Monday, September 2, 2013

Balderdash

I've walked this earth for three decades, assuming that those baggy, breezy shorts I wore in middle school were called, "Cool Lots." Just recently, I discovered that they are actually called "culottes." I feel this is something I should have picked up earlier in the game. Now I'm questioning everything. Were those high top sneakers I wore not L.A. Gear, but instead La Gear?


Naturally, to verify this new discovery of mine, I check the Wikipedia entry for “culottes.” Yup, sure enough, there are my childhood shorts.


Side note: I really can’t recommend this Wikipedia article more. It really doesn't disappoint. I had no idea that one clothing item could have such significant historical context. Most of the entry describes culottes in the context of the French Revolution. Then, in a transitional jump that even Evel Knievel wouldn't have attempted, it goes from Paris during the Victorian Era immediately into the Mall of America in the 1980s.


I do challenge the accuracy of this particular Wikipedia entry in one aspect. Wikipedia posits that another phrase for culottes is the skort. I’m no sartorial archivist, but I’m pretty sure my sixth grade closet had a one section for culottes and one section for skorts. Sure, a pair of culottes can transform into a skort with the simple addition of a front skirt panel. But then the article of clothing would would cease to be culottes, would it not? Culottes and skorts are entirely distinct subspecies of the genus Unattractivus Rumpus Coveragus. Culottes are unabashedly direct. Spacious thigh room? On it. Breezy leg openings? Don’t mind if I do. High rise? Hell yes. Culottes look at the world and say, “See these pleats? I DARE you to find a camel toe.”


Skorts, by comparison are all about deception. They provide the same movement but do it behind the scenes. A curtain across the front prevents the world from seeing the magic taking place. That is, until the skorted individual walks away. Then everyone’s like, ahhh, so THAT’s how she could sit cross-legged with so much confidence. I feel so misled...


Compromise: maybe there is some overlap. But I think we can agree that it’s like the law of rectangles and squares. All skorts are culottes, but not all culottes are skorts.


Some other errors I only recently picked up on: the phrase “for all intents and purposes.” I used to say “for all intensive purposes.” Which still kind of works, when you think about it. But then, on second thought … nope. I’m just an idiot.


My most unfortunate misunderstanding had to do with the word “scatological.” It kind of sounds like scattered, right? Using my foolproof powers of deduction, I determined that, since those two words sound alike, they must be in the same linguistic ballpark. Scattered means spread around and disordered, so clearly scatological refers to something being randomly structured in terms of logic. (Again, “logical” is right there in the word.)


I didn't use this word a lot, but I used it off and on for years. YEARS. It wasn't until I had the following conversation with my co-worker that I discovered what I had actually been saying:

















All this time, I was been referring to things as being … poopy. 

I immediately went to my office, shut my door, and mentally rewound the last few years, scanning for any memory of using that word. At the committee meeting with the executive dean? In front of my freshman seminar class? When I was talking to the priest at my grandmother’s visitation hours? On that date with the cute guy at the zoo? How many times did I confidently describe something as “having to do with feces” in front of these people?


In a horrifyingly ironic twist of fate, a few years later I did wind up in a work meeting that I could accurately describe as scatological. But that’s a story for another time.


Another example of definition ignorance: this afternoon I was typing an email to a co-worker about a situation where a student thought that he had the right to do whatever he wanted in a class. I typed, I mean, it’s like he thinks a letter from his coach gives him carp blanche to do anything.


Oddly, the spell check function didn’t recognize the phrase “carpe blanche” and didn't have any suggestions for a correction. Hmm, since it’s one of those fancy foreign phrases maybe there’s an extra e at the end of “carp” or something. I retyped “carpe blanche.” No dice. I decided to Google it.


Carte blanche. Not carp blanche.


Apparently the French phrase translates to “blank card” or “blank cheque.” Ah, yes. The ability to write a blank check makes way more sense than the ability to steam cook a fish.


Aaaand, just like with the culottes, all problems start with the French...




Friday, August 30, 2013

New Post Coming Soon

So I had a lull in work during lunch today and thought, hey, I should check and see when my last post was. I figured, maybe three weeks ago.

Sweet Moses...

I haven't posted anything in three months??? How is that possible? I have certainly had some random thoughts bouncing around in my head for the past ninety days. Is this what happens when one turns thirty? I apparently can't remember to write anything down. Going to bed at 9:30 isn't helping with the late night creative writing process, either.

I am currently staring down at a countdown clock to the end of the work day and the start of a glorious three-day weekend. Surely there has to be enough time between mowing, weeding, painting, car washing, concert attending, laundering, cleaning, eating and sleeping to write something down.

In the meantime, to celebrate the start of the season, here is a picture of a walrus as a football player.


Friday, May 31, 2013

XXX


In one hour and forty minutes, I will be saying goodbye to my twenties and hello to my thirties. Everyone seems to have their own personal Scary Age. The number that seems impossibly far away until it’s staring up at you from the top of a cake, in a blaze of fire and glory. Go ahead, shut your eyes. You cannot ignore that many candles.

