April 10, 2005

  • Good Little Rockers Eat Lentils
    © The Author, 2005

    Imagine if you will, the following hotness: orange shoes with chunky black rubber soles, an orange and hot pink flowered mini dress, two spiky pigtails complimented by two gigantic gold earrings fashioned to resemble the face of King Tut. If that outfit doesn’t make you compulsively dial the fashion police, just picture the ensemble decorating the gawky, braces and glasses clad, skinned-kneed pile of bones and angles that was my 11-year old self.

    Hot, I say, Hot!

    It was not just for my beloved full-length mirror that I was rocking this obviously rad attire for. No—this outfit was meant to be seen and lucky for me, I had the perfect place to be seen in it. I was going to my very first concert—THE B52’s!

    My family grew up in a suburb of Detroit whose main offerings to the world include decent public schools and a ski-hill/concert venue called Pine Knob, which my family lived about a mile from. In the summer time, I would sleep with my windows open, and receive murmured lullabies from the likes of Motley Crue, Eddie Money, The Blues Brothers, and Patty LaBelle. So, at age 11, I was more than ready to party at the Knob, especially when my mom mentioned that my favorite band of all time would be coming to play a show.

    The B52’s and I have always been tight. One of my favorite games as a girl (who am I kidding—you know I still do it) was to make believe I was the director and lead singer in music video’s and live concerts. I had a canopy bed that had detachable knobs decorating the top of the posts. These made perfect microphones. My costumes were picked out with great care and the process of selecting the perfect costume made for a very messy room. My audience was a captivated array of stuffed animals. They went wild cheering—you wouldn’t believe it, they usually were so well behaved! Needless to say, the process was handled with the greatest of care, and when I wasn’t impersonating all four of The Bangles, I was all four of The B52’s.

    On the day of the concert, my mom and I walked to the Knob to avoid traffic. Strutting past the elementary school that I had just graduated from in my outfit of hotness, I remember feeling so teenage. The very fact that I had absolutely no qualms about my mom coming with me to the concert is pretty telling of how teenage I was not, but I was happy in my delusion.

    Entering the concert I was so excited to see people dressed funkier than I! Pink hair! Neat tattoos! Drag queens! Stripy tights! Combat boots! Unfortunate mesh shirts! Girls with short hair! Boys with long hair! These ocular confections made me giddy—in our small town of soccer mom’s with paunches, working stiffs in khaki’s, and preppy looking kids and teens, the varsity jacket was the height of fashion culture. Seeing the audience dressed to the gills in wild clothes made me feel like finally my instincts towards crazy costume clothes were not so strange after all! While my look has tamed a bit since middle school and high school, the diverse and far out fashions of the B52’s audience assured me that it was cool to dress as crazy as I wanted. This assurance came in particuarly handy when I was later to attend a very preppy high school, while sporting short crayon red hair, purple cat-eye glasses, home-sewn purple velvet bellbottoms, orange micro-mini skirts, and knee high combat boots.

    My mom and I happily made our way past the awesomely dressed attendees to our seats in the shaded pavilion. I sat next to a lisping man who complimented me on my earrings (my beginnings as a fag hag). My very cool and not at all paunchy or soccer-momish mom sat on the other side of me. To my mom’s great joy, the lisping man to my left asked coyly, “Are you two sisters?” I was too young to realise he was complimenting her–it just made me feel like I looked way cool and definatly older.

    Soon, the concert began and I went wild. Dancing, jumping, singing, cheering, and getting swept up in the collective excitement of the band was exhilarating. When I closed my eyes I could imagine myself on stage; I could visualize the fans cheering for me. It was an even more satisfying fantasy than my stuffed animal’s cheers—and they were a rowdy bunch. My mom was up on her feet dancing with me and I was pleased to see that she also knew the songs word-for-word as I did. I was surprised, looking around me, to see that not everyone was getting as crazy as we were.

    I pointed to a sullen looking group of people, somberly nodding their heads to the beat. I was too young to realize what being self-conscious looked like. “Mom, why aren’t they dancing?”

    “I don’t know. You pay a pretty penny to go to a concert—you might as well have fun!”

    My mom is full of good advice.

    Later, I became aware of what being self-conscious felt like and have even suffered from occasional bouts of it—even at concerts. Thanks to that advice from my all-knowing mamacita, I am always able to shake the feeling loose, close my eyes, and get lost in the music. Soon, I am singing at the top of my lungs and dancing like the nutty thing that I am.

    This Friday, my partner surprised me with the invitation to spend money that we don’t really have to go to an Ash concert. At first I hesitated, but then I realized that eating lentils and rice all next week would be worth going to get crazy at a show put on by one of our favorite bands. Shaun and I have always fancied ourselves good little rockers (witness the framed and autographed picture of Everclear on our wall! Witness our framed album covers as our idea of interior decorating! Witness my husband’s idea of a scrapbook—a cruddy photo holder with ticket stubs from every concert ever attended! Witness his idea of high fashion—band t-shirts!). Sometimes an immature move like using your money allotted to purchase a healthy, balanced diet to buy concert tickets is the best way to rock. Because at that point, have not only spent money on the tickets, but you are also going to be malnourished later, so you better damn well have a good time.
    And, as always, a good time we had.

    What was your favorite/first concert?

April 6, 2005

  • Messing with my Head
    © The Author, 2005

    I tried to make myself comfortable in the plastic salon chair as she circled around me, taking stock. Her belly was soft and tan and peeking from the bottom of her black, stretchy shirt; her midsection swayed gently as she combed and cut my wet hair. I contemplated my own belly–typically contoured and rib cagey, but daily transforming into a hard and rounded little bowl after dinner. Like snowflakes, no two bellies are alike.

    Suddenly, in mid-cut, disrupting me in mid-silly-thought, a deep-rooted burp seeped out from under her breath. She threw her scissors down on the tray and grabbed a nearby water bottle with sudden urgency.

    “I’m sorry–I just ate some pepperoni pizza for lunch and now I’m payin’ for it.”

    I knew then that this hairdresser was a keeper.

    Ever since my trusted childhood hairdresser, Barbie, took a razor to “feather” my bangs when I was twelve, I gave up expecting to look good emerging from the salon. But I do expect an interesting hairdresser. Even if they style my hair after a helmet or a mushroom cap–forcing me to pray no one recognizes me before I make it home to rinse the unfortunate style down the drain–all will be forgiven if they can indulge me with some good, one-sided conversation.

    When I say one-sided, I mean that I want them to do the talking. After all, what do I want to pay good money to hear stories I already know for?

    The hairdresser I had before this most recent, belching hairdresser was a transvestite working in a salon whose clientele was comprised primarily of longhaired Latina’s. For them, a haircut was just taking a dead centimeter or two off the ends. I usually sport a bob or a short cut–so the salon’s trannie stylist, who was bored with “not cutting hair”, automatically snatched me up.

