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motion picture monday

April 27, 2015

released: 1992.
starring: moira kelly, d.b. sweeney, terry o'quinn.
what makes it awesome: the dialogue and moira kelly's character.

two. dedication.
released: 2007.
starring: tom wilkinson, billy crudup, mandy moore.
what makes it awesome: it is beautifully, refreshingly. incredibly politically incorrect, a wonderfully unconventional love and life story with an interesting soundtrack.

released: 2009.
starring: joseph gordon levitt, zooey deschanel, geoffrey arend.
what makes it awesome: it's a fantastically-crafted, roller coaster of a love story.

four. love happens.
released: 2009.
starring: aaron eckhart, jennifer aniston, martin sheen.
what makes it awesome: aaron eckhart's character... his struggles and his strength.

released: 2010.
starring: rachel mcadams, diane keaton, harrison ford.
what makes it awesome: diane keaton and harrison ford.

released: 2011.
starring: ewan mcgregor, emily blunt, kristin scott thomas.
what makes it awesome: ewan mcgregor... and it's a beautiful story.

released: 2014.
starring: zac efron, miles teller, michael b. jordan.
what makes it awesome: it's pretty crass. it's pretty clever.

random quarter: the q&a edition-april

April 26, 2015

one. who are you fooling? no one, now.

two. who do you feel closest to? melissa. 

three. if you could wish for one thing to happen today, what would it be? seven blogiversary bash guest posts.

four. what was the last take-out meal you ordered? whataburger, small coke, onion rings.

five. what colors are you wearing? blue and brown.

six. what is your secret passion? don't feel passionate about anything.

seven. where do you feel most at home? dad's office at mom's desk.

eight. a chore you ignored today? cleaning my room. 

nine. did you have fun today? because? yes. hung out at baker's.

ten. switchfoot's dare you to move was inspiring.

eleven. what is your favorite thing to do on a sunday morning? breakfast at black walnut.

twelve. if you could acquire a talent (without any extra effort), what would it be? affability.

thirteen. what celebrity would you want to interview? ellen degeneres.

fourteen. what do you think is your biggest shortcoming? can't be what people want.

fifteen. write down a problem you solved today. figured out what to do.

sixteen. what famous person would you bring back from the dead to have dinner with? hunter s. thompson.

seventeen. how many times did you curse today? no clue.

eighteen. what do you want to say when someone asks "what do you do?" write.

nineteen. you wish you could stop stupid choices i make from happening.

twenty. how would your parents describe you? funny, cute, quirky and smart.

twenty-one. is life fair? yes? no? sometimes? not today? no. ain't supposed to be.

twenty-two. who do you need to call? ghostbusters.

twenty-three. how much spare change do you have? on me right now? none.

twenty-four. what type of person are you? awkward.

twenty-five. what are three words to describe your social life? forced, bumbled exchanges.

it damned sure ain't me, so it must be you

April 18, 2015

this morning i awoke to a text from that man i've been seeing... and it started out sweet. but that conversation, which ended up spanning a four hour period, ended quite sourly.

so we won't be shopping at victoria's secret for those scraps of silk and lace after all.

we won't be doing anything at all. fine by me. i'd given that dude the benefit of the doubt one too many times.

in the end, what cut it was that he'd said i was the ugliest bitch he'd ever dated. this from a man who claimed to love me. you keep using that word...

thank god for my friend melissa. one of the first things she'd done after i'd told her of the demise was to send me this...


... paired with the words he's the heffer. darn right. (and i didn't even care that the world was spelled wrong.)

thank god for the apple store and the ease with which one can exchange a phone.

it's a damned good thing i am capable of loving myself to some extent. there're way too many women who tie themselves to a man just because he's there. just because sometimes he's good to you. just because he does shit like insisting on getting the door for you.

being a man takes a hell of a lot more than opening a door for a lady.

and cutting a tie's really not so hard. i'd much rather die a single woman than date a douchebag.

so the next time my gut says that dude's probably an angry dick, i will go with that instead of giving him the benefit of the doubt.

the skin we're in

April 17, 2015

i'll be honest... i've been burnt out on blogging for a while now. i've been doing this for ten years. TEN. YEARS. that's a really long time. especially for an aries. our attention spans last about ten seconds.

