Thursday, December 26, 2013

Verlaine

La canción,
que nunca diré,
se ha dormido en mis labios.
La canción,
que nunca diré.

Sobre las madreselvas
había una luciérnaga,
y la luna picaba
con un rayo en el agua.

Entonces yo soñé,
la canción,
que nunca diré.

Canción llena de labios
y de cauces lejanos.

Canción llena de horas
perdidas en la sombra.

Canción de estrella viva
sobre un perpetuo día.
 
~Federico Garcia Lorca 

Monday, December 23, 2013

Ballroom dancing and male-dominated society

I took several dance classes when I went to UCLA, partly because I have always wanted to learn and partly so that I would do some exercise during the week and not turn entirely into Jabba the Hut. The class was once a week, and I bought black and white loafers at my favorite cheap shoe place on Westwood Boulevard since tennis shoes were strictly forbidden and I knew I'd get blisters if I wore heels (and I'm tall enough as it is anyway). I took East Coast Swing the first semester (Winter '11), Ballroom basics the next 2 semesters (Spring and Fall '12), then Beginning Salsa (Winter '12), then Intermediate Salsa (Spring '12). The same instructor taught all the dance classes, a petite yet tough lady named Jackie. I loved it. I got to be pretty good, too (by which I mean you probably wouldn't die of secondhand embarrassment while watching).

I learned a lot from these classes: how to dance, obviously; how to follow; what to do in different circumstances. It was while dancing in one of the Ballroom dance classes that I realized how the culture of ballroom dancing directly parallels a male-dominated society like ours, especially the way it was in the past (which obviously makes sense considering the former arose from the latter). In ballroom dancing, the man leads. The man makes all the decisions, and the woman has to follow and go along with whatever he wants to do. If he wants to twirl her, she twirls. It's his decision. If she wants to twirl, she has to wait until it occurs to him. If she doesn't want to twirl, she's kinda out of luck unless she's willing to speak up ("hey, I'm getting kind of dizzy"). He moves her where he wants to go. He is supposed to have a firm hold on her. The firmer the hold, the better/stronger the lead.

The man always walks or moves forward, while the woman moves backwards. She can't see where she's going; the man decides where they're headed. I had a guy I was dancing with ask me once, "Isn't it weird to be always walking backwards?" "No," I replied, "I'm used to it." And that's how it is, in a male-dominated culture like ours. You are used to things always being a certain way, with men always being in charge and making the decisions. You get used to being the one who has no say, who does whatever the other has her do, who follows, who doesn't make decisions. You get used to being controlled, to always having the short end of the stick, to this world not being for you.

Girls would dance together if there weren't enough guys or if they just wanted to dance together (this happened more often than guys dancing together, which only happened a couple times as a joke), but one had to take the man's part (the Lead) and one had to take the woman's part. The rigidity of the gender roles stayed in the couple, despite their both being the same gender. Men could dance with two women, but I never saw two men dancing with one woman (I never took tango; that may be A Thing there; idk). I guess that as long as you have a Lead it doesn't matter how many he's leading.

The culture of ballroom dancing doesn't really prepare you for the real world, either (at least my classes didn't). The instructor always decreed that the men had to ask the women to dance (men lead and make all the decisions, doncha know). We girls had to stand there and wait for guys to come up to us and ask us to dance; we couldn't go up to and ask them. The most we could do was make eye contact with a guy we wanted to dance with and smile encouragingly. I'll bet that's what it was like to date in the olden times. Interestingly, when I went swing dancing with some friends at a local dance studio, I was ill-prepared for it because I just sat there and waited for guys to ask me to dance, which generally didn't happen. Hardly anyone asked me to dance because I was new and didn't know anyone, and on top of that and being really shy, I didn't ask anyone to dance because it felt wrong, like I was breaking the rules. My instructor had hammered it into my head that The Men Do The Asking. This did not apply in the real world (my friends asked guys all the time), and it left me sitting on the sidelines, feeling awkward and longing to dance but unable to due to antiquated rules I had internalized. In this way, the rules I learned in my dance classes actually hindered me in real life.

