Friday, December 3, 2010

Barbed Wire & Wet Willies On My Mind

This is my last entry in this location before I find a new blog home. Someplace prettier and sexier to display the progress I've made since quitting advertising. A delicious decision.

Tonight, my closest friends are sitting round a fire, throwing back cold ones like we did in college. Someone is probably playing the guitar, and another is roasting a marshmallow. I'm lying in bed with barbed wire lodged in my throat and a bad attitude because I WANT TO PLAY. Childlike, yes. And always.

This week I did some thinking on wet willies. Sending threatening notes to friends of their ear-moistening fates was probably the best part of the last five days.

The Process:

1) Put own finger in own mouth.
2) Slyly place own finger in victim's ear.
3) Wiggle finger rapidly, for as long as possible, until person attached to ear flails in horror. Victim's eyebrows will become thick, diagonal lines pointing toward the bridge of their nose. Victim will yell and revoke friendship for 15 minutes to 48 hours.

FUN.

Now that you're pondering wet willies, here are some recent mobile phone photos taken on a Motorola Rival. It's purple and black with a red key for on/off functions and a green key for call. It sometimes has a touch screen, except when it doesn't, which is 72% of the time.

Happy Hannukah 2010! The Orthodox celebrated night #1 at Universal City Walk. A giant menorah (shown below in high resolution) and several yarmulke'd musical acts performed for the occassion.


The paws of a dog who is not mine. Because I am borderline insane.


Validating my often curious fashion decisions via image text.



Indian sweets on Diwali. To know me is to know that I wish I was Indian. Because that culture wins.




Time to pass out in hopes that a special angel will come to me in the night and remove the barbed wire from my throat, without a trace.

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Cham Cham


Tonight I had my very first cham cham, sometimes known as a pleasure boat.

The boyfriend is on set, so it's my duty to provide dinner and cooking was out of the question. We're in a heat wave, Tuesdays are for two hours of dream-following and Glee is on. I also made an embarrassingly mediocre batch of pasta last night. This lack of cable TV is compromising my inner Giada.

I recently heard an NPR report about parents making their children wear oral expanders to produce a more attractive smile. Apparently the wider the smile, the more attractive it is. And the more attractive it is, the better off you'll be in this world. Needless to say, Giada definitely had an oral expander.

Moving right along, I ended up at India Sweets & Spices, because saying "surprise me", when I ask what he wants means he's getting something Asian, spicy and mysterious.

I ordered a combo of whatever the nice man recommended and took notice of the glass case displaying rows upon rows of fun Indian sweets. One of the trays held what appeared to be a pile of burnt, oozing twinkies, called cham chams. I ordered one so I could hold a cham cham in my hand. I say cham cham daily in reference to kittens eating kibble or in my sleep while dreaming.

Cham chams are sweet and squishy, made with flour, cream, sugar, safron, lemon juice and coconut flakes. They taste nothing like twinkies, and are rockin' good.

India, don't stop it.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Scary Strawberries


Strawberries for dinner tonight, Tuesday. Red, sweet, tart, nutritious strawberries make eating whimsical and delicate and happy. Place them in a bowl after washing, or in my case, place the colander in a larger bowl to catch the drippings because I can't wait for them to dry. I can't wait to eat these strawberries that I bought at the grocery store on sale!

Gently picking each berry by the green part, not really stems, maybe leaves. So, by the leaves, I take one from the bowl and put it in my mouth without looking because I know what's about to happen. And I'm correct, because it's as delightful as it is delicious and I can have lots of them because they are not pizza and they are not cheeseburgers and they are not chow mein.

I got a squishy one. It's ok. So I look at the next one and there's mold. Mold all over one side of it. Like it fell in the snow or a bathtub about to be scrubbed with Comet. It's dark, so I switch on the light and look at the rest of them. And I'm afraid. But not because I am eating strawberries in the dark on a Tuesday.

They are weird. Strawberries are weird and no longer cute. They are strange and menacing like monsters. The monsters that seem inanimate, but when you least expect it they open their eyes and roar then bare giant claws and dangle you by your throat with one of them. The other hangs on to the spire of a tall building.

I deal with this frightening dillema by reasoning that not all strawberries are monsters. A few of them are in my belly right now, and I am not a gonner. I feel fine. So I put the innocent ones into a ziplock and the suspicious ones right in the garbage. Just got rid of 'em right away. For safety.