In my very unscientific poll, thirty appears to be the Scary Age for a large percentage of the population. People younger than that age balk at the number. “You’re going to be THIRTY??” Their eyes widen in disbelief and horror. I’ve gotten that a lot during the past month. On the one hand, I should probably take their shock as a compliment. Their senses cannot resolve the conflicting information they are receiving: their eyes tell them  I’m a vivacious twentysomething while their ears hear me say the word, thiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiirty...

On the other hand, it may just be that I dress inappropriately young. Which is probably the likelier answer. One cannot enter one’s thirties with a wardrobe comprised of Old Navy yoga pants and Target tank tops. Or CAN they …

Then there is the other side of the demographic spectrum. The people who see the the road sign for Exit Thirty as a speck in their rearview mirror. I work in an engineering department at the University. Which means I work with a lot of individuals with a lot of years under their high-waisted belts. Perfectly nice people. They are great at sharing thoughts on financial planning or whether Mad Men accurately depicts what life was like in the 1950s. You would think these people would have some perspective on how insignificant turning thirty really is in the scheme of things. I mean, some of these professors lived through the Dust Bowl. (I’m trying to say that I work with some old farts. Is that coming across?)

But even these wizened, ancient beings raised a bushy eyebrow in my direction all day yesterday. “Turning thirty, eh? Ooooo, that’s a big one, isn’t it? How ya doin’?”

Um … doing just fine? I have cake. I have lovely gifts and cards from coworkers. I have a check from my grandma and an overflowing shopping cart at Zappos.com. All in all, a pretty good day at the office.

Here’s the thing: I didn’t realize that turning thirty was such a big, BIG deal. Sure, NBC devoted a whole plot line on Friends to Rachel turning thirty, but I thought that was just a Jennifer-Aniston-debuting-a-new-haircut thing. Rachel was never a model for appropriate emotional maturity. (I still adamantly believe that Rachel was less psychosocially developed than Joey. Who summarizes a relationship in an eighteen-page letter, FRONT AND BACK, and expects someone like Ross to actually read it? YOU WERE ON A BREAK.)

Nineties sitcoms aside, I thought most jokes about thirty-turning were pretty much sarcastic. Apparently not. I’ve had multiple people ask me if I am okay -- oh yeah, I’m fine -- and then really … am I okay -- see, now you’re just starting to freak me out -- followed by an empathetic nod. I’m just turning thirty. It’s not like I killed a kitten. (Which I have done. Technically it was kittyslaughter, not kitty murder, given the lack of intent. But that’s another story for another time.) I’ve made it twenty-nine-years-and-three-hundred-sixty-four-days without dying once. Shouldn’t this be a happy occasion?

I’ve been trying to figure out why I’m not freaking out more, given everyone’s concern. Here’s what I’ve come up with: for me, turning thirty means that my age is finally catching up to my lifestyle. I’ve been living the life of a thirty-or-older-year-old since I was fourteen. FINALLY, I can knit earnestly and not just ironically. No more hipster slouch hats. It’s all granny squares and house slippers from here on out. My obsession with all things Riverdance just makes me culturally aware. My early bedtime is not pathetic but pragmatic. I can openly enjoy watching PBS shows. Hell, I may leave them on my DVR. No need to immediately delete them to avoid the shame of some house guest accidentally scrolling through and seeing them. I’m thirty. Public television viewing is to be expected. I no longer have to stand in a store’s underwear section for ten minutes, trying to decipher whether the string bikini or the low-rise hipster is less wedgie-inducing. No more VPL (Visible Panty Line) shame. Now I can walk right to the granny panties, grab the highest-rise brief, and march towards the cash register, silky bloomers flapping in the breeze like Old Glory.
 
Oh beauuuutiful for fuuuuull coverage..


To be fair, I do anticipate some downsides. I now know that anyone I work with aged twenty-one or younger will immediately view me as the old fart of the office. Security alarms will go off if I set even one toe into a store like Forever 21. Even concerts will eventually slip away if I'm not careful. For now, with the right lighting and eye makeup I can pass for an older-but-not-old fan. One that is seasoned. Knows exactly what side of the stage has the best viewing opportunities. Knows that the drinking bracelet goes on the right wrist, not the left. But it’s a fine line between hip adult and hip replacement.

(One refreshing anecdote: at a concert earlier this month, the lead singer from Relient K talked about how he took turning thirty hard. Like, rock star hard. Nice to know that, behind those tight jeans and leather cuff bracelets, even musicians can have a "what have I done with my life" moment. And are old enough to remember that Friends  episode.)

To be fair, there are certainly things that I wish were different about my life. Things that I had accomplished or done better. But I don’t think that adding more time would have really help. I am a creature of habit, risk-aversion, and resistance to change. (Increased self-awareness being another benefit to turning thirty.) Someone giving me a time traveling machine would be a huge waste of a science-fiction plotline. The only thing I could see changing is that maybe -- MAYBE -- I would kill house centipedes a few years earlier than when I finally did. Which was last year. Other than that, my guess is that thing would have pretty much been the same.
 
