Sunday, October 29, 2006
Halloween
After much consideration, I've decided not to go as a fairy for Halloween, because it's filppin' cold out, nor as a pirate, because thanks to PoC, everyone and their cousin will be running around town yelling "Arrrg!" like a bunch of posers. Instead, I shall go as a Pastafarian. This affords me several benefits:
1) I still get to use my pirate garb.
2) I don't have to freeze my ass off in some skimpy hooker outfit that passes for a costume.
3) I can spread my faith to the Christian/Jewish/Muslim/Athiest infidels that infest my campus.
4) I help combat global warming.
Wednesday, October 25, 2006
Last Man Alive. The Phone Rings...
Hemmingway's shortest story was six words long: "For sale: baby shoes, never worn." So Wired magazine had a bunch of sci fi and horror writers try to match the feat, and oddly enough, most of my favorite writers replied. Some I had to share:
Gown removed carelessly. Head, less so.
- Joss Whedon
I’m dead. I’ve missed you. Kiss … ?
- Neil Gaiman
The baby’s blood type? Human, mostly.
- Orson Scott Card
Kirby had never eaten toes before.
- Kevin Smith
Bush told the truth. Hell froze.
- William Gibson
Death postponed. Metastasized cells got organized.
- David Brin
Osama’s time machine: President Gore concerned.
- Charles Stross
Cryonics: Disney thawed. Mickey gnawed. Omigawd.
- Eileen Gunn
Commas, see, add, like, nada, okay?
- Gregory Maguire
Leia: "Baby's yours." Luke: "Bad news…"
- Steven Meretzky
Gown removed carelessly. Head, less so.
- Joss Whedon
I’m dead. I’ve missed you. Kiss … ?
- Neil Gaiman
The baby’s blood type? Human, mostly.
- Orson Scott Card
Kirby had never eaten toes before.
- Kevin Smith
Bush told the truth. Hell froze.
- William Gibson
Death postponed. Metastasized cells got organized.
- David Brin
Osama’s time machine: President Gore concerned.
- Charles Stross
Cryonics: Disney thawed. Mickey gnawed. Omigawd.
- Eileen Gunn
Commas, see, add, like, nada, okay?
- Gregory Maguire
Leia: "Baby's yours." Luke: "Bad news…"
- Steven Meretzky
Thursday, October 19, 2006
The Dark Side Calls to Me
:(
Smeagol died early this morning from fish bladder problems associated with swallowing air every frickin' day. This fish was like an elevator. He'd swallow this air bubble from the top of the tank, and spend the rest of the evening frantically swimming for the bottom of the bowl. Once he made it, he'd stop, and then slowly, involuntarily float to the top of the tank where he'd sit, looking grumpy. You think once would be a good lesson. Nope. Every. Single. Night. Except this one and every other one hearafter.
Smeagol is survived by Gollum, who made it out pretty good in the will. Now he gets the other half of the tank, many more rocks, the entire fake plant, and the rock with a butterfly painted on it. He also no longer has deal with Smeagol's food-hogging ways. (I investigated the possibility of making Kelsey swallow enormous amounts of air, but the plan failed in the planing stages due to logistical issues.)
Goodbye, dear Smeagol. We shall miss your fishy tail.
Wednesday, October 18, 2006
New Layout
I haven't updated, but I have changed the scenery so that when you look upon my massive not-updates, you will at least have a better view. Feel free to tell me it sucks. I don't like it much either. Of course, if you do like it, thank you, and I completely agree. I'm so awesome that I astound even me.
The main problem with this new layout is that I no longer have a place to put my surrealist subtitles, like "There's a duck in your elevator," which I think added a lot to the site. Until I can come up with a good solution for this obvious shortfall, I'll have to make up for it with more entries that aren't particularly funny, while at the same time lack any real information whatsoever.
Although I do have a update on my vow to stop buying used books I don't have time to read with money I don't have:
Griffin and Sabine by Rick Bantock
The Golden Mean by Rick Bantock
Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason by Helen Fielding
Bonfire of the Vanities by Tom Wolfe
So far so good.
Tuesday, October 10, 2006
Truthiness Update
It wasn't that long ago, say last semester, when I had to take a multimedia law class on all sorts of useful things like defamation, NY Times vs. Sullivan, how many laws I break in any given blog post and what my odds are of being successfully sued for it. I got an A in that class.