But I'm still hungry and a little put off by strawberries for dinner. It went from a strawberry night to a top ramen night in a blink of an eye. Strawberries are tricky and quick to pull the wool over your eyes. So be careful not to eat a monster when all you were doing was enjoying an adorable springtime strawberry.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

"I Miss You"




Three years of outdoor media buying was put in the past on Thursday, which meant writing the obligatory goodbye e-mails to clients, colleagues and vendors. Since I'm myself, I thought about the content of these farewells since the day I gave 30 days notice, which left me rocking back and forth with insanity by 2:30 everyday (as opposed to 5:30). Generosity isn't always a unicorn ride in the park.

Many of the responses to these e-mails included, "We'll miss you!" or "I'm really going to miss you :*( !" Ok - this made me feel awkward because, in truth, I will only miss a select few that can fit in the palm of my hand. It made me realize that people are quick to say these three words, which to me, are almost on par with I love you. The majority of these important-phrase-abusers were obviously lying and I just can't get down like that. Those who will truly miss me needn't say it, because I'll miss them too, so it really goes without saying. The point here is, when people say I miss you, they don't always mean it, and I feel that this phrase shouldn't be thrown around casually. My feelings about this are strong and brawny. And I am doubting humanity with each passing thought.

Though I did receive some appropriate and honest responses such as, "Thank you for all your hard work!" and "We appreciate all you've done for us". Those are real. They're real because, yes, I did work hard, and thank you for acknowledging that. But come Monday, planning requests will be sent to the next of kin without much thought, like killing a can of keystone light and popping open the next one, never to think of that crumpled ball of aluminum again. Life's realities are best explained with drinking analogies.

All in all. In the end. In closing. In conclusion. What it all boils down to. When you say "I miss you", you should mean it. Because people should say what they mean. Or try to anyway.

Radishes are crunchy and slightly spicy.

Saturday, August 14, 2010

Announcement to the Universe

I haven't written since the last time I wrote and my excuse is that I learned something about myself. When I am a robot, I am a robot and I can't be both myself and a robot because it hurts. More specifically, when the robot to self ratio is hugely unbalanced, I chew my fingernails because it hurts good, eat all my feelings because it feels both horrible and wonderful all at once and I see an alligator in the mirror. Also, Negative Nancy comes to town. Who invited her? Not me. Go away, Nancy.

My meager ratio of self raised its hand recently and said, "I am not a robot, ok?" Thanks, self. Thanks. The robot officially has an expiration date of September 10, 2010 and I can already see the tables turning on the ratio.

A favorite friend said this to me yesterday in so many words: You have to show all sides of yourself to the world. The great, the bad, the embarrassing, the stupid, the brilliant.

Universe, I'm talking to you. But everyone else can know too. Because it's not a secret. It's an announcement.

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

court.



To start 2010 off interestingly, I received my very first moving violation on Jan. 6. Not for speeding at 90 in a 35 or driving on the wrong side of the 101 as my right of passage into the [insert San Fernando Valley street name here] Gang. I turned right safely on a green light between the hours of 7:00 and 9:00 in the morning, and now I'm $300 poorer with eight hours of life wasted to traffic school. Dad told me to fight every ticket, because if you don't, insurance will shake its seven story tall finger at you. So I said, "OK, Dad!"

I'd been experiencing slight pings of anxiety in anticipation of this court date. Last time at the Van Nuys court house, Dad dragged me by the earlobe to deal with my truancy ticket for hopping the fences of Taft High School. After successfully clearing the wall to freedom, my buddies and I unanimously rested our 15 year old semi-selves on the sidewalk to light up a celebratory cigarette in recognition of this great success. There's no time for school when you have a sheet in your pocket and not a trace of self esteem. Mid-high five a black and white crept around the corner, sirens screaming (for theatrics and intimidation purposes only) and I'm cuffed, jammed into the plastic navy seats, with a torrential downpour of emotions flooding the creases of my scrunchy little girl face. After that, Dad arranged with my teachers to fill out strict weekly progress reports for which I despised him violently. Several months later, he brought my report card to trial and the judge let me off for good grades. Thanks, Dad.

10 years later I don't have a progress report or an adult to hold my hand. I'm in trouble for trying to squeeze in a trip to the bank before buying billboards for nine straight hours.