I realize there is an interesting point to be made about my instructor being a woman and teaching us the very traditional-role-y ballroom dances. Women often internalize and then turn around to teach the next generation the very same rules that cage them, that put them as lesser. When my teacher taught us the moves, she'd generally take the man's part and show us what to do with a volunteer girl from the class. (She would also sometimes have a guy who was a good dancer lead her in order to show us what the ladies were supposed to do.) The instructor was the leader of our class, and women who are leaders often have to take on male qualities because in the traditional mindset, leader=male.

Also, in classes where the guys outnumbered the girls, there would be a mad rush to ask girls to dance in order to avoid being left without a partner (the instructor made sure those who hadn't danced previously got to dance the next time). It was amusing and kind of amazing to see guys run or jump up to one and breathlessly say "hiwouldyouliketodance". One felt almost powerful, at that point (and there is so little power for women in ballroom dancing). This also didn't really help prepare me for the real world because in the real world, guys were not falling over themselves to ask me to dance (or on a date, I guess is the real-world parallel).

There is something that was positive about the dance classes' rigidly enforced gender roles and rules. The instructor was adamant about men doing the leading and asking, but she was equally adamant about the men being responsible for the women they were dancing with. It was the men's responsibility to make sure they didn't steer their partners into other dancers, or step on their toes, or make them dizzy by twirling them too much, or dropping them during lifts, or dipping them into other people, or crash into others or the wall, etc. If anything of that sort happened, it was automatically the man's fault. Many times I'd step on a guy's toes accidentally and apologize (the ingrained rules of my primary culture were stronger than this one's), only to have him say, "No, that's my fault; I wasn't leading you correctly."

Our male-dominated culture has men leading all the time, but outside of feminist circles you will rarely hear the blame placed on them. Wars and crime and economic crises and poverty and so forth occur under the watch of or are done by the group in charge (generally white heterosexual men, especially those who are rich) but they are almost always blamed on other people or seen as things that Just Happen ("don't get raped" instead of "don't rape"). Sometimes the bad things are blamed on others, on those not in the Group In Power (the U.S.'s economic state after George W. Bush being blamed on Obama, or the 'deterioration of our society' being blamed on feminism or secularization). We still have the male bias and domination without at least having the sense of responsibility, of acknowledging that it's their fault because it happened on their watch, when they were in charge, because they were in charge (and they're almost always in charge). If you're going to be in charge, at least own up to how much responsibility you have.

Not that I want Chivalry To Come Back, or anything. Just everyone be good to one another. And realize that what you've been taught, and the society we live in, is often messed up. But even in that (despite that?), you can find beauty and joy. I really did love dancing. I think I'll start up again.

Sunday, September 29, 2013

iTunes Shuffle poem


All we do is mess around
I've been thinking how to step to you
Well I couldn't tell you
And I don't know
It's been a long time
Maybe no one told you
Oh very young
Right now I feel just like a leaf on a breeze
Rarity glistened sharp
I've made a habit

[IDK, this doesn't make much sense. It was kinda fun, though. I may do this to get myself started on writing every once in a while. Can you guess what the songs were?]

Thursday, September 26, 2013

September book haul

From an estate sale I went to a couple weeks ago:
-Agnes Grey by Anne Brontë (I read somewhere that fans of Jane Eyre would like this so I bought it)
-Laments For the Living by Dorothy Parker (I have her Enough Rope and adored it. This book is of short stories rather than poems but who cares)
-Sonnets From the Portuguese by Elizabeth Barrett Browning (I had bought a different copy for a friend for her birthday but apart from reading the few sonnets everybody knows I haven't read this myself)
-the aforementioned New York Public Library Desk Reference book, which I bought for and have at work

Oh I just remembered I had bought a book from an earlier estate sale as well. It's this 1800s book of Sir Walter Scott's collected poetical works, in leather. Not bookbinding leather, like straight up cowhide, with flowers painted on it. It's so old! I'm not a Scott fan (haven't read anything by him, although I have Ivanhoe waiting for me on my bookshelf) but it was so fragile and amazing I couldn't leave it behind. It has a picture and signature (probably also a picture, rather than physically signed) of the author inside, facing the title page, but the first like 8 pages are bug-eaten so I don't know which year it's from. Definitely from the 1800s, though.
I also bought from this estate sale the DVD of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, which I'd been wanting to watch for ages.