    Standing behind me and leaning down from his platform shoes, he would meet my eyes in the mirror. I would explain the cut I was thinking of, which usually involved lopping off a good few inches or so.

    “Ohh girrrl! Your husband is going to be so mad!” This is a statement that all the Latina’s would echo. Apparently these Latina’s were with men who prized their long hair.
    “No–he likes me with whatever hair I have.”
    “Then lets cut it shorter! Let’s make him mad girl–we’ll show him whose boss, right?”
    It was after spouting a few comments like this that s/he began talking about Sasha. While they were in “L-O-V-E and you know it, girl,” Sasha was so controlling that my hairdresser was constantly venting about it. Soon, my hair became the place where her latent urges to rebel manifested. My hair looked pretty crappy, but at least things were interesting.

    My uncanny ability to hire interesting people to cut my hair goes back further than the vengeful trannie. One ex-hairdresser of mine was a very flamboyant Frenchmen who discussed (in great detail) the rumps of the girlfriends he had before he married his wife (a doughty beige woman who worked as his appointment setter). Despite his strange but ever present need to make me believe he was straight, it seemed quite apparent that he was not. This conclusion had more to do with the Chip and Dale air freshener dangling from his mirror than his lisp, or his total disregard for his wife.

    I have never left any of these hairdressers for any reason other than the following: the salon goes out of business or I move to a new neighborhood. I don’t mind that these people aren’t the best stylists–they are all off-beat charachters who I enjoy meeting, and since the perfect hair cut is so ellusive anyway, I’ll settle for an interesting hairdresser.

    My most recent hairdresser came to me when a street marketer prayed on my thrifty side and sold me a discounted promotional offer. I used it last Thursday to cut off my shoulder length hair in order to rock a nice, springtime short cut.

    When my new hairdresser met me at the reception area, the first thing I thought was that her makeup was amazing. In the middle of the day, layers of silver, black, and gray melted into each other and sculpted her eye sockets into a metallic, surreal glamour. High arched eyebrows and liquid liner completed the look. Her makeup, tight pony tail, and big hoop earrings invoked a look that seemed to be a cross between a super hero and a sixties film star. It was impossible to imagine her with a bare face.

    We were quiet for a time. I think she was suffering from some bad indegestion as noted with the beforementioned burp. But after a time, conversation ensued.

    “So, did you enjoy your Easter holiday?” She asked, seating me in her barber chair.
    “Oh-we just rented movies and went out for beers. How about you?”
    “Well, it’s not my Easter.”
    “You don’t celebrate?”
    “I’m Greek Orthodox. We have red eggs and no bunny and a different date. I spent everyone else’s Easter Sunday on my couch watching trash TV.”
    I was hooked.

    She smiled and we were quiet again. She pulled strands of my wet hair in front of my eyes and cut the better part of them down to size. Her arched brows furrowed and discomfort flitted about her face. My mind wondered to the pepperoni pizza and I realized that it would be horribly embarrassing for a hairdresser to fart while cutting someone’s hair.

    “So, are your parents from Greece?”
    “Yeah–I am too. Born and raised.”

    I guess this explained why I liked to listen to her talk; her words dipthonged between her Chicago accent and her Greek accent, creating a harsh beauty.

    “Are you planning on visiting Greece anytime soon?”
    “I guess so. It’s just such a different way of life over there–everyone is so chilled out, but that can drive you nuts. It can make you too lazy to do anything with your life. It’s like my grandpa–he’s 86 and he smokes like a chimney, drinks all day, and eats lard 24-7, but he’s as healthy as an ox because the man doesn’t know the meaning of the word “stress.” He’s just chilled out like all the rest of them.”

    “That sounds nice.”

    “I guess. But when you grow up with it the act gets old. My main goal growing up was to get out of Greece. I went to live with a cousin in London when I was a teenager. Then i just traveled around until I was completely broke and too embarrassed to go to my folks. My aunt flew me over to the states. We were in New York at the time. She was the one who helped me with beauty school.”

    “Why did you leave New York?”

    “A guy. A million years ago.”

    She sighed. The exasperation in her voice told me they weren’t together anymore.

    My hair was falling about me in rapid succession now.

    “Do you like your bangs like this–or shorter?”

    I opened my eyes to look at my cropped hair in the mirror.

    “A little shorter, please. So–do you think you will stay here in Chicago long term?”
    “I don’t know. I mean, its all right here and everything but I just sort of stumbled into it. I just wanted to escape my parents and my hometown and see the world and suddenly I’m past thirty and I still haven’t really made a plan. For now, I guess I’ll stay and just travel a lot. I save everything to travel. I’m going to Ibiza in June.”

    “Ibiza sounds nice.”
    “I’ve not been yet. I’ll tell you about it when I get back.”

    When her cutting was finished, I was happily surprised to find that my hairdresser was actually good at cutting hair, although her styling of it left a bit to be desired. But once I got home and messed it up a bit, I was quite pleased with the results. And better yet, I was pleased to have met such an honest, real, interesting, pizza eating person, especially in such a fake, skin and bones flaunting place as a salon. Hopefully my new hairdresser will come back from Ibiza to tell me about it. If not, I’m sure I’ll find another character to make a mess of my head.

    Who does your ‘do?

April 3, 2005

  • These are a Few of my Favorite Things
    © The Author, 2005

    Who needs raindrops on roses and whiskers on kittens, or bright copper kettles and warm woolen mittens?

    Funny live theater and frozen yogurt with cherries
    Paperback novels and my cousin Sheri
    Making up lyrics to gleefully sing
    These are a few of my favorite things!

    Bakery cookies and Buffy the Slayer,
    The Flaming Lips in my CD player,
    New running shoes running shoes for my feet to take wing—
    These are a few of my favorite things!

    Meeting new people from faraway places
    Swimming and splashing my friends laughing faces
    Sweetheart-ed partners and new haircuts for spring—
    These are a few of my favorite things!

    When my cat bites,
    When my job sucks,
    When I’m feeling sad—
    I simply think of my favorite things, and then I don’t feel so bad!

    The weather has me all happy today. I’d write for real today, but my bike is calling. ::smile::

April 2, 2005

  • Hot Pics!
    © The Author, 2005


    One of my favorite hobbies of all time is photography. I’ve got an ancient Cannon AE-1 that I like to hit the streets and take photos with. My photography ranges in subject—it really is just a matter of whatever place I feel like walking to in a day, but lately my pictures have been mainly comprised of the little bits that make up my neighborhood. Non of these are stellar, but I like doing them and I thought you might get a kick out of them as well. I was inspired to post these by the great pictures on Sandiegogrl’s site.

    Sandie’s nature photography makes me smile, and perhaps these will do the same for you.


    This is a house that my partner and I stumbled upon during a walk we took in early march. I think they are just a tad religious. ::smile::


    I have a little mini series of mannequin heads. I think they are cute—if you look closely, they each have their own little vacant personalities.