That morning I awoke 15 minutes ahead of time to run a flat iron through my hair to seem polished and mindful of my appearance during the work week. Before leaving the house, I globbed on a bit of mascara, slung on a gold necklace and left to my half day at work preceding this dreaded appointment.
After paying $10 to park in a government lot, I limped on a broken toe toward the security line to enter the Los Angeles Superior Court. Approaching from the east, I came within seven feet of a petite gentleman who, too, was approaching the line, but from the west. As we proceeded with similar intentions, we both recognized that in a soon second, one of us must say "go 'head" with a slight and cordial nod. The petite gentleman excitedly announced "uh, ladies - ladies first you know!" in an unidentifiable and fantastic accent, to which I kindly smiled and said "thank you". The interaction resulted in strange and unavoidable eye contact from all corners of the room. Whenever an instance occurred to urge a reaction from any of the 200 defendants (such as a gasp), he'd summons my eyes to his by boring two painful holes in my existence, throwing his head back in laughter as if this was a private joke between us. Apparently an awkward security line encounter is grounds for an instant friendship. Much better than hate in the end.

Upon confirming that I had no plans to blow up the courthouse, I lifted my unnecessarily large red bag over my shoulder, and set out to find Room 201: Traffic Court. I exited the elevator on the fourth floor, and to my relief, a sign reading Room 201: Traffic Court hung above two large double doors. I asked a man in a plaid shirt and work boots if he was in line and he whispered "no, yeah, it's OK". I then looked out the window where a hot dog truck led my eyes northward to Sylmar's low lying hills, vibrantly green from the rain. This added to my satisfaction of successfully finding Room 201 without the help of a janitor.

Court doors scheduled to open at 1:30, leaving 27 minutes to read my book, so I propped myself against the window and cracked open an original print of
In Cold Blood. People continued filling the room, including a tall and slender Korean man in his 60s with salt and pepper hair. Confused and apprehensive, he studied the list of names posted on the wall to verify his inclusion. As he slid his index finger gingerly down each sheet of legal paper, another man of similar age in a tweed sweater and fedora lent his help and insight on the other man's journey through the lists. He demonstrated an uncommon level of energy and charisma, so I closed my book and stuffed it back in my bag. Each word left this man's face with laughter, which made me wish he was talking to me instead, or that he'd talk to me next. He danced through the bleak hall like we were all guests at a sock hop, and welcomed other court-goers as they entered through the elevators. This man had a purpose for everything he was doing, would do, and has done in the last 60 years.
In a corner 10 feet to the right leaned a guy in his twenties wearing a cropped leather jacket and purposely torn jeans. Buried in his iPhone, his hair stood at attention and Jersey Shore came to mind instantly because I really like that show. Pauly D without the DJ and less height as far as hair is concerned. Another young man entered the vicinity in similar attire, but from Mervyn's before its demise. Then a third joined the two, adorably chubby like a Disney hippo with a buzz cut. The design on the back of his white pop-collared shirt looked to be a combination of a Japanese dragon and Mike Tyson's face tattoo. I found out later that this was the Jewish guy. Noticing right away that they all had a great deal in common on the surface, they meshed immediately and became the least bored and awkward individuals in the room. Those three entered the court house as strangers and left as friends.
Court doors finally opened and the swaying blob of humanity turned focused as the police officer explained next steps. We were directed to form two lines: English Speakers and Non-English Speakers. The English speaking line was the longest, and as we shimmied our way into the court room, a very old woman emitting a highly offensive odor merged into my lane. I held the door for her. As we forward marched into the court room, we English speakers took the seats on the right, the others on the left. Once all seated, a different police officer warned us that our names would soon be called in alphabetical order. Upon hearing our respective names, we were to respond with "here" in a tone loud of enough be heard by all 200 people. We'd then take a seat in the mid-cluster of chairs between the English and non-English speakers. I broke a sweat. Anticipating one's name to be called in a public setting can cause a great deal of anxiety. If I faltered to any degree, everyone would think me for the rest of their lives as that idiot who didn't know what to do at the Van Nuys court house. The smelly old lady sat next to me. I smiled so she wouldn't realize how much I hated her decision.