there aren't that many topics i've not covered. some of them i've covered ad nauseam. maybe this is one of them. but i'm doing it again because of stories like those i found on facebook today.

my posture is horrible for a variety of reasons: i don't eat right; i don't exercise; i sleep on my side with my shoulders curled toward my face; i swam breaststroke in high school, which overdevelops the pectoral muscles; i have cerebral palsy.

i. have. cerebral. palsy.

look that shit up. it's wicked, wicked crap.

the first time i watched the theory of everything, and eddie redmayne acted out the scenes in which his character, the physicist stephen hawking, first learns of his ailment, of its diagnosis... i wept. i wept, people, because i have some understanding of what it means to hate your body. to loathe it. to look at it with such disgust, such great disdain because it won't do what you want it to do. i have some comprehension of the helplessness and the anger. and the fear.

my legs don't work so well. i cannot run. i can't. every time i try, my knees protest.

my eyes don't work so well. crowds terrify me. people move around like gaseous molecules with no concern for each other. i see things in two dimensions, not three, and in crowds, i cannot comprehend where everything is. i'm afraid to take a step, that i might collide with someone else and fall. so i spin around like a top, trying to find some safe place out of the way, and the longer it takes to find purchase, the angrier i become that people can't just stop for one second. just stop and let me get my bearings.

falling terrifies me, too. i fell a lot in my youth, in my adolescence, in my early twenties. in my childhood, i fell because i couldn't see. in my twenties it was because the tendons and ligaments in my knees were weakening. and it hurt. something awful. it hurt to fix it, too. that pain was much worse. i can't recall it well enough to tell you anything more than the first twenty-four hours after the surgeries, i was on a morphine drip, and for weeks afterward, i had a regular prescription for vicodin. i can recall one night waking up to pain so immense that i just wanted the drugs, which were across the house in the kitchen. getting up meant wrapping my knee, putting on my leg brace, and hobbling on my crutches. it would take too long. so i slid out of bed and pulled myself into the kitchen and up to the counter. and then there's the physical therapy. they put you on a stationary bicycle; they put your feet on the pedals and tell you to move the wheels. and it feels like things inside you are shredding. and you maybe moved it an inch. maybe. it takes weeks and weeks before you can make the thing turn one full circle.

then there's the cosmetic surgeries. the ones you have to make you prettier so people won't recoil when they see you because your eyes are so ugly. the doctor works some magic on your face, stitching your eyelids shut for a twenty-four hour period while that magic heals. there's the delusions that the stitches have come undone, and you can see the basketweave texture of the patches he's placed on your face. and then... then he takes the patches off and cuts the stitches. and you look in the mirror, and you want to recoil because your face, which you hadn't much liked before the surgery, suddenly looks like it belongs to frankenstein. and the doctors don't tell you that in addition to being blind for twenty-four hours, you'll feel uglier afterward and that you won't really be able to walk, either, because they're taking muscle out of your leg and putting it in your forehead.

my face feels like a picasso painting.

then there's the spasms. the ones that are more like a constant clenching in your neck, or your calves, or your hands, or your jaw. those are preferable to the others because you can soothe them, to some extent, with a massage. the ones that feel like a fluttering inside you, those are worse. they almost always come just before you fall asleep. they startle you. they make you feel like something's crawling on you or, worse, inside you. they keep you from getting to sleep at night. they wake you up several times throughout it. and in the morning, you don't feel rested.

and lastly there's the knowledge that that fluttering sensation, that spasm could occur in other muscles... like your heart. your heart that has a murmur. one that makes the doctors, who seem to be in such a hurry to diagnose what ails you so they can get you out of their office and the next one in, this murmur makes the world for them come to a screeching halt. everything goes quiet. and you sit there, waiting for the words to come out... the urging for the ekg. just give me my prescription for my z-pack, lady, and let me go... i don't want to think about my heart and how it's breaking.

but even with all that, i've had it easy. it could've been worse. it could've been SO. MUCH. WORSE.

i am five foot seven inches tall. i weigh one hundred seventy-three pounds. i wear large shirts and size twelve pants.

the man i'm seeing wants to take me to victoria's secret and pick out some pretty. there's a part of me--that passionate aries bit, i'm sure--that wants to go. i'd be interested to know what sorts of things he'd pick out. i'd want to see my figure as he does. i'd want to see if there's anything in that store that could make me feel sexy.

