Saturday, August 30, 2003

What kind of girl are you?

GIRLY GIRL - Clever Kitty
A GIRLY-GIRL. You dont have a lot of self-esteem
and people are always bringing you down for
being sad. What do they know, anyway? You feel
like youre too mature for your age and are
frustrated by the trend-followers who refuse to
accept you because youre not like them.
Your virtues: Intelligence, understanding nature,
modesty.
Your flaws: Lack of social life, inferiority
complex, timidity.


What kind of girl are you?
brought to you by Quizilla


I think these quizzes were made by an Aussie.

While I don't feel this is completely accurate, it is close.

What would your Japanese name be?

Yoshimi
Yoshimi - "Happy Beauty"
Sponsored by www.life-blood.cjb.net


What would your Japanese name be? (female)
brought to you by Quizilla


Yay!

Tuesday, August 26, 2003

Thursday, August 21, 2003

Stymied

I haven't blogged in a bit. Part of the reason is because I fell off the wagon, so to speak. Just like all my other attempts at dieting, this one has ended in failure. Sam says that I constantly commit myself to and accomplish great things, but somehow am stymied by anything involving self-improvement. It's an interesting evaluation, but I'm not sure what I think of it. The things I commit to are all in the "Fun Stuff I Want To Do" category, whereas the things I slack off on are "Things I Think I Ought To Be Doing, Whether They Are Fun or Not". I guess you could label the second group as being self-improvement items, because the things I think I ought to be doing include losing weight, exercising, writing the next great American novel, and things of that nature. I think they can also be referred to as things that involve changing my usual routine. I tend to fall into the patterns of least resistance, things that feel natural and amusing. Anything that goes against the flow is automatically more difficult to maintain over any length of time.

Analyzing the situation to death has not put me one step closer to fixing it.

The other reason I haven't blogged is because Xanga was down due to a barrage of DDOS attacks. Lame.

Right now I'm listening to a track from the Run Lola Run OST called "Casino (Solid State Remix)". It is damn good. It has a pumping, driving beat and a repeated sample of Lola panting as she runs, punctuated by rushing sound effects and a few simple bass chords and melodies. It is really neat; it puts me in a sort of sexual meditative state.

I've been doing lots of posting on GP4 lately. One of Sam's non-player-characters, Amy Velpers, is hosting a ball, and all the PCs were required to attend. Everyone is on the same thread. It's a hoot.

Sean wasn't feeling well today. Fortunately, he has a good week before he has to go to work; since he's changing companies on the 29th, he is using up all his sick days now. I hope he'll get a good rest over this extended weekend. His allergies really seem to kill him.

I sort of wish we could use this time that he's off to go visit my relatives in Kentucky, but Sean doesn't feel up to taking a trip. He says he just wants to relax. Fair enough, I suppose.

I missed both Mom and Ben's birthday parties. Fortunately, Faye and others made sure there were pictures for me to see, which is good. Logan is really growing up, and Connor is a boy now, not a baby. He's almost four. It's crazy.

I miss everybody.

Hopefully I can find some sort of job so that I can afford to fly home to visit sometime...flights from Augusta to Lexington are ridiculously expensive though, something like $600 when I checked today. I've got the non-major-airport blues...

Sunday, August 10, 2003

"I think all of us have one question," AJ said. "What're you going to eat today?"

:>

Well, I don't know what I'm going to eat today. However, yesterday, I had:

  • five pieces of pizza

  • two cans of Mountain Dew


  • Hopefully that will satisfy everyone's curiosity for now. ;P

    Sean and I awoke this morning to the violent sounds of a raging storm. Rain slammed against the roof and walls of our apartment as lightning crashed and thunder cracked deafeningly at very close range. Sean got up to look at the storm out the deck door, then returned to curl up in bed. "Honest," he said, "Georgia didn't have tropical South American weather before you moved here."

    It's all my fault!!!

    McAfee Virus Scan renewed itself yesterday, so I figured I'd keep it rather than cancelling the service. I'm scanning my computer now, and so far, three small files in my Temporary Internet Files folder have come up as infected. I'm not sure if they are actually causing a problem or not, but it's good to know that McAfee caught them. The viruses are named "Exploit-ByteVerify" and "JS/Seeker.gen.f". I just remembered that I haven't bothered to apply Service Packs to Office yet, so I'll do that once the scan is done and hopefully lower my infectability factor.

    Last night we had Paul over and ordered pizza. That was our tradition for a long time, but the past few weeks we'd been neglecting it. It was good to have company over again. We ended up watching the first two DVDs of Kimagure Orange Road, which I found very amusing and fun. The male lead suffers from that same inability to articulate his desires to women that we see in many titles, but it's not as overwhelmingly irritating as it is in, say, To Heart. In fact, Kyosuke does much better with it than Tenchi or Keitaro (to use two very famous examples), which is a refreshing change. I'd like to watch more of the show, and soon.

    I also need to catch up on Naruto. Episode 44 was just released by the fansubbers, but I think Sean and I haven't seen anything past 38.

    The AMRN has been kicking, so much so that two new games may or may not be in the works. Snipes has been putting together a website in hopes of resurrecting the long-dead Bubblegum Crisis game; Sam has been kicking around the idea of a Cowboy Bebop game for months now. I'd like to mention here that I've thought about doing a Cowboy Bebop game ever since seeing Cowboy Bebop. The universe is extraordinarily rich, and the genre leaves plenty of room for more intrigue and fun. The game would have to exclude the original cast, but I feel that assembling a new group of people and writing a story for those people would have the same effect as the anime. What happens, ultimately, would be directly relevant to them, and when it was all said and done they would have changed the face of the universe.

    Of course, the biggest problem with that is keeping players. If you let someone join who ends up flaking out a few months in, then you have to totally rewrite your story. This, plus the fact that I am already running two games, sort of curtailed the tiny, preliminary thoughts I was having. Still, the thought that Sam might work something up is exciting. I wonder what sort of character I could play...

    Saturday, August 9, 2003

    All good things...

    Continuing on the one meal a day plan, I ate:

  • one chicken club sandwich from Chik-Fil-A

  • one large box of waffle fries

  • one medium Dr Pepper

  • two cans of Mountain Dew, one of which I am currently drinking


  • I'm sort of in a weird mood today. I'm not sure what the deal is, but it probably has something to do with the IRC chat. You know how good things are...they tend to not always stay as good. I guess this is sort of the situation now, though I'm sure things will get better with time. Essentially, there is a guy who comes to the chat that pretty much everyone dislikes, but I have no legit reason to ban him, so we're stuck with him. (In other news, I did ban Suzaku today--he was asking for it. Literally.)

    I'd like to be in the mood to post, and I'm working my way back in, but it's a slow process. I don't really have much to say beyond that, so I'll stop here.

    Friday, August 8, 2003

    One meal a day; plus, IRC is cool

    Today, like yesterday, I only had one meal. It was:

  • one pint sweet and sour chicken

  • one pint rice

  • one can Mountain Dew


  • I've also been drinking water.

    I'm not sure what the deal is, but yesterday and today I just didn't feel like eating, other than the main meal that came around what lunch would be for me if I was counting. Right now I feel like I should be hungry, but I don't particularly want to eat anything. Thinking about food makes me go "Meh."

    Sam says that I should try to stick to one meal a day for a week so that my stomach will contract. Then I'll get full easier, as long as I eat slowly. I say that sounds like a good plan, so I'm going to go for it.

    Boy, we had a crazy time in the channel tonight. I told Kitty Larke's player to come in, and she did, and she was a hoot. She's one of those who is quite adept at the skill of chatting, and she kept us all in stitches. We amused her greatly, as well. It was a rousing good time for all, during which postage occurred...so in essence, I was quite a happy camper!

    I really haven't had a good, fast-paced chat like that in a long time. We used to have them back on EFNet, #robotech and #starwars!, but after awhile people just stopped going to EFNet (including me). I really love what the IRC room does for the AMRN. Giving people a common place to discuss posts and conspire together and get to know one another was a fantastic idea. Posting has increased among the people who show up to the chat, I believe, and we're tying more things together far more easily than before. It's the sense of community that I always felt we needed. Not everyone comes to the room, so it's not an all-encapsulating experience...but we have enough of the major posters that it almost feels like it. It's fantastic.

    Thursday, August 7, 2003

    Happy Birthday, Dawn!

    Yes, it's August 8 in Malaysia already, which means my dear friend Dawn is celebrating her birthday. I suppose it wouldn't be proper to put her age here ;D

    Dawn and I have known each other since fall/winter of 1999. Actually, the first time I learned of her existence was, I believe, when I visited Sean for the first time in the summer of 1999. I'm actually having a little trouble putting the facts together, but I know that my first encounter with Dawn occurred while Sean and I had our computers over at the Mental Soup offices. We were there after hours hanging out online, and a message popped up on Sean's ICQ for "Ryu-chan". Somehow, I also discovered that Dawn had sent him a Christmas card. (He must have still had it on his desk with the rest of his mail. In the middle of summer. I don't know ;P)

    "How did she get your address?" I asked, as this was back in the 'jealous girlfriend' stage of our relationship.

    "I gave it to her," Sean said without explanation or apology. (My husband is cool.)

    Since I had no real response to this--even jealous-girlfriend-me knew that throwing a hissy fit would be stupid and immature--I dropped the issue. I went back to reading the AMRN to see if I could find her posts or any idea about her (at the time I was not a member, but I had started reading the boards because Sean spent so much time writing there. If I use another parenthetical I may kill myself).