From my public library's year-round booksale:
-Thank You, Jeeves by P.G. Wodehouse (read this already. Cracked up throughout, like straight up bursting out laughing p. much every page. One word: BANJOLELE. I must read the others. Only qualms: blackface is a plot point! Not once but twice!! And the N-word is dropped casually, constantly, by every character except for Jeeves [perf human being and the best]. Oh 1930s, you so racist. :/)
-Codex by Lev Grossman (I just like grabbed it off the shelf because it was called codex and the cataloging notes said medievalists–fiction. I'm currently reading this. It's about this guy, an investment banker or something, who gets assigned to catalog and sort a rare books collection/library of some English aristocrats and also gets hooked on a virtual reality, quest videogame which I think is supposed to mirror his IRL search for a mythical codex in that library. It's very slow moving; we just see the guy sort and catalog books and then go home and play the videogame and sleep. I love it. I can sort and catalog books all day; apparently I can also read about people sorting and cataloging books all day too. It's just my speed, interesting and old books and not too high-stakes. Also there's a standoffish medievalist grad student who helps the guy and she is basically 10000% done with everything and only cares about the books and medieval/Renaissance/book history. I love her. I'm sorta hoping they become bros instead of ending up together but that's what will probly happen.)

I just bought The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore by William Joyce, which is just as lovely as I remembered. Such a wonderful book. I had sorta forgotten about it until I saw the picture book at Barnes & Noble. It was, interestingly, a short animated film (which won an Oscar) first, then an app (which I did not know), and now a picture book. You'd think it'd be the other way around, ironically enough. Anyway, I found and read the book (gorgeous; they made it look like the one ML writes in!) but didn't buy it since picture books are hideously expensive. But lo and behold, I got a 20% off B&N coupon in my email and bought the book at a reduced price using the last of my giftcard money! Worth it.

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Misc. book stuff

I just added another update to my Surprise Stamp post.
I also bought some books from an estate sale and from my library's booksale recently but they will go in another post. The only one I have with me right now is the New York Public Library's Desk Reference, which I bought for work since it's a useful thing to have. 
Also, Threadless.com has this Select collection (the book heart T-shirt I bought from them is from that collection) and they just came out with new stuff, including this shirt and this cardigan with a 'herringbook' print!!! So much want.
One of my birthday presents was this zippered pouch from Out of Print (another favorite online store. Everything has covers of classic books/literature on it), which I had actually contemplated buying. My mom went to a book/cooking store in NorCal with my brother when they were there for a wedding (my brother already lives in that area) and she bought it for me there. I love it. It looks like a library card!!!!! But at first I was at a loss as to how to use it since I'm no longer in school and don't need pouches to hold pens and such. However, I decided to stop carrying my purse around in my work tote bag (the idea had been for convenience; once I was done with work I could just pull the purse out without having to transfer everything) and use the pouch to hold things so that they don't get lost in the tote! And since my tote bag says "Trust me, I'm a librarian" and the pouch looks like a library card from inside a library book, it's all themed! (My other little zippered pouch that I'm using is a sort of coin purse my little brother bought me in Honduras and it doesn't match the theme but we'll ignore that.)
Oh, I also put my favorite pins on my work tote (UCLA Bruins pin from UCLA Alumni, WonderWoman pin I bought at the LA County Fair, small "Respect" rainbow pin that I think a sibling got from school eons ago). I have an "I Read" pin that I got from the LA Times Festival of Books a few years ago, but underneath it says "LA Times" and since I'm not sure if it says "I Read" or "I Read LA Times" and I don't do the latter, I elected not to use it. I had also bought an official LA Times Festival of Books pin with a dinosaur but I tragically lost it a while back (button pins have a really annoying habit of becoming undone and falling off. I almost lost my UCLA pin that way).

Monday, September 9, 2013

TIFITLWIW: Horses roundup (heh)

I was going through the pictures on my phone and realized a good amount of them involved horses. So I thought I'd put them together in a post.
This is by Carol Cable, from a funny book of her cartoons about academe. I saw this and immediately thought of Tumblr.

I saw this and immediately thought of one of my favorite shows. Parks & Recreation takes place in Pawnee, Indiana. There is a Native American tribe on that show, but they are the Wamapoke (sp?) rather than the Pawnee tribe.