 
 
 
Sure, there are bigger things. Relationship, travel, job promotion, kids. Those would be nice things to have in the right set of circumstances. And I have great examples of friends and family with those plot points in their life story at thirty.  But I also see a lot of examples of ones that aren’t so sunny. Even the ones that work aren’t perfect. Take today, for example. My mom, sister, and niece came down to spend the day. We had a perfect day of chatting and eating and shopping, but most of the day was spent scurrying around after the little one. I know that I’m biased, but my niece is almost painfully adorable. Big blue eyes, blond hair in curls, a smile that takes up her entire face. She’s so cute that it almost makes me jealous of my sister. Almost.

Because, as my angelic little niece smiled and spun around my living room… suddenly she stopped.

And stood there.

And shivered.

And dropped a deuce.

And my loving, patient, sleep-deprived sister had the honor of taking a deep breath and changing that diaper. Whereas my role as Aunt-In-Chief was to laugh hysterically and document the whole thing (except the diaper change) on video.
All in all, I’ll take what I have: family, friends, health, home, job, basic cable package, jumbo-sized Nutella jar. Not a bad way to start my third decade! Here’s to enjoying the next seven years until I hit my own personal Scary Age: Thirty-Seven! (It’s late thirties AND it’s a prime number. I don’t know why that makes it worse, but it does.)

And yes, after spending the last two nights out, I am too tired to do anything tonight on my actual birthday. So I am reading through lovely cards and notes and posts with birthday wishes, writing this post, and enjoying a fine dinner of white wine and Twix bars. THIRTY KICKS ASS!

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

I Got Nothing.

Hello, Internet perusers and people who accidentally wound up on this page after trying to Google recipes for toast!

Sorry for the dearth of blog posts recently. I was on such a roll of posting stories during the start of the year! And then, sadly, I've reached the barren wasteland of the annual calendar. It's technically spring, but the city where I live is still taking hits of the snow- sleet one-two punch. The days are getting longer, but it's so cold that I hurry into my home after work and don't emerge until the next morning.

Upside: nothing particularly embarrassing has happened to me recently.

Downside: nothing particularly entertaining has happened to me recently.

Translation: When my life is going along swimmingly, I have nothing to blog about. I successfully made a crock pot recipe without stirring in any volcanic ingredients. I partied it up last month with Bachelorette & Co. without incident. The closest I got to anything mildly entertaining was when the student checking IDs at the bar wound up being a former student of mine. Or when a particularly bubbly member of our party decided to give my number to some guy who was hanging out at our table. On the walk back, when I asked for some more information (like, you know, his name) she replied, "... maybe Mike?"

Great. So now I have to dodge calls from unknown numbers in case it's Maybe Mike on the other end of the line.

The next day, the fog of the evening lifted and some other details emerged. My friend still wasn't sure about his name, but she definitely remembered some other details. Like how he was banned from that particular bar/shopping center a few years ago for littering. Well, that and the fact that he was caught in the men's room with a female companion. But he definitely didn't get arrested until he tossed a Mountain Dew bottle onto the sidewalk.

It's been a few weeks and Maybe Mike hasn't called. Which was relieving at first, but now feels mildly insulting. Um, really Maybe Mike? You're tossing this slice of fierceness aside? This is your Mountain Dew Incident of 2009 all over again ...

See? It was work just stretching that story THAT far. Luckily, most of my awkward interludes pop up with the tulips so there is hope on the horizon.

************************************************
Update.

Okay, I recently had the worst day of work in my career. And I mean, the worst day I've ever had AND the worst day I will ever have. Nothing particularly tragic. Just disgusting. We're talking, Threat Level Retching. It is so far over the line I don't think I can even write about it.  (Yet...)

I take it back, Universe! I love it when my existence is one yawn-inducing expanse of beige! Don't pepper my path with any more insanely bizarre stories that require me to breathe out of my mouth and just hope that death takes me quickly.

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Copier Corral: Parking Spot

It's Wednesday, so you know what that means .... New Girl breakdown from your friendly office coworkers! Grab some coffee and we'll meet you at the copier.

NEW GIRL SEASON 2

EPISODE: PARKING SPOT



Warning: contains spoilers from the latest episode of New Girl. So if you haven't watched it yet, don't read on!

Warning Number 2: does not contain much explanation of the episode's specifics, but rather commentary on it. So .. actually ...  if you haven't watched it, it won't make sense to you anyway.

BANG-O-METER
Jess went outside of the box with -- drum roll, please -- SIDE SWEPT BANGS. In terms of character development, this is epic. I am loving the side sweep, even if she does fidget with them the entire episode.  Maybe her forehead is vampiric and can't be exposed to direct sunlight.