    This cart man was so fun to photograph—I have a few photos of him (if scanning weren’t such a laborious process, I’d post more), and he was a total ham for the camera in all of them. He stopped everything and shoo-ed his customers out of the way, just to strike a pose for me. I was hoping for a candid shot of him serving people from his food cart, but he wanted to model for me solo. Very funny indeed.


    I don’t know why I think this picture is so funny. I laugh when I see it—it’s just a burger king toy blown up really huge to look like a big, intimidating statue. Perhaps I think its funny that a ferocious fat man could be burger king’s idea of a fun kids toy. Kid opening up his kiddie meal: “Ohh! I hope I get the fat scowling man!!”


    A quintessential Chicago “el” shot. Lovely, eh?


    I don’t have a foot fetish or anything, but this picture makes me want to sneak up on it and give it a good tickle. It’s way too peaceful—it’s just asking for it. ::smile::


    Here’s a collage I made for kicks. Sometimes I do that with my photography—mix it with my drawings and other people’s work I cut from magazines on rainy days.

March 31, 2005

  • What a Nightmare
    © The Author, 2005

    The sky filled my eyes as I floated on the calm surface of Lake Michigan. My ears were submerged, hearing only the gurgle of the water and the whispers of fish. So at peace, it came as a big, happy surprise to me when my brothers dumped a pail of water onto my belly from my step-dads white and rainbow striped speedboat, which must have quietly been driven over to me while I was resting from my swim.

    Laughing, I splashed water at their sweetly pimpled, smiling teenage faces. They hit me with another wall of water from their pail. My step-dad Tony emerged from the boat floor, laughing in mock madman mode and jumped into the drivers side seat. My brothers threw an inner tube out to me and I grabbed hold. Soon the transmutable water became a plane of hard glass beneath me as Tony began to cruise fast around the lake. As always when tubing, I couldn’t stop laughing—I was smiling so hard my face hurt. Thumbs up! Faster! Faster!

    As we came to a halt on Chicago’s far north shore and I had the sudden realization that my brothers and step dad didn’t live here with me. I encouraged them to hurry up and go back to Michigan—I had the strange, sudden feeling that something horrible was about to happen. The sky over the city was becoming dark and the acrid taste of soot seemed to stick to the back of my throat.

    I trudged through the water back to the beach. I dusted the sand off my bike and began to ride south through the city. I was worried. Something was defiantly wrong—too many people were out on the streets. At first they just seemed to be hanging out, getting in my way as I tried to reach the Art Institute to retrieve my partner from work before the trouble hit. My intuition assured me that the trouble would be coming from the north, so I was sure I could get to him before anything catastrophic happened. He could hop on my bike and we would pedal to Indiana and take a train or flight out from there, since I was sure that the city would be too heinous to exit safely.

    As I reached the Gold Coast, pure pandemonium reined the streets. People were frantically moving north, screaming—absolutely terrified. I ditched my bike and tried to push against the frightened hordes. I was sure I needed to go south—I was sure the big bad would be coming from the north. Silly people, I thought, you are all walking into a trap!

    Shortly after, I had finally pushed my way past the crowd. Instead of a clear path to run to my partner on, I was met with a wall of fire, a tsunami of flames. The fire towered above me—and in slow motion—it came crashing down on me and I knew I was wrong. I had done everything wrong.

    The bulk of my nightmares usually follow some variation the following theme: Truly Saves the Day. Although they are now teenagers, in many of these types of dreams my brothers are still small boys; Anthony is still six and Julian is still three. Their ages make me 13 again. I wake from sleep to find a ferocious fire raging in our childhood home. I race to my brother’s bedroom to rescue them. I lift them out of bed, but my skinny arms struggle to carry both of them as we try to evacuate unharmed. I am usually able to save them if I do not wake up sweaty and screaming first.

    Other nightmares follow this heroic theme with a varied plotline. In one recurring nightmare, I am driving on a deserted highway with a group of friends and family. Suddenly a tornado as large as small city appears on the horizon. It is up to me to deliver everyone to safety. The land around us is flat and I know that the tornado will devour our car, as it is the tallest thing around. To everyone’s horror, I park the car and order everyone to get out of it and lie with me, as flat as they possibly can, in the roadside ditch. I know that this is the only way we will be saved, but the other passengers just want to try to outrun it—no one wants to budge from the car. I am pulling them out, fighting them to come. Sometimes they do, or sometimes my partner wakes me before the dream finishes, citing my sleep talking and difficulty breathing as ample reason.

    While I always know how it can be done, I never enjoy saving the day in my dreams. It is horrible trying to get everyone to cooperate with me, and it is really scary because I know that if I can’t convince the people I love most to do as I say, then they will die. The nightmare I had last night was the first nightmare I have ever had that I was completely wrong about how to save the day. While it was less frustrating than my usual nightmares, I can’t shake the feeling that it means something—that it is a message about the direction I have decided to take my life. What if I am completely wrong?

    Yesterday, in my waking hours, I did something that was a huge deal for me. This next protion might seem like a red herring, but it will all make sense soon enough. I aplogize, dear reader, that I have yet to master the transition beween the subconcious world of my dreams and the realities of my day, but please bear with me.

    Writing has always been my true love. But like a singleton who is too afraid of commitment to marry, I needed to dabble in any artistic venture that waggled its tail at me. I became engrossed in theater, music, drawing, painting, collage, sculpting, filmmaking, and photography. I tried to keep my adoration of writing to myself—indulging only in avid journal writing and very private fiction writing, but my obsession with words always bleed through in my other work. I would weave words into my visual art, I found myself jumping at the chance to write scripts rather than act them, and for a time I was in a band, composing very bad music to my hearts content.

    When it came time to go to college, I eventually settled on a screenwriting major. Film and video seemed to me to be a place where many different facuts of the arts converged to create a single product, so it appealed to me at a time when I still was not ready to admit that writing was my one true love. During the latter part of my undergraduate studies—after many soul-draining internships—I realized, too late to change my major that I didn’t want to work in television or in film. My skin is not thick enough for these industries. Plus, I enjoy my family, friends, sanity, and community too much to slave 70 hours a week for a medium that has so much potential but is constantly wasted in order to sell advertisements and fuel our capitalist machine. Why didn’t I see it sooner? I don’t know—I’m a fool. But I think being a fool in your late teens, early twenties is pretty standard. I could have done a lot worse.

    I graduated with a degree called Television Writing and Producing last May—loving the art and hating the industry—and was ready to start anew. Aside from participating in shitty studio and television station internships, I spent some worthwhile time in college doing a lot of community work with a local youth center. I loved helping the kids with their art projects. I had also been tutoring English composition at my college as an undergraduate, and I found that to be much more fufilling than any of my media internships. With both ventures I found that I did my best writing when I was helping others to do their best. I loved the interpersonal interaction and I was overjoyed to be working with organizations that I shared values with.