    I never did find anything to fuel my jealousy, and I forgot about the whole thing shortly thereafter.

    Months later, I decided to join the AMRN with my new character idea, Julien Straub. Shade (who I had also met in person on that trip) and I conspired together to come up with the idea. Basically, Julien would be closeted gay, and he would realize the truth about himself by falling in love with Ryu Connor, Sean's character. It was going to be a hoot, or so we thought.

    So I started roleplaying with Julien, and I discovered that I was really, really liking it.

    During the transfer story in which Julien and a crowd of others were shuffling into various squadrons on the Etrakis, I--or rather, Julien's player--met Dawn--or rather, Dawn and her alter-ego Hellspawn. Oh, boy, this is more convoluted than I thought.

    Julien and Iliana's players, which were of course me and Dawn, began conversing through email. The messages were really interesting and "we" got to know each other quite well. Meanwhile, on ICQ, "Hellspawn", who played on the AMRN, joined "Julien's" contact list. Julien and Hellspawn talked for a bit about videogames and RPGs, but ultimately didn't have much to say to each other. (I was having trouble pretending to be a man. I really had no interest in videogames and RPGs, and I didn't know what else to talk about.)

    Finally, Hellspawn decided that "he" could no longer lie to "his" good friend Julien, and spilled the beans in an email from Iliana, letting me know that they were one and the same person.

    After receiving the email, I was sort of shocked, and I wasn't sure what to think. When I saw Hellspawn on ICQ later, I sucked it up: "You play a pretty good woman, Hellspawn!"

    Then Dawn responded with the killer: "That's because I am one, dearie ^_~"

    I about fell out of my chair. But I could hardly fault her, since I was doing the same thing.

    I wanted to paste the log of that conversation here, but I seem to have lost all of my Julien chats :P I have checked all my backup CDs and DVDs and I guess I just never thought to copy over Julien's ICQ stuff. I'm amazed that I didn't save the chats as text files though. What was I thinking?

    In any case, I didn't tell her who I was for awhile. I actually began living a double life, because as my chat logs with Sean attest, I met Dawn as Heather on January 21, 2000.

    Me (9:02:38 PM): Hellspawn, huh?
    Sean (9:02:59 PM): Yeah, approve her.
    Me (9:03:02 PM): I did.
    Me (9:04:02 PM): That's the same person you were talking to that one time, right?
    Sean (9:08:35 PM): Right.
    I believe I'm slyly referring to "that girl who called you Ryu-chan?" without actually saying it. I was such a dork at the beginning of our relationship. ;>

    Anyway, I don't have any logs from Dawn until February 4, 2000. By that time we seemed to know each other's secrets. This excerpt is interesting:

    --------------------------------------
    ICQ History Log For:
    64474335 Witch Child
    Started on Wed Sep 27 15:56:59 2000
    --------------------------------------
    COSLeia 2/15/00 2:31 PM This is weird.
    Witch 2/15/00 2:43 PM I agree... ^_^
    COSLeia 2/15/00 2:43 PM Back as me. And sure, I'll talk to Boomer
    Witch 2/15/00 2:44 PM ^_^
    hold on a moment while I set it up?
    COSLeia 2/17/00 4:01 PM :)
    Witch 2/17/00 4:02 PM hehe... just noticed?
    is Dave online btw? he hasn't authorized me
    yet
    COSLeia 2/17/00 4:07 PM I'm not on as Julien so I can't tell hold on
    As you can see, after Dawn found out I was Julien, I still kept up the charade for quite a long time. I even had a few conversations with Sean as Julien, on AIM. O, the deception! These, of course, I managed to save. Just for kicks, here's an example:

    Hellfire00 (11:49:49 PM): Hmm, just Tuesday, was hoping for a new Penny-Arcade.
    JulienStraub (11:49:52 PM): Oops. I have to go.
    JulienStraub (11:49:59 PM): Penny-Arcade!
    JulienStraub (11:50:06 PM): My gaming friends told me about that.
    JulienStraub (11:50:08 PM): I never miss it now.
    Sean (11:50:14 PM): It rulez.
    JulienStraub (11:50:20 PM): 3r33t
    Sean (11:50:28 PM): LOL, you know l33t speak!
    JulienStraub (11:50:44 PM): I'm on AOL. What do you expect?
    Sean (11:50:45 PM): OMG! I thought I was all alone!
    Sean (11:50:46 PM): Roxor!
    Sean (11:50:49 PM): Heh.
    Sean (11:51:19 PM): Alright, take care man, I will chat at you tomorrow I am sure.
    "My gaming friends"...peh.

    And just for good measure...

    JulienStraub (11:14:44 PM): Hello. ^_^
    Sean (11:14:50 PM): Hello. ^_^
    Gaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay...

    Hm. Well. This turned into more of a ramble about Julien than a discussion of my relationship with Dawn ^^;;;; I guess it would be easier to chronicle my friendship with her if I hadn't seemingly lost all the old chats and emails. :( I don't know why I didn't save them. I've been saving things like that since 1996. Oh well. I must have lost it all in a format and forgotten to back up beforehand.

    Well, I guess I can break the suspense and let the reader know how Dawn found out that I was Julien.

    I was having trouble keeping the identities separate after I started talking to Dawn as myself, especially considering how close I had gotten to her as Julien. One day I was telling her about my struggle with cancer, and Dawn paused and then said, "This sounds familiar..."

    I froze. I had told Dawn about having cancer as Julien, in email, and completely forgotten! I didn't want to lie to her (I seem to have no problems with deception as long as I don't have to actually lie straight out), and so after a moment of consternation, I finally said, "You probably remember it from Julien telling you about it. And I'm Julien."

    I'm sure Dawn almost fell out of her chair...and thus our true and open friendship began :>

    Since Dawn and I really started to know each other, our friendship has really deepened and blossomed. I've never met her in person, but I can say without a doubt that she is the closest female friend I have. I wanted her to be the maid of honor at my wedding, but unfortunately she couldn't make it. I told her that she was my maid of honor whether she was there or not, though :)

    Since we became friends, I've watched Dawn go through some hard times, especially in her relationships. I wish I knew the right thing to do or say to help her find the man for her, but I guess it will just come in time. She seems to attract people who don't appreciate her...and sadly enough she tends to cling to those people. I guess some of that is natural...women like the 'strong, silent type' and would actually rather be dismissed outright by a guy than coddled and pampered by one. But when it goes to the extreme, it's just hurtful and sad. There needs to be a good balance...two people who know they love each other but who don't lose their identities and opinions in the process. It's hard to do, and a lot of it is purely left up to chance. (Who knew I would meet my perfect match in a Robotech chat room?)

    I want Dawn to be happy. One of my goals in life once I'm rich ;) is to sponsor Dawn to come to the US. I know she wants to come here and meet everyone. I don't know that she would necessarily want to stay, and I wouldn't force her to do anything, but I would love to have her close, so we could hang out in person. It would just be great :>

    I sometimes wonder how we would get along in person. She likes to go to clubs and stuff, and she's a smoker. I imagine she drinks, too, but I'm not sure. Compared to Dawn, I'm pretty boring ^^;; I wonder if she would have fun with me, or if she would need more excitement in her life.

    Maybe someday I'll find out!

    Gaila

    I took off my shoes yesterday and set them next to my desk with my socks lying on top. They've been sitting there since then.

    Seeing them in the periphery of my vision, I've managed to convince myself that they are various other things, since I don't really expect anything to be at that spot on the floor. At once point I thought there was a huge dead mouse lying right next to my feet. But of late, every time I notice my shoes out of the corner of my eye, my brain gives me an image of my dog, Gaila, lying asleep next to my desk. It's a comforting, normal-seeming image, and the first few times I saw it I looked down as if preparing to reach down and pet her. Of course, she's not there. Now that that image has occurred to me, it's all I see.

    It's odd, because I don't know that I miss Gaila. I think I miss the idea of Gaila.

    A few days ago the guys in the chatroom were talking about their dogs. Sam has apparently had a dog like Misho--intelligent to the point of being a member of the family. Carver had a similar experience with his dog, who unfortunately had to be put to sleep recently. As everyone spoke about their dogs, I realized that I had never made that connection with mine.

    I remember the day I picked her out. She was so tiny. I was wearing a tank top with a flannel shirt over it, so I buttoned the shirt and put her inside, carrying her around in the makeshift pouch. The name 'Gaila' came to me out of the blue; to this day I don't know why I called her that. I had been considering 'Leia', but I thought the boys would make fun of me...plus I wasn't sure I wanted to attach a Star Wars reference to my dog. I wanted her to have her own reference.

    When we were finally able to take our dogs home, they lived in the basement for a long time, locked up in cages my dad built. Once they were potty-trained, they stayed in our rooms with us. We were trying to train them to walk with a leash, but we didn't work with them much, and ultimately they never learned. I think AJ got Hairy to be a pretty obedient, intelligent dog, but I never felt that Gaila was anything out of the ordinary.

    She was a fast dog. She loved to run and catch the ball, and 99% of the time she would beat her brothers to it. I once threw the ball for her so much that she almost passed out from heat and exhaustion. I was horrified that she had continued running despite her tiredness, that I had nearly run my dog to death. My parents said that Misho had been like that, too; he'd run until he couldn't run anymore if you told him to.

    I still wonder to this day whether or not I gave my dog brain damage, destroyed her chances of being that intelligent dog I wanted so much.