I've since learned some things, however, that throw the quality of my education into doubt. My professor managed to cover the broad spectrum of media law, but never once mentioned that the news is not legally required to report the news. Put another way, any media outlet can lie and fabricate stories with impunity. Americans enjoy this extension of our first amendment rights thanks to Fox News, defender of freedom, who stood up in a court of law to protect our right to make shit up and pretend it's true.
Thanks to this, Fox News is safe to come up with inventive solutions to news reporting dilemmas, such as how to report on a Republican sex scandal without making Republicans look like asshats. Simple. When the truth is inconvenient, change it.
The key to making this work is never issuing a retraction for your "mistake." This technique is also useful when your party of choice is losing an election in a landslide. Take this gem of a report about the senate election in Rhode Island between Republican Senator Lincoln Chafee and Democratic former state attorney general Sheldon Whitehouse.
Thank you, Florida's Appellate Court of the Second District! If there's one thing I'm sick and tired of, it's the media's obsession with reporting the "truth" and the "facts". There's enough negative things on TV today without bringing the truth into it. While we're at it, I would likely request that Variety magazine report on Firefly's second season airing on ABC this Fall, and I would like 60 Minutes to do a ground breaking piece on the discovery of a new gnostic scroll that reveals the Flying Spaghetti Monster to be the true father of Jesus, and I would really like for the American Journal of Medicine to release a new study declaring that high doses of chocolate are a way to promote weight loss and cure cancer. I'd like that a lot. If you all could get right on that, that would be greeeeeaaat.
I've since learned some things, however, that throw the quality of my education into doubt. My professor managed to cover the broad spectrum of media law, but never once mentioned that the news is not legally required to report the news. Put another way, any media outlet can lie and fabricate stories with impunity. Americans enjoy this extension of our first amendment rights thanks to Fox News, defender of freedom, who stood up in a court of law to protect our right to make shit up and pretend it's true.
Thanks to this, Fox News is safe to come up with inventive solutions to news reporting dilemmas, such as how to report on a Republican sex scandal without making Republicans look like asshats. Simple. When the truth is inconvenient, change it.
The key to making this work is never issuing a retraction for your "mistake." This technique is also useful when your party of choice is losing an election in a landslide. Take this gem of a report about the senate election in Rhode Island between Republican Senator Lincoln Chafee and Democratic former state attorney general Sheldon Whitehouse.
Thank you, Florida's Appellate Court of the Second District! If there's one thing I'm sick and tired of, it's the media's obsession with reporting the "truth" and the "facts". There's enough negative things on TV today without bringing the truth into it. While we're at it, I would likely request that Variety magazine report on Firefly's second season airing on ABC this Fall, and I would like 60 Minutes to do a ground breaking piece on the discovery of a new gnostic scroll that reveals the Flying Spaghetti Monster to be the true father of Jesus, and I would really like for the American Journal of Medicine to release a new study declaring that high doses of chocolate are a way to promote weight loss and cure cancer. I'd like that a lot. If you all could get right on that, that would be greeeeeaaat.
Monday, October 09, 2006
Londonderry
Another essay for nonfiction. I had to describe a place in detail in four to five pages. I picked the worst place I could think of. I had more to say here, I think, but held back on the off chance my professor is from New England.
Rodney Munson is real, although I mushed several people into one fat bully and added the name, which I just now realized was a subconscious Buffy reference.
The door slapped open, and my mother’s voice rang in a shrill note I’d never heard before. “Christy, get out of the house, now.” She didn’t wait for me to comply. Before I could process the meaning of her words, her arms were around my shoulders and we were up, up across the white carpet mom despaired of ever getting clean, down the wooden stairs, and funneled through the narrow hall into the blinding daylight.
Someone plopped me on our neighbor’s couch before I realized I still held a plastic dinosaur in each hand. I blinked dust out of my eyes. Adults said things behind their hands. A cup of hot chocolate cooled, untouched, on the coffee table. The smoke alarms had never gone off.
I worried about my toys, mostly, the Christmas presents I hadn’t gotten to play with yet. There was the model train set from Uncle Tony, and the new books from Aunt D. The rest of our things only occurred to me later. My father’s computer would burn, and my mother’s heirloom jewelry would melt. The white carpet was probably black with soot.
Mrs. Fisher smiled at me reassuringly from the other couch. I had only spoken to her once, on Christmas, eight days earlier, when she came to our front door with a plate of cookies and a housewarming gift. This was the first time I’d been inside her house. It was the same floor plan as ours—everyone had the same design, just mirror images—but I had to look for the similarities. Everything here had flowers on it, the couches, the drapes, the coasters, the wall prints, the carpet, and Mrs. Fisher. The air reeked of muffins and sugar. It was nothing like home.