    Since graduation, I have continued my volunteer work at the community center and I feel like I get more out of it that I am able to give—the teenagers are amazing and funny and interesting people. I mentor a girl there who is surely destined for greatness. I mention my involvment in the community center in this essay, because, as you will see later, it helped me have strength in a career defining descision I made yesterday afternoon–a decision that has been haunting me since my creepy dream last night. Anyways–as much I love volunteering, I can’t spend all my time doing it. After all, I’m a college grad now and I’ve got some enourmous bills to pay (namly that gastly student loan). It takes working a few jobs to have enough to pay them.

    I’ll start with my jobs that occur during the regular workweek. Two days a week, I have the privilege of working as a writing consultant, which is basically a slightly higher-paid version of what I did as a composition tutor during my undergraduate years. (And the students are on Spring Break this week—woo hoo for two days off for me!) The other three days of my workweek are spent at the Museum of Contemporary Art, where I work as a marketing assistant. Here, I write marketing copy for newsletters, plan special events, do boring data entry, schedule meetings, file shit, and wear dress pants with a crease ironed into them.

    In the summers, I teach weekend workshops to “at risk” (god I hate that term—these words belong to the company I work for—they are not my own) high school students who want to “change for the better” and apply to college. In my workshops, we leave all that propaganda at the door and I just help them write personal statements that will communicate effectively and personally, who they are to anyone who has the privilege of reading their work—be it a college admissions worker or not.

    For the most part, I love all of these jobs, but I have yet another job that I hate.

    After graduating with a degree in the media arts, I felt like it would be wasteful to not invest in some production equipment and utilize the film and video skills I had acquired during college to earn a bit of money. Actually, it was less a matter of feeling that it would be wasteful and more a matter of feeling guilty and pathetic that I had chosen the wrong degree.

    Anyhow, although I have always loved writing the scripts more than doing the production work involved in the video, it wasn’t until after I graduated—and I was finally able to admit that writing was my true drive—that I came to absolutely hate doing video production work and editing. I think I always loathed shooting and editing, but now it is just soul draining and aggravating. I really, honestly, hate it. I can do it decently enough, but I just hate doing it. Lucky for me, yesterday afternoon I decided—and made public—that I never will do any of it again.

    Until yesterday afternoon, the fourth job that I held was as an Independent Video Producer. An independent producer is a fancy name for a freelance video production person. It’s anyone who can script, shoot, and edit video and charges for it. Recently, the museum hired me to do a video to accompany an exhibition series that we have in our education center lobby right now entitled, Artists and Their Kids.

    I was flattered by the invitation to do the video and I was happy for the extra bit of money. However, just like all the projects I did as an Independent Producer before it, I absolutely hated every minute of it. I put on a happy face, and completed the project. The museum director and the education staff were all thrilled with the video. Everyone was excited about it but me. I was drained and dreading the invitation to do the next one.

    A good boss is able to see her employees not only as resources in terms of what they can bring to the company, but also in terms of what they can do to ensure that whatever skills the employee can bring to the table are able to flourish.

    Fortunately, I have a really great boss at the museum. She was kind, supportive, and inquisitive when I told her that I wanted to focus more on my writing and my teaching. I politely told her that my plate was just too full to accept any more video projects, and that my other projects were just to important to me to sacrifice them for the video work.

    It wasn’t just because I was saying “no” to my boss that I was nervous about this admission. It was the first time that I had admitted to anyone other than my husband and myself that I wanted to write, and to write at my best, I needed to work creatively with others, not for others. The very discovery that lead to the admission was new to me, and I have been strangely afraid to articulate it until yesterday. It was a big step for junior, here. And I couldn’t be more grateful that I have a boss that was able to support me—nurture me in a way, even—and make it a good experience.

    My boss never knew that I was a writer. She is a writer too, and wrote many articles at one point in her life. Who knows—perhaps she will see my writing as a resource now, and I will get more writing assignments than data entry. If not, finally being able to connect in a real way with someone in that office is enough to make my heart sing.

    So, after these big career-defining events transpired yesterday, I was happy and at peace with my decisions going to sleep. Which made my horrible nightmare about the wall of fire even more traumatic, the message even heftier—what if I am wrong about all of this? What if I’m wrong yet again?

    What do you dream?

March 29, 2005

  • Get Outta My Face!

    What began as your run of the mill annoyance at a fellow CTA passenger yesterday morning ended in a dull but persistent case of heartache.

    As my commute to work begins, I become greedy to soak up any remaining time left before work that I am able to, which primarily manifests in my vulture-like behavior when scouting for a prime place to sit or stand on the bus and subway car that are the vehicles of my commute. Enthralled with Kafka on the Shore, I boarded the bus yesterday morning and immediately scanned the crowd. A young woman in scrubs with an intricate criss-crossing blonde and black weave was gathering her things in a my stop is next type of way. The coast was clear—no pregnant women, no elderly people, no small children—so I scurried to ensure my butt would replace hers on the nappy, blue bus seat. This would allow me to enjoy my reading better than a standing position would allow. But the passenger who shared the two-seat row with me was not about to let me read in peace.

    “I said git outta my face!”

    Startled, I glanced over. A teenage girl, sixteen at most, was sitting next to me, chatting on her cell phone. I hate it when people carry full-blown cell phone conversations on the bus. Don’t they know that is my quiet time?

    “No-she needed to git outta my face! She had all these babies back in the day and things was different then. We live in the modern world now, yo. We live in the modern world, you know what I’m sayin’?”

    I tried to imagine what she was saying. Now women have legal reproductive options? Now “non-traditional” motherhood is more accepted? Less accepted? I wished she were more articulate. I did not know what she was saying.

    I tried to get back to my book, but my eyes just stare blankly at the page as I eavesdropped.

    “You know—when she was unemployed I gave her my paycheck to cover half the rent and you know, no one else offered her a fuckin’ cent, you know. Where was her sista’s then? Where was her cousin then? I give her that money. And you know what—she didn’t even remember my birthday.”

    I closed my book. There was no denying it—her story was more interesting than Haruki Maurakami’s.

    “No-she didn’t even remember my birthday! My auntie called to see what we done on my birthday and my momma said, ‘oh, you know—we played it chill. We stayed at home and celebrated nice together.’ Bullshit ! That woman is talking shit. I crept out on Friday to go to a party at my cousins and I didn’t get home ‘till Sunday around 5. She didn’t even notice I wasn’t at home on my birthday. And you know—she got my other cousin an outfit for her birthday last month and my own momma didn’t get me anything! You know, I don’t care if she unemployed! She could take money outta my own check and get me something to surprise me, you know…”

    I was beginning to wonder if there was a person on the other line. This girl was talking non-stop.

