good: it ain't hard to find the kind of part-time work that'll have you just scraping by, but who would want that life? So the kind of freedom you want requires both time and money, and quite possibly also a real job with real responsibility. But jobs, as we've learned from "Office Space" on, are the great freedom-slayers, malevolent, soul-crushing monstrosities that sustain our collective existence at the low, low cost of our individual lives. Which, then, do you give up? Do you sacrifice your potential to lead a life of relative liberty, or do you make the most of your adulthood and abandon your childhood?<br /><br />The correct answer, obviously, is neither; the hard part is figuring out how. Here are some tricks that I've used to help allay the creeping unease that comes with a desk job in the suburbs, designed to work in all seasons*:<br /><ul><li>Ignore posted closing times. Parks, trails, buildings, swimming pools, concert venues, outdoor ice rinks - all of these and more are only really closed when somebody kicks you out. You never know just what you'll find when you aren't being shepherded around.</li><li>Make something. Whether it be <a href="http://blog.makezine.com/archive/2007/11/homemade_air_conditioner_2.html">practical</a> or just <a href="http://blog.makezine.com/archive/2009/08/how-to_make_an_origami_x-wing.html">cool</a>, the experience of building something will leave you with (a) an item you didn't have before and (b) the knowledge of how to make an item that you didn't know how to make before. Who knows, you might even learn something.<br /></li><li>Lie for fun. People, surprisingly, are <span style="font-style: italic;">really</span> credulous. If you're clever enough, you can get them to believe almost anything. My personal favorite is to tell people that "vacuum" is spelled that way because, when they first made up the word, they thought it was an element - y'know, as in "vack-you-um." You'll need some imagination, a good poker face, and a flagrant disregard for basic ethics, but it's a hell of a lot of fun when it works.</li><li>Work on a non-work project at work. Learn magic tricks, write a novella, paint a mural on your sneakers, make a floor plan of your bedroom that's in accordance with feng shui principles - just do something not related to your job, with a defined endpoint, that you want to do but can never make yourself do in your free time. You're gonna waste the time anyway, you might as well put it to good use.<br /></li><li>Take a nap.</li><li>Walk down the street and make eye contact with every single person you pass. Do your best not to be the one who looks away first - it takes some getting used to.</li></ul>This list is only partial, of course, and you should feel free to use or tweak or add to or disregard any of the items thereon. But what you must remember is that the teenagers and twenty-somethings who couldn't fence you in as a kid are the same dull-eyed careerists who you think are in your way now. What's changed isn't anything fundamental to who you are - you're no less strong or creative or brave now than you were then, you're only taller and richer! The change is in how you've been taught to see the world: the teachers whose classes you dozed through are now the bosses in whose meetings you feel compelled to look attentive; your parents, whose rules you challenged at every step, have now been replaced by a million capital-lettered sans-serif signs that you obey without even thinking; and summer, rather than being the perfect opportunity to experiment, is a desperate rush to have all the fun you think you can't have in the other nine months.<br /><br />Friends, I tell you that the solution is not to reclaim summer: one quarter of the year would be a paltry reward for any of us. The solution is to reclaim your <span style="font-style: italic;">life</span>, all twelve months of it. Those bleak, imposing slabs you see all around you aren't walls, and they never were. They're dominoes, just waiting for the first push.<br /><br />*Please note, though, that some or all of these may actually be illegal. In the case that any of these tricks might put you in legal jeopardy, I of course do not officially recommend it.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1932499604404201555.post-44574607328024040812009-08-21T14:22:00.002-04:002009-08-21T14:30:32.068-04:00Something to BelieveAshley contributed too! And the blogs just keep rolling in. :)<br /><br /><br />One of the unfortunate truths of reality is that, as long as we are alive, we are growing up. When you're young, this doesn't seem all that bad. Turning another year older means that perhaps you can ride your bike past the corner stop sign, you can spend your allowance on penny candy, and you can go to that pool party with that girl or boy you have a crush on. It could mean going out and getting a job and being able to pay for things without your parents input, getting your license and driving around just because it's something to do, going out and experiencing your first bit of real freedom. As you get older, though, growing up means more responsibilities, more bills, and more troubles of sizes you didn't imagine when you were five. Even worse, growing up means the end of something that you valued so dear, perhaps more than life itself: summer vacation.