An hour later, a fireman clomped into Mrs. Fisher’s floral living room. Smoke and dust cascaded off his shoulders in waves, and he held out a velvet stegosaurus rescued from certain death. “Your mom said you’d want this.” I snatched it into my arms and nodded wordlessly.
The fire was a four-alarm response, even though the flames never progressed farther than the back wall of our townhouse. Nothing burned, but we lost almost everything to smoke damage. For years later, my surviving toys still smelled like a campsite.
~~~
USAA set us up in an apartment nearby while the investigators and the repair crews did their jobs. I’ve since pushed most of that place out of my memory, but looking back I can still see the yellow walls, feel the shag carpet underfoot, and smell the urine musk of the rental couch which looked like a reject from Mrs. Fisher’s living room. We were just guests there, and the apartment never let us forget we were imposing on it. The Nixon-era refrigerator resented all demands to cool below sixty-five degrees and was prone to epileptic fits in the middle of the night that would rattle the building’s struts and make my air mattress jiggle. The TV consistently displayed three colors: black, yellow, and red, whether I was watching The Simpsons or Lost in Space. For the bathrooms, we had a system: Warn people not to use the toilet before you got in the shower, or suffer the consequences.
One appliance that did work was the heat, and we were grateful for it. Nor’easters marched through the region that year in a relentless campaign of wet, white muck, so by the end of January, the snow was stacked up higher than my father’s head. The novelty wore off after I realized that, unlike Georgia, New England didn’t cancel school for snow, unless that snow was accompanied by a suitably sized apocalypse.
The anti-Christ never showed, except in the form of Rodney Munson, self-proclaimed (and undisputed) lord over all the school bus. Rodney had passionate and toxic views on school, people shorter than him, people taller than him, and people that didn’t watch Home Improvement. I didn’t watch Home Improvement. My side also lost The War. My family came from Poland and Germany and wasn’t actually there for The War, but the North had won, the South had lost, and I talked funny. End of argument.
There was no point in telling him, or anyone else, that they talked funny, and pronounced their R’s as A’s. Su-ah. He-ah. Lob-stah. (Dad used to say the R’s migrated south so people could warsh their cars.) I also didn’t point out that their Plymouth Rock was stupid and small and looked like a pebble, and Boston Market’s cornbread was too sweet and tasted like ass. There was no point. Rodney was three inches taller, and that trumped all argument.
If you’ve never been, here’s a quick and dirty guide to the culture of New England, according to my mother, who was raised in Tennessee. In New England, there are two kinds of people, New Englanders, and people who are from Away. That’s what they called it. Away. New Englanders were people born in New England, and whose parents had been born in New England, and preferably, their grandparents had been born there too. New York did not count. Neither did Canada. If your mother was in New York, and in labor, and in a horse drawn carriage racing for the Connecticut border, but you popped out three miles from the state line, you were in trouble. Ninety years later, at your funeral in the small Maine town where you’d grown up, grown old, and died, your eulogy would include a note that, as it turns out, you were from Away. My mother has been known to exaggerate on occasion—or all the time—but the most popular kid in my class could trace his lineage back to the Mayflower Compact, a fact he pointed out on a weekly basis.
~~~
Here’s what happened with the fire: The person that poured the foundations for the townhouses had to file for bankruptcy before he could build on them. When the bank turned around and sold the land, it was for only a fraction of what it was worth. Our builder, a guy my parents referred to only as Bob, knew a deal when he saw one, but didn’t have the money to act on it. So he borrowed the cash from a loan shark. He got his brother, Glen, to do all the electrical, plumbing, insulation, and ductwork, all skills Glen picked up from yellow books he bought at Barnes and Nobel. Glen also installed our fireplace. Somehow, he not only insulated our walls, but also our chimney, so when my parents decided to light a festive holiday fire, the festivities spread through the entire back wall and into our neighbor’s walls as well. Lawsuits ensued.
In the meantime, we got the townhouse repaired, and the insurance gave us all new furniture, and I kept waddling to the bus stop in a pink parka, pink gloves, and pinker snow pants, so I could benefit from Rodney’s extensive knowledge of the civil war. The years trudged by. I got older.
Rodney Munson is real, although I mushed several people into one fat bully and added the name, which I just now realized was a subconscious Buffy reference.