    “…and now I’m ditching school ‘cuz I had to pick up another shift so we could have the phone for this month since Shaniqua is almost due and we’ll need it, you know, to pick her up and go to the hospital when it’s the time. So you know what—when momma yells at me for dumb shit I don’t deserve, hell yeah I’m gonna tell her: Get outta my face!

    I have never been more thankful to transfer to red line at North and Clybourn. I wasn’t sure how much more sorrow I could take so early in the morning. But before I could squeeze my way through the crowd, she dropped one more bomb.

    “She always say, ‘your daddy is rolling over in his grave.’ Bullshit, I tell her. My daddy not in a grave. He ashes.”

    I hope someone is able to “get in this girls face” and tell her that her mom’s issues are not her responsibly. Tell her to focus only on school. Tell her to let her mom figure out how they will have phone service. Tell her that she is important and valuable and give her a birthday outfit.

    I don’t pray. But I do ponder and wish and volunteer and try my best to create change. But at the end of the day—I’m just me and the jaded teenager on the bus will still have to miss her classes to support a mother who has seemingly forfeited the right to “get in her daughter’s face” to make sure her child gets to school. So perhaps prayers aren’t such a bad idea after all, if only to provide comfort in a world ready to jump out and rattle your emotions at every turn.

    How do you deal?

March 28, 2005

  • This weekend was lovely. My partner and I went to see the movie, Millions yesterday thanks to some lovely birthday Fandango Bucks from my homeslice, Lindsay. If any theaters near you are playing this fantastic Brittish film, I encourage you to go see it. It’s a great movie for people of all ages–kids, teens, adults, old, the undead–everyone will love it. A reviewer claimed that it was the best film carried by a child actor since A Christmas Story, and I’m happy to report it lived up to the expectation beautifully.

    Also, this weekend I have ventured into a new fiction piece. It stars a character named Hotarou. The bulk of today was spent doing some plot outlines and character sketches. Tonight I wanted to try my hand at a little scene to see if I will dig becoming this character while I write her. So far–so good–I dig her.

    I typically don’t post my attempts at fiction writing–the web just doesn’t seem to be the right venue for longer works and some of my essays seem to push that already (plus, while I am a trusting person and I don’t think my work is even good enough to want to rip off–there is always a part of me that is a bit guarded). However, I thought some feedback on this little scene while the concept is still congealing might give me some inspiration. Namely, I’m curious to know what you, my dear reader, are curious about.

    As always, all opinions are welcome and cherished as long as they are shared. ::smile:: I hope you all had a great weekend! And fear not–Monday will be over before you know it I’m really just consoling myself here). Enjoy!

    Hotarou Goes to Kyoto
    A little scene, with no real reason to title anyhow, so please excuse the crap title
    © The Author, 2005

    My reflection in the train car window was ugly. It had been a few days since my welcome at Toshi’s apartment expired and I had yet to scrape together enough to give myself a proper scrub down at the public bath. I had been avoiding my reflection all day, but since my Walkman batteries were shot and I still had well over two hours until the train reached Kyoto, self-loathing seemed to be a reasonable way to kill time. But in all honesty, I wasn’t expecting it to be as half as bad as it was.

    My hair was in tangles. It was greasy and my scalp itched under flakes of dead skin and the grime of travel. My eyes were tired, dull slashes in my puffy face. My skin was yellow and dead. A heinous pimple had cropped up like a third eye, or better yet–an egg with an evil hatchling inside, between my eyebrows. I tried to push my bangs about to hide the monstrosity, but they only clung in limp strands to my sticky face. I was defeated by my own filth.

    It seemed like a million years ago–in a funky twilight zone parallel universe of a place–that this face was ever was able to smile. Despite my better judgment, I lifted the corners of my sagging mouth. Immediately, my lifeless eyes accumulated a wall of tears, blurring my unbearable reflection. And suddenly I was home.

    My mom’s hand was running through my hair as I lay on my bed, collapsed and defeated from another bad day in Mr. Tanaka’s class. At sixteen, I was too old for this type of comfort, but I didn’t want it to end. Her hands smelled like aloe and miso. Her neat fingernails massaged my scalp. Then and now–and I suspect always–I wanted to be little again. I remember counting the days to my dad’s next business trips so I could have my mom all to myself. While he was away, I would tiptoe into her room to crawl up beside her in bed and sleep with my back snuggled up against her warm, white pajama-ed back. In the dark, she would whisper that we were like two little sleeping shrimps.

    I blinked my eyes and my wall of tears came plummeting onto my fat cheeks. I looked about at the other passengers on the late train–most of them weary businessmen commuting to stale meetings and industry conventions in the city. My eyelids were growing heavy and were becoming nearly impossible to contend with. I exhaled loudly, inadvertently catching the eye of an old woman across the aisle from me.

    Wearing a silk, poppy printed scarf tied around her head and an orange wool pea coat, she was rigidly clutching her luggage, which seemed to only consist of a basket filled with cherries, apples, and little pre-packaged pink bean curd buns. My stomach groaned jealously. It was odd–I couldn’t recall her boarding and I was flummoxed as to how I would miss her. We held each other’s gaze for longer than is customary on public transit–perhaps a full five seconds–before my eyes finally succumbed to sleep. My dreams ebbed with childlike pictures of poppy fields, fruit, and happy sleeping shrimp all lined up in a row.

March 24, 2005

  • Typically reserved for leisurely Sunday afternoons, I am usually too busy during the week to have the pleasure to post. However, the treatment of this week’s news items have left me reeling and I crave the informed, quality insights of my fellow Xanga authors to help me process the insanity. You were all awesomely articulate and generous with sharing your opinions, knowledge, and experience on my last post, all of which was very helpful to me as a wanna-be writer and simply gratifying for me as a reader. Thanks for that! I’d be grateful if you could indulge me yet again.

    The Unbearable Whiteness of Being and Other Media Ponderings
    © The Author, 2005

    This Monday, March 21st, Jeff Weise, a 16-year-old from Red Lake High School on the Red Lake Chippewa Reservation in Minnesota went on the goriest high school killing spree since Columbine. Armed with two pistols and a shotgun, he killed his grandfather and his grandfather’s girlfriend, as well as seven people at his school. Weise went on to wound seven more before he eventually shot himself.

    Before I express my horror, I want to express my sympathies. My heart aches for this community, truly and sincerely. May peace be with them.

    I have always thought that if one can express their angst at society through writing and art, then they are less likely to act out on these things. The events of the Red Lake high school shooting have shaken this core belief in me because apparently Jeff Weise was an avid writer and illustrator. His material was dark and sadistic, but instead of providing him with a nonviolent outlet, his art only seemed to fuel his need to kill. This is really disturbing to me on many levels and I have yet to fully processed my feelings on this, so I apologize for the lack of conviction here. I just don’t know what to think of it.

