28.11.07
Shoebox Full of Photographs and Sepia-Tone Lovin'.
I felt the need to write something non-academic this morning before I spent the rest of my day/life in the lib. I got a fantastic couch chair on the fifth floor. All the way to left by the copy machine where no one can see my computer screen (I don't like feeling guilty when people can see I'm on facebook, or blogging), and I have a great view of downstairs. Two old men are decorating the Christmas tree and adding big-bowed wreaths to front windows. Further, I can lounge my feet out on the table. Nice.
I'm excited to go reject tree hunting Saturday morning. I like the concept of rescuing a homeless tree and making him feel special...doning him in homemade ornaments, stringed popcorn, and tinsel, tinsel, tinsel. We're going for the tacky look this year.
Oh yes, and one more thing. I ate a candy cane yesterday. Therefore, the holiday is coming and I'm excited.
Mr. Yuck.
-organic raspberry vinegrette salad dressing
-my bloodshot eye
-papers, exams, and speeches...oh my!
-Hollywood writer's strike
-our unwashed kitchen floor
-traffic
eh, how trivial these mere annoyances are in the great scheme of life!
Carpe Diem!
Hakuna Matata!
C'est la vie!
Give me liberty, or give me death! ...alright, now I've gone too far. Gee-Knight.
25.11.07
Writer's Block.
Therefore, how seriously annoyed and seriously conflicted I find myself, that the thing I want to do more than anything else, the one thing that I am trying to embark on a life-long journey with...the thing that is supposed to be my stablity, is the one thing that is spooning me a current dose of dissonance. It's the one thing that is causing me to pause and take a serious look at where I am right now; and it is quite possibly the one thing that could change the course of these next few years, pending on the decision it guides me to.
Well, Hell. I'm confused.
23.11.07
Note from a 9 year old.
Here is some advice to play a prank on someone:go to youtube.com and type in ghost car and click on the ghost car add and don't let the person see what you are tyeping in and cover the top were it says ghost car add cause then they will see that it is a scary thing then just wait for the fun to begin and the person will think that it is going to be a lovly car but then ahhhhh! A ghost pops up it will scare them a lot. Oh yeah and tell them that you want to show them a really cool car and they will think that it won't be scary but then ATTACK OF THE CIVIL WAR! Next i want talk about Elf a very funny movie "bye buddy hope you find you dad". Yes it is very funny but it can be very sad hold on i need a moment.........ok sorry i was just crying. Now the moment you'v been wating for its Soilja Boy Time!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Soilja boy up in the oh watch me crank it watch me oh so why do you crank the soilja boy why do you crank that soilja boy! My friend Brandon taught me that! Finally I LOVE REGINA SPEKTOR!!!!!!!!!!!!!
-Anna
Oh the innocence of children. It's pretty sad that 4th graders are listening to Soulja Boy. My sister is weird, but I love her.
22.11.07
To Be Thankful.
Me- "Mommy, why aren't you more of a domestic mother?"
-"What, would you rather me be sitting around baking pies all day or bettering myself as a human being!?"
In talking about her final project for her design class...
Anna- "Mom, was anybody else's board in the class as nice as yours?"
-"No."
Looking at a decorating magazine in our kitchen...
Dad- "Oh look, the newest word in the decorating world is 'twist.' I guess you'll be using that along with all those other stupid words like 'yummy.'"
- "You just don't understand design lingo. I was in a store the other day and a male designer said 'yummy.' It's just artistic. You have lingo in your field."
Dad- "Yeah. 'pump.'"
- "Oh you know what I mean!"
Dad- "Hey Bridget, guess what!? I sold a yummy pump today!"
Dinner at the Gaudreau's tonight, good time. After 11 years, they really have become family.
Looking forward to a day of shopping tomorrow.
20.11.07
Thunderous Silence.
Besides these mundane features, I'm currently in a room that seems like a distant memory. I'm resting in a bed that isn't mine, just recently delivered to the house, and besides that pathetically faithful chair, my furniture is gone, now in my apartment. The odds and ends that I left behind when I went away to school last year are now residing in my closet. There is no noise coming from a television, nothing on the walls to stimulate my mind, there is just silence. A silence that stems from the absence of distraction.
However, within the silence still exists the noise of my mind, the noise being made by my thoughts. What exactly are they saying tonight?
Tonight, they seem to be fixed on the emotions I'm having about being home temporarily. Nine hours away at school, home is such a precious place that I look forward to returning to each time I get the opportunity. I feel like it's such a rare treat to experience the place where I am most myself, the place where I have the closet relationships with the people around me, the place that I make fun of for being small, rural, and boring, yet the place that amazes me with it's natural beauty everytime I venture back. Tonight, I'm bothered by the fact that this is no longer my primary dwelling. With each visit home, it is seeming more like a rest stop, a place to indulge in a much-needed hearty meal, get some much-needed sleep, and visit quickly with a few important people, before heading back to the place that is selfishly trying to take over as my new home. This isn't to say that I'm not happy where I am...it's just becoming more and more of a reality that as time is passing, I'm moving farther and farther away from something that was so wonderfully mine for 18 years (spread between three states, six houses, and three apartments). Again, not to say that just because I'm not at home as often anymore, doesn't mean it isn't my home and doesn't mean I am fully emancipated from it, but there is that realization that I'm growing up and life is calling me onward. It seems like these are thoughts that should have been more prominant last year, going through all the akward freshman changes, but there's something about being off of campus this year and feeling more independent that is bringing about these thoughts in full force.