he wants to go shopping. the idea excites him. it mortifies me.

sometimes i do like my body. i have to tell ya, i love my rack. i'm quite fond of my breasts. that wasn't always the case. all throughout high school i was pathetically flat-chested, which served me well for swimming but not much else. i was also horribly straight and ridiculously thin. long limbs on a short torso with a ginormous cranium (for housing all that brain power that has been both a blessing and a curse). i don't like that i've allowed myself to get this badly out of shape, but at the same time, i am soft, when for so much of my life, i was brittle and hard. while this is the fattest i've ever been, i feel much more feminine now than i ever have.

still, i haven't worn shorts in years. he thinks i should wear them all the time. i think my thighs are disgusting...

and that brings me to the first story.

the man's quite fond of my ass. and, of course, i am not.

michael buble and his wife, whilst waiting in the lobby of what appears to be a hotel, notice a rather curvaceous woman wearing shorts that are, by most's standards, too short. so buble posed for a photo, and his wife got the woman in the shot as well as her husband. and buble posted it to his instagram where some forty-three thousand people "liked" it.

i admire that the woman was so comfortable in her skin that she would dare wear those shorts, knowing that they would call such attention to herself. i wonder why instead of others being in awe of her audacity and her confidence, we choose instead to focus on the fact that her ass is hanging out. we bash the woman for dressing "inappropriately." we bash the man for having taken the photo and making the comments.

we insist on belittling others' physiques so that we can feel better about our own. and it's not just those, like me, who weigh significantly more than they should. we say the thin ones are too thin. we say the tall ones are too tall, and the short ones too short... no one is free from the criticism. no one.

we shame a person's body because it does not fit some impossible mold (hell, we'd shame it if it did fit, out of sheer jealousy) someone created eons ago and said should be the norm. i don't even know what that is... that norm. i can tell you that any effort i make to get my body to that state would be for naught, because even if i could have that thirty-six, twenty-four, thirty-six figure (i'm assuming that's the norm?), i still wouldn't be tan enough and strong enough to carry it, to show it off. i've too many freckles, my skin is too reluctant to take on color--i know this because i spent the weekends of my childhood and adolescence in the backyard in a bathing suit without wearing sunscreen. my muscles too weak to ever have that kind of tone. also there are the scars--thirty or so--from all the surgeries and all the falls.

which brings me to the second story.

to fourteen-year-old jonathan pitre, whose body attacks him with every breath it seems. i've seen stories like his before. i've heard of the condition he has, due largely in part because of the blogging world. but i don't think anyone's ever managed to bring home the extent of just how awful this particular disease can be. and good god, it's hideous.

oh, dear lord, the things i've taken for granted...

my heart... my heart... it aches for this boy. it aches for his family--for his mother. such hell this must be. i admire his strength for plugging along. for living anyway. fighting when it must seem so unbearable to do so.

the worst part of his day is the three hours it takes to bathe. he must endure this every other day. his mother must administer it. to be him... to be her...

gisele bundchen just took her last turn strutting her stuff on the catwalk in all her golden, toned, feminine splendor. the good lord made her beautiful.

pink took to twitter to defend her choice of donning a little black dress when her figure was, to some, much too shapely for it. he made her beautiful.

he also made the woman in those short shorts and that little boy, wrapped in all his bandages, beautiful, too.

the woodlands waterway arts festival

April 10, 2015

patrons brave inclement weather to view works by artists from all across the country.

steven graber of kansas poses with two of his works.

more of graber's works.

chris hartsfield of kentucky chats with a guest as a festival volunteer views his collection.

hartsfield poses with his favorite selections.

wife linda poses with her favorites.

elijah bossenbroek of arizona provides musical entertainment.

austin's rick loudermilk, the featured artist from two years ago, relaxes in his booth.

john scanlan of iowa poses outside his booth next to a favored piece.

more of scanlan's photography.

random quarter: the q&a edition - march

March 3, 2015

one. salty or sweet? salty.

two. did you sleep alone last night? yes.

three. what's your favorite word (right now)? fuck. always and forever.

four. who's your nemesis? myself.

five. it's not a good idea to experiment with people's feelings.

six. what's the last song you listened to? new york state of mind.

seven. what is the last movie you rented? the hundred foot journey. (maybe?)