    The events at Red Lake High School have also made me question both the news media’s portrayal of this tragedy, as well as my perception of the coverage. I was a junior in high school in 1999 when the Columbine shooting occurred. I’m not sure if my opinions are due to the fact that I was in high school at the time and was thus I was hyper sensitive to the event, but it seemed to me that the media coverage was HUGE. In my memory, it seemed on par with the coverage of 9/11. It was a national grief. It was a national issue. It frightened me.

    It could just be me, but the Red Lake School shooting does not seem to be receiving as much attention the Columbine shooting.

    This morning NPR reported that the Red Lake reservation was not allowing the media into the reservation to cover the incident. This gave me a bit more insight into my internal struggle to digest the media treatment of the event, but I was not completely satisfied by it.

    Whatever the case may have been with journalists entry into the reservation earlier this week, it seems that they are being let in today. Tonight ABC aired a brief report on the 5:30 broadcast that included footage of the high school and brief sound bites of some of those involved. The students and community members who spoke about the incident went unnamed, as there was no title graphic on the lower third of the screen. A man with a black ponytail and the tan skin of a Chippewa explained, “Our children have no sense of identity anymore.” His statement is fine, but I have a feeling this man had a lot more to say and most likely, had a name—and neither were paid proper attention.

    A part of me wonders if the lack of due coverage is racially motivated. I went to a primarily white school in the suburbs. As hard as it is for me to admit it, it took a shooting at a school with demographics similar to my own all the way in Colorado for me to realize that school violence is a real threat. The all-white suburb I grew up in is only 45 minutes from Detroit, where the schools are notoriously violent, but primarily black. The media seems to acknowledge that violence is a problem that effects everyone only when it happens to white people. It is true that the news is plagued with stories of young African American men slaughtering each other—and that is heart breaking and terrifying—but it lacks the immediate national concern and attention given to violence when it happens to white people. It shouldn’t.

    This white priority was also evident a few summers ago when little white girls were being kidnapped left and right. That story dominated the airwaves and made The Lovely Bones a best seller, but people are kidnapped all the time. Not all people are white and upper middle class. Was there not one African American, Native American, Latino child kidnapped during that entire summer? Was there not one poor child taken from their home? Again, I am not certain about these things—it’s just a sneaking suspicion that happens to haunt me.

    Perhaps audiences are just too desensitized to care about yet another school shooting. Whatever the case, there is no excuse for the events at Red Lake high school to be billed on the news as secondary to Terri Schiavo’s drama.

    Terri Schiavo has been pulverized this week by the incessant insertion and removal of her feeding tube. Congress got involved proclaiming, “Let her live!” Thank god for checks and balances a la the Supreme Court. I only say that because I believe Mr. Schiavo when he asserts that it was Terri’s wish to die if she was in a persistent vegetative state. The Supreme Court upheld the decision to have the tube removed, and removed it seemingly shall stay.

    But why is it that everyone is so fixated on this damn tube? I can only imagine the frustration that Dr. Kevorkian is feeling as he vents alone in his cell at the Thumb Correctional Facility. Individuals have a right to die—the courts are admitting that much. But to let people starve to death? As my friend Chad eloquently stated, “There are murders that are more humane than that.” I am just simply shocked that lobbyists for euthanasia have not been taking advantage of this media circus to chime in on this debate.

    The logic of the feeding tube removal seems to be, “we didn’t kill her. She just died.” What a cheap and inconsiderate way to comfort and distance society from the actions they condone. Assisted suicide may be a brutal term, but least it’s honest. I just know that if I were in Mrs. Schiavo’s position, I would like to die with a content and full belly via a gentle drug injection.

    What is not entirely clear to me is if there are in fact no strong lobby groups continuing to fight for assisted suicide after Dr. Jack Kevorkian’s imprisonment, or if the media is just not interested in what they have to say.

    Perhaps the media chooses to cover Terri’s dilemma because audiences can easily take a stand on it. The events at Red Lake High School, however, are inconclusive and lacking in a clear resolution. Few seem to want to engage in the discourse that is needed to arrive at ways to counter the violence in our schools, simply because it will be a difficult discourse to have.

    Perhaps if Right To Life lobbyists stopped squandering all their resources on a woman who had chosen to die, spent their time working for the rights of students to live though their classes, then there would be enough financial and governmental pull to lead such a discourse. Until that day, I guess we’ll all have to do our best to create a nonviolent society—one in which we can respect each other enough to know when it is the right time to say goodbye.

March 20, 2005

  • Symmetry is Boring; I am Beautiful.
    © The Author, 2005

    I am very tall. I am creative. I am extraordinarily loving and opinionated. I have acne scars. I care about my community. My teeth are enormous. I like to go running. My ass is round. My tits, however, are not. Symmetry is boring; I am beautiful.

    Last week’s episode of the WB reality series, The Starlet had me foaming at the mouth. The show, which I had been eager to watch, has turned out to be blatant in its disrespect to women, and last week it felt directly insulting to my body in particular.

    While I generally expect the quiet oppression of women in all mainstream media, I had for some reason, expected more from this show. It seemed to have the potential to demonstrate that acting is a difficult profession and a challenging craft; it had the opportunity to show that women in the media are more than “sexy” bodies and predictably pretty faces—they are artists. Or at least, some of them are. I guess I was just hoping for some integrity, which was entirely too much to expect from the WB.

    For all of those who are not hip to The Starlet, this show provides viewers with the opportunity to watch ten young actresses have their dreams pissed on by Faye Dunaway, Vivica A. Fox, and casting director Joseph Middleton. This panel picks only one young woman to be The Starlet, which entails an acting contract on one of the WB’s insipid teen melodramas.

    The ugly(er) underbelly of this particular show, reveals the preparation of these young actresses to continue the disgusting tradition that many starlets have perpetuated before them; the actresses learn to exploit the female form and a woman’s right to an individualized identity (sexual and otherwise), in order to fuel the patriarchal, capitalist machine. This has become obvious in more than one instance on The Starlet, but I’d like to discuss one of the more obvious points first to ease you, my dear reader, into my feminist rant with your comfort in mind.

    Both the first and second episode of The Starlet included acting challenges where bikinis were a requisite. I have nothing against the swimwear (I myself enjoy donning as few clothes as possible in the summer heat, and I am all for the right for woman to go topless as our male counterparts have the option of doing), but the episode last week shamelessly implied that if you do happen to prefer a different style of beach gear, you are not only a flabby, out-of shape failure of a woman, but you are also a bad actress. Case in point: Mercedes, a stunning contestant on the show who preferred to wear a sarong with her bikini while doing a screen test for a hideously scripted hair product commercial. At 24, Mercedes is the oldest actress in the house and by far the most seasoned. While the younger actresses obsessed over creating predictable mainstream bodies when they heard that they had been accepted as contestants on the show, it is evident that Mercedes instead focused on attending her acting classes regularly. But with all this bikini wearing, Mercedes expressed in last week’s episode that she wished that she had done a bit more thighwork than scene work. The panel echoed her insecurity, with Vivica Fox producing the particularly catty comment, “you hear that? It’s the gym calling.”