<br /><br />As kids, summer vacation first and foremost meant no school. What you did with your time instead of school, of course, was up to you (and your parents, who were probably paying for it). Sleepaway camp, day camp, summer sports, summer school (blech), and visits to far away lands (such as the playground, the park, and maybe even the ice cream parlor) were all grand staples of life. For those of us with a great deal of both energy and imagination, running around outside could be just the ticket to boarding a train to the magical. Some of us were lucky enough to seek solace in the air conditioning; others braved the heat of a thousand suns. Whatever the case, everybody got the same thing: a break from the monotony.<br /><br />People often lie about how great being in your 20s is, and one of the things they fail to tell you is how incredibly lousy summer can be. Rather than taking a break from the ordinary, you mow on with your daily business, trudging off to work, hoping you don't get stuck in the same traffic you're always stuck in, because your AC isn't working and you're going to sweat through your suit. You hop on a crowded bus in 100% humidity and make your way to every shop downtown, praying that someone will hire you. You tuck yourself behind your desk and calculate how many vacations days you have left and whether you can afford to go to the beach with your boyfriend or if you need to save them for your sister's birthday. And, if you do end up with the luxury of enjoying free time during the summer, it's probably because you're unemployed, and the rest of your friends are all too busy working to enjoy the days with you.<br /><br />Knowing this, and realizing just what we've lost, why should we, the generation of the quarter life crisis, believe in the magic of summer?<br /><br />Close your eyes. No really, once you finish reading this paragraph, close them. As they're closed, think about how many people you see in a day. Think about how well you know those people. Think about how many of those people are new to you, hold a new promise that you have yet to discover. Afterward, think about how many of those people you'll see six months from now. Think about how many people period you'll see six months from now. Finally, think about how many people you would've seen had you been ten years old. When you're done with that, continue reading.<br /><br />I'm not a mind reader, but I'm going to guess that currently, you see a fair amount of people each day (assuming you leave the how) that you don't know, and, unless you're living with or near them, not as many people that you know. Six months from now, when it's cold and rainy/snowy/whatever Pittsburgh decides to be, those strangers that you saw will all but disappear. You may still see your friends, you may not; it depends on how busy they are and how able they are to get around in inclimate weather. As a child, however, you probably saw a lot of people. Every activity was a chance to meet new people. At the very least, you could hang out with a friend down the street and see them as much as you wanted to. Even if you were stuck alone, you had the promise of school to bring you back together. That promise doesn't exist anymore. This isn't grade school, we aren't all in the same home room, and I may never see you again.<br /><br />At a time where confusion and uncertainly makes us lonely and scared, we have to remember the power that summer still has over us. The weather alone means exposure to the world and safety from a place that could literally kill us with an icicle. It means going out to bars after work and walking home because it's just that beautiful outside. It means playing football or kickball or baseball with friends because real life sucks and acting like you're a kid again keeps you connected to your youth. It's not the same as before, but it's the one time of year where you can remember where you came from and exploit it for all it's worth. The other three seasons just bring rain and seasonal depression.<br /><br />Things may not be as awesome as they once were, but summer still happens, which means we still have a chance to do something about it. Take advantage of the extra long days. Walk through the woods on your day off. Throw your best friend into the pool. Dance to a bad pop song and make memories to it. Growing up sucks, but if you ain't dead yet, you still have a chance to make it glorious.Lizziehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17334938313757023018noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1932499604404201555.post-34301424611398603832009-08-21T13:52:00.003-04:002009-08-21T14:02:27.971-04:00Messy Metaphors: From Space, Before Time, Epic Battles, The EndFirst in our series of summer related blogs from other people (because summer is nearly almost over and that's awful) is this contribution from Desiree! And it's WONDERFUL!<br /><br /><br />I watched The Universe on the History Channel (to referred to as H.C.) the other night. It was an episode concentrating first on time travel, and then redirecting the subject to anti-matter. I can't describe how it got from A to E, or the connection between the two made in the episode; i zoned out somewhere between B and D, thinking about how paradoxical time travel really is.<br /><br />That, however, is not the point of this blog, the in-between. The subject I'm concerned with is anti-matter and its destructive relationship with its counterpart, matter.<br /><br />Scientists, historians, pretentious genius' were called upon by the H.C. to explain this literally explosive, obliterating reaction. They postulate that, before Time began, before the Big Bang, anti-matter and particles of matter were all that made the universe. They were almost equal in proportion. Like an epic battle of yore (let's say, the Battle of 1066 when William the Conquerer defeated the saxons of england on Senlac Hill, six miles from Hastings. It was the definitive battle for the Norman's; it's also my favorite!), they met and, being complete opposites, negated each other. Matter won by a lone proton/electron/whatever (i'm no science major) and the stars (and later, we humans) were born! Huzzah!