eight. what was something you wanted today but couldn't have? being held by a man.

nine. where do you live? conroe, texas.

ten. if you could add one hour to your day, what would you do with it? sleep.

eleven. what is true? i'm still in my pajamas.

twelve. what do you not want to talk about? sex.

thirteen. what do you want to buy? a beach vacation.

fourteen. what new activity have you tried? i haven't.

fifteen. in three words describe your spirituality. catholicism, astrology, mythology.

sixteen. what was the last book you read? fangirl.

seventeen. the first thing i ate today was club minis and coca-cola.

eighteen. jot down a news story from today. netanyahu bad deal on iran.

nineteen. are you country or rock'n'roll (or hip-hop, emo, folk punk... )? rock'n'roll.

twenty. adam, blake and pharrell made me laugh.

twenty-one. who do you aspire to be like? no one, lately.

twenty-two. when was the last time you felt like you were on top of the world? october third.

twenty-three. pick a color for today. gray.

twenty-four. what inventions can you not live without? music, stories, television and internet.

twenty-five. how could today have been better? more gumption. more clarity.

the thirtieth question

February 25, 2015

this was written a few years ago for another's blog. i'm republishing it here because the link to the original post is no longer good.

What lessons have you learned through the years?

Don’t play football with a bunch of boys if you’re the only girl, a pint-sized one at that. Especially when school starts in like two weeks. Especially when you’re the go-to gal on the swim team for a particular leg of a relay. You might break your collarbone. Or something. And chances are really good that you’ll be out for the whole season.

Run. Every day. There will come a day where you won’t be able to do this. Or want to. Relish the days you can. That high that comes afterward? That windedness? The physical exhaustion paired with that glorious tingling sensation coursing through your body? Those glutes? Those are beautiful things. You’ll miss them.

Speaking of muscles… When I was fourteen, I weighed seventy pounds. I had three percent body fat. Yes, three. That I was twenty pounds lighter than the norm worried my doctor and he put me on an Ensure regimen. And I ate, desperately. Burgers and pizza and pasta. Daily. To counter the three to five thousand meters I swam daily, depending on the time of year. I despised the flatness and straightness of my figure. I ogled the litheness and length, the strength of the boys on ours and the opposing teams. I studied the curvaceous and muscular figures of the girls I swam with and against. I ate. Poorly. And now, at over forty with some thirty percent body fat, I wish like hell I could say I was twenty pounds underweight. That my body was a little flatter and a lot straighter. That I could’ve, should’ve taken better care of myself.

Regret sucks. Do your damnedest to avoid it. 

If he matters to you—really, really matters—give the boy what he wants. Even if what he wants makes you unhappy. That unhappiness? Maybe it’ll only last a moment or two. Maybe if you don’t give him what he wants, you’ll be unhappy for a whole lot longer.  On the flip side of that… if he’s not giving you want you want, maybe he doesn’t really matter, in which case kicking him to the curb’s a really good idea.

There’s this thing called instinct. And it’s good. It generally leads you in the right direction. But don’t confuse it with temper. That’s a bad thing. It will almost always inspire you to go the wrong way. Sometimes it’s really hard to tell them apart.

Not every woman is destined for marriage and family. These are beautiful aspirations. Worthy. Lovely. But don’t become so obsessed with finding them that you forget to appreciate what you have. A friend told me once that she thought my disappointment with how my life has played out overshadows my witty personality and can make me appear cranky. I don’t mind the cranky. I do mind the disappointment. I mind that it casts a shadow on what makes me good. I don’t know how to shrug off that cloak. I spent my life trying to be normal when I wasn’t meant to be so. 

There are stories inside you. Don’t be afraid to tell them.