NEMO: NICK'S EMOTIONAL MODUS OPERANDI

Plaid Button-Down

Translation: Shades of optimism (not a hoodie) but strong undertones of emotional fragility (still flannel)




This week the show highlighted the plight of the modern city-dweller: where to keep your damn car. Unlike rural and suburban areas, parking in a city is more of a privilege than a right. A privilege that some of us shell out hundred of dollars every year to buy. But, in places where legalized extortion (a.k.a. parking permits) aren't possible, one has to rely on other measures. The more optimistic of us assume that parking is a pay-it-forward business: be thoughtful and commit random acts of kindness throughout the day and karma will reward you with a curb location right by your front door when you get home at night. The rest of us? We know better. Parking isn't a benevolent spiritual being. Parking is a cold-hearted son-of-a-bitch. That d-bag who cut you off on the exit ramp. He's squealing into that spot five seconds before you even spot it.

So when a beautiful, shining, completely unclaimed parking spot -- IN A GARAGE -- is dangled in front of our New Girl roommates, no wonder they lose their minds. I mean, what could be better? (Really, Winston? Skipping out on a reserved garage spot to just because some chick calls you and gives you a thirteen-minute window for some sweet lovin'? Rookie mistake. Winnie, you gotta pave that paradise to claim that parking lot.)



Thus, the tradition of Winston splitting off on his own side storyline continues. (At least he's getting a story line and not just playing the straight man to the other whack-a-roommates.)

As you can imagine, hijinx between the three remaining roomies -- Schmidt, Nick, and Jess -- ensues as each one tries to manipulate / seduce / awkward moonwalk the others into giving up the space.




I'm no authority on negotiation tactics. In grad school I enrolled in one business negotiation class. I thought it would be fun. Turns out the class was in the MBA program. And those mofos are straight-up scary. They are addicted to the thrill of the barter.  Day one of class, I was like chum in the water. I wound up sweating and fidgeting my way through the next ten weeks, while they all tweaked out over the their negotiation high. What they learned in the class? Seventy different ways to emotionally manipulate a fellow classmate. What I learned? That I apparently cannot make direct eye contact and value the feeling of resolution WAY more than actually resolving anything.

That being said ... Schmidt CLEARLY missed some opportunities during the Parking Spot Standoff.

Missed Opportunity #1:

  Jess plays the Lady Card. Winston trumps her with the Race Card. Nick tosses out the Lonely Bartender Card, clearly a throw-away move.

Schmidt reaches into his hand ... and throws out ... Deserve the Spot Card?

DESERVE THE SPOT Card?

I'm sorry, Schmidt. Are you keeping that Jew Card of yours up your sleeve for some reason? Play it, damn it. It's the Left Bower of Persecution Cards.

Missed Opportunity #2:

Schmidt, Jess, and Nick are crowded into the actual parking spot. Squatter's rights. Last one to leave gets the spot. Knowing his roommates as he should, Schimdt has to realize that his true opponent is really just Jess. Nick is commitment phobia + magpie attention span, wrapped up in a plaid shirt. No way is he seeing this through. Jess, however, is sticking to her guns. She's a formidable opponent. She only has two known weaknesses:

1. the color khaki, and

2. male genitalia.

Didn't we learn that way back in Season one? She can't even say the word. She resorts to Nickelodeon nicknames like "pee pee and bubbles."

So when Schmidt starts hopping around, saying that he has to pee, I'm like, GENIUS! Whip it out. You get bladder relief AND a parking spot. Missions Accomplished.

That is what Schmidt should do.

That is not what Schmidt does.

Instead, he winds up sitting on the pavement in his own pool of urine. Parking-spot-less.

Come to think of it, this entire episode was an exercise in misdirection and unmet expectations. Just look at the end of the episode. Schmidt reveals that Nick violated the No-Nail Oath and thus he is entitled to a smooch from Jess. Then, after being sexually thwarted by an errant pants selection and the cheap-o sales clerk at the pharmacy, Winston comes back to the loft and bemoans "Winnie needs a win!"

Soooo .... Nick violated the No-Nail Oath.

Which entitles the other roommates to some Jess-on-Roomie action...

And  Winston is looking for an option besides self completion...

Putting all those factors together .... carry the one ... that means ...

Winston gets the parking spot?

What? I thought for sure it meant he would get his own smooch from Jess. Or, if not Jess, then at least from Schmidt.

However, we DID do surprisingly well last Copier Corral with our Hopes and Dreams for this week. Check it out!

Last Week's Hopes and Dreams!
(Were we right?? )

  • HOPE ACCOMPLISHED - Daisy DOES make another appearance!
  • DREAM somewhat CAME TRUE - CeCe DOES try to date a hot Indian guys. She just didn't meet him at the Marriage Convention, like we predicted.
  • DREAM DASHED - Schmidt didn't make any sexual overtones involving naan.
  • WHAT DREAMS HAVE COME - Nick DID start to shower. Heck, he started the episode with a teeth-brushing vignette. Didn't we also say he would start rocking more button-downs and fewer t-shirts and hoodies? Why yes. Yes we did.
  • HOPE sort of ACHIEVED - While we don't have a new relationship name for Winston and Daisy (I'm still holding out hope for Waisty) but we did get a new solo nickname. Winnie.  
In summary, here are our final thoughts.