<br /><br />SO: When anti-matter and matter come in contact with each other, they both are wiped from existence. Not even microscopic dust is left behind.<br /><br />After exhaustively explaining the analogy/metaphor I am about to make, here it is:<br /><br />This summer has been, to use a MUCH over-used phrase, a "rollercoaster." So much good and so much bad, all colliding inside of me. Like anti-matter and matter (remember, kids?), the awful, wrenching, heart-breaking feelings collided, explosively, with the wonderful, crazy, happiness of the last few months and left nothing behind. (I could also make a connection to The Neverending Story II, in which The Emptiness takes over Fantasia and makes things hollow, even stupid Bastien, but it wouldn't make as much sense). And that nothing, that apathy, was like self-actualization. I've reached self-actualization through an explosive collision of every emotion i can possibly, humanly expect to feel. And The Living Is Easy. Or as easy as one can expect for a sentient being....<br /><br />Apathy is looked down upon as a vile thing one doesn't ever want to achieve on a regular basis. I remember, a long time ago, Liz and I longed to be rid of our apathy and feel like other people felt. We made a pact, a countdown, to Valentine's Day, on which we would destroy, totally, our apathetic ways and become fully realized human beings. And then I became twenty years old and craved and cried and begged for apathy to come back to me. I would have bought it gifts! Gave money! Done anything to feel (or NOT feel) its cold, empty embrace. And when it finally skulked back to me at 5am one July morning while i was sitting on the stoop, dragging at a cigarette, staring at the lightening sky, I realized Myself.<br /><br />I stood apart from myself and looked at everything i've done, and planned to do, and wished for, and loved....and found something that I still can't figure out... A weird new sense of self; a sense that where i go, and what i say, and what i do, is meant and I'm going the right way. Sort of. There is always a detour or two. And bad traffic. And messy metaphors to explain things i could never normally explain.<br /><br />Maslow defined self-actualization, basically, as the realization of one's full potential. I've realized. And with realization comes a responsibility to get what i want.<br /><br />World, watch out.... I am going to walk all over you.<br /><br />(ps. self-actualization is exhausting)Lizziehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17334938313757023018noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1932499604404201555.post-65623697656945398032009-08-18T12:41:00.012-04:002009-08-18T15:41:39.146-04:00Things That I'm Obsessed With: Non-Fiction EditionOne summer, during the disaffected teen era of my life, I felt an overwhelming desire to get out of my small hometown as soon as humanly possible and not come back until school resumed. However, being that I was a minor and consistently spent all my money on CDs, leaving wasn't an option.<br /><br />Regardless of the fact that my wanderlust couldn't be satisfied, the urge remained.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://hjgher.com/journal/wp-content/wanderlust.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 329px; height: 216px;" src="http://hjgher.com/journal/wp-content/wanderlust.jpg" alt="" border="0" /></a>So, I found a healthy outlet in reading as much of the local library's non-fiction section as I could.<br /><br />It opened up realms of possibility for my bored and unsatisfied mind. And the unbearable need to leave became a little more bearable.<br /><br />And the most apparent benefit was that AP Bio was so much easier than it should have been.<br /><br />However, as the years have progressed, this healthy habit has turned the corner into unhealthy obsession. Now I'm the kid that wanders through the non-fiction stacks, finds a topic of interest, gets out four books on the subject, and reads them in a week.<br /><br />Granted, during any given "normal" week, I'm usually healthily reading up on only one or two subjects from the non-fiction section and taking my time to complete them.<br /><br />But every once in awhile, a day like today happens where I absolutely MUST leave whatever physical place I may be, but lack the means/time to do so. And so, instead of throwing away all my savings on a solitary Latin American vacation or moving to Oregon to live in the woods, I head straight for the library to make the feeling go away.<br /><br />Why I need to leave may be attributed to any number of predicaments or sentiments, however, wanderlust is always the initiator. This time it was followed by life dissatisfaction/frustration (which is almost always somewhere in the mix), summer ending (this season is always involved in some capacity), jarring realizations (the kind you want to run away from because they lack solutions), and whores (that's a semi-new one).<br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://www.cfa.harvard.edu/%7Erkirshner/RPK_files/image004.gif"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 157px; height: 239px;" src="http://www.cfa.harvard.edu/%7Erkirshner/RPK_files/image004.gif" alt="" border="0" /></a><br />As a result, I went directly to the library and up the two half-flights of stairs to the QB/QC section which is astronomy, astrophysics, quantum physics, and the like. I grabbed four books with compelling titles and will soon be underway.