The officer eventually shouted "Pardess" after the A - Os, to which I crackled in response, then filed into the middle section next to the guy who took advantage of the Mervyn's nationwide liquidation. His adams apple protruded to an unusual distance so I studied it for a rude span of time. Next thing I know, the dancing man with the fedora tumbled down my row and situated himself right beside me. The size of the adams apple to my left paled in comparison to the wonderful conversation about to occur on my right. I shifted in my seat a bit awaiting fedora man's first words and nothing. Not a glance, nor a smile. With bruised feelings, I imposed my chin upon my knuckles and listened intently to a recording announcing our choices of guilty, not guilty or no contest. No contest and guilty are synonymous, and the former only exists for cowards, dainty ladies and insurance salespeople. Does this apply in other situations such as not tipping the bar tender for opening an $8 bottle of beer or throwing a recyclable bottle in the garbage?

We reached a grace period between the recording and when court came to order. Behind me sat two middle-aged white men: 1) Tall and commanding in a fitted suit, likely a member of The Hair Club for Men 2) Lanky in a shirt with a busy pattern of silver sword fish, wearing CVS aviators indoors. I eaves dropped as they one-upped each other on their plans of getting out of their various traffic offenses. "Well, technically the cop's radar gun hadn't been calibrated so I'll be just fine, " said the man in the suit, to which the man in the swordfish shirt responded, "I'm just hoping the cop doesn't show up!" They laughed heartily at this punchline. The dialogue went on for too many minutes, consisting of all the other activities they'd rather be doing than sitting in a courtroom. These included golf, important business meetings, the gym and driving down the coast.

Growing impatient with these two, I pulled out my book, which grabbed fedora man's attention. "Well, I say, that looks like a very old book," he said with the kinder eyes than a lamb. I explained the title and that it was the first addition, and he went on to describe how films based on books never turn out correctly, which then funneled into the appropriate conversation of why we were there. It seems that his 1973 Cadillac is made of steel, unlike the plastic cars of today, so he couldn't help traveling at 80 miles per hour down Laurel Canyon. Today he would claim not guilty. Our time together ended here as court came to order.
The judge entered the room, and the giant adams apple leaned over and whispered "she looks like the crypt keeper." I smiled politely jumping to the conclusion that this was childish and below me, especially in a court of law. But as I looked closer, it did seem that she'd been exhumed, cloaked in a black robe and nailed to her seat before us all. Row by row we sauntered to the microphone and announced guilty, not-guilty or no contest. I pleaded guilty, because I was. And then I realized that this trip to the Van Nuys court house was completely pointless from a legal and monetary standpoint.

Like a donut factory, we pleaded however we pleaded, then rotated back to the hallway to wait for the cashier to break the news. The cashiers began calling names, but as the assembly line of defendants saturated the room, hearing became increasingly difficult.

During the wait, commanding white man in the suit stood a few inches beside me to where I could gauge that the top of my head reached just below his shoulder. Though we stood closest, he began a conversation with fedora man standing two feet away and offered advice on his case. Others in the crowd heard the suit's officiality and we were eventually surrounded by others seeking advice on their states of affairs. Finally someone asked "are you a lawyer, sir?" He replied, "no! I put satellites in outer space." One would think that the crowd inquiring about legal advice would dissipate after learning that this man probably had no more legal training than their gardener, but it didn't. It didn't because he was tall, white, of distinguished age and in a suit.

Finally taking a break to scan my surroundings, I noticed the silver swordfish shirt on the other side of me, arms crossed, pouting. He quickly realized my acknowledgement then continued to express his negative opinion of the suit in mumbles and grumbles. After each comment, he'd look to me for approval and I'd politely smirk and look away in hopes that he'd take a hint. "That guy is so dramatic," he whined, shaking his head, slumped against the window pane in his swordfish shirt, sandals and socks. Naturally, we dove into the conversation of why we were sharing this space in time and I learned it was old news to him. While awkwardly humoring him and trying to listen for my name for a quick escape, he grabbed my right hand to examine my middle finger, encircled by a ring with a brownred stone. "What stone is this?" he inquired excitedly, as if the man in the suit never existed and we were in an Austrian meadow or Starbucks. "I'm not sure, but I got it in Northern California," I answered as I slipped it off and gave it to him after noticing his filthy finger print ridges. He took an even closer look, turned it around, smelled it and I sarcastically asked if he was a geologist. "No, I just collect rocks. I have about 30,000 rocks at home. I love rocks." After wondering why he didn't mention this earlier during his contest with the suit, the cashier called my name and I repossessed my ring and received my bill to the State of California for $307.65.
After sincerely thanking the cashier for my bail amount, I twirled to point myself toward the defendants who accompanied me on that Wednesday. Straight ahead, a man with a surplus of white hair and a rhinoceros skin face looked toward the floor and tapped his foot. A willowy lady with sailor moon eyes and brown hair seemed nervous and I envied her smooth shiny pony tail. On the floor sat a young man wearing faded black from head to toe, legs stretched out in front of him, purple shoe laces in his converse. A backpack slouched by his side to compliment his apathetic motif, hair styled with what looked like canola oil, but was indeed a lack of personal hygiene. Petite gentleman bid me adieu with eager eyes and the type of wave you give when you know you'll see that person in the morning at the water cooler.
I reconnected with reality that day. Thanks again, Dad.