Lessons Learned
(This is where we break it down for ya.)
  • I own the exact same hoodie as Nick.
  • Nick has amazing fluid control skills. Spitting that beer back in the stein? He could audition for the water fountains in front of the Bellagio.
  • How does that cardiganed dude standing in line behind Winston at the pharmacy NOT have a condom in his wallet? Throw Winston a loosie, frat boy.
  • To get what you want, sometimes you have to shake what the good people of your home state gave you. (Since I'm from Ohio, this means shaking some underarm flab and an inferiority complex.)
Wait ... What?
(This is where we punch holes in the New Girl boat about things that don't jive with us. Or we just rant.)
  • I'm still not sure how Nick became the Decider of the parking spot. They would have had better luck asking that creepy super Remy from downstairs to make the call.
  • When Jess and Nick ran out to their cars to move them, didn't it seem like there were tons of parking spaces they could use?
  • When Winston makes it back to Daisy's side of town, he can't find her building. Um, none of those buildings look the same. If he can't find her apartment out of those buildings, I'm not sure he should have graduated high school. Or be able to make coffee.
Next Week's Hopes and Dreams!
(This is where we provide our predictions for future episodes. Inventive title, eh?)

  • Jess WILL keep her side swept bangs, but she'll switch to a right-part orientation
  • Winston WILL find out about Jess and Nick. And he will think it's no big deal. And his nonchalance will drive Schmidt insane.
  • We WILL discover the secret location of Schmidt's nipples. And, when twisted clockwise thrice, they will divine the name of the cardinal appointment to be the next pop. (Twist counterclockwise and you'll get the winning numbers to PowerBall.)

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Bestill My Hearrrrrrt

You guys ... I think I may have met someone .....

On Valentine's Day, no less!

I know what you're thinking, and the answer is yes. He is a pirate.

Let me back up. This week I've been down in Savannah, Georgia for my first ever business trip. (Hence my panicky post earlier in the week about traveling. Yes, the flights went okay. Yes, I made it through security. Yes, I felt the need to entertain the TSA attendants with witty banter as they body scanned me. No, they did not laugh, but they also didn't flag me for a body cavity search. So I'm calling that a win.)

The whole thing feels very adult: airplane flight, hotel reservation, conference registration. The days are pretty long, crammed with lengthy concept lectures and intense work group sessions. By the time dinner rolls around, I'm running on fumes.

Tonight is our last night in Savannah, which just happens to also be Valentine's Day. Our group decides to try out a local eatery near our hotel called The Pirate House. I of course imagine this to be a sea-faring version of Medieval Times, except instead of corsets and jousting we would see eye patches and walking the plank.

Turns out, The Pirate House a very nice restaurant, complete with a necktied waitstaff and dim lighting. No problem. After all, this is a business trip. Mature dining experiences with cloth napkins are to be expected.

Side note: to all restaurant managers, may I offer a suggestion? If you are running some type of Valentine's Day, two-entrees-for-one special, perhaps place that conditional statement in, I don't know, size 48 bold-face all caps font at the top of the specials menu. That way, you will save your servers the extra time of having to go back to a customer and explain that the item they ordered is not available to them since they are an old, withered up spinster who can't keep a partner around past the appetizer portion of the meal. Either that, or bring said spinster two servings of the chicken marsala Valentine's Special. And a box. And some more bread.

Now that we have THAT little kink ironed out...

We order (re-order) our meals and sit chitchatting about that day's conference topics. Halfway through a story about a work group conversation hijacker, one of my colleagues looks across the dining room and startles.

"I think I just saw a pirate."

We of course  all scoff at her and write it off as her brain short-circuiting after a long day of conferencing.

Turns out, she is totally right. The server corroborates her story. "Oh yes, we have a pirate. I'll send him over to you."

Ten minutes later, as I am tearing into my filet mignon (that I secretly wish is chicken marsala), I hear a voice coming from below my shoulder.

"Excuse me, lasses..."

We all turn, and there, kneeling down beside my chair and pointing a saber at my purse on the floor, is a pirate.

"... but who be the owner of this here handbag?"



 No, that pictures has not been doctored. Those are some crazy-ass eyes.

Not to be too critical, but I feel it's important for me to clarify the type of pirate this gentleman is portraying. As pirates go, he isn't rough and ragged. He's no Johnny-Depp-as-Captain-Jack-Sparrow, nor is he Johnny-Depp-as-he-is-in-real-life-which-is-still-noticeably-piratey. To be honest, he's kind of a dandy. First of all, he has two fully functioning eyes. His teeth are Crest WhiteStripped to perfection. Barely a brush of stubble on his cheeks. I Web-MD symptoms for scurvy on my phone. No dice. White fluffy shirt? Pressed and pristine. Socks? Striped and straight. Hat? Definitely three-pointed. Jauntily askew? Nope. It's placed at a perfect horizon. Flat and straight as the plains of Oklahoma, which is nowhere near the choppy waters of the high-farin' seas.