This is a funny little horse doodle I found on the back of a book jacket.


Often hardcover books that come with dust jackets will have a publisher's logo or something indented into the book cover (there's a specific term for this I think, like 'stamped' or something, but I don't know what it is). This one's a horse and the initials of the author, who I think is known for writing books about horses. The book (which I just spent like 15 minutes looking for) is The Man Who Listens to Horses by Monty Roberts. I took a pic of this because my initials are MR as well.

Thursday, September 5, 2013

TIFITLWIW: Cutest found bookmark

Found this inside the book pictured underneath. Isn't it adorable? It's a cross-stitch embroidered bookmark that reads, "this is where I fell asleep" and has a teddy bear wearing a nightcap. Perfect for people like my dad who fall asleep in the middle of reading.

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Favorite websites: Threadless.com

I have a bit of an obsession with this website. Threadless sells T-shirts, mainly, cool screen-print ones (as well as other clothing items and accessories). If you like the image on the T-shirt, you can often get it as an art print, iPhone case, or hoodie. Artists from all over the world contribute designs. I like that all designs are available for both guys and girls regardless of what you think the audience would be. They also have excellent customer service and fast shipping. I'd heard of them from somewhere on the Internet a while back but didn't start buying from them until a few months ago. It started when I bought my brother Ricardo this shirt (he plays the piano). He really liked it, and when I filled out a survey, Threadless sent me a coupon. I found this shirt and had to have it (it is basically me in T-shirt form). I adore it. The fabric's really soft, and it has 2 of my favorite things. I also bought my brother Jonatan this T-shirt for his bday, which he seems to have liked. When I bought his shirt I also bought myself this shirt, which is probably one of my all-time pieces of Sherlock fanart. It's like the Book of Kells meets Sherlock. Amazing. I haven't worn it because it's too hot, but it's hanging on my wall like a wearable poster. I keep having to stop myself from buying an art print since the shirt fulfills that purpose. The only thing is that, by the time I bought it, they had sold out of girls so I had to get a guy T-shirt. I don't know if it's because it's a guy T-shirt or because it's not a Select shirt like my book heart tee but the fabric feels thicker and not as soft. Anyway.
Right now they're having a sale and I'm kinda trying to decide between these $8 shirts: 1 (purple! pandas! Dia de los Muertos-type face designs, aka my heritage!), 2 (monarch butterflies are my favorite), 3 (SuperMario x the famous Magritte painting! That's 2 kinds of nerdiness), 4 (cool revamp of The Wizard of Oz)
I also like these book/library T-shirts: 1, 2, 3 (I especially like this one and hope they reprint it. IDK if it would be inappropriate for work). I also really like this one but I'm waiting for the price to drop.

Sunday, August 4, 2013

Yardsale haul

  • Lentenlands: My Childhood with Joy Davidman and C.S. Lewis by Douglas H. Gresham ($1)
  • Emma DVD (Gwyneth Paltrow version) ($1)
  • Amélie DVD ($1)
  • Bride & Prejudice DVD (yes, you read that right. It's the modern Bollywood retelling of P&P) (50 cents because it's just the DVD without the case)
  • Possession DVD (ditto, 50 cents)
They also had all three extended editions of the LOTR movies but I already own the normal versions (also bought from a yard sale, lol) and let's be real, I would never get around to watching the extra footage. I haven't even watched the DVD extras from the Narnia movies.  Also they had some Tom Hanks movies and I wanted to call my sister and ask her if she wanted me to get them for her but my phone died. >:[

Friday, July 26, 2013

TIFITLWIW: Don't judge a book by its cover

Book covers are very important to me. When I'm buying series, they all must have the same cover. I have the three Howl's Moving Castle books, but two have these  covers and one (the middle one, which makes it worse) has this one. It drives me nuts (I think at least one was a gift, and/or I couldn't find the last one with the proper cover and I didn't want to wait to read it). But I don't want to spend extra money to replace it. #firstworldproblems

Anyway, I came across some books with, shall we say, interesting covers.


Quick, guess what this book is about! Well, there's a sword and a flower, plus that font and color choices... Maybe it's a historical bodice-ripper romance novel? Well, I don't know about the romance, but judging by the book's Wikipedia entry, it's a historical novel about ancient Rome. It does not sound like it matches the cover at all.