Sunday, February 21, 2010

Insignificant Woe: Decorating


Decorating a living space has enough power to lower one's self esteem significantly. For one, you come to the realization that you don't have nearly enough money to carry out your dream design. Secondly, your dream design is completely unoriginal since it's stolen directly from that foreign film you saw last weekend that made you feel sophisticated and better than everyone else you know. Once you proudly finish one thing, you pivot an inch or two and that other 40 foot wall comes into plain sight, tapping its foot in disappointment since you haven't even hung one frame or considered its existence in general. Should I paint it? If so, what color? Is my place going to look as if I dove into a container of green playdo while slurping asparagus soup on earth day?

And furthermore, you finish your project and strut down the lane to your friend's new place, certain that you'll be the one giving advice on how to design on a budget, only to find that they had been much more innovative and much swifter in their decorating achievements. Who knew that you could turn a lamp shade upside down, slap a few magazine clippings and a straw hat on it to create a state of the art ottoman? "Oh, I made that myself," she'll say coyly as your stomach sinks thinking of that vintage-esque lamp you bought at Target for $45 (it was such a great deal!).

Everything is a process. And a learning experience. Patience is a virtue. More money. More time. More everything. Hooks. Hutch. Love my giant window. Couch covers? I hate you, Ikea. I love you though. Knives.


Sunday, January 10, 2010

Across the Street in Van Nuys


The San Fernando Valley is a dry and convenient place where it doesn't take more than 10 minutes to reach a Target in any cardinal direction. Wide boulevards lined with strip malls are the bread and butter of this town, with a sandwich shop adjacent to a topless bar and a Watkins Family Optometry on the other side.

This is the valley in which I was raised and had a rather fortunate childhood. Proudly born in Van Nuys, I spent my elementary years managing lemonade stands and heroically saving the lives of stray animals. My big cousin (who could have ordered me to drink bleach and I would have gotten right down to it) and I strolled these marginally mean streets, passing one block lined with ranch style homes, and the next comprised of stuccoed apartments with balconies draped in lime green for rent signs. La Cucaracha resounded through the neighborhood several times each day as the taco truck's turnkey method of bringing in business. Across the street lived an older lady with thick yellow toenails and an elderberry tree in her ungated front yard. I'd pop in to visit after school or on a Saturday, and she'd feed me pineapple upside down cake and american cheese. Her home was dark and mostly brown. Wheel of Fortune and Jeopardy were her dearest friends who lived in the front room with the shabby Victorian couch she'd spend most days on. She'd often have a clear beverage in hand with a massacred lime floating in it, and in my adulthood I've realized why she was so jolly.

One autumn day I ran over to present the dead bird I'd planned on bringing back to life and she spilled the special drink all over the front of her lavender muumuu. She then continued to lose her footing and fell into the glass-topped coffee table, causing a slight laceration on her right arm that at the time seemed like a watermelon that had been thrown off a high rise. After some struggle, she climbed back up on the sofa and adjusted her muumuu as I stood stiffly by the front door protecting my latest project. Luckily, the gin and tonic remained half full, and she proceeded to lift the glass and pour what was left through her thin withered lips.

Her name was Maggie. Maggie taught me that should I ever discover gum in my hair, no need to panic. The trick is peanut butter. Peanut butter and ice. She gave me permission to pick elderberries from her tree on the condition that I remembered that they weren't raspberries or blackberries, but elderberries. She let me explore her overgrown backyard with an empty pool, where once lay a rigor mortis cat down at the bottom, by the drain.