And most importantly, never, NEVER get a credit card.

random quarter: the q&a edition - february

February 6, 2015

one. who do you live with: my parents.

two. on a scale of one to ten, how sad are you? why? two. because i went shopping.

three. outside the weather is getting much better.

four. what are you obsessively listening to? simple mind's alive and kicking.

five. are you seeking contentment or excitement? both?

six. what are three things you have to buy? perfume, mouthwash, gasoline.

seven. are you in love? not at the moment, but...

eight. how late did you sleep? eight a.m.

nine. if this day were an animal, what would it be? a kitten.

ten. how did you get to work today? i didn't.

eleven. what is your biggest obstacle right now? a lack of willpower.

twelve. did you kiss someone today? platonically? my niece. romantically? no.

thirteen. what was the last performance or concert you went to? into the woods.

fourteen. if you could change something about today, what would it be? would've found jeans that fit.

fifteen. what's the most expensive thing you're wearing right now? my bra.

sixteen. what word did you overuse today? fuck.

seventeen. what was your prevailing emotion of the day? happiness.

eighteen. today you've got too much fat on this body.

nineteen. what's the last dream you remember? jack tattoo on my hand.

twenty. when was the last time you were sick? a few weeks ago.

twenty-one. what is your resolution for tomorrow? not getting a speeding ticket.

twenty-two. what is your favorite question to ask people? what's your favorite movie?

twenty-three. write down the cure for a broken heart. booze and time.

twenty-four. who is the craziest person in your life? me.

twenty-five. what is the most embarrassing purchase on a recent credit card statement? the outfield downloads from itunes.

random quarter: the q&a edition - january

January 5, 2015

one. can people change? no.

two. what are you reading right now? me before you - jojo moyes.

three. the best part of today? watching last sunday's packers' game.

four. what was the last restaurant you went to? fielding's.

five. today was tough because brother's children drove me nuts.

six. today you lost patience. several times.

seven. what's your favorite accessory? london blue topaz ring.

eight. where do you want to travel next? drive up california's coast.

nine. are you a leader or a follower? follower.

ten. one a scale of one to ten, how was your lunch today? six.

eleven. do you owe someone some money? yes. does someone owe you? no.

twelve. what was peaceful about today? watching football.

thirteen. list three foods you ate today? cake, turkey sandwich, chocolate milkshake.

fourteen. are you holding a grudge? yes. about? my brother disrespecting my space.

fifteen. what are you looking forward to? a day with no responsibilities.

sixteen. are you seeking security or adventure? adventure.

seventeen. do you need a break? yes. from what? life in general.

eighteen. today you needed more rest, cooperation, cleanliness, patience, kindness.

nineteen. which art movement best describes you today? abstract expressionism.

twenty. how do you describe home? tempestuous.

twenty-one. what was the last television show you watched? nfl football - sunday, december twenty-eighth.

twenty-two. what do you want to forget? a boy.

twenty-three. who do you want to be? better.

twenty-four. what is your mission? self-sufficiency.

twenty-five. was today typical? yes. why or why not? it's equally good and bad.

reading recap: the fifth

January 2, 2015


the ones i've read
landline
eleanor and park
the fault in our stars
the language of flowers
wonder
one day
redeeming love
i see you everywhere
the perks of being a wallflower
just one day
where she went
attachments
if i stay
the truth about alice
love is a mix tape
dash and lily's book of dares
fangirl
dr. bird's advice for sad poets
meant to be
the statistical probability of love at first sight
the silver linings playbook
thirteen little blue envelopes
love and other perishable items
stargirl
persuasion
divergent
makeovers at the beauty counter of happiness
fifty shades darker
fifty shades of grey
the time of my life
insurgent
all there is: love stories from storycorps
the testament
the chance
the wit and wisdom of mark twain
how to love
julie and romeo
the phantom tollbooth
allegiant
this is what happy looks like
fifty shades freed

the ones i'd started
interpreter of maladies
gone with the wind
the book thief
the help
the absolutely true diary of a part-time indian
this is where i leave you
a stained white radiance
 if he had been with me
two kisses for maddie
captivating
so long insecurity
me before you
every day
the sisters mortland
gates of fire
anna and the french kiss
crime and punishment
another piece of my heart
the arrivals
mennonite in a little black dress
the noticer
maximum achievement
rays of the dawn
the fountainhead

the ones i (wish i could've) took back
because they bored me
whiskey beach
just one year
how to be single
looking for alaska
an abundance of katherines
the best of me
a casual vacancy
if you could see me now
prep
lucy sullivan getting married

and a bunch of others whose titles i've forgotten.

i've decided i'm gonna keep the recap list going indefinitely.
right now i'm at forty-one.

fangirl

January 1, 2015

why i read it: because as part of the book challenge which i have undertaken, i was to select a title that was not a reread by a favorite author.

what i liked: "he's a perfectly good boyfriend," cath would say.