The door slapped open, and my mother’s voice rang in a shrill note I’d never heard before. “Christy, get out of the house, now.” She didn’t wait for me to comply. Before I could process the meaning of her words, her arms were around my shoulders and we were up, up across the white carpet mom despaired of ever getting clean, down the wooden stairs, and funneled through the narrow hall into the blinding daylight.
Someone plopped me on our neighbor’s couch before I realized I still held a plastic dinosaur in each hand. I blinked dust out of my eyes. Adults said things behind their hands. A cup of hot chocolate cooled, untouched, on the coffee table. The smoke alarms had never gone off.
I worried about my toys, mostly, the Christmas presents I hadn’t gotten to play with yet. There was the model train set from Uncle Tony, and the new books from Aunt D. The rest of our things only occurred to me later. My father’s computer would burn, and my mother’s heirloom jewelry would melt. The white carpet was probably black with soot.
Mrs. Fisher smiled at me reassuringly from the other couch. I had only spoken to her once, on Christmas, eight days earlier, when she came to our front door with a plate of cookies and a housewarming gift. This was the first time I’d been inside her house. It was the same floor plan as ours—everyone had the same design, just mirror images—but I had to look for the similarities. Everything here had flowers on it, the couches, the drapes, the coasters, the wall prints, the carpet, and Mrs. Fisher. The air reeked of muffins and sugar. It was nothing like home.
An hour later, a fireman clomped into Mrs. Fisher’s floral living room. Smoke and dust cascaded off his shoulders in waves, and he held out a velvet stegosaurus rescued from certain death. “Your mom said you’d want this.” I snatched it into my arms and nodded wordlessly.
The fire was a four-alarm response, even though the flames never progressed farther than the back wall of our townhouse. Nothing burned, but we lost almost everything to smoke damage. For years later, my surviving toys still smelled like a campsite.
USAA set us up in an apartment nearby while the investigators and the repair crews did their jobs. I’ve since pushed most of that place out of my memory, but looking back I can still see the yellow walls, feel the shag carpet underfoot, and smell the urine musk of the rental couch which looked like a reject from Mrs. Fisher’s living room. We were just guests there, and the apartment never let us forget we were imposing on it. The Nixon-era refrigerator resented all demands to cool below sixty-five degrees and was prone to epileptic fits in the middle of the night that would rattle the building’s struts and make my air mattress jiggle. The TV consistently displayed three colors: black, yellow, and red, whether I was watching The Simpsons or Lost in Space. For the bathrooms, we had a system: Warn people not to use the toilet before you got in the shower, or suffer the consequences.
One appliance that did work was the heat, and we were grateful for it. Nor’easters marched through the region that year in a relentless campaign of wet, white muck, so by the end of January, the snow was stacked up higher than my father’s head. The novelty wore off after I realized that, unlike Georgia, New England didn’t cancel school for snow, unless that snow was accompanied by a suitably sized apocalypse.
The anti-Christ never showed, except in the form of Rodney Munson, self-proclaimed (and undisputed) lord over all the school bus. Rodney had passionate and toxic views on school, people shorter than him, people taller than him, and people that didn’t watch Home Improvement. I didn’t watch Home Improvement. My side also lost The War. My family came from Poland and Germany and wasn’t actually there for The War, but the North had won, the South had lost, and I talked funny. End of argument.
There was no point in telling him, or anyone else, that they talked funny, and pronounced their R’s as A’s. Su-ah. He-ah. Lob-stah. (Dad used to say the R’s migrated south so people could warsh their cars.) I also didn’t point out that their Plymouth Rock was stupid and small and looked like a pebble, and Boston Market’s cornbread was too sweet and tasted like ass. There was no point. Rodney was three inches taller, and that trumped all argument.
If you’ve never been, here’s a quick and dirty guide to the culture of New England, according to my mother, who was raised in Tennessee. In New England, there are two kinds of people, New Englanders, and people who are from Away. That’s what they called it. Away. New Englanders were people born in New England, and whose parents had been born in New England, and preferably, their grandparents had been born there too. New York did not count. Neither did Canada. If your mother was in New York, and in labor, and in a horse drawn carriage racing for the Connecticut border, but you popped out three miles from the state line, you were in trouble. Ninety years later, at your funeral in the small Maine town where you’d grown up, grown old, and died, your eulogy would include a note that, as it turns out, you were from Away. My mother has been known to exaggerate on occasion—or all the time—but the most popular kid in my class could trace his lineage back to the Mayflower Compact, a fact he pointed out on a weekly basis.