    I made other mistakes with Gaila. One time, giving her a bath, I wrung out her ears to dry them. Why I thought this was a good idea, I don't know. I think I busted up the cartilage, because her ears aren't flat anymore. They look wrinkled.

    The biggest regretful memory I have with Gaila is what happened when she lost her leg. Dan Yoder had been the one to let them outside that night. It was pitch black out and impossible to see. Due to some construction my parents were having done (I believe it was the retaining wall for leveling the yard), there was a pile of rebar lying in the backyard. Gaila ran right into a piece of rebar and shattered her right shoulder.

    When she screamed that night, I should have gone to her. I didn't. AJ went and got her and someone else ended up carrying her to the car to take her to the vet. The next day, when it was determined that her shoulder couldn't be repaired, AJ and Mom were the ones who made the decision to remove her leg, as it would only be dangling there in the way. They took her in for the operation; I arrived with the family to get her when it was over.

    She came walking out with a huge line of stitches on her shoulder, stumbling towards me. She seemed perplexed by the fact that nothing was holding her up on that side, and she looked like she was on the verge of falling with every step. At that moment I hated everything, but I especially hated myself...for not loving her more.

    I think part of the reason I am not attached to Gaila as much as I try to convince myself I want to be is because I don't want to be responsible. Because I know I am responsible for bad things that have happened to her already. I want her to be safe and well taken care of, and she is those things at home, with Mom. She is Mom's dog now, and Mom watches over her better than I ever did. Mom knows Gaila's eccentricities, like how she can't have dog chews because she'll swallow them whole and choke and vomit all over. Mom has been the one to love Gaila. I was never there for her, even when she slept in my room.

    And so really it's not that Gaila wasn't good enough for me, as I used to think. It's that I'm not good enough for her.

    She's only 17! O_O

    Sam said something tonight on IRC concerning a character of mine that I would like to immortalize.

    <Ironside> But Celia has legs a guy could suck on for a week.
    So...yeah.

    He's actually referring to a picture that Barricade edited, originally from a Korean video game called Magna Carta. Here is his version of the pic. He also says that the line is a movie quote...but what a line. I was like o_o...

    ...a whole week...yum...

    *cough*

    Anyway, it's from The Naked Gun, a movie I love, but actually haven't seen in its entirety. I should go rent it :>

    And that's about it for that.

    My mutant power; plus, musical musings

    My current blog entries--or lack thereof--would indicate that I haven't eaten food in awhile, but that is not actually the case. Yes, I'm afraid that I have been lying through omission, and so now I will come clean.

    Last night I ate:

  • probably four ounces of roast chicken

  • 1/2 cup peas

  • 2 cups garden salad with 2 tbsp ranch dressing

  • 1/2 cup green seedless grapes


  • I also had two Slim-Fast shakes, one of which was regrettably made with some whole milk, as I have exhausted the skim milk supply. Later on in the night as I grew more despondent and bored, I ate

  • one fat-free yogurt


  • and

  • one Slim-Fast snack bar


  • I'm pretty sure that's all the damage I did, though.

    My only meal today consisted of:

  • one thick piece of buttery garlic bread

  • three bites of spaghetti, taken before the realization that the meat was pretty old and didn't really taste all that great

  • 1/2 cup salad with a smidgen of ranch dressing

  • one quarter pounder with cheese

  • one medium fry

  • one medium Dr Pepper


  • After the fiasco that was the dinner I'd slaved over for a whole hour (gasp!), Sean and I ran out to Checkers. I felt ill for a little while, but it soon passed. (I swear, my mutant power is the ability to digest ANYTHING. This is, perhaps, not so much a power as it is a curse.)

    As I ate my lovely burger and fries (and drank that lovely cup of caffeine), I began to feel much better. In the chat room I was bouncing off the walls, and as you can see below I was also playing Dynomite. Too. Much. Fun. I didn't beat any of my high scores, but I was really enjoying myself. I was also talking out loud. For example, when the game said "Uh, Whirley's coming!" I would respond, "Come on, Whirley! Let's be friends! MWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!" Then, of course, I would whack him. Other comments included "Dammit," "Shit," and "AHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!"

    Somehow Celine Dion's song "My Heart Will Go On" came up as a topic for discussion in the chat, and so I pulled out my old, dusty mp3 and gave it a listen. Such a good song. After that I started waxing sentimental about old pop music I used to listen to, so I played several mp3s from Madonna's Ray of Light album. I really loved that album for awhile; back at GRW I used to listen to it all the time. That and Ace of Base's The Sign.

    Right now I'm listening to Donna Lewis' "I Love You Always Forever". I was living in Huntsville when this song first came out. At the time I was somewhat infatuated with one of the guys taking ground school with me out at this little podunk airport north of town. He had this dark, musty look to him...he looked like he had some good stories to tell. And he was always going on adventures. In fact, eventually he stopped coming to ground school because he'd not only 1) gone to Germany but 2) fallen in love with a girl he'd met while there. Guys like that just fascinate me. I can't imagine what it would be like to be in a relationship with one...but then I don't know if guys like that are stable enough to have a long-term relationship.

    In any case, whenever the Donna Lewis song came on, I would picture his face in my mind...and when she sang the line "You've got the most unbelieveable blue eyes I've ever seen," I would think "green"...because boy, did he ever.

    Wednesday, August 6, 2003

    My gaming box...not so much

    I have long operated under the assumption that my computer is good enough to play games on, should I ever feel the desire. Now, though, I have to seriously question that.

    Today I was listening to an mp3 in WinAmp and running all my normal programs--AIM, ICQ, mIRC, and IE--when I decided to play Dynomite. I opened the program and began playing. I had gotten pretty far into the game when suddenly the game jerked and stuttered just as Whirley was going by. I missed him, which seriously annoyed me. Soon I decided to quit--I don't like playing the game with the extra egg color. It gets too hard to differentiate in my peripheral vision.

    So I closed the program, and then I got to thinking. Why did it hang? So, as an experiment, I did CTL-ALT-DEL and watched the CPU usage as I played another game.

    The results?



    Sean says it looks like Dynomite is rendered in 3D. That's all well and good...but it still irks me that I should need a faster processor just to play what is essentially a 2D shooter.

    Tuesday, August 5, 2003

    Update!

    Yup. Computer stuff. More specifically, his computer stuff, which he had taken to work so that he could install his new motherboard.

    Crazy...

    He says that one of his coworkers looked into the case and said, "Jesus, Sean, it's immaculate!" Yes, that's my husband. He builds the tidiest computers known to man.

    "Are you decent?"

    Sean just called to ask me if I was "decent". I suppose that's a testament to my laziness; a lot of the time when he comes home I either am still wearing my nightgown, or lounging around in a towel after my shower. Today, miraculously, I actually have clothes on. Apparently he is bringing some stuff home that he will need help in carrying upstairs. I'm not sure what it could possibly be, but I'm sure it's something to do with computers, or work, or maybe it's books that he hadn't brought to the apartment yet. In other words, something boring ;)

    Rewarding myself

    Sam made a pretty good suggestion last night. He said that if I manage to drink a Slim-Fast instead of actual food, I shouldn't have to write a post about it. He said to think of it as a reward. I do believe I will follow that idea, because all these posts are driving me crazy.

    Monday, August 4, 2003

    Food

    I haven't eaten anything yet today, but I just sucked on a piece of hard candy--cherry-flavored--so I suppose I should write something.

    I have been up since around 2:30, when FedEx stopped in to drop off Sean's new motherboard. (His RMAed motherboard, since the one he'd bought was bad. And speaking of Sean, he just got home. Yay!)

    Well, I ended up leaving this open while I went and made dinner. We're having:

  • two hotdogs

  • macaroni and cheese

  • squash

  • green beans


  • I'm also drinking some really tart sugar-free pink lemonade. Mmmm.

    I think when I write my story for this, it will be about the wedding, or the honeymoon. I really need to cover those topics.

    For now though, I'm going to eat. ;D

    OMG!



    I love Penny Arcade.

    Sweet and sour exercise ennui

  • Small bowl of rice and sweet and sour chicken, left over from when we had Don and Suzanne over for dinner


  • I figure this is okay because it's dinnertime. For me. Because I stay up late and get up in the afternoon.

    I'll need to get some more rice soon...I just ran out of the stuff I bought at the Korean market and the bit I had left over from the Japanese grocery in Kentucky. All I have now is a bag of long grain white rice that Sue gave me. It really doesn't taste as good as the short grain Japanese brand rice, unfortunately :/

    I was talking in the channel about how I need to start exercising. Sam says that walking isn't enough, that tennis is okay, but that he recommends fencing. The first two I can do at my apartment complex for free...so maybe a combination of those?

    Blah. The worst thing about exercise is how boring it is. I love how good I feel afterwards, but the whole monotony of it really gets to me.

    Sweet and sour chicken = teh yum. I was just thinking that a sweet and sour chicken pizza would be faboo.

    I am suddenly very depressed. I am pretty much double the weight I should be. I have no idea what to do about it. Or rather, I have ideas, but I have no follow-through. I don't know what to do about that.

    Gonna stop writing now.

    I have an oral fixation! Plus, I am a distant relative.

    I am now convinced that I have an oral fixation.

    There is no possible way that I could be hungry. No way in hell. In fact, I feel that if I ate something, I would become nauseated. The mere thought of putting food in my mouth right now makes my entire body protest.

    And yet--for some inexplicable reason--I want to get something to eat.