"he's an end table," wren would answer.

"he's always there for me."

"... to set magazines on."


"would you rather i dated someone like jesse? so we can both end up crying every weekend?"

"i would rather you dated someone you'd actually like to kiss."

"i've kissed abel."

"oh, cath, stop. you're making my brain throw up."

"we've been dating for three years. he's my boyfriend."

"you have stronger feelings for baz and simon."

"duh, they're baz and simon, like that's even fair--i like abel. he's steady."

"you just keep describing an end table..." (p. 35).

wren usually lost interest in a guy as soon as she'd won him over. the conversion was her favorite part. "that moment," she told cath, "when you realize that a guy's looking at you differently--that you're taking up more space in his field of vision. that moment when you know he can't see past you anymore" (pp. 35-36).

"we're kids," wren said.

"not anymore. you're sophisticated young women. nobody wants to watch you unwrap gift cards" (p. 160).

"i'm really good at quickly identifying the smartest girl in every class."

cath frowned at him. "god, levi. that's so exploitive."

"how is it exploitive? i don't make them wear miniskirts. i don't call them 'baby.' i just say, 'hello, smart girl. would you like to talk to me about great expectations?"

"they probably think you like them."

"i do like them" (p. 172).

eventually she heard a buzz and levi walked back through the doors, holding two disposable coffee cups and balancing two boxed sandwiches on his forearms.

"turkey or ham?" he asked.

"why are you always feeding me?"

"well, i work in food service, and my major is basically grazing..." (p. 220).

seeing that they were scared terrified their dad. he'd go to bed and sleep for fifteen hours. he'd make an appointment with his counselor. he'd try the meds again, even if they all knew it wouldn't stick.

"i can't think when i'm on them," he'd told cath one night. she was sixteen, and she'd come downstairs to check the front door and found it unlocked--and then she'd inadvertently locked him out. her dad had been sitting outside on the steps and it scared her half to death when he rang the doorbell. 

"they slow your brain down," he said, clutching an orange bottle of pills. "they iron out all the wrinkles... maybe all the bad stuff happens in the wrinkles, but all the good stuff does, too...

"they break your brain like a horse, so it takes all your orders. i need a brain that can break away, you know? i need to think" (p. 224).

"i'm like him," she whispered.

"you're not," wren said.

"i am. i'm crazy like him." she was already having panic attacks. she was already hiding at parties... 

"you're not," wren said.

"but what if i am?"

"decide not to be."

"that's not how it works," cath argued.

"nobody knows how it works."

"what if i don't even see it coming?"

"i'll see it coming... if it tries to take you," wren said, "i won't let go." (pp. 226-227).

"somebody else got ugg boots for christmas," reagan said, watching the dinner line empty into the dining room. "if we had whiskey, this is when we'd take a shot" (p. 256).

what sucked: the main character's name is cather. every time i read that, it thought catheter. 

having said all that: this is definitely my least favorite of her books. i liked it. i did not love it. i do not want more of it.

the good in my day: december

daddy. sarah. mercy bocephus. iced tea. pottery barn's comfort roll-arm slipcovered sofa. saltgrass' chicken fried steak. jewel. that the world can sometimes be so beautifully small. the compliments a woman paid to my father through me. the memory of a man. that window of calm in the day, just as the sun's setting... when the world seems painless and plentiful: the dogs barking, the people laughing and loving, the daylight blushing before it pales. first-row parking places. cousins. online shopping. adam. marble slab. the whopping sale i had at work (i've not had one of those in years). the christmas card from amy. pappadeaux's. the christmas card from erin. shopping with dad. the christmas card from karen. lesley. kimberly. gary and kathleen. the shirts i found at the gap. the wraps i found at urban outfitters. fielding's. making the twins' christmas presents. i took the twins the library; afterward, they wrote in the library notebooks i'd made for them what they'd checked out; it was so beautiful to sit with them while they practiced writing. lindsay.

the truth about alice

why i read it: because in july of last year, i went to a writer's workshop presented by the author, and ever since then, i've been meaning to read her book, and when i emailed her the other day with questions about the craft and because i'd lost my notes from that workshop and needed some reminders, she took the time to compose a very kind reply.