Then there's his performance... It isn't that he's a bad actor, necessarily. It's like he's acting like a pirate, as opposed to just being a pirate. You know? Like he is doing a caricature of what a pirate is, not a character. Maybe the problem is that it  feels like he is trying too hard. Like he really cares whether you think he's a pirate. If this was a real pirate ship, there is now way this guy would be captain or first mate. He would be lucky to be the schmo swabbing the deck, casting longing looks at the tight-knit crew of pillagers and plotting ways he can knock out a few of his perfectly formed teeth. I'm pretty sure that if he ever tried to order someone to walk the plank, it would come out as more of a noncommittal suggestion than a barking command. Maybe he'd luck out and someone would think, hey, the water looks nice, maybe I should dive off this wooden board and pop in for a quick swim.

That being said, if I were to date a pirate, this is the type of pirate I would wind up with. Captain Jack Sparrow would take one look at me, mutter "goody-two-shoes" under his breath, and swagger off to something more buxom. Some girls attract distant yet douchey. I attract eager yet insecure. (Trust me, I'll take the latter every time. As my friend says, you always want to date someone who is just a touch damaged, self-esteem-wise. Makes them easier to keep around.)

Anyway, The Pirate chats with us a bit.

Pirate: "Where'd ye get sech a fine lookin' bag?"
Me: "Ah, yes, on the high seas of the internet."
Pirate: " ... yes, err ... be ye privateers or buccaneers?'
Me: "Oh, actually we're Buckeyes!"
Pirate: "..."



Check out that death-stare he is shooting at me. Apparently this pirate is not used to witty repartee. Probably because most customers who call him over their tables read at a third-grade level. I had intended to help by being part of the bit, but I start getting a sinking suspicion that he prefers to work solo.

Then The Pirate says he doesn't understand any of the racket playing in the room through the loudspeakers. (Um, it's Sinatra. Have a little respect.) Would we like to hear a song? Well, I sure as hell want to see where this is going. So he reaches into his vest and pulls out a metal flute-whistle. What is this, Riverdance? He tells us we should feel free to clap along, then proceeds to whistle out some high-seas tune and stop his feet. (Which basically DEMANDS that we clap along.) We applaud politely at the end of the fair tune.

...

(Then, as you can imagine, there is some awkward silence.)

....

Then we ask if we can have a picture with him.

"Ah, yes, I'd beer 'appy ter oblige ye travellers from thee north, but may I suggest we parlay down ter the hostess table at thee entrance? See, yar able ter get much better pictures with ye cameras with thee overhead lamps down yonder. Jest shout ahoy when yer leavin' and I'll beer ready."

That's right. The Pirate prefers that any pictures of him be in good lighting.

We agree and tell him we'll grab him on our way out. He bobs his head and swashbuckles over to another table.

For the rest of our meal, I spy The Pirate popping in and out of the background. Half the time he just scoots into a corner of a hallway, eyes darting around. He never seems sure what to do with his hands.The poor guy  doesn't even feel comfortable in The Pirate House. Good sir, if you can't own your space at The Pirate House, then really what is left for you? Long John Silvers? Red Lobster?

An hour later, we sign our checks and gather our things. Ever lurking, The Pirate pops up and asks if we be ready ter take our portrait. He leads the way, feather bobbing excitedly toward our photo shoot locale.

Still ... cute, right?


All in all, one of my more successful Valentine's Days. I can't wait to tell our future brood of little lads and lasses how me and the Pirate met up! All because his refined flute playing, impeccable fashion sense, and  our shared appreciation of  handbags. (Wait a minute ...)


Bonus: The menu at The Pirate House had a recipe for a cocktail called Chantham Artillery Punch. And it looks fantastic.

Then again, any recipe is fantastic when the last step is "Add one case of champagne when ready to serve." 


Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Fond Farewell

Here's a fun fact about myself that I didn't realize until about twelve hours ago.

I am terrified of taking flights.

Not so much the actual flying part. Hey, that's totally out of my control. Once we're hurtling through in a big metal tube, that's on you, Mr. Pilot. The worst part of actually flying for me has to do with the whole ear-popping phenomenon. (Side effect from having ruptured my eardrums just sitting in my dorm room, watching a movie. It makes you a little gun shy with any changes in eardrum pressure.)

But my stomach is in knots, I feel all jittery, and I keep playing over and over in my mind how this is going to go horribly, horribly wrong.

I'm talking about the whole airport experience.

It's like, as soon as I walk through those automatic doors, I'm develop a mild form of autism. Can't read social cues, feel overwhelmed by signage, don't understand what the blazered people around me want. (TICKET? ID? BAG? HIGH FIVE?) In fact, one time, upon approaching security, I saw a TSA attendant stretch out his hand to me. He was reaching for my ticket. I instead dumped all of my spare change and my earrings into his hands.

I have night terrors about not remembering to get that pink tag for my carry-on bag, so I can't put my suitcase under the plane, so I wind up trying to jam it into an overhead compartment, but it won't fit, so instead they just leave me standing on the runway. Which is when I discover that I dropped my keys onto my seat. And now don't have any keys. I'm stranded at the airport. And I am going to die here. Forever haunting Terminal B.