Here’s what happened with the fire: The person that poured the foundations for the townhouses had to file for bankruptcy before he could build on them. When the bank turned around and sold the land, it was for only a fraction of what it was worth. Our builder, a guy my parents referred to only as Bob, knew a deal when he saw one, but didn’t have the money to act on it. So he borrowed the cash from a loan shark. He got his brother, Glen, to do all the electrical, plumbing, insulation, and ductwork, all skills Glen picked up from yellow books he bought at Barnes and Nobel. Glen also installed our fireplace. Somehow, he not only insulated our walls, but also our chimney, so when my parents decided to light a festive holiday fire, the festivities spread through the entire back wall and into our neighbor’s walls as well. Lawsuits ensued.
In the meantime, we got the townhouse repaired, and the insurance gave us all new furniture, and I kept waddling to the bus stop in a pink parka, pink gloves, and pinker snow pants, so I could benefit from Rodney’s extensive knowledge of the civil war. The years trudged by. I got older.
Thoughts From TDU While Not Doing My Homework
So…I bought two used books today. I couldn’t help it. I was going to the library, and POW! There was a book sale. Fifty cents for a paperback, a buck for a hardcover. It was a set up. They heard I was coming today and ambushed me.
First off—I was lied to. Many of those books were not used at all, but mint condition trade paperbacks. The covers were perfect, the pages weren’t bent, and there wasn’t a food stain to be seen. They smelled good too. So I got two books: The Things They Carried by Tim O’Brain, and Idlewild by Nick Sagan. I’ve always wanted to read TTTC but never got around to it. Now’s my chance. As for Idlewild, I’d never heard of it, but the book had a glowing blurb on the cover from Neil Gaiman, which was good enough for me. Also, according to Sagan’s About-the-Author blurb, he’s Carl Sagan’s son, graduated from OMFG Wonderful University, wrote scripts in Hollywood for the best movies ev4r, and is much more talented than you, me, and everyone else. That was worth four bits right there.
The way I see it, okay okay okay, I spent money on books I don’t have time to read, but at Borders the same books in the same condition would cost me $29.30, so I just saved myself twenty-eight bucks. Hurray for fiscal responsibility.
The problem was that I ran into this guy from one of my film classes who wanted to know what class the O’Brian book was for, because apparently everyone and their cousin reads The Things They Carried for GWRIT 103. I told him I tested out of that class. That was the wrong answer.
This, to me, is the big difference between high school and college. In high school, if you read a book you don’t have to, you’re a nerd and should be put in social quarantine in case it’s contagious. In college if you’re reading voluntarily, you’re not taking enough credit hours and you’re a lazy pus. It didn’t occur to me to tell the guy it was for ENG 493 until much too late to do me any good.
And one more thing. I’m looking at the nutrition label for a bag of popcorn and it tells me that if I eat the corn kernels, that’s 130 calories. Once I pop it, though, and I eat the whole bag, that’s just 30 calories. Where do the other 100 calories go? The law of conservation of energy says they have to go somewhere. Do they evaporate? Does the bag absorb them? Do diet gnomes spirit them away? If so, can they work their magic on chocolate instead?
I don’t care. This popcorn is too crunchy and tastes like eight miles of ass. I’m getting a bagel.
Saturday, October 07, 2006
Thursday, October 05, 2006
Mixed Messages
The Bad News.
The Good News.
If I had to name the one thing about American politics that worries me the most, it would be the Evangelical stranglehold on our nation's policies. Over the past several years, I've developed a troubling cognitive dissonance. I like to think that I'm a tolerant person, and that I try to respect worldviews outside my own. However, from Catholic school, to 9/11, to Bush, the wealth of my experience leads me to believe that organized religion is perhaps humanity's most destructive force. More people have died in the name of Christ than from AIDS, or smallpox, or cancer. And while I recognize that there are many church going people who are good, honest, and benign, I'm confronted daily with people who wear their bible over their heart only as an excuse to feel superior, or wield dogma as a weapon to bludgeon their peers.
I can only hope that eventually, faith will replace dogma, and spirituality will replace religion. The first requires awe before the beauty of creation, whereas the second takes that awe and corrupts it to the advantage of the few.