what i liked: kurt -- so why don't i mind living here? first, everyone leaves me alone. which is to say they ignore me. which is not as bad as it sounds. to be honest, it's really rather nice to be afforded such freedom of time and of space to read, to think, and to study, and to be left in peace. when i sit by myself in the cafeteria rereading the hobbit for the thirteenth time just because i want to, i don't look out onto the sea of faces and wish i wasn't alone. i simply acknowledge the sea exists and go back to the hobbit. it isn't difficult for me.

secondly, i haven't minded living in healy because my grandmother is a loving and caring woman who has raised me with affection and compassion.

lastly, alice franklin lives here.

alice franklin with the raspberry lips and the bad reputation and the faraway eyes (pp. 34-35).

"it's such a pleasure to teach you, to talk with you," he answered. "you have a gifted mind." he leaned back in his chair, his arms behind his head, and i could see the yellowing stains on his shirt, under his arms. if mr. becker knew they were there, he didn't seem to care. nor did he seem to care that he was almost completely bald and had pockmarks on his cheeks from bad acne, or that he had several unknowable stains on his tie. 

i have a gifted mind, all right. i know enough to know that i do not want to turn out like mr. becker. and i know enough to know that to ask mr. becker about how to talk to alice would be more complicated than discussing quantum gravity (p. 53).

elaine -- then my mom will take all our special weight watchers food and use a black sharpie to label it with point values and store it on one shelf in the fridge and one shelf in the cabinet, and if she's feeling totally nuts, she might even put a post-it note on the shelves that says, "mom's and elaine's special food--don't touch!" which is totally stupid seeing as how the only person who lives in the house is my dad and he wouldn't touch our special food even if it meant the healy tigers were guaranteed a winning football season for the rest of his natural life (p. 59).

what sucked: it's two hundred pages, but it sometimes feels as though reading it takes as long as a book twice its length.

having said all that: it makes me SO glad i was not one of the popular kids growing up. one of the girls with whom i'd gone to elementary and junior high school... a few years ago, when discussing a particular back-to-school swimming party (that had sucked so much for me that i'd left early, walked back home and gone to my room to cry), she'd said that her friends (because she was popular) had made fun of her because her bathing suit sagged in the butt. i remembered being annoyed with her for comparing them mocking her textiles to them mocking my person... her pain seemed so insignificant next to mine. i'm a little ashamed, now, to admit that i felt that way. i know high school sucks for everybody. but i've a better appreciation for that now because of this book. and i'm so glad i was more like kurt (but not nearly as good as he... i was too embarrassed to sit alone in the cafeteria) back then than kelsie or elaine or anybody else in healy, texas. it's not a bad read. best thing i can say about it is the author does a pretty good job of making each of her characters have unique voices.

random quarter: the q&a edition - december

December 13, 2014

one. on a scale of one to ten, how happy are you? four.

two. do you want to know how it ends? not really.

three. who do you miss? my older brother.

four. what is your most recent act of generosity? salvation army's angel tree gifts.

five. where do you find joy? little things and the twins.

six. what's on your wish list? better lives for the twins.

seven. what is your biggest regret? not loving my brother better.

eight. why are you impressive? generosity, compassion, intelligence, talent, resilience.

nine. moderation or excess? moderation.

ten. what do you find irresistible? pretty eyes, tattooes, strength, kindness.

eleven. if you had to move to a new city, where would you move? don't know. somewhere near water.

twelve. what do you like to talk about? fiction, film and football.

thirteen. what's your favorite cereal? honeycomb/cap'n crunch/corn pops.

fourteen. write down five words that describe today. heartbreaking morning... better... then best.

fifteen. on a scale of one to ten, how spontaneous were you today? two.

sixteen. when was the last time you felt at peace? for a second... yesterday.

seventeen. snuggle down or go out and play? snuggle down.

eighteen. what details from today would you like to remember? fortune parking, pleasant workday and evening.

nineteen. today you gained another pound, i'm sure.

twenty. how ambitious do you feel today? not at all so.

twenty-one. what surprised you today? getting a first-row parking space.

twenty-two. if you could change one thing about today, what would it be? i'd find the right words.

twenty-three. where do you see yourself next year? the same place.

twenty-four. what is your dream vacation? a beach, booze and books.

twenty-five. list what you've eaten for the past week. ice cream, steak, vegetables, junk.