Happy Freaking New Year

My initial thought when I recall 2008 is that it pretty much sucked. Personal and professional stagnation, two significant deaths, all overshadowed my year. If I let myself think a little more, there were some good points. Travel, both for business and pleasure, is always a good thing, and I made several trips in the last twelve months. The recent election surpassed my expectations. I’m kind of at a loss, though, for anything else. So, I won’t talk about the past, and I’m not really in the mood to speculate about the future. All I will say is, ‘good riddance 2008!’.

My writing group, however, continues to inspire me. To lighten the mood, I give to you now tonight’s product of impromptu scribbling, a poem about peanut butter (sort of).

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SIFF Day 7: Home Alone

Right now I should be at the Uptown watching Werner Herzog’s Encounters at the End of the World, a documentary shot in Antarctica. However, I’ve decided to stay home to be sad and cranky. My Netflix Player was delivered today, left on the doorstep of my office, according to the online tracking results. When I went to my office, however, it was not to be found. I’ve called FedEx twice and just got off the phone with Roku/Netflix customer service – who said I’m not the first to call about such circumstances – but that won’t make my Player magically appear in my living room. I am sad sad sad and mad mad mad. Poop.

Anonymous no more

During my sophomore and junior years at Southwest High School, a handful of friends and I published a ‘zine before we even knew what a ‘zine was. We called it an underground newspaper, and we dubbed it Anonymous! We vowed to each other that we would not reveal to anyone outside the publication our involvement.

Initially, it was just my friend Angela and me, and we wrote in several personas in order to make it appear more people were on staff. Over time, a few more people figured out what we were doing and joined in. We didn’t talk about it explicitly at school, and denied it ferociously if questioned. In fact, I had one friend and reader who was so obsessed with getting me to admit I had a part in it, that he eventually became my stalker, even after I moved to New York for college. The front page of the first farewell issue was directed toward him.

The first issues were photocopied at the Boy Scout office during Angela’s brother’s meetings. Later, one of our teachers offered, hypothetically of course, to make copies for us in the teachers’ lounge on the sly. We had other support among the teaching staff, mostly of the moral kind. At some point, we were also noticed by the head honchos, and we had to find another copy source. My mom was gracious enough to take up the challenge, and we mailed off our mock-ups 250 miles away to Houston for printing.

We closed up shop when half the staff graduated and Angela and I lost interest in each other. It was a lot of fun while it lasted. The most amazing thing about it was that we had an actual readership and subscribers, even.

Recently, I was reunited with all the issues of Anonymous!, thanks to my wonderful mother, who had been keeping them safe and well-archived for all these years. And now, for the first time since 1991, they are available for public consumption. I make no claims as to the quality – some are really quite bad in fact – but I think it is a neat piece of nostalgia. Keeping true to the name, we never claimed ownership of any of our original writing. If we did put a name to it, it was a pseudonym, mainly to keep up appearances of having more people on staff than actuality. Some of the pieces I know for certain were written by me, others I’m not so sure.

Now, seventeen years later, I reveal my fellow staffmembers (those that I can remember, anyway), in no particular order: myself, Angela C., Sean S., George P., Gabriel B.

I apologize to anyone I forgot, and to those I remember (in the event they still don’t want to claim involvement) .

And without further ado, I give to you Anonymous!

My Cat Is Better Than Yours

Something I will most likely come to regret some day is playing “fetch” with my cat and his kibble. It started one day when he had not been eating for a few days and I started to get worried. To try to make it more interesting for him, I tossed a few pieces for him to chase. It worked. He ate again.

However, he now begs me to throw at least a few pieces for him every night. I don’t have to, of course, but he can get so whiney. It’s also fun to watch him scramble after a little piece of dried food. It’s especially entertaining when the kibble starts to ricochet off walls and doors. Amazing eye-paw coordination this kitty has. More amazing is how he can now catch a piece of kibble between his front paws when I toss it in the air. You really gotta see it in person to appreciate the magnitude of this feat. But, since I don’t allow other humans in my apartment (kidding!), I’ve tried to capture it on video. He can do it with a bit more finesse than this, but I cannot get the camera to cooperate.

Refresh to see it again.

And for his next trick, he will eat a whole watermelon.

Top 10 of 2007

It’s the end of the year, and everyone is thinking back to all the good stuff and bad stuff from the last 12 months. All the DJs are putting out their Top Ten songs and albums of the year. There are probably Top Ten news stories in various places. Top Ten This, Top Ten That. I thought I might make my own list. So I thought and I thought, for at least five or ten minutes, but nothing came to mind. Well, one thing did come to mind – the Top Ten Indescribable Things That Happened in 2007 That Made it Unique From All the Other Years I’ve Been Alive.

For instance, I started this blog in 2007. I got the Tassajara Bread Book this year after seeing the film How to Cook Your Life. I played Quake again after like 10 years. I used Flexcar. My buddy Alex finally came to visit me after years of my badgering. I bought a new DVD player. The QFC opened two blocks from my apartment. The Tower Records two blocks away closed then became a Silver Platters which I never go to. (I rarely went to Tower, either.) The only marriage for which I’ve been a member of the wedding party (since my sister’s when I was 18) ended in divorce. I finally bought rain boots after living in Seattle for nine years.

I think that’s 10 things. I don’t know if that’s Top or Bottom, and I’m not sure what the long term effects of those things are – hence the “indescribable”. But they happened. And who cares?

So here’s my real Top Ten.

The Top Ten Wasabi Peas of 2007:

Top Ten Wasabi Peas

And then there were none.

My Prediction Comes True

Dave and Jasmine won!

Approaching the finale, I was rooting for Dave/Jasmine and Shay/Joshua to make the final two teams. They were really the two teams that made the most strides toward getting to know each other and working together to win the competition. Sam/Nicole (the other finalists) really didn’t work as partners, but Sam was so competitive it didn’t matter. He really wasn’t a dumb beauty when it came down to it. Of course, he still likes Rebecca, so he can’t be that smart. And Shay/Joshua made it to third place, so I can’t complain too much.

OK. I’m done.

Dave & Jasmine

Until next season. Who knows, maybe I’ll even be a contestant. If they’ll accept girl geeks as old as I am. Ha!