    It's not like I have anything in particular in mind. I just feel the urge to munch. Even though the act of munching would make me feel like puking.

    WTF?

    I've believed in my oral fixation for awhile now. After all, I am always putting things in my mouth. I never chew on pencils--that's gross--but I do play with clumps of my hair, brushing them with my fingers and then putting them into my mouth, holding them there and then blowing them out with a poof and starting over. I also like to always have something to drink nearby, whether it be soda or water or sugar-free juice. Whatever's on hand. The reason I keep trying to stop drinking soda is because I can easily imbibe 500+ calories a day that way without noticing. Of late, water doesn't seem like enough. It seems too empty, too boring. I always seem to want some sort of flavor. It's quite detrimental to a balanced diet ;P

    What do you do when you have an oral fixation? Is there a way to deal with it other than just keeping water on hand?

    Paul's party was pretty fun. As usual, his large family was there. I don't know all of their names yet; I've never been good with names. It's part of being antisocial, I think.

    Here are the ones I do know. First, Paul's mother Sue, who is half Japanese and thus knows how to make all sorts of great Japanese food. She is married to Barney, who is thus Paul's stepfather. Sue has a daughter, Mickey, who is older than Paul and pregnant. She and her husband Bart were in attendance. Then there are Paul's younger siblings, April and a boy whose name I can't remember unfortunately. I am not sure if they are Sue's children with Barney or Barney's children with someone else or what. My severe lack of knowledge is pretty sad.

    Then there was Sue's brother...and I can't remember his name. He and his wife Trisha and their daughter and Trisha's parents were there. I know Trisha and her father from "yard-saling"; Sue invited me along one Saturday morning and I got to watch their bargain eagle eyes in action. So it was cool to see Trisha again; she's nice. I don't remember her daughter's name. There was a baby there named Katie or something...I couldn't figure out if she was Trisha's daughter or her daughter's daughter o_o

    That is about all I can remember. There was a whole slew of people in the next room, too. A teenage guy, and a young girl with a little black chihuahua (at least, I guess it was a chihuahua), and I think some adults...too many to keep track of X_O They're a pretty clannish group, and I feel honored that Sean and I are considered part of the family, so to speak. Still, it is a bit overwhelming to have all those people around at once, especially since I don't have history with any of them. (Heck, having my own extended family all together at once is overwhelming.)

    Anyway, we arrived and walked right in without knocking, waving to the crowd in the living room and moving to the kitchen. I feel the most comfortable in there; not really sure why. I grabbed a plate and loaded up with the goodies I mentioned in the previous post, while Sean declined dinner and waited for dessert--his burger and fries had curbed his hunger. Too bad I couldn't say the same...but even if I could have, I would have eaten something so as not to be rude. o_o

    Dinner was good, and the cake and ice cream were delicious. The conversation was typical for that group, meaning no-holds-barred anything-goes commentary. Mickey and Bart's sex life was discussed, and when the little toddler started looking down her shirt, Trisha crowed, "See anything you like down there?" Their openness is always amusing to me, and it's usually a little more than Sean can handle for any extended period of time. We managed to cut out after a little over an hour; we stayed long enough to watch Paul open his presents, then split. (By the way, if you are dying of curiosity, we gave him money. We figure that's better than any other gift to give a bachelor, living on his own, who was just laid off.)

    So that was it for our outing this evening. My husband is a total homebody, and I'm not much better. Left to our own devices, we might very well crawl into a cave, never emerging except perhaps for sushi and burgers. Perhaps.

    Faye just shared some pictures and movies with me of her kids. "Her kids" is such a strange way to refer to them. I feel a connection with Connor that goes beyond "my brother's son", I think. I was there when he was born and I watched him grow up, seeing him probably 80% of all days after they moved in behind Mom and Dad's house. I've watched--and helped--him turn into a little person. When I look at the pictures they send to me now, I can imagine him moving and speaking, and I even feel like I have an idea of what he's thinking. He's Connor. He's my very special Connor-boy who I love very much. I miss him.

    Seeing the pictures and movies brings me two distinct sensations. There's the missing Connor, definitely. But then I see Logan, and I get a different sort of pang. I look at his face, and I do not see a child who looks like Connor (as everyone else keeps saying). I see a totally separate individual. An individual who I do not know. My new nephew is a stranger to me...so even though I can look at his pictures and say "how cute!" it is not the same way I look at Connor's pictures and say "how cute!" It is a different kind of appreciation. It's more distant. I sometimes feel as though I may as well be looking at the child of a distant relative.

    In a way I suppose I am, given the many miles between here and home.

    Every time I think about this, it strikes me how unfair it is to Logan. Connor got to spend the first three years of his life knowing his aunt, being his aunt's best buddy. He formed a special relationship with me that can never be duplicated. Could never, even if I was local. But Logan has no chance of forming a relationship of his own with me. Not on anywhere near the same level.

    It hurts to think about that.

    I mean, Gabrielle has three kids now. She just gave birth to her own second child, Laef (pronounced "Layf") Marcus Follmer. But I don't feel bad that I'm not there to watch Laef grow up. I feel a distant sort of regret about it, but it's nowhere near the same feeling I get thinking that I won't be part of my brother's child's life. Logan is AJ's son, just as much as Connor is. I want to be there to watch him grow too.

    There is just something about my brothers. Maybe because we were close in age and grew up together and had many of the same friends. I feel a connection to both of them, a very strong desire to be part of their lives and part of their families' lives, even though I often don't feel like I fit in.

    Faye helps a lot in the latter aspect...she makes me feel that I belong, that I am important and special to the family and to her children. I want to have a relationship with those kids. I don't want Connor to forget about me, and I don't want Logan to grow up never knowing me. I want to be there.

    But given the current situation, I don't know how to manage it. We've already signed the lease for another year here in this apartment. The next time I'll see my family will be when Sean and I go up for Christmas...I can't imagine going up any sooner, although I'd love to. Who knows, maybe I will...but I seriously need to get some sort of job. Being unemployed and taking these little jaunts is not good on our budget ;P

    So I'm going to be like Mom was to all the Illinois cousins...the long-distance aunt who visits maybe once a year and brings her children who don't quite get along with "the gang". We were so far removed from our cousins--even the local ones, really--that no firm relationships were ever forged. I don't feel as strong a connection with my cousins or aunts and uncles as I would like to. I feel that Ben and I are very special people in Connor (and now Logan)'s life, and that is far more profound than anything I ever experienced with my own aunts and uncles. But I'm breaking it by not living nearby. If I do manage to have kids, they'll be in the same boat as my brothers and I were.

    Everything we do in life affects others, no matter how independent we might want to be. It's pretty sobering to think about that.

    Sunday, August 3, 2003

    ...guh.

    I have eaten way too much.

    Before we left, I had:

  • the rest of Sean's french fries

  • the rest of Sean's double quarter pounder with cheese


  • Then we went to Barney and Sue's place for Paul's party, where I consumed:

  • baked beans

  • black beans

  • pasta salad

  • "dirty" rice (rice mixed with meat)

  • most of a cheeseburger

  • one glass of sweet tea

  • one scoop of Neapolitan ice cream

  • one large slice of white cake with thick whipped topping


  • Right now, because I am freaking insane, I am drinking:

  • a can of Mountain Dew


  • If I keel over dead in the night, you'll all know why.

    I owe you all a story, a damn good one, but I really feel too ill to think clearly. I promise to come back and write something good. Maybe I'll discuss the party, or maybe I'll dredge up more childhood memories. I could talk about Noelle, maybe, and my trip to see her at Myrtle Beach. Unless I wrote about that already. I'm too fuzzy to remember now, and I don't feel like checking.

    I'm going to go lie down for a bit and let my food digest. I'll be back later.

    Disclosure

    As I was finishing up my Slim-Fast, Sean said, "I'm hungry." I looked over to find him sitting curled up in his chair with his arms wrapped around his legs and his chin propped on one knee, smiling at me with the universal cutesy look that says "Aren't you going to make me something?" He was so adorable that I just started giggling at him. Finally I remarked that we had hotdogs. "That could work," he said, but neither of us moved. I was thoroughly engaged in whatever I was reading--probably celebrity gossip or something, I don't know why that intrigues me so much--and finally he got up. I figured he was going to cook himself some hotdogs, but he came back in the room with his keys and said that he was going to go "pick up something".

    "What do you mean?"

    "I mean I'm going to go pick up something." He always does that. Repeats exactly what he just said. I didn't say "What?", I asked him to elucidate. :> Fortunately, he tacked on, "A burger or something. And I'll get Paul's [omitted in case Paul happens to read this, not that he won't find out in an hour and half anyway] while I'm out."

    "Okay," I said, and turned back to my oh-so-exciting reading. I probably should have gone with him, but meh, I had just had my caloric intake, and besides, he didn't act like he was assuming I would go. Checkers is just across the street anyway, so it wouldn't have been that interesting to ride along. I guess.

    I'm telling you all of this because after awhile of sitting here smelling Sean's delicious lunch/dinner, I finally decided to nick

  • one french fry


  • for myself. I know, I know...I'm incorrigible. I was thinking about cheating and not writing it in my blog...but that would be unfair to you, my readers, my glorious public. No, I shall be honorable. Justice shall prevail! And stuff.

    Connor Reloaded



    This is the sort of thing that happens when I get bored.

    In case you're interested, this is the original picture.

    It's a marathon...