Check this guy out too:

I know Chaim Potok as the author of The Chosen (I saw the movie but haven't read anything by him), so I know it's probably a great work of fiction. This cover kinda sucks though. It's just so painfully Eighties. Like, if this cover had a lady on it in addition to the pensive main guy, I'd assume it was another one of those White Couple With Tragic Love and Angst books. However, I opened it to find...
It was signed by the author. Cute this face again.

Thursday, July 18, 2013

TIFITLWIW: Surprise stamp

So I was going though my iPad pictures when I found this one that I had totally forgotten about:


 It's a wee little striding man in a hat, stamped on the bottom of a book. I just found it by accident. It's probably about an inch high. I think it may be a printer's mark? I don't even remember what book this was. Anyway, I thought it was cute.

UPDATE: I found another one, and it's the logo for Simon & Schuster. I'm guessing they stamp the bottom of all their hardcover books. Neat. 

FURTHER UPDATE: Apparently it's also the logo for Prentice Hall??? Are both owned by the same publishing house? I'm so confused. Anyway, PH's logo shows the striding man in greater detail. He's actually a farmer sowing seed, like in a field or something. The hand behind him is flinging the seed behind him, while his other hand reaches into a pouch slung in front of his body. I guess it's a metaphor for spreading knowledge which sprouts in readers' mind or something. idk. I'm only 99% sure it's the same logo.

Sunday, July 7, 2013

TIFITLWIW: Things found in books 3



Mini Disneyland playing card. It's probably like 2 inches long. Pen included for scale. I don't remember what book I found this in.


Bulletins for the Campus Hill Church. Interesting to see how the logos and fonts changed (probably because of the change in pastors). I like the old rainbow church logo but can see why they changed it. These were found inside religious books, naturally.


Despite how book-oriented I am, I strangely was never into bookplates and marking "my" books. I can understand the appeal and the usefulness, especially if you lend your books out to friends a lot. I do find most bookplates cute, but it just comes off as super possessive to me. Why be so desperate to mark your books as yours? It comes off as very "it's MINE!!!!" to me. Plus if you want to give them away or sell them later you have to take them out or force the buyer to have a book with your name in it (this weirds me out since I'm kind of a private person). So while a lot of the bookplates found in the donated books are cute, they are a huge pain in the nether regions to remove. A lot of them won't come off, so I have to leave them in the books. I'll probably cover them with a blank sticker label or something. Anyway this one has a squirrel on it.

Thursday, June 27, 2013

poetry is
a quiet gasp
alone late at night
because you just read
the words your heart
wanted
               needed
                             was trying to say
and both hadn't found
and didn't know
until that moment

 

Note: I think the reason this poem keeps coming up in Google searches is because it is heavily based on a poem I read ages ago and forgot until some of its phrases floated up to the top of my mind and I wrote them down, thinking I'd come up with them. It is very easy for the human mind to commit plagiarism unintentionally.

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

TIFITLWIW: Title pages

A Book of Golden Deeds of All Times and All Lands, Gathered & Narrated by Charlotte M. Yonge (Dutton & Co., ~1908).
This book, which I think is about good deeds done by good people, sounds kinda didactic and boring. Aren't the title pages gorgeous though? I love the quote by Shakespeare. This is actually my current cellphone wallpaper.


Modern Essays Selected by Norman E. Brett-James (Dutton & Co., ~1924)
By the same publishing house. I didn't notice that until now. Gorgeous early twentieth-century books.



 Dante Alighieri's The Divine Comedy, translated by Lawrence Grant White with illustrations by Gustave Doré (Pantheon Books, 1948)
Totally nerded out when I found this. This gif is what my face was doing as I flipped through the book. Also, note Dante's uncanny resemblance to Grumpy Cat.

Paganism, Popery, & Christianity... by Vincent W. Milner (Bradley, 1860)
This one's not as pretty but I'm showing it as an example of the crazy-long titles books used to be given. They didn't mess around in those days; they wanted you to know exactly what was going to be in their book. Click and read this one; it's great. I am also amused by how RAGE OF THE PROTESTANT VARIETY the author is about Catholicism. It's easy to forget about that being A Thing in the 1800s. Let There Be Light is also the motto of UCLA; not sure why the circle/seal thing is a belt. Also, this book is older than the American Civil War.