(In actuality, I totally front through the entire process. I paint on a patina of boredom across my face, just a jaded jetsetter trying to get through TSA checkpoints. So I probably don't stick out much overall. But inside that cool, collected exterior is a litter of jittery gerbils, spazzing out slamming noggins-first into walls.)

So I'm typing this during the fifteen minutes before I leave for the airport. If I don't make it (meaning, I die of embarrassment at the ticket counter), think of me fondly. Think of me, bright and beaming, cracking jokes and dazzling coworkers at meeting with my wit. Don't think of me, sitting on the linoleum airport floor, flop sweating and crying into a bag of overly-priced Combos.

Sunday, February 10, 2013

Night Shift

Dear Myself,

I'm sure, when you are reading this in the morning, you will be exhausted. You will slap annoyingly at the alarm clock. (Which, by the way, is uncalled for. It's just doing its job.) You will literally roll out of bed. You will be so out of it that you'll wind up putting your contact lenses in the wrong eyes and then wonder why you have a migraine by lunch. The reason I am writing to you is because I (Past You) am up at 3 AM. Wondering why? It's because of you. You lazy, unmotivated, veg-all-day jerk face. You refuse to be productive during normal, practical, easy-to-use daytime hours. Instead, you lounge on the couch, watching a marathon of Rugby 7 matches, a sport you don't understand in the slightest. (Side note: Ladies. You HAVE to check out Rugby 7. Trust me. A sporting event with a running time of fifteen minutes and athletic physiques that will make you feel incredibly confident in your relative thigh size? You're welcome.) Then, when most people are turning off porch lights and heading to bed ... you get some inexplicable, impractical rush of energy to be productive.

And produce you do.

At 8 PM, you decided to throw in a load of laundry.

While you're down in the basement stuffing the washing machine, you spy your painting supplies. Oh yeah, you had been meaning to put a few extra coats of paint that trim in the dining room. Why not start now?

Why not give it three coats?






In between drying time and laundry cycles, you have to do something to occupy your time, right?

Why not try to figure out why your printer hasn't been working? Sure, you'll give it a whirl!


Why not print out some pictures, now that your printer has been trouble-shot into submission? Don't mind if you do!

You know, you've been meaning to redo some of the frames you have in  your front room. How about an art project or two?




How about typing up a blog post about all of this? Since, you know, you can't seem to write anything during the FIVE HOURS you avoided writing like it was the plague.

In summation: when the sun is out, the only thing your capable of producing is a butt-cheek impression on the sofa cushions. But, sun's down  .... okay, I was going for a whole play on the "sun's out, guns out" cliche, I can't think of a clever rhyme to "down" that indicates accomplishing a crapload of stuff. And I blame you. Because you're the one who kept me up this late.

So the next time you are kicked back on the couch, flipping through your seventeen DVR'd episodes of The Big Bang Theory (Seriously, why are you even still taping those? You've seen all of them. ALL. Of. Them.) please consider emptying the dishwasher instead. It will take you five minutes. And will earn you three hours of sleep.

(But the art project did turn out pretty nice. At least, to my bleary 3AM eyes. We'll see what it looks like once I get a few hours of shut-eye and my standards improve.)


Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Copier Corral: Schmidt Happens

One of my favorite parts of the work week is Wednesday morning. It starts boringly enough. Everyone comes in, says hi, goes into their offices, maybe wedges a lunch bag into the fridge. Then, after a few minutes, someone will mutter something like this:

"Get your crap together, India."

And it's off to the races.

Every Wednesday, our office partakes in a joyful yet academic analysis of last night's episode of New Girl. For those of you who aren't familiar with this show, let me summarize: cute yet quirky (I will NOT type the word "adorkable") girl meets three emotionally dysfunctional single dudes and moves into a ridiculously huge loft which, given their respective employment histories, they could never afford. And. Hilarity. Ensues.

If you're wondering whether or not you should start DVRing the show, here's a quick litmus test:

Watch the clip below for as long as you can.


Did you make it to the seagulls flying by? You'll probably like the show.

Did you bail out as soon as Zooey Deschanel flung off that lime-green comforter? You will hate all A-plot stories featuring the main character.

If you are on the fence, keep in mind that the ZD quotient does vary from episode to episode. One week you'll get a show chock full of ballet flats, high-waisted shorts, and teapot decoupage. The next week, it's all-out binge-drinking, True American style, with varying levels of nudity. The former has high ZD, the later is more heavy on the Schmidtism. Schmidtism refers to the character of Schmidt, one of the roommates who suffers from an overly earnest desire to mover from Player to Playa. (As in a ladies man, not a beach.) Picture everything John Mayer does. Now take away the money, the guitar skills (skillz?), and the authenticity. You're left with Schmidt.

Side note: know what's a fun game? Looking at a quote and trying to figure out if it was said by Schmidt or John Mayer. Here, say it with me. Who's ready to play....

GUESS!

THE!

D-BAG!