    I'm about done with my

  • Slim-Fast


  • and I'm not really sure what I want to talk about. I guess another ramble is in order.

    Paul just had his birthday the other day. Today we're going over to his parents' house for a little party. This means I don't have to cook dinner. Whee!

    ...

    I finished my Slim-Fast like half an hour ago and I've had this window open for longer than that, and I can't think of anything to write. Instead, I've been reading stuff. I came across this interesting article during my bored procrastinations. Basically this is a group that will train you to run a marathon and then send you to where the marathon takes place--they cover virtually all costs as long as you have found enough pledges to meet their requirements. All the pledged money goes towards cancer research: specifically, leukemia and lymphoma. And you get to travel and get in shape. It sounds like a win-win-win situation to me :) I'm going to start seriously thinking about doing it.

    I have never been fit enough to run a marathon. It would be really cool to be able to run. Even when I was in kung fu, the time during which I was in the best shape of my life, I couldn't run even a mile. There's just something about running. I could stand (or jump) around for two hours throwing kicks and punches, but sustained running always left me winded and nauseated with a horrible stitch in my side. Imagine being able to run a 26 mile marathon and not feel that way!

    Standing on the periphery

    Yes, that's right, you caught me. I'm eating

  • a Klondike bar.


  • So sue me already! Sometimes you just need goodies...

    Here is a special message for a dear friend of mine. You know who you are.

    So I've been going through the PvP archives for the past few days, as you know, and it occurred to me that I read comics about video games without actually being a player of video games. Sure, I can beat King Koopa in the original Super Mario Bros. (after a multitude of tries), and sure, I indulge in PopCap's fantastic Dynomite quite a bit, but I am really no connoisseur (connoisseuse?) of games. Games in 3D intimidate me. I tried to play one of the Mario ones once, and I was totally confused by the shifting camera angle. Supposedly men are better at spatial thinking than women, so maybe I go into it with a handicap. Still, I'm sure I could learn, if I cared to practice. I just don't care to.

    I say that about so many things :>

    Anyway, this whole standing on the periphery of a movement and watching it happen but not really participating thing is typical of my entire life, or at least of most of my relationships. I always feel like an outsider, like everyone else is getting things done and going places and I am just watching and trying my best to catch up. I have this wild desire to be cool and interesting and to have people remember me long after I'm gone. It's really...annoying. I want people to be interested in me, therefore I feel that I must become interesting. I'm not interesting yet, obviously, because I'm not famous yet. Right?

    ;P

    I'm starting to like the design of my Xanga blog better than my main site design. It's sort of annoying me. Then again, maybe it's time for a change on my site. I do, after all, favor the color blue. We'll see if I ever feel like actually changing it.

    Speaking of web design, I still owe my mom a redesign of the No-Dog site, and I also should redo GP4's page and update the Macross 2051 homepage. I really haven't felt in the mood to design a website in quite some time; otherwise, I would do something for Box of Bunnies, the new website for my local circle of friends. But meh.

    I still feel like I'm hungry...like for a chicken sandwich o_o I guess technically I only had two meals today, but still, a sandwich? At this hour? Bleh.

    This is a train! It counts!

    Ah,

  • String cheese


  • that yet isn't string cheese. (It doesn't pull off in strings. Being shaped like a log does not make you a string, it makes you a log. Dammit.) Oh, and I'm eating three of these monstrosities. They taste okay.

    I wasted my anecdote earlier, because Sam told me I had cheated by not putting one in the post about dinner. I still maintain that that was in fact an anecdote...just a very short one whose core was "I read part of a book." But regardless, because I posted another story to make him happy, I don't have any left for this post, which sort of sucks because I have to write something.

    I finally did manage to post for the Ghostriders. It wasn't as hard as I thought it would be. The actions were all organized and efficient, so they beat the hell out of the incoming Regults. Now they have to pick up Lynn Kaifun. hehehehehehe.

    Sean asked me today if I wanted to finish up Pulp Fiction. I think maybe, now that I know exactly what's going to happen (because he told me), it might not be so bad to watch the rest. I guess I was reacting to it the same way I react to most horror movies: the tension is just too much for me. I don't know what the deal with that is. Does it mean that I couldn't deal with a high-stress working environment? Or are those two things unrelated? (I think I could deal with high stress at work if I enjoyed my job, but who knows?)

    Hey, it doesn't have to be an anecdote...it can be a train of thought. This is a train...see? There are three cars. Four if you count this paragraph, and five if you count the meanderings about cheese. So there!

    Romance in real life

    I got sort of dressed up today. I figured that since I shaved my legs, I should wear a knee-length skirt. Logic is a key factor in all of my decisions, obviously. So I put on my favorite side-zip navy skirt, then my lighter blue polo-esque ribbed girl-sleeved shirt. By girl-sleeved I mean those short, tight sleeves like they have on baby tees, instead of real sleeves that actually cover most of your bicep. A lot of my shirts have the shorter sleeves, so either they're in style or I have just gravitated towards that.

    Regardless, I looked pretty cute. I put in my contact lenses and some earrings with dangly blue hearts, then sprayed on some Ciara perfume...and went back into the office to sit on the computer some more.

    I'd had an inkling that we were going out for sushi, but Sean was very involved with Asheron's Call 2, so I wasn't sure when it was going to happen. I puttered around online for awhile, but I didn't feel like posting or doing much of anything besides reading PvP. Paul popped up to ask if Sean and I wanted to go watch anime at his place after dinner. I glanced over to Sean and tried to get his attention three times. Finally I waved at him, a wide, exaggerated motion that made him roll his eyes, sigh, and take off his headphones. "What."

    Don't you love it when people say "What" and it isn't a question? Me neither.

    So I asked him if he wanted to go to Paul's, and he said he'd think about it and went back to his game.

    This incident, combined with the rampant stupidity of a guy on the IRC channel, did nothing for my mood. I started getting a headache, and I could feel my stomach growling, but I wanted to wait for the sushi instead of grabbing some comfort food. I decided I couldn't handle being logged into any chat programs, so I shut them all down and left the office.

    In the living room, I turned on the TV, discovered (surprise surprise) that there was absolutely nothing on that I wanted to watch (we really need cable), and then just lay down across the couch, trying to relax. While I was sprawled out and moping, Sean poked his head in to say that we would leave for sushi at 8, and that he didn't want to go to Paul's.

    That gave me half an hour to burn. Bored, I glanced over my bookshelves until the Japanese Houses one caught my eye. I pulled it out and started reading. Fortunately, it really caught my interest, and I started to feel much better--if a bit wistful for Japan. At around 8 I went back into the office and logged back onto AIM briefly to tell Paul we wouldn't be coming. Then Sean said, "All right," and we both got up to leave. We kissed a little; I think he had finally detached himself from the game enough to notice what I was wearing. Either that or he just felt like kissing. It happens ;D

    I stepped into my blue sandals and he grabbed his sunglasses and keys. We kissed some more. Moving towards the door, I said, "I take it you like my outfit."

    Sean followed me out the front door. "Yes, very much," he said, and I smiled. He added, "I like you."

    Needless to say, we kissed some more. "I like you, too," I said. Then we tromped down the stairs towards the car.

    Saturday, August 2, 2003

    The aesthetics of serenity

    Ah...dinner.

    There is something about Japanese food that just feels right. It's light and not overpowering, yet it can make me feel completely satisfied. It's not a double quarter pounder with cheese...but after eating Japanese food, I feel that a double quarter pounder with cheese would be excessive to the point of nausea. No...give me my rice, my cutlets of fish--raw or otherwise, my green tea. That is the kind of food to eat if I plan on living for 100 years.

    And I do, of course!

    Before we left for the sushi place I was reading a book I picked up last year called The Japanese House. It's one of those beautiful oversized coffee table books that I adore, filled with gorgeous pictures and fascinating background information. I read about tatami mats, washi paper, shoji screens, and Japanese tea houses. I love the simple elegance of traditional Japanese style, in architecture, interior design, gardens...everything. It's really hard to describe the feeling it all gives me. I just feel comfortable and serene in a traditional Japanese setting. Of course, serenity was one of the main goals of the aesthetic design, passed down through Buddhism and filtering into the everyday culture, so perhaps the ease with which I adapt to it all is understandable.

    In any case, after that light reading I went on to have a light dinner, consisting of:

  • 3 "Augusta" rolls (crab, avocado, and cucumber--yum!)

  • 6 unagi rolls (barbecued eel and cucumber)

  • 1 "Philly" roll (cucumber, onion, Philadelphia Cream Cheese, and salmon--Sean loves them, but they're not for me I suppose)

  • 1 piece of maguro nigiri (raw tuna--I could have eaten more of it, it was absolutely delicious)

  • 3 pieces of unagi nigiri (that barbecued eel again--oh how I love it)

  • 1.5 pieces of tamago (egg--asked for it without rice as we were getting full, but we couldn't finish it anyway. Too sweet and eggy I guess)

  • Two mugs of green tea--the weird kind, I recognize the taste but I can't remember what Todd said it was made of. (Todd, my instructor for the Japan trip in 2001, is something of a tea connoisseur.)


  • Ahhhhh, how deliciously satisfying. At the moment I am partaking of

  • Sugar-free raspberry juice


  • It's good stuff, light and refreshing and a nice end to a glorious repast.

    Time to practice!!

    I'm actually not eating right now, but I came across an old PvP strip that I found infinitely humorous, given the situation.

    http://www.pvponline.com/archive.php3?archive=20011120

    Cole and I would get along just fine.