Friday, May 31, 2013

 gif by dean-pls on Tumblr

Forgive me, friend,
I wasn't searching because
I could scarcely hope to dream up
someone as wonderful as you.
Beyond all I could hope for,
past every thought of every good thing
is where you are.
It is enough to know I know you now;
It is already an embarrassment of riches.
I didn't have or deserve the knowledge
that someone like you existed;
I have enough love now to
stretch back across the lonely
pre-you years by myself.
I was always waiting for you
and didn't know it.

Thursday, May 23, 2013

Things I've found in the library where I work: Things found in books 2

Sometimes you find neat things left inside books. A bound play in book form had several ads and clippings inside. The back side of one had a pin-up ad from the forties.
"I like 'Smooth' Men!" Sorry, Whisker Club.

This pamphlet was found in a different book and is about the "backstage" supporters in hospitals, such as nurses and janitors. I thought it was kinda cute.


Friday, May 10, 2013

Things I've found in the library where I work: Things found in books

There's a great blog called Forgotten Bookmarks, where people submit things they've found in books, either library or used books. This is mainly along those lines.

This made me laugh. So great. The paper's yellowing, as well as the font, indicates that this card is from several decades ago. I'm thinking mid-century, sometime before 1980 but probably after 1930.

This one was found in a religious book, I'm pretty sure, as it is a quote from SDA periodical Amazing Facts:
"God has preserved His word in miraculous ways throughout the centuries, using His faithful workers to spread the gospel even in the most dangerous times. An amazing narrative that will increase your faith for [the?] coming time of trouble." Amazing Facts Jan-Feb 2004
I'm not sure what the other text is for. "Great Deals"?

Love this. "I choose to love myself in spite of myself!"

Friday, April 26, 2013

Things I've found in the library where I work: Random book covers

#swag #plaid #palebluegrandpajeans
 
This cover delights me. Not sure why I like Don Knotts since I don't think I've seen anything he's in (I had to Wikipedia him), but how can you look at that face and not (like him, that is). What a swell human.

Henry James on Italy, with the most beautiful paintings of Venice and Rome and such. Haven't tried reading this one because I might burst into tears from missing Italy so much. Also pictured: my Macbook with its purple keyboard cover, some boxes.

Isn't this a lovely cover? There's awesome little medieval-type people representing the different disciplines in each round curlicue thing. I love old books.

Saturday, April 20, 2013

Upon Waking

  • I cannot fly
  • I'm done with school
  • I'm home and nowhere else
  • No embarrassment has happened
  • I don't have to worry about 
  • whatever it was I was worrying about
  • I cannot see or speak to my grandmother 
  • ever again in this life
  • I am alone

Inspired by Lists for the Future

Friday, April 12, 2013

Things I've found in the library where I work: National Geographic magazines

So I've started working as a librarian in a junior college library. I'm building their library from the ground up, basically, and this involves going through all their donated books and materials. I've found some pretty neat things, which I'll highlight in this blog as a series.

Somebody donated a bunch (a couple boxes worth) of National Geographic magazines. I haven't really gone through them yet because I'm doing all the books first, but this one was amongst said books and the awesome holographic image of a hominid skull caught my eye.


Pretty sweet, right? It's the metallic rainbow-y kind that looks 3-D. I took a video of it so you could check out the neat 3-D action. Hopefully it comes out:


National Geographic Vol. 168, No. 5 November 1985

I also came across this other NatGeo mag. The guy with the condor on the cover looks a lot like the guy from The Black Keys (the one with glasses). Perhaps he's a time-traveler.

 Condor-wrangling: not for the faint of heart.

National Geographic Vol. 139, No. 8 May 1971

Sunday, March 17, 2013

The Secret of Kells

For St. Patrick's Day, Hulu has The Secret of Kells available to watch. I had been wanting to see it since it's about an illuminated manuscript/book that is real, the Book of Kells (largely considered Ireland's greatest national treasure, according to Wikipedia), and I heard the animation was amazing. I am so glad I finally got to watch it. It has pretty much everything I love: illuminated manuscripts, books, medieval stuff, mythology, early Christianity, gorgeous art, nature and forests, the triumph of light over darkness... I could go on and on. It's now one of my favorite movies ever. I haven't see anything this lovely and wondrous since the Morris Lessmore film. I love it so much.