I am, of course, excluding Pastafarianism, which has pirates and pasta, and can therefore do no wrong. Consider their dogma:
The Eight "I'd Really Rather You Didn'ts"
1. I'd Really Rather You Didn't Act Like a Sanctimonious Holier-Than-Thou Ass When Describing My Noodly Goodness. If Some People Don't Believe In Me, That's Okay. Really, I'm Not That Vain. Besides, This Isn't About Them So Don't Change The Subject.
2. I'd Really Rather You Didn't Use My Existence As A Means To Oppress, Subjugate, Punish, Eviscerate, And/Or, You Know, Be Mean To Others. I Don't Require Sacrifices, And Purity Is For Drinking Water, Not People.
3. I'd Really Rather You Didn't Judge People For The Way They Look, Or How They Dress, Or The Way They Talk, Or, Well, Just Play Nice, Okay? Oh, And Get This In Your Thick Heads: Woman = Person. Man = Person. Samey - Samey. One Is Not Better Than The Other, Unless We're Talking About Fashion And I'm Sorry, But I Gave That To Women And Some Guys Who Know The Difference Between Teal and Fuchsia.
4. I'd Really Rather You Didn't Indulge In Conduct That Offends Yourself, Or Your Willing, Consenting Partner Of Legal Age AND Mental Maturity. As For Anyone Who Might Object, I Think The Expression Is Go Fuck Yourself, Unless They Find That Offensive In Which Case They Can Turn Off the TV For Once And Go For A Walk For A Change.
5. I'd Really Rather You Didn't Challenge The Bigoted, Misogynist, Hateful Ideas Of Others On An Empty Stomach. Eat, Then Go After The Bullshit.
6. I'd Really Rather You Didn't Build Multimillion-Dollar Churches/Temples/Mosques/Shrines To My Noodly Goodness When The Money Could Be Better Spent (Take Your Pick):
Ending Poverty
Curing Diseases
Living In Peace, Loving With Passion, And Lowering The Cost Of Cable
I Might be a Complex-Carbohydrate Omniscient Being, But I Enjoy The Simple Things In Life. I Ought To Know. I AM the Creator.
7. I'd Really Rather You Didn't Go Around Telling People I Talk To You. You're Not That Interesting. Get Over Yourself. And I Told You To Love Your Fellow Man, Can't You Take A Hint?
8. I'd Really Rather You Didn't Do Unto Others As You Would Have Them Do Unto You If You Are Into, Um, Stuff That Uses A Lot of Leather/Lubricant/Las Vegas. If the Other Person Is Into It, However (Pursuant To #4), Then Have At It, Take Pictures, And For The Love Of Mike, Wear a CONDOM! Honestly, It's A Piece of Rubber. If I Didn't Want It To Feel Good When You Did It I Would Have Added Spikes, Or Something.
We Hates Her, Precious
I'm sure I've mentioned here before, I don't like my roommate. I've tried, with sincere and diligent effort to appreciate Kelsey for the unique and beautiful snowflake that she is, instead of demonizing her into the demonic spawn of satan she superficially appears to be. My efforts have come to naught. She is, with the unilateral consensus of my soul, a raging bitch.
As a for instance, I was in my room, working hard on homework for ENG 493 (Smoke and Mirrors - Neil Gaiman), when bubbly, Christian rock blared through my door. I poke my head out of my room, to discover that she's scattered the contents of the freezer around the kitchen, set up a pair of speakers... and then left. So I turned the dial down to a reasonable level just in time for Kelsey to leap out of the shadows, ninja-like, to ambush me and accuse me of "touching" her "things." She insinuated that one o'clock was pretty late to be sleeping, and I informed her I was doing homework, thanks for asking. To Kelsey’s mind, all college students do is party, drink, have sex, and sleep. Classes and homework NEVER come up. And, OK, technically I was doing homework for a fictitious class, but that's hardly the issue.
And while we're on the subject, I would really rather prefer that she not tell my landlord I'm doing drugs.
Pages
I've been thinking about my fictional class, ENG 493: A Survey of Reading Whatever the Hell You Want. The idea's not half-bad. I'm only taking twelve credit hours, an unthinkable level of slackerness. I'm going to pretend that am taking ENG 493 and make time to do some reading, which is, after all, the best way to learn how to write. Put that way, it's not procrastination, but a proactive measure necessary to my development as a writer.