"It’s like I come on very strong. I am a very…I’m just very. V-E-R-Y. And if you can’t handle very, then I’m a d-bag. But I think the world needs a little very. That’s why black people love me."

Survey says .........

DING DING DING!!!

JOHN MAYER!!!

"I want to tell people about us because I think you are the dopest, flyest, smartest, ballsiest woman that I've sexually enjoyed in really long time."


Survey says .........

DING DING DING!!!

SCHMIDT!!!


"My Six Word Story: My heart didn't come with instructions."

Survey says .........

DING DING DING!!!

JOHN MAYER!!!


 

That game is tougher than it seems, ain't it.

The good thing about Schmidt is that he's the acidity to the ZD base. They balance each other out so that, by the end of an episode, your stomach isn't violently convulsing from too much aspartame or too much Jaeger. (I'm assuming you can figure out which goes with which.)

In what I hope will become a weekly post idea, here is the SPOILER-LADEN review of last night's New Girl episode, Table 34, courtesy of the hard-working employees in 244Hitch.

Disclaimer: this post will make no sense if you did not watch the most recent episode of New Girl. I suggest you either

  1. open up a new Internet browser window, watch it, and come back when you're done, or
  2. forget this post, Google the phrase "John Mayer Quotes," and enjoy the shock-and-awe of those results.


Lessons Learned
(This is where we break it down for ya.)
  • Winston gets his mojo back.
  • Schmidt gets the best lines and the best turban.
  • Nick gets to moonwalk out of awkward conversations.
  • The culture of India gets pwned. (Because I know I have some relatives over the age of forty reading this blog, I feel the need to point out that there isn't a typo in that last sentence.)
  • Nick and Jess really "get" structural engineering when it comes to newspaper and masking tape.
  • The television-viewing audience gets a view of an Indian Marriage Convention. (Is that a real thing?)
  • We all get to look inward and ponder that dark, soul-searching question, "To what table would I be assigned?"
Wait ... I Don't Get It
(This is where we punch holes in the New Girl boat about things that don't jive with us. Or we just rant.)
  • Why did Sam the doctor make such a big deal about Nick and Jess kissing? Wasn't he chanting "KISS! KISS! KISS!" a few hours earlier during True American? Plus, when he and Jess first started seeing each other, I believe it was a Friends With Benefits arrangement. Sure, it grew into something more over time, but can a guy who used to look for hitting it / quitting it situations really be that prudish about a kiss? And does no one recall when he broke up with Jess during Halloween, because she wanted something serious, only to come crawling back in cliff-hanger fashion for Christmas? Jess, you earned some credit with that. Cash in those chips, girl.
  • Why does kissing Winston automatically mean that you will not appear in the next episode? This is also known as the Stockholm Shelby Syndrome. We really liked Daisy from last episode. Finally, someone for Winston to banter with who doesn't just sit there like a turd in a punch bowl. We have hopes that Winston and Daisy will last enough to register as a full-fledged New Girl Relationship. (B-Plot in at least three of the next five episodes.) But with our luck, given that Winston and Daisy had such great chemistry, the writers will ditch the relationship. The thought process always seems to go like this:
    • Winston gets a really interesting character development moment -->
    • Audience loves it -->
    • Next episode, no mention of the previous moment is made and Winston is instead given an lame story point -->
    • Audience hates it and feels Winston's talents are being wasted -->
    • Writing team think GREAT! and keeps that ineffective story line for Winston for the next five episodes.
    • (Of course, I am referring here to Shelby. She lasted the longest of any external significant other on the show. It took forever to kill her off story-wise.)
  • In the meantime, we'll hold off creating a Shipper name for Winston and Daisy until we know whether this plotline has staying power or will trail off.
  • Nick really squandered an opportunity there at the end with Jess to earn some points with her by comforting her during her breakup. It started out okay. Dancing like a fool to get her to smile while she sips on a  rosé wine and listens to Taylor Swift? That part was genius. And it ended okay, with a very disconcerting by earnest attempt at a hug. But the part in the middle? Where he starts talking about how he's never been a home wrecker before and it feels kind of good, or proud, or something? Dude, focus. This isn't about you right now. Jess seemed to take it well, but that seemed like a stretch given how upset she was.
Next Week's Hopes and Dreams!
(This is where we provide our predictions for future episodes. Inventive title, eh?)

  • Daisy WILL make another appearance. Hey, she's got a great voice for radio. Maybe they'll use her as a vehicle to revive that plot line where Winston got his own sports talk radio show. You know, the one we never hear about anymore?
  • CeCe WILL start dating one of those hot Indian guys from the Marriage Convention. Schmidt WILL make a reference to naan with sexual overtones.
  • Nick WILL start to shower, since Jess said he would look "smokin' hot" in a previous episode if he just took better care of himself. He will also start rocking more button-downs and fewer t-shirts and hoodies. (The key to Nick's emotional state are his sartorial choices. Collared shirt = Nick happy. Anything fleece = Nick sad.)
  • Winston and Daisy's new name WILL be ... Waisty. Or Dainsty. Or Winsy. Or Daiston...