<br /><br />Astronomy/Physics is my most commonly selected subject and so I know these aisles by heart. Stars do crazy things to my head. And the physics behind everything never ceases to BLOW MY MIND. So, during the worst of these crises, there's a 94% chance that these are the things I'm reading. And the awful thing is that I've read so much on the subject that usually only about half of what I'm reading is new material. However, it's so worth the time spent because that new material is ceaselessly extraordinary.<br /><br />Aside from all that personal garbage which likely doesn't apply to you on any level, there are universal reasons why non-fiction may be beneficial to your life.<br /><br />You learn something new and can share this knowledge with other people who may be interested. And subsequently, you become way more interesting to some people and broaden your group of friends. And non-fiction books come in every subject imaginable so whatever you want to rea<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEikqpMjMPJOQqRo0RjxZkHsjETGmBl5vVq98vfJLh5vZHOI-DbvL8jwdMBh1BpNhyphenhyphen3nkhKdXKAw3RC7UcaiE7BrpKHZtzr5LXaJoh2FbWd7e2dfoVRrz7zqNj-eGFtpwKLt7AB0cvt-7z8/s1600-h/Picture+1.png"><img style="margin: 0pt 10px 10px 0pt; float: left; cursor: pointer; width: 136px; height: 200px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEikqpMjMPJOQqRo0RjxZkHsjETGmBl5vVq98vfJLh5vZHOI-DbvL8jwdMBh1BpNhyphenhyphen3nkhKdXKAw3RC7UcaiE7BrpKHZtzr5LXaJoh2FbWd7e2dfoVRrz7zqNj-eGFtpwKLt7AB0cvt-7z8/s200/Picture+1.png" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5371366638101182274" border="0" /></a>d about, there is a book to satisfy your craving. It's not just dry science! Journals, biographies, historical accounts, travel-related things, some essays, memoirs, etc. are all considered non-fiction. Also, the more you know, the more you can get away with in the academic arena. Using outside knowledge can boost paper and exam scores like none other. I know from personal experience. Reading different types of things also gives you the ability to think in different kinds of ways, so grasping a difficult concept in a class or work environment can sometimes be much easier if you can compare it to something else or think differently about it. And if you need to bullshit your way through something, it's so much easier if you're in tip-top mental shape and can source all kinds of information to get your bullshitted point across in a way that makes it sound legitimate.<br /><br />In short, there are no downsides to self-education. Minus the fact that sometimes non-fiction can be slower and more bland than fiction generally is. Let me emphasize the "generally" part (Can we toast to how awful anything written by Nathaniel Hawthorne is?). If you're worried about being bored to death, make sure you start out with something that interests you more than most things. If it's still bad, browse the aisle again until you find something on the subject that was intended for light reading until you get into the swing of things. Before you know it, you'll be on your way to becoming a treasure trove of useless information.<br /><br />If reading just really isn't your thing, I recommend these television networks which can be obtained through most cable/satellite providers:<br />- Discovery... and all the affiliated Discovery channels (TLC, Animal Planet, The Science Channel, The Travel Channel, Discovery Health, etc.)<br />- National Geographic<br />- BBC affiliated channels<br />- The History Channel<br />- Biography<br /><br />And if you only have a digital converter box, there's always PBS.<br /><br />Speaking of educational television, it's relevant to point out that I'm also obsessed with Blue Planet, Planet Earth, and The Universe. And you can buy Blue Planet/Planet Earth TOGETHER (<a href="http://www.amazon.com/Planet-Earth-Blue-Special-Collectors/dp/B000TEUSQ8/ref=pd_cp_d_3">http://www.amazon.com/Planet-Earth-Blue-Special-Collectors/dp/B000TEUSQ8/ref=pd_cp_d_3</a>). I would kill for that in HD.Lizziehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17334938313757023018noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1932499604404201555.post-89507102118673934692009-08-15T11:00:00.003-04:002009-08-18T14:12:31.557-04:00Little Boxes, Little Boxes, Little Boxes Made Of Ticky TackyThat's how I feel whenever I fly into any city. No cities I've been to are nearly as bad in this capacity as Atlanta though. But this is a story for another time.<br /><br />Moving on, life is entirely ironic most of the time.<br /><br />As i strolled through the Philadelphia airport on my way to claim some baggage, I read an ad about how most people will read the entire ad in an airport instead of just briefly glancing at it and how you should advertise in the airport for this reason. It was advertising advertising, basically.<br /><br />However, the irony is (I told you this was going to be ironic) is that it's probably the only airport ad I've ever read in its entirety for whatever reason. Maybe the people that are advertising for advertising are just so good at advertising that their ad is better than all the others.<br /><br />Oh, yeah. And now they advertise on the baggage carousel apparently. And I have to admit that it's a damn good idea because it's wicked effective.<br /><br />I know know more about Overstock.com than I ever cared to because I've seen the ad come around 20 or so times.Lizziehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17334938313757023018noreply@blogger.com0