Which brings me to the rest of this update. It's another essay for Nonfiction, where I had to define a whole world using a narrow focusing device. I only had two pages, so I don't think I pulled it off, but I like some of the bits here:
There weren’t any students for a five-seat radius at any of the lunch tables, which suited me just fine. While the other kids yammered about stupid things like Nintendo or Jonathan Taylor Thomas, I was the verge of a scientific breakthrough. It was going to be historic! Groundbreaking! I was shocked it wasn’t already on the evening news. A Roman collar floated into my peripheral vision. With typical adult incompetence, Father John took my isolation for an unlucky predicament. “What are you reading?”
I didn’t look up. “Dinotopia.” I should have stopped there. “You see, this guy was in a library and he found this journal about this father and son who crash-landed on this island where dinosaurs had survived and they had a whole civilization there and it’s all in the journal.” I flipped back through lushly illustrated pages to the beginning, where a man pulled a battered volume from a dusty bookshelf. The caption read: I find the journal. “If this is true,” I jabbered on, “it would rewrite all the science books!” This book had confirmed what I already knew to be fact: That dinosaurs, like my goldfish and Amelia Earhart, had not died at all, but had merely been misplaced and would turn up eventually, probably in a very surprising location.
Then Father John launched a torpedo into my feverish calculations. “It’s just a book,” he sighed and left. Across the room Ronny Thompson and Kevin Wheeler were chucking peas again.
Public schools and private schools are fundamentally the same. Fun of any kind is strictly prohibited. Still, nylon garland and twinkle lights weren’t overtly religious, so the principal turned a blind eye when Mrs. Robinson draped them around the backstage areas. After the bell rang and the kids shuffled out to second period, she held me back with tap to my shoulder. On an early release day, no one would care if I got to Algebra a few minutes late.
Mrs. Robinson waited a few seconds before speaking until the chatter of students in the hallway died away. “I won’t keep you long, but we’re not really supposed to exchange presents with students so…” She shrugged and produced a paperback with a bow around it. “Don’t tell anyone.”
Sheepishly, I pulled a wrapped box the size of a fist from my backpack. We swapped and I examined the contraband gift. Guilty Pleasures by Laurel K. Hamilton. On the cover a petite woman gripped a revolver in one hand, while a pale man with fangs lingered in the background. “You’ll like this one,” she said, gauging my reaction. “It’s like a film noir Buffy.” I could have hugged her. Spiky hair, a predominantly black wardrobe, and a fondness for Anne Rice had lent me an unfortunate reputation for wanting to be a vampire. Which was stupid. I read dinosaur books voraciously in the third grade, but that didn’t mean I aspired to be a Tyrannosaur. Mrs. Robinson was different. She ran a Vampire: The Masquerade game on the weekend for her friends.
I hugged her anyway.
The sun’s rising and I’m on my seventh cup of tea. I notice the clock for the first time in twelve hours. Class in an hour, and I’m on page 578. The end is so close I can taste it. I flip through the remaining pages. “Don’t let your classes get in the way of your education,” Professor Timonin had said. I open my blinds, switch off my reading lamp, and settle in. He’d understand.
My parents used to sleep in on the weekends, so around daybreak or sometimes before, I would pull a book from a shelf, settle back into bed and kill time. The arcane symbols along the bottom of the pages were gibberish, but that didn’t stop me. There were pictures.
The Pink Angel looked for the Blue Angel, but couldn’t find her. As it turned out, the Green Angel had tricked the Blue Angel into eating poisoned cookies, and now he held her prisoner in his fortress in the sky. Luckily, the Red Angel saw this happen and told the Pink Angel, so they launched a siege of the Green Angel’s fortress with the help of the Orange Angel… and so on. A different story every morning.
A couple years later, the gibberish at the bottom of the page started making sense. The Angels weren’t kidnapping or rescuing anyone. They were counting from one to ten. Lame.
Wednesday, October 04, 2006
Squee!
Tuesday, October 03, 2006
Route Six
Here's another essay from my nonfiction class. I had to tell a story about something that happened to me recently, from the prespective of someone at least twenty years older than me and over the opposiate gender. The narriator here is something of an amalgum of several people, although I pulled a lot of his views out of my ass. I suppose this was meant to teach us a lesson about the difference between truth and fact.
The worst time is the in-between time, when people aren’t coming or going and the whole place empties out down to a few stragglers and the hollow rattle of the bus on the pavement. Times like that, you can hear your heart beat.