    What a bitch.

    Not only is Mercedes in no conceivable way fat, but she is in fact thin. She is thin! Her stomach is flat. Her arms do not waggle. Her breasts do not spill. Her butt and thighs, although an admitted insecurity of Mercedes, were not even half the size of one ass cheek belonging to that gargantuant man on the King of Queens. And so what if Mercedes were fat? Who says that fat must equate ugly? Ugly comes in all forms—fat and thin, so Atkins really can’t save you when it comes from escaping the ugly stick. And what is so bad about being ugly, might I add? Why is it that many fat or ugly (or both) men are allowed to be successful, interesting, funny, “good” actors, while beautiful women who happen to on the slender side of average (because as we all know it is the duty of actresses to be on the cutting edge of thin) struggle to be recognized? I’ll tell you why. It’s because the capitalist system perpetuates self-hating behavior on the part of women everywhere in order to sell us shit we don’t need, and truth be told we don’t even want. This goes far deeper than the obvious image issues that Mercedes and women everywhere suffer from. It threatens to follow us into the bedroom.

    As we all know from When Harry Met Sally, orgasms are entirely fake-able. Women are well aware of how they are “supposed” to look and sound during climax because of constant efforts of the media to inform us of these things. But certainly every true orgasm is as unique as the person having it, so why would the media want to deceive us so?

    According to capitalist pedagogy, if women can be convinced that only the traditional “oohs and ahhs” are appropriate during climax, then they can also be convinced that they all have the same desires and the same fears. This tidy little bundle makes it oh so easy for Victoria’s Secret to sell you a “figure enhancing” bodice (which will undoubtedly cut into your flesh while the un-breathable polyester blend gives you a hellish yeast infection) for $70 U.S. dollars.

    That’s the way (uh-huh, uh-huh) Uncle Sam likes it (uh-huh, uh-huh).

    Aside from selling us actual items, the capitalist pigs who are in charge have historically been men. To stay on top of the proverbial power fuck, these men also try to sell women a weak and powerless mold to fit into. Sure, you can decline purchase of this mold, but then you will be ostracized and isolated and receive an automatic placement into another category: the FemaNazi Dike Butch Bitch Category. This placement is for women with those pesky little things called emotions and opinions. Only men are allowed those things. Proper women receive barbiturates, complacency to a male dominated culture, and fashions that reinforce their powerlessness.

    You know as well as I that those ultra pointy-toed boots with stiletto heels aren’t made for walking. And neither are the emaciated and feeble legs that are shoved into them.

    One could easily argue that feminism is advancing in U.S. society and culture. Women, although they make an average of 71 cents to every dollar a man makes, are nevertheless prevalent forces in the workplace. Women, although their reproductive rights are constantly threatened by whatever white man happens to rule their land, nevertheless have choice. Women, although they typically only see themselves portrayed in our culture as being in sexual relationships with men, and when they are with women it is to appease a male fantasy, are nevertheless free to embrace another woman as a lover, a partner, or both. Women, although faced with the light-skinned, straight haired, white ideals of beauty in nearly every facet of our culture, are nevertheless encouraged to embrace the beauty in their ethnic identity. Women, although pressured with daunting diets that produce a skeletal version of beauty, are nevertheless free to embrace their curves. After all, there is another reality show especially for those who make this choice—Kristy Ally’s Fat Actress. But this too is unsatisfactory. Why should the fat actresses be separated from the thin? The game of separating women into clean demographics and categories is getting old.

    It is time for us to see beauty in all its forms—fat, thin, and in between. It is time for women to reject the images of what we are supposed to look like and the fashions we are supposed to prefer. It is time for us to writhe in the bedroom how want to. It is time for us to laugh in the face of the predictable, easy to market to robots that the capitalists want us to be.

    After watching a very pink Gap ad starring Sarah Jessica Parker singing, “I Enjoy Being a Girl,” my husband recently asked me, “Do you enjoy being a girl?” I didn’t know how to answer. I enjoy my personality. I enjoy my opinions. I enjoy my brain. I enjoy my body. With all the shit that I as a women have to combat on a daily basis just to keep a shred of my actual identity from being snatched up and shit upon by capitalists selling “The American Dream,” it’s a wonder that I can say yes—I enjoy being a girl. I only wish that society could enjoy my womanhood as much as I do.
    ___________________________________________________________________________________________________

    An Afterward
    As always, thank you for your readership. If there are any points (or counter points) that you felt need to be tossed about on this issue, please feel free to post them in my comment box. In interest of keeping this essay short, I am sure I left crucial points un-discussed and certain arguments un-combated. Open discourse on this topic is the only way to dismantle it, and since media literacy is something few are privy to learning in school, the web seems a likely place for this discussion. Your opinions are important and valuable, and I look forward to hearing them.

    Also, in pursuit of honesty, I’ve got to tell you: I’m still planning on watching The Starlet this week. I like to try out the acting challenges during the commercial breaks. It’s more entertaining than it deserves to be.

    Finally, I’d like to invite you all to participate in Chicagoartgirl23’s The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly Photo Challenge. This will challenge us to take a look at the beauty and the horror in ourselves instead of taking the television’s word for what looks good and bad.

    The Rules
    If you dare, post a minimum of two pictures of yourself. One must show you at your ugliest. The other must show you at your most beautiful. This does not have to translate into the least/most attractive pictures of yourself. This challenge is open ended in interpretation, but since it is as such, it would be cool if you could post a brief description of why you chose the photos you chose. Once you have done so, drop me a comment—I’m curious to see what you post!

    My Photo Challenge Results

    The Ugly

    This is, by far, the ugliest picture I have of myself. I almost ripped it up and threw it away before I realized that it is actually quite hilarious. In this photo I am sunburned, dehydrated, and frustrated. I snapped this picture myself because I wanted to see what an openly irritated me looks like. I am a ham for the camera, so I did sprout this expression intentionally, but it comes from deep within my monstrous self. An openly irritated me is not only ugly to look at—more importantly its ugly to feel and ugly to be around. After seeing the startling physical manifestation in this picture, I was reminded of the importance of keeping my cool—if only not to frighten young children who might see me. Plus, it’s an effing funny picture.

    The Good

    This is a picture that my partner and I took after we made up after a horrible fight on a vacation we took together when we were still dating. The pure happiness is not because we have a love of quarrelling (in fact we seldom fight), but rather because we were able to take comfort in the fact that it was going to be all right. We are actually happy that we are two different people, with two different ways of approaching the world—even when that sometimes results in the occasional argument. We used this picture on our wedding invitation because it reminded us that we are strong—and that is beautiful.