    Unfinished business

    I'm ingesting again, so it's time for another post. This time it's

  • One Slim-Fast diet milkshake, made with 8 ounces of skim milk


  • Yeah, we'll see how long this diet lasts...

    In my dreams last night there were a series of very odd occurrences that all seemed to reflect "unfinished business" in my memories. They all merged together to form one cohesive story. (I wonder sometimes if our idea of a good story isn't drawn directly from how our dreams are constructed. Then again, maybe my dreams follow a short story pattern because I've done a lot of reading...)

    Two important things happened in the dream. They were important not necessarily for their specific nature, but for the feeling I had throughout. I was completely comfortable and happy, which was nonstandard for me in those situations.

    The first situation was me having a job. I am not entirely sure what exactly the job was; it seemed to be something involving troubleshooting or data entry or somesuch. The dream took place after hours or during a break or something, and now that I think about it, the setting was a hospital, right outside the cancer ward. I remember reading the name of the ward (it was named after someone): it was like the Vola or Zola or Zula Cancer Center, or something like that. In any case, I don't know if my actual job was at the hospital or not, but for some reason I was hanging out there and meeting up with people. As this happened I spoke about my job and realized that I was happy with it, even though it didn't really utilize either of my degrees. This gave me a profound feeling of comfort.

    The second thing was the people I was meeting with. They were all figures from my past, people I don't see anymore. They may have all been high school friends, but I'm not sure because I only remember two of them clearly: Audra Johns and Isaac Porter. Audra was speaking to me in a friendly way about something silly, and while this was happening I did not feel awkward or as if I had nothing to say or as if I wanted to run and hide. I felt serene, at peace. I was having fun. This does not match up with my memories from high school, in which I never felt that I belonged. I still have trouble with this even now. A quick anecdote from a recent get-together can illustrate this.

    Sean and I had had some people over to watch anime and eat Japanese food. It was really fun. Afterwards we all went to the local putt-putt golf place to play arcade games. At one point everyone was standing in a circle talking. I realized all of a sudden that the guys were shifting around to make sure I was part of the circle instead of standing in a flanking position to someone who was in the circle. So I tried standing in the circle, realizing that I don't normally do that, and it felt infinitely weird. Sure, it felt like I was important and a part of the group, but it also felt like I should somehow prove my right to that position. I felt uncomfortable and just stood there not saying anything.

    It was a lot worse than that in high school. That's why not feeling awkward around Audra Johns--a popular, bubbly, friendly girl of the "smart kids" group that I wanted so desperately to be considered a part of--is so odd. Essentially, I never feel that I am worth talking to or that I have anything interesting to say when I'm face-to-face with another person. Online, though, I feel clever and witty and fun...so in the dream, I was essentially experiencing how I usually feel online in a "real life" scenario. It was neat.

    The other person I remember clearly speaking with is Isaac Porter. This is a guy who I knew since sixth grade. He and his friend Ryan Lawson seemed to get no end of amusement out of tormenting me and my friend Noelle. I remember at least one instance of me running out of the English classroom and going to cry in the bathroom, despite my overwhelming goody-goody instincts that leaving the classroom during class was bad. My perception of whatever they had done to me must have been extreme.

    Time sort of adds a buffer to memories like that, and so I can't really remember what it was that they did that was so horrible. I can remember their mocking, laughing faces, and how wildly I hated them and just wished they would go away forever, but I have no idea why I felt those feelings.

    In any case, Isaac and Ryan diminished in my life during the beginning of high school, and by the time I encountered them again they had somehow become charming, attractive, polite young men. The same thing happened to the guy who used to torment me and my friend Johnnie in fourth grade, Jared Bell. Suddenly, I no longer had a reason to hate any of them. In fact, all of them seemed like guys I would want to go out with. But the history between us made everything feel so weird. I never became friends with any of them, and instead sort of gazed on them from afar, wondering how it was that they had gotten "cool" while I was still the same person I'd been back in middle school. (Except fatter.)

    I never could relate to any of them. My distancing myself from everyone in middle school due to beliefs that I was somehow better, and then my distancing from everyone due to beliefs that I was no more than dust at their feet, had conspired to give me zero real friends. I was the wannabe outsider, in class with all of them but never feeling that I belonged. I wanted to feel that I belonged, but I didn't know how. By the time I started trying to just be friendly and sociable, it was my senior year, and everyone had already forged friendships. No one was interested in new ones because we were all graduating. I asked Jared to go to the prom with me and he said, "Umm, well, I wasn't actually going to go." I ended up going with a freshman who was a friend of AJ's girlfriend at the time. It sucked.

    It's interesting to me, then, that Isaac appeared in this dream. I sat down at a table with a bunch of those kids from school, all grown up, and he happened to be next to me. (In other words, I didn't sit down obsessing over the fact that I was sitting down next to Isaac Porter, which is yet another difference.) I just sat there and enjoyed the company and talked and laughed. It was amazing.

    At one point Isaac wrapped his arm around my shoulders. For awhile I didn't say anything, and finally I looked over at him and said "Did you put your arm around me?"

    He grinned with embarrassment. "Uh, yeah," he said, pulling his arm away. "You smell good."

    I blushed, wrapped my arm around his shoulders, and said, "Oh. Thank you." Then he put his arm back around me and we continued to sit like that. It occurred to me later to wonder if he'd seen my wedding rings.

    So yeah...weird, huh?

    I don't know if this means I have unresolved issues with my high school experience (probably) or if my subconscious is just telling me to lighten up (another good possibility).

    Backfiring...

    Yeah, so I'm having

  • One 12-ounce can of Mountain Dew


  • and

  • Another piece of pizza


  • What's it to ya?

    I'm thinking this plan is sort of backfiring, at least in the "oh yeah, I'll be too embarrassed to overeat if I have to write it down" department. In fact, I get the distinct impression that I am going to eat the last lonely piece of pizza in the fridge after I finish with this one. If I do, I'll be sure to let you know ;P

    Kevin had to move back to Florida from Texas today. He grew up in Jacksonville, but he'd been in the Houston area long enough to make some real bonds. He had friends, and a college he was going to, and there was a girl...he never told her how he felt, and now she's hundreds of miles away.

    His parents are either completely blind to his pain or are ignoring it for their own benefit. I'm betting on the latter...not that I in any way approve.

    The reason for the move--a $30K pay raise--is a good one. But I have yet to hear any solid reasoning why Kevin couldn't have been allowed to stay in Houston, where he was happy. He was already enrolled in school and he'd made a life for himself there. Why his parents couldn't see that and let him live his own life is beyond me.

    Seeing him hurt so much makes my heart ache. There's nothing I can do, and I hate that.

    I'm going to go get that

  • Last piece of pizza in the fridge


  • before I finish posting, so that I won't have to post again. I'd like to actually do up something with my City 12 cop character tonight.

    Sam and I have decided to play rivals. My character's name is T.J. Satana (enemies and obnoxious friends call her "Hooker"), and his character's name is L. Dallas Gabriel. They're both Detective Sergeants in the City 12 Police...and their purpose will be to run around meddling in the affairs of all the PCs, fighting each other tooth and nail along the way. It should be fun :D

    Mmm...last slice of pizza goodness.

    Friday, August 1, 2003

    My reaction to Pulp Fiction

    All right. Dinner.

  • One medium Dr Pepper, no ice

  • 8-pc chicken nuggets from Chik-Fil-A

  • Medium waffle fries

  • Cole slaw


  • Is that how you spell it? "Cole slaw"? What a ridiculous term.

    I suppose my readers--yes, all two of you--are wondering what happened to the sushi. Well, Sean was already late getting home because he stopped off at his parents' house to pick up a few things he still hadn't moved over here. I saw his saxophone case and a computer case in his car, and apparently there's more stashed in there somewhere. He also ran around to Best Buy and to the Suncoast in the mall, looking for movies. I'm not sure what got him in the mood to watch a movie tonight, but he called me and said he was looking to buy one or more of the following: Pulp Fiction, The Transporter, and Aliens. It turned out that Aliens is currently out of print, due to its initial DVD release being of rather poor quality, and is due to be rereleased in an Alien box set this winter. He finally decided to get Pulp Fiction only, but the mall wanted $10 more than Best Buy, so he swung by the apartment, picked me up, and we ran over to Best Buy.

    On the way he told me that he was supposed to meet someone on AC2 at 9pm. This meant that we would have to rush at dinner. I said that we should go to Chik-Fil-A instead, then, and save the sushi for when we had more time. Part of what I love about eating out is not being rushed and just enjoying the evening. So we grabbed Pulp Fiction--and the Matrix Reloaded soundtrack--at Best Buy and then crossed the street to grab some Chik-Fil-A. We came home and Sean was all ready to watch the movie.

    I was a little hesitant. I know that Pulp Fiction is one of those movies everyone has seen and that it's critically acclaimed and all, but I'd heard some rumors about what it was like, and quite frankly I was a little afraid of it. So I wasn't too thrilled about watching it right away. It turned out that my DVD player couldn't handle the DVD...it has problems with most modern discs, unfortunately. I thought I was saved, but Sean said we could just watch it on my computer. I relented because he really seemed to want to see it.

    I have just retrieved

  • One glass of sugar-free raspberry juice


  • I wanted ice cream, but I didn't want to write that I was eating ice cream like a wuss because I was afraid of a movie. :P

    So we were watching Pulp Fiction. The initial scene was annoying, but it didn't really bother me. Well, except maybe that kiss, because it was kind of gross. I like kisses and kissing scenes, but that one was sloppy, and it also felt stupid. I mean, these were robbers. Congratufuckinglations on loving each other, but could you stop being assholes?