Chi Ro monogram from the actual Book of Kells. [source] Chi and Ro are the first two letters of "Christ" in Greek, so it's basically a symbol for Jesus.

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Clothes I have lost or at least I think so because I have no idea where they could have gone

  • a paisley-print flared elastic-waist skirt that I bought at The Buffalo Exchange (formerly of Westwood, RIP) for crazy cheap. Last worn to my BFF's baby's shower. Said baby is now 2 years old.
  • blue Old Navy cotton sundress. I loved this sundress so freaking much. It was slightly prone to wrinkling, but besides that it wasn't too short or low and it had POCKETS. I am doubly bummed now because it would be perfect to Disneybound as Belle in. :(((
  • 'dressy' denim jean flares. I wish I had these to wear to work. I remember them being among the clothes I brought home after finishing grad school and I swear I saw them in the garage with my other clothes but I have no idea where they are now. I don't know why.
  • white long-sleeved shirt. I may have given this away.
  • my favorite grey A-line denim skirt. I used to wear this all the time. I'm pretty sure I had it here at home.

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Smash

This hot mess of a show. Like a grown-up Glee, but on Broadway and the plotlines are slightly more straightforward and believable.

Best parts of Smash:
1) Tom and his zingers and general existence. Christian Borle's delivery of his lines gives me life.
2) the singing. Everyone is so talented. The dancing is great too.
3) uhhh, idk, I guess Derek. I mean his character is such a sleazeball but the actor (the same one who played the Commodore in Pirates of the Caribbean) plays him so sardonically and great. Also, Megan Hilty is fantastic. It's pretty laughable that they'd pick Kat McPhee over her for Marilyn. I mean really.
4) the girls' clothes. I want almost everything. Also hot guyz although currently I am hard-pressed to name one. Oh I guess that fixer guy.
5) Anjelica Huston throwing martinis in her ex-husband's face. This does not happen enough, imo.

Anyway, since I began working at my new job I have way less free time so I'm considering stopping keeping up with this one until the end of the season or w/e and then just watching all the episodes at once. Something's got to give.

Monday, February 11, 2013

Two things I am worried about

  • I got my wisdom teeth out Friday and while I've had zero pain or swelling I'm worried I'll give myself dry socket(s?) from eating normally.
  • My hard drive, which I use to back up my laptop and save extra files, suddenly for no reason (maybe I stepped on or dropped it one too many times? Never that hard!) became read-only and won't back anything up. My life is in that thing. I need it to work and store things like before! DDDDDDDDD:

Sunday, February 10, 2013

The family that lives on the corner across the street always has a yard sale every 6 months or so, and I usually walk down there and buy a classic book (this time it was the Barnes & Noble A Tale of Two Cities. 50 cents!). Well, the neighbor lady noticed my Pride & Prejudice sweatshirt and said she loves the story, that she's seen all the movies. I told her about The Lizzie Bennet Diaries and she said she'll check them out! :DDD

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Obligatory New Year's post

Tentative/vague list of New Year's Resolutions:
-lose weight/work out/be healthier/eat right etc. Because I am boring and just like everybody else, but mainly because I want to look good for my sister's wedding in May. Never let it be said I wasn't shallow!
-write more. I have a book of poetic forms that I've been meaning to go through and try to write each one. And I have a short story I've only written one sentence of, as well as other ideas I just think about and never write down. Maybe even try to publish something
-read the C.S. Lewis devotional my parents bought me as well as my Bible every day. I had been reading my Bible every day for several years, but all the grad school stuff just brought that to a creaking halt. But I will start up again.
-crochet/knit more. I have so much yarn and needles it isn't even funny
-use the craft stuff I have kicking around in storage containers/boxes
-make a sizeable dent in my to-read pile
-try to spend more time with my friends
-drive more so I'm not so bad at it

Anyway, here is an animated short of The Little Match Girl, set in Russia. I read it was made for a Fantastia movie they were making for 2006 but never finished. It's terribly sad but I always saw it as a New Year's story.