    How does beauty flourish/wither in you? ::smile::

March 15, 2005

  • I am typically silent in the mornings. It wasn’t until I said, “excuse
    me,” in a voice that closely resembled the Crypt Keeper while shoving
    my way onto the subway yesterday morning that I realized I was sick. I
    left work early due to my inability to speak or eat (which was causing
    me to feel faint and dizzy) and I’m at home today. My cousin (who
    stayed in our apartment this past weekend) called this afternoon to
    warn me she has strep throat. I’ve found no white dots breeding on the
    back of my throat yet, so let’s pray for an inexpensive (read: orange
    juice curable vs. pricy antibiotics and dr. co-pay) virus.

    Anyhow, when I am sick I like to watch my favorite movies. I started the day with Election and I’m just about to put on The Wonder Boys.
    These are two standbys that are always sure to make me feel a bit
    better. It is good that movie watching, one of my favorite ways to
    spend time, is still available to me in sickness, as my other favorite
    pastime, kissing, is not. With those things in mind, I bring to you the
    following essay. I hope you enjoy it, and stay healthy ladies and gents!
    ________________________________________________________________________
    The Kiss of Death
    © The Author, 2005

    My first real
    kiss was with Brett Jerdon. I was in eighth grade and he was in
    seventh, although he seemed older due to his chin length hair, his
    eyebrow ring, and his infinite knowledge of the band Rancid.

    I
    was not Mr. Jerdon’s first kiss. I could tell this by the way he so
    casually invited me to see a movie with him after having met me only
    once at a band and choir spring concert rehearsal. He, naturally, was
    the skateboarding drummer from the middle school across town. I was the
    girl whose growth spurts left her knee length choir skirt prancing
    inappropriately an inch or two below her bottom. My legs, which were on
    full display to the drum line due to the positioning of the choir
    podium, were taller than most of the students who were gawking at them.
    Although they resembled twigs more than legs, I overheard a certain
    Brett Jerdon describe them to someone behind me in that single,
    pathetically sought after phrase; Hot.

    It was decided. The
    theater was to be local. The movie was to be inconsequential. The kiss
    (with tongue!) was to be expected. I readied myself. I perfected sexy
    poses in the mirror (no small task when you have yet to grow boobs),
    and called every girl friend I had to gain advice. “Tilt your head to
    the side like in the movies,” they all said. I rolled my eyes—I already
    knew that much. If only my kissing partner could say the same.

    I
    stepped out of my mom’s mini van (she was convinced I would be meeting
    friends), and bounded into the theater lobby. Mr. Jerdon was waiting
    there with a bucket of yellow popcorn. I smiled and took a few kernels.
    “Hey,” I said.

    We made our way down the aisle and picked a
    seat snuggly in the back, in a section of the theater historically
    known as Make Out Central. The previews began and we munched popcorn
    and shot each other a few “meaningful” glances. Soon the movie began.

    Before
    I continue my story, it is important to know something about me. I
    suffer from a hideous symptom that my family refers to as “TV face.” I
    was first diagnosed while watching my favorite show, The Wonder Years.
    During the second act of the show, my mom noticed an alarmingly ugly
    look of concentration taking over my otherwise sensible face. According
    to her, my brows furrowed, my eyes retreated deep into their sockets,
    my chin burrowed into my neck, and I was staring with an intensity that
    could burn a hole through the screen. She burst out laughing and I felt
    my muscles shift back to normal, “what?” I asked. “You’ve got TV face,”
    she answered. And so it was.

    Although the name implies it,
    television is not the only cause of this dreadful facial expression. I
    can become enraptured with any form of storytelling to the point of TV
    face: theater performances, concerts, books, and paintings. But nothing
    quite brings out my TV face like television or movies. I become so
    entranced and so gripped by the story at hand, that I loose all sense
    of my surroundings. My TV face is an impenetrable shell, a warning to
    those around me that I do not wish to be disturbed.

    With that in mind, perhaps I shouldn’t have chosen a movie to be backdrop of my first real
    kiss, let alone a movie that was actually good. My passion for story
    swept me away from my hormonal self sitting next to the hot boy beside
    me and threw me into the drama that was Mr. Holland’s Opus .

    So
    good was this movie, that my TV face warded Brett off for the better
    half of the film. It must have been my stuffed bra that did him in,
    because just as I was ready to burst into tears when Richard Dreyfuss
    sang to his deaf son a personalized version of the Lennon song,
    “Beautiful, beautiful, beautiful…Beautiful Cole,” Bret Jerdons face
    attacked me.

    A slimy tongue was lashing this way and that.
    Popcorn spilled onto the floor as I was startled back into the reality
    in the theater. Snot that had accumulated from choking back tears
    streamed down my face. He was nearly on top of me while I struggled for
    breath beneath his wormy mouth. And worst of all, he did not know how
    to tilt his head properly. Perhaps if he had been watching more movies
    instead of making out during them, he would have known this.

    After
    our tragic kissing episode, I was always sure to warn my subsequent
    dates about TV face and my preference to be left undisturbed during
    movies. I knew my husband was for me when he waited until the
    commercial break during the Rue Paul Show until we kissed for the first
    time. The mere fact that he would watch the Rue Paul Show with me seems
    reason enough to marry him.

    Like any two best friends, stories and I proclaim with pride, “we’ll never let a boy come between us. Never!” And no fitting boy has ever wanted to.

    _______________________________________________________________________
    And
    now, because I am bored and unable to communicate verbally, here is a
    list of recommendations. I just got Netflicks (I am CRAZY about it), so
    any additions to my list are more than welcome. Just add them in the
    comment box. Also, all kissing stories are welcome as well. Come on
    people—where can you kiss and tell if not a blog?

    A list of Good Eggs:
    (In no particular order)

    Movies:
    Election
    The Wonder Boys
    Sling Blade
    Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory
    The Nightmare Before Christmas
    Edward Scisorhands
    The Usual Suspects
    Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil
    American Beauty
    Y tu mamá también
    The Omen I, II, III
    The Exorcist
    From Dusk Till Dawn
    Pulp Fiction
    Jackie Brown
    Shrek
    Snatch
    What Dreams May Come
    Hedwig and the Angry Inch
    The Who’s Tommy
    Lilo and Stitch
    Mulholland Dr.
    The Shining
    O Brother, Where Art Thou?
    Talk to Her
    Stanly Kubrick’s Lolita
    Garden State
    A Clockwork Orange
    To Kill A Mockingbird
    Rocky Horror Picture Show
    Citizen Kane

    Television Shows:
    Any and all of the Buffy the Vampire Slayer seasons on DVD
    Twin Peaks, season 1 on DVD
    Freaks and Geeks, season 1 on DVD
    Best of the Muppet Show
    The Family Guy

    Stand Up:
    Eddy Izzard
    Margaret Cho
    Dana Carvy

    Now get to watching! ::smile::