    Anyway, my reaction to the next scene pretty much set the tone for the rest of what I saw of the film. Travolta and Jackson's commentary is amusing, but as things go on and the plot is unfurled I can sense that something is going to happen. Something I know I am not going to like. Something involving violence. I watched Desperado; I've seen flying gore and guts. But that's the kind of movie where it doesn't matter because it's so sudden and surprising. It's cartoony almost. With this, I had to deal with the waiting. Waiting while they chatted with one another, bringing up topics that were seemingly irrelevant--although of course I could tell that everything was included with a purpose. All their apparently inane chatter did was build up the tension. And when they arrived to do the job, instead of simply getting it done...they built up the tension even more.

    When Jackson finally shot the guy on the couch, I jerked as if I had been the one shot. And then the guy in the chair began sniveling and I knew he was going to die. I knew it would happen; why wouldn't they go ahead and kill him? But no, they had to torture him, had to taunt him, had to teach him a lesson. I felt like I was the one being tortured and lectured to, and it just wouldn't stop, until finally they were filling the guy with bullets. But seeing him executed was not a relief. It did not relax me, because I knew that the movie was just beginning, and that things far worse than this were coming.

    I knew I wasn't safe. I knew that I was going to see things I didn't want to see. I tried to build up my courage, but I was already hugging my elbows, frozen in my chair. I couldn't eat my dinner. (Until later ;P)

    The drug dealer scene was surreal and pathetic, but it allowed me to relax a little. I began to cringe again when Travolta shot up. And then he was on his way to see Uma Thurman--a beautiful woman who I found horribly unattractive in this film--and she kept being druggy-sexy, and you knew she was off-limits, and you were just waiting for the shit to hit the fan, and it did, with a fucking vengeance. And the tension just kept building.

    The direction...it's brilliant, perfect. It makes you scared about what's coming next because you know something's coming. This is the kind of movie where the plot flows naturally and beautifully but instead of riding along with it, you're being yanked behind on a choker chain that keeps getting tighter and tighter. You never choke, and sometimes it loosens, but there's never enough slack to breathe completely, and then you're being dragged along again and the noose around your neck just gets tighter and tighter.

    It was uncomfortable. It was scary. It was a crawly panicky feeling in my gut that made me want to scream.

    By the time we got to Bruce Willis' escape from the boxing ring and his meeting with his strange lover, I couldn't take it anymore. They kept talking and talking and I kept cringing and waiting for the door to burst open and for someone to riddle their bodies with bullets. The tension was too much, it was just too much. I got up and left the room and sat on the toilet and cried.

    I am a total fucking wuss.

    I sat there curled up and let myself cry until I was done. When I finally managed to calm down, I washed my face and came back into the office and told Sean that I didn't think I could watch the rest of the movie.

    "Why not?" he asked.

    I hugged him around the shoulders from behind; he was still seated at his computer. "Because I don't like it," was the answer I came up with.

    "Fair enough."

    My husband is a very understanding man. I don't think AJ would have accepted that reason.

    I wanted to explain it to him, but I'm not sure I've even adequately described my feelings here. The movie was a pressure cooker, I guess, and I was the first steam to flee. It's not something that makes me jump for joy and be proud of being me, that's for sure.

    So I asked Sean to tell me what happens in the rest of the movie, and he did. Now that I know exactly what is going to occur, I might be able to watch it...but not today, not right now. Right now I'd just like to calm back down, drink my raspberry juice, and chat on IRC. Then I'll go to bed and snuggle under the covers and try to forget the horror.

    Sticks in the mud

    I am now eating:

  • One glass of sugarless raspberry juice

  • One large slice of pizza left over from dinner last night


  • We're going out for sushi later, but I am soooooo hungry it's not even funny. I don't know if this is real hunger or what, but it's giving me a headache, so I figured I should eat. And of course I immediately go for carbs...the quick rush of energy is more appealing than anything substantial. Oh, well. At least pizza has protein, too, in the form of cheese and pepperoni.

    I've been reading the PvP archives since last night. That comic is such a hoot. I like to paste links to the funniest ones into the IRC channel, but sometimes it occurs to me that I'm pasting links to every single comic I read. Really, the humor just works for me.

    Mari called me earlier to invite Sean and me to go with her, Kelly, and Chris Libby downtown for First Friday. I think it's a sort of festival. Back in Lexington they had Fourth Friday, but it was pretty localized. There was one place, and you paid to get in, and there was art there to look at and a whole bunch of catered food. I never went, though I always thought it would be fun. This seems a little different, though; apparently all the downtown shops put out displays and there is food all over and lots of stuff to do. Sean didn't want to deal with the traffic, and to be honest I didn't feel like going out today anyway, so ultimately we declined. We'll have our sushi instead, then spend the evening at home.

    We are really sticks in the mud, I think. We hardly ever do anything. Sean says he is only willing to do stuff on Saturdays and Sundays, and even then he likes to have a week's notice. I can be a little more spontaneous than that, but since I've been married it just seems weird and/or lame to go places without my husband. I still go out on my own, but not as much as I used to. We even run errands together when we're both home at the same time (i.e., when he's not at work).

    This pizza is making my headache go away and my thoughts clearer. I don't know what it is with me and food. Maybe I've psyched myself out so that I can only relax and feel better by falling into my bad habits with a vengeance. :>

    So yeah, sticks in the mud. Yesterday we had Sean's old boss, Don, and his wife Suzanne over for dinner. Suzanne invited me to go with her during the week to volunteer in a special education classroom. I waffled around and finally said no; it was my first impulse. Part of it seems to be my natural inclination to never leave the apartment (even though I keep saying "I need to get out more"), and part of it was my timidity. I seem to be afraid of everything these days. I don't feel like I can do anything. I have no confidence. I feel the most comfortable at home in my apartment, where I am in charge, and on the AMRN, another place where I'm in charge. The thought of leaving these two areas and going out somewhere else is vastly unappealing. It's most pointed when I think about getting a new job. I'm so insecure in my abilities--to be honest, I don't even know what I'm qualified to do--that I can't sell myself, and most of the time I don't feel like I want to work anywhere anyway. It's new people to meet, new rules to learn, and I'd be starting at the bottom. It just all seems scary and uncomfortable to me.

    So instead, I'm just sitting around in a rut, turning down invitations to go out and do things with other people and staying at home on the computer.

    This doesn't seem healthy.

    I hate housework. I would love to have a job that took me away from that. But I love the AMRN. I love what I do there. I love chatting to AMRN people about the game, and coming up with new ideas and implementing them. I love the writing. I love how fast-paced it can get when you have a group of people all online at once and they decide to RP together. It is just so much fun. There are times when it feels like work, but on the whole, I feel like I wouldn't want to be doing anything else.

    It would be extraordinarily cool if I could get paid to do something similar to what I do on the AMRN.

    I am a content editor, a manager, a producer, a writer...I don't know exactly how I would define my role. I like being in a position to do what I can where I can and when I can. I like having the freedom to make choices, and the responsibility to take care of business. But ultimately I like participating in the community.

    Where can I find something like that that will actually earn me an income?

    "The Plan"; plus, what is friendship?

    There are two problems in my life that I think about often. The first is that I overeat. The second is that I don't write enough. Not anything serious, anyway--the AMRN isn't going to bring me revenue anytime soon. As I was in the shower just now, thinking about these problems, an idea occurred to me that is uniquely suited to my particular situation.

    I have decided that from now on, whenever I eat anything, I will post to this blog. I will include in my post what I ate, and I will also write some anecdote or train of thought. I figure this is as brilliant a solution as I have ever come up with. I imagine that most days I will be too embarrassed to admit eating four scoops of ice cream and a Klondike bar and two hotdogs...knowing that I will have to post what I'm eating for all the world to see will be a great deterrent. Plus, since I'm weak and will probably end up eating regularly--and three times a day at least anyway--this ensures that I will post more frequently to my blog, which will help me get the creative juices flowing. God, what a horrible, cliched metaphor. If I wrote more often, maybe I wouldn't keep using them :>

    So, that's the plan. We'll see how it holds up!

    ///

    Today, I got up at around 2 pm. So far I have consumed:

  • One glass of sugarless raspberry juice (from a mix)

  • One bowl (probably a cup and a half) of Crunch Berries cereal with probably a cup and a half of whole milk


  • Not too bad a start for the day, but we'll see how things go. With the way I snack, I may be posting here a zillion times a day...

    ///

    And now, for the required writing.

    I was thinking in the shower about the phrase "squeaky clean". I learned that being squeaky clean is actually bad from a water tester who went over to Jazz and Rizwan's old house while I was visiting them. He claimed that if you or your dishes or whatever else squeaked after being cleaned, then the soap wasn't all gone, and that the water therefore needed treatment. This was interesting to hear, but as I've never had the experience of not getting all the soap off, it wasn't vitally necessary to my life.

    What did interest me at the time, and still does to this day, was the fact that Jazz invited me over knowing that a guy was coming to do a sales pitch. This seems extraordinarily odd to me. When Jazz invited me over she said something like "We have a guy coming over to talk about our water, but it shouldn't take long," or something to that effect. I shrugged and went over there, thinking it wasn't a big deal. But during the presentation I really felt like I didn't belong; it was something more for the household, not me. It made me wonder why Jazz would even think to have someone over during that time...I can't imagine inviting someone over to watch me talk with the insurance agent, for example.