The rest of the day, it’s hauling cattle—loud, rude, and pungent. I turn down my hearing aid and my world narrows to what’s outside that window. Beer cans scattered across a brown lawn. Sullen students huddled over travel mugs, still resentful that eleven a.m. comes so early. Grey skies gear up for a soggy afternoon. Cars clog the intersections. Traffic is always terrible fifteen minutes before class. One of the old-timers who takes his lunch break at the campus hub, he once tried to explain to me how we’re in a noble profession. It’s a people business. Transporting folks is about more than traffic lights. You gotta know them to do it right. Well, I’ve seen the skirts these girls wear, and I’ve got a fair idea what I’d really like to know.
This is the least personal business. Even the shittiest desk job has you writing e-mails or making phone calls. Burger-flippers get to talk about the customer’s order. The only words out of my mouth all day are “Good morning,” “Good evening,” “You’re welcome,” and “Goodbye.” Telemarketers don’t know how good they have it.
Next time you’re privileged to ride public transportation, watch. I pack them in till they’re noses are pressed to someone else’s neck, and they go and look out the window, read a newspaper, press a cell phone to their ear, or wear those white earbuds and crank up the volume to compete with the Beethoven I’ve got playing over the speakers. These people could be inhaling their neighbor’s shirt without ever noticing its color.
It goes beyond looking. These kids carry on the most personal business on the bus like it was their bedroom, with no one paying them any mind. I’ve heard people break up with their honeys on their cell phones that look like fat credit cards, or discuss the nuanced tactics of getting freshmen girls sloshed. Moments like that, I turn the volume up on Beethoven.
There was this one time, though. It was a long hiatus on campus while the students shuffled in from their afternoon classes to go home. A girl came on and sat not three feet from my seat, cell phone in-hand. She dialed the number from memory.
“Hello? Oh, hey. Nothing. I just got out of class—we had to watch this tedious movie—and I wanted to call. What’s up?” She fell silent. In the dim reflection of the review mirror, she turned her head and her hair swept down like a curtain to hide her face. “When? Does mom…? Right. I’ve… I’ve got to go.”
One by one, students clattered up the steps and filled the seats until it was standing room only. Textbooks, sudoku, and ipods come out. The girl cried up until her stop came. No one noticed.
The worst time is the in-between time, when people aren’t coming or going and the whole place empties out down to a few stragglers and the hollow rattle of the bus on the pavement. Times like that, you can hear your heart beat.
The rest of the day, it’s hauling cattle—loud, rude, and pungent. I turn down my hearing aid and my world narrows to what’s outside that window. Beer cans scattered across a brown lawn. Sullen students huddled over travel mugs, still resentful that eleven a.m. comes so early. Grey skies gear up for a soggy afternoon. Cars clog the intersections. Traffic is always terrible fifteen minutes before class. One of the old-timers who takes his lunch break at the campus hub, he once tried to explain to me how we’re in a noble profession. It’s a people business. Transporting folks is about more than traffic lights. You gotta know them to do it right. Well, I’ve seen the skirts these girls wear, and I’ve got a fair idea what I’d really like to know.
This is the least personal business. Even the shittiest desk job has you writing e-mails or making phone calls. Burger-flippers get to talk about the customer’s order. The only words out of my mouth all day are “Good morning,” “Good evening,” “You’re welcome,” and “Goodbye.” Telemarketers don’t know how good they have it.
Next time you’re privileged to ride public transportation, watch. I pack them in till they’re noses are pressed to someone else’s neck, and they go and look out the window, read a newspaper, press a cell phone to their ear, or wear those white earbuds and crank up the volume to compete with the Beethoven I’ve got playing over the speakers. These people could be inhaling their neighbor’s shirt without ever noticing its color.
It goes beyond looking. These kids carry on the most personal business on the bus like it was their bedroom, with no one paying them any mind. I’ve heard people break up with their honeys on their cell phones that look like fat credit cards, or discuss the nuanced tactics of getting freshmen girls sloshed. Moments like that, I turn the volume up on Beethoven.
There was this one time, though. It was a long hiatus on campus while the students shuffled in from their afternoon classes to go home. A girl came on and sat not three feet from my seat, cell phone in-hand. She dialed the number from memory.
“Hello? Oh, hey. Nothing. I just got out of class—we had to watch this tedious movie—and I wanted to call. What’s up?” She fell silent. In the dim reflection of the review mirror, she turned her head and her hair swept down like a curtain to hide her face. “When? Does mom…? Right. I’ve… I’ve got to go.”
One by one, students clattered up the steps and filled the seats until it was standing room only. Textbooks, sudoku, and ipods come out. The girl cried up until her stop came. No one noticed.
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