It's just wierd, wierd, wierd. But nonetheless, I make the most of the time I'm here...this so far includes, but is not limited to, 3 games of CandyLand with Anna, helping mom at 2am with her presentation board, watching Grounded 4 Life with Meggie, my first experience at Noodles & Company (which my grandma couldn't stop calling Oodles and Noodles), and good conversations with Cass and Bri at the Lukey house. LOVE LOVE LOVE.
Travelers (No)Rest.
Nevertheless, it's a good learning opportunity.
(for the record, I'm aware of the clicheness of this entry...the whole attempt to be witty and profound, "omg here are some things I learned...and now I will write a cute little list and attempt to add subtle or blatant humor (your perrogative)." Just thought I'd put that out there.)
-1st and foremost > November 19th is National WIDE LOAD Day.
-I loathe Georgia drivers, especially when they still have a way of sneaking up on you in Virginia
-In order to maintain a sense of classiness, yet still promoting our right to free speech, gas station bathrooms are now equipped with paper for passerbys to write their thoughts on
-Rockin' the Suburbs by Ben Folds will always give me great chuckles
-You should not attempt to take pictures while operating a vehicle on winding mountains
-I may hate Nickelback more than any other band
-Virginia has the most creative landscape architecture when it comes to designing police hide-outs
-Middletown road officials don't seem to care that the speed limit sign on Holter Road still reads "Pee Limit" thanks to what I assume to be the works of a middle school boy with true, artistic ductape talent.
That's all, k bye.
16.11.07
13.11.07
Music and Politics.
The Center Stage and Save the Last Dance Soundtracks
-These ruled my CD player on the bus ride to school throughout all of 7th grade
Jewel ~ Pieces of You
-I loved that she yodeled and that she used to wash her hair in a K-Mart bathroom
-I partially attribute my love of writing music and playing the guitar to this album
Nelly ~ Country Grammar
-As far as rap goes, I still think it's unbeatable
Destiny's Child ~ Writings on the Wall
-I liked the challenge of trying to figure out what they were actually saying ("Bugga Boo" anyone?)
I'm somewhat glad my music taste has evolved since then, but I'm proud of my roots nonetheless.
One Christmas when my mom went to buy me some CDs on my christmas list, the worker helping her looked at her funny and said, "your daughter sure does have an interesting array of music selections!" I like it that way, thank you.
I'm in the library and this is a clear attempt at procrastinating.
It bothers me that a girl is currently reading last Friday's issue of The Tiger. Newsflash...that's old news get with the times (May I suggest the New York Times? It's much more up to speed).
I'm also annoyed by the fact that her friend just made a statement on how it is a trendy thing to vote for Barack Obama...oh so it's not a trendy thing to be all gung ho for Ron Paul on this campus?
Alright, I'm done. Time to work.
12.11.07
Show and Tell, Minus the Show.
It's just something I do, alright?
Good thing no one is in my immediate proximity because I'm very tired and can sense deliria rising from within...if you couldn't already tell from this completely pointless entry.
'Nite.
Strange Appearences.
This morning, as part of our series, Nathan invited his Muslim friend, Abdul, to come and participate in a conversation with him in the presence of our community about Islam. It was one of the most intriguing, beautiful, sincere, and refreshing things I have ever witnessed during a Sunday gathering.
Abdul provided much insight into what it means to be Muslim, but what was most interesting and eye-opening to me were the similarities between the Islamic and Christian faith.
Several subjects were touched on during the conversation and all were rich in word. There were, however, two points that Abdul made that really formed an impression on my heart:
1. "It is good that we are talking. It is good that we are talking."
-We are called in both the Muslim and Christian faith to "Love our neighbors," but how can we do so if we do not know our neighbor?
2. How can one say that they live in total submission to the word of God when they don't even know what the word says?
-This I found relevant to not only Muslims, whom he was talking about, in context, but to Christians as well.
At the end of the conversation, our community witnessed a warm embrace between Nathan and Abdul from which sprung an emotion inside of me. I could see, even feel, the sincerity it their embrace, and to me it symbolized the message God has scribed out for us, "to love our neighbor," free of judgement and free of hate...simply bound by a willingness and an eagerness to understand the totally other.
I was both humbled and challenged this morning, and I only wish that all members of the Christian community could experience something similar.
8.11.07
Mod is Tired.
7.11.07
Come Together.
The head-boppers