    But Jazz has always been a little strange. I don't know if she still is, because she lives in Boston and she and I have only communicated through email a handful of times in the last two years or so. But back when we were younger and hanging out together, things were really bizarre...only I was so insecure with my own personality that I didn't recognize her behavior as odd.

    It started the day she asked me to be her best friend. Before that time I simply considered her a good friend; she and Kristanne were best friends and had been for years. But apparently she and Kristanne had had a falling out, and now Jazz was looking for a replacement. I was ecstatic to be chosen and said yes, thus beginning a friendship that has seen more ups and downs than an elevator. Or something.

    One time Jazz came over to my house for a swimming party and immediately asked if she could shave her legs, since she hadn't done so at home. We let her, but my mother still mentions that and how weird it was. I told Jazz about it some years later and she said she had never done it.

    Another time we were having some guys install a new sliding glass door on our deck, and Jazz immediately began talking to them and buddying up with them instead of doing what she was there to do, which was hang out with me. This made me feel weird for two reasons. First, I felt that I was being ignored. Second, I had this impression that you aren't supposed to engage workers in conversation while they're on the job. They weren't there as guests...they were there to install a door. We didn't know them; there was no reason to form a friendship. I wonder sometimes if this impression is classist or rude, but really, if you're paying someone by the hour, it's against your best interest to waste their work time with chatter. I believe Jazz later denied having done this as well.

    Then there was the time we took Jazz to the Bluegrass Fair. This was something fun that we did every year as kids; it was a way for us to get out of the house and enjoy something special. We didn't have a lot of money growing up, but Mom made sure to see to it that our lives were enriched in as many ways as she could. This was simply one of the fun things she did with us. I was old enough to realize that going to the fair was a special family experience, and I was excited to share that experience with my "best friend". But once we were inside, Jazz wanted to ride a big roller coaster-type thing that spun in a big circle, and I was too afraid to go on it. She went alone, and befriended the girl she ended up sitting next to. When the two of them got off the ride, Jazz told me that she and the girl were going to go ride some more rides together. So in essence, she dumped me, the person who had brought her, in favor of someone who was more fun.

    I guess in some ways I am a stick in the mud, but I don't know...if you truly consider someone your best friend, do you treat them like that?

    Weird stuff like that continued through high school. After we graduated, I went to the University of Alabama in Huntsville, and Jazz went to the University of Louisville. There, she met Khawaja Rizwan Shuja (Khawaja is his last name, and Shuja is his father's name, but in the US this was misinterpreted so his last name is legally Shuja), an electrical engineering masters candidate from Pakistan. The two of them were married in January of 1997, mere months after they met.

    Jazz did not tell me she was getting married nor ask me to come to her wedding. She explained later that she was afraid all her friends would try to talk her out of it, so she didn't tell anyone but her immediate family. I told her I understood, but I really didn't. A true friend would be supportive...and if she really believed she was doing the right thing, no one should be able to just talk her out of it, anyway. This perturbed me, but I tried to get my head around it.

    After my first year at UAH, I dropped out. Mechanical engineering was simply not for me. I piddled about at a sucky job for awhile, and then I got cancer. While I was in the hospital, Jazz and Rizwan drove down from Louisville to visit me.

    I had met Rizwan previously. Chris, my boyfriend at the time, and I had gone back to Kentucky during one of the school breaks, and one day we drove up to Louisville to see Jazz and Rizwan. I had decided that while Rizwan was awkward in some ways, I liked him. Jazz really liked Chris--the guy was into drama and performed loudly in the middle of the park, much to her delight. I, on the other hand, was horribly embarrassed. I wasn't impressed by his acting and I wanted him to stop making a scene. This should have been a clue to me, I think...but oh well.

    In any case, their visit to me in the hospital was short, but much appreciated. It was a wonderful thing for them to do. It was the middle of the school year, after all, and they had to work hard. Rizwan was about to get his masters, and Jazz was still working on her degree as well. This is a good memory that I have of Jazz.

    After I got well, I enrolled at the University of Kentucky. Rizwan had his degree and had gotten a job in Harrodsburg; they bought a house in Nicholasville and Jazz enrolled at UK too. I thought this was great because we were finally close to each other again. I spent a lot of time at their place, studying or watching Indian movies with them or eating dinner or whatever.

    Jazz always seemed to make friends with people easily. Looking back on it, though, I'm not sure that "friends" is the proper word. I'm not sure what is though. Her next door neighbor at the house in Nicholasville was a young lesbian who had a troublesome home life. She came over and hung out with us a fair amount, and she and Jazz got along great, but I just felt weird around her. Part of it, I'm sure, was my own fledgling feelings of same-sex attraction...I had actually been attracted to Jazz herself since our sophomore year of high school. But I don't think that was all. I think the girl just struck me as off, as someone I did not want to be around. My mom has that sort of intuition too, and it has served her well, so I don't try to ignore those feelings. The main point of all this is that Jazz had no problems befriending practically anyone; she would go into their houses immediately, invite them over to mingle with other friends, and basically let people into her life indiscriminately. Sometimes she would complain to me about people she was friends with who were doing mean things or things she didn't approve of. This caused me to wonder why exactly she remained friends with them.

    At around this time, my relationship with Sean was developing. Sean was--and still is--a very opinionated man, and he sees no reason for people to waste their time on those who are hurtful or uninteresting or anything else that precludes a good time. He actually told me that Jazz was no good for me, that she was using me as an emotional crutch and that I meant nothing to her. I refused to believe him, but the core of his philosophy began to take a deep root in me. Why, after all, should a person feel they have to befriend everyone? You can love everyone in the world without having to put up with their shit every day. I think this branching of opinions was what heralded the beginning of the end of my friendship with Jazz.

    One day while she was rushing down the hallway in her home, Jazz brushed up against the corner of her hallway wall and fell, twisting her foot and then sitting on it. This broke her leg down near the ankle and she was bedridden for a week or two, then on crutches. She did her classes correspondence then, I believe, and was essentially unable to go around and enjoy herself. During that time, I only visited her once. While I was there, her mother was also there, and something happened that made me feel really weird. Jazz was whining about how much pain she was in and how horrible her situation was, and she told her mother something like "Well, I wish someone would clean that bathroom." That wasn't exactly what she said, but whatever it was, it was an obvious guilt trip. "I'm bedridden and I can't do anything...why won't people help me?"

    Her mother went and immediately started cleaning. I was thoroughly disgusted by the entire affair. Yes, people can do nice things for people who are sick or injured...but being sick or injured doesn't give a person the right to make demands like that. I thought back to how I was in the hospital: I tried not to make my visitors feel unwelcome or like they had to do anything for me. It wasn't their fault I had cancer, and it was good of them to visit at all. I felt that treating them with respect was only polite. Because of the obvious clash in our outlooks on how sick or injured people are to comport themselves, I never went back.

    Weeks, maybe months later, Jazz and I got into an argument. I could check my AIM logs to see what it was about--yes, it occurred on AIM; isn't that ridiculous?--but I don't really want to. Suffice it to say that she brought up the bit about my not visiting her more than once when her leg was broken. I told her how disagreeable she was being and why that made me not want to come, and she said that that shouldn't matter, that a true friend would have come anyway, and that she, after all, had visited me all the way from Louisville when I was in the hospital. I replied that a broken leg was hardly the same thing as cancer...to which she spat at me that I was always bringing that up and making myself out to be a victim, and that I had no right to do so.

    Our conversation ended with Jazz telling me she hoped I rotted in hell because I was a horrible sinner and a horrible person, and then she told me that it was probably good that this happened because she and Rizwan were moving to Boston the following week. She was moving, and she hadn't even said a word of it to me until that very minute.

    I haven't seen her since, and as I mentioned above, we have only emailed one another a few times. Once she wrote to me to say she hoped I had given up my sinful ways, and that she was sorry for wishing those horrible things on me. I wasn't quite sure how to respond, so I wrote back to congratulate her on her new baby, Maryam, who I had learned of through Jazz's sister Libby. Jazz replied with questions about my own life, questions that I didn't want to answer because I had not given up my "sinful ways", the things she had listed in the first email, and I didn't want to be lectured about it.

    I didn't answer her message for an entire year.

    Then one day I noticed it still sitting in my Inbox, where I leave messages that I've yet to reply to, and I decided what the hell. I told her how I was engaged to Sean and how we would be married after I graduated, and I told her how AJ and Faye and Ben and my parents were doing, and I talked about some mutual friends of ours. She wrote back later and was friendly, so I wrote back in a friendly way too. Our correspondence has not been deep or meaningful, but at least it has been...amicable.

    Since then Jazz has had another baby. She and Rizwan are still living in Boston, as far as I know. Jazz stated in her last message that she has carpal tunnel syndrome, so she can't write any more letters. I have no idea if this is true or not. Maybe she just wanted to escape the distant familiarity of our exchange. I can't blame her if that's the case.

    I wish we really had been best friends, but I don't think we ever were. It's a relationship I look back on with a great deal of regret. I wish I could think of something I could have done differently, but in the end I believe that we simply weren't suited to have that level of a relationship. If we'd realized it sooner, we might have saved ourselves years of feelings of betrayal. But I guess people get comfortable and don't want to change the status quo, even if they're unhappy with it.

    I hope Jazz has a happy life, and that she finds herself a true friend.