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People always told me be careful of what you do
And don’t go around breaking young girl’s hearts
And mother always told me be careful of who you love
And be careful of what you do cause the lie becomes the truth
I fell off the grid for a while this weekend. Got off the plane on Thursday evening and every television screen throughout the terminal was ablaze with images of Michael Jackson.
Dead? At 50?
No, scratch that. At any age, it just sounds wrong.
Truth be told, this has been a really bad week for a lot of our beloved media icons. How would Johnny Carson have ever found the stage without Ed McMahon to herald his way? Farrah Fawcett? How can an Angel die? Say it ain’t so, Charlie.
But Michael Jackson?
I said you wanna be startin’ somethin’
You got to be startin’ somethin’
I said you wanna be startin’ somethin’
You got to be startin’ somethin’
Pop music wasn’t part of my childhood. But Michael Jackson wasn’t pop music. Michael Jackson was…Michael Jackson. MJ. The Gloved One. The King of Pop. It was an accolade that no one dared question, because it was fact. Was any artist more pervasive, more talented, more representative of an entire decade? Madonna maybe. But Madonna was not the King.
Michael Jackson was.
That this is thriller, thriller night
‘Cause I can thrill you more than any ghost would dare to try
Girl, this is thriller, thriller night
So let me hold you tight and share a killer, diller, chiller
Thriller here tonight
Pepsi, Disney, MTV. At times it seemed he held the entire world in that bedazzled gloved hand of his. Quirky, eccentric, odd, or just downright bizarre
This is why I love living so close to D.C. I snapped this shot of Renoir’s “Luncheon of the Boating Party” on Saturday. For free. Usually, you have to pay to tour the Phillips Collection, but several museums and galleries downtown participated in a free museum day this past Saturday, including the Phillips. So we decided to stop by to see how the luncheon was going. Still looks quite colorful and vibrant, even if stuck at a bit of an odd angle in this photo. It’s a bit difficult to get a straight-on shot of this one; it’s without a doubt the most popular piece in the collection, and the room is constantly near capacity. So I snicked this shot off as quickly as I could and kept my fingers crossed that it would at least come out clear.
Unfortunately, the Phillips was the only free museum we visited. I’m in slow combat with a funky warm weather cold right now, so after touring the Phillips and stopping for a cupcake from Larry’s Ice Cream, I was ready to pack it in. I had hoped to find a little medical advice from the local church…but I think I was barking up the wrong tree on this one. They just kept saying that they wanted to audit me. All I wanted was a cough drop! And stop asking me if I believe in Xena and the Galactic Confederacy! Mixing genres like that is just not cool.
Okay, wipe up the milkshake and clean off the bowling pin. I’m definitely finished. Time to go home and sleep this one off…
I think someone keeps stealing time from me. I always think I have more time to do things during the day…and then I keep coming up short. What’s up with that?
So this past weekend I ended up at the mall. It was a “necessary evil” trip…unfortunately, it didn’t include Kira Nerys or Odo (and if you get that geek reference, I’m imaginary high-fiving you right now). My part of the necessary evil was that I needed to take one of my watches to the jeweler for a new battery.
I hate malls. HATE them. It’s not just the overwhelming sense of so many people crammed like cattle inside one building (although that has a huge role in the enmity, since I do hate people). No, this hatred springs from the well of teen angst that drilled into my soul many, many moons ago.
Remember when everyone who was anyone in the teen safari was a mall rat? It was the cool place to be seen, the replacement hangout when skating rinks began to slowly fade into the ephemera of former awesomeness.
I remember when we finally got our own mall. I remember going there with my parents when it first opened. It was the summer before I started high school. I was a fat, fashionless introvert with acne and no self esteem. I was the hippopotamus to the mall rat lions. Teenagers can smell internalized inferiority like dogs can smell fear.
Going with high school friends made the mall slightly less traumatic. So did losing a lot of weight and no longer dressing like I was a lost member of the Von Trapp family. In fact, I dropped all color from my wardrobe minus black and purple. Lots of leather. Lots of silver jewelry. Lots of black nail polish. And, of course, this was the period of my life that gave birth to the aforementioned “sideways rooster comb.”
[Okay, this is a sad tangential moment for me: I saw a photo the other day of a famous person who styles their hair in a way similar to the sideways rooster comb. The famous person was Conan O’Brien. Whathafu?!? Seriously, see the front of his hair in this photo? Imagine this slightly higher, with bangs down to his eyes, teased out on the sides, and long in the back, but pretty much the same color. I don’t know who to feel worse for: my teenaged self or Conan O’Brien.]
Still, I knew I was a poseur. I was a private school honor society nerd to whom the public school life was as alien as Q’onoS would be to a Bajoran (it also didn’t help that I made jokes like this back then, too). I was less cool than public school band members (at least they went to a school big enough to actually have a band).
It wasn’t all bad. I had my little school clique. I had my Smurfy blue Chevette. I had Suncoast and Waldenbooks, both places wherein I would sequester myself for hours of uninterrupted geekery. But to this day the mall represents all those worries and fears that only seem important when you’re a teenager, but continue to haunt you well into your dotage (I am, after all, now untrustworthy according to Bob Dylan). It’s silly, I know, but these are all the things that flood over me the instant I near a mall. Apparently, I still carry around a kernel of internalized inferiority.
Want to know the real kick in the pants? I ended up forgetting my watch at home. So I hid out in the Borders Express for a while (this is what all Waldenbooks have become in this area), bought a Star Trek novel, and scurried out into the fresh air and sun before the mall rat pheromones even had a chance to permeate my clothing. Strangely enough, these pheromones smell exactly like Sbarro pizza…
Whoever said that you can’t go home again, I’m here to say bollocks! You most certainly can go home again. I do it all the time! Okay, maybe not all the time. I’m sure my mother would argue that I don’t do it quite often enough (of course, if she had her way, I would still be living with my parents, thus fulfilling the ultimate nerd stereotype).
Beer me up, Scotty
I departed from the safety of the lair bright and early Friday morning, and remained off the Interwebs grid for most of the weekend. It was a delightful break, as it always is. My parental units still reside in their undisclosed North Carolina location, so I got to go Southern for the weekend, which is always a treat. First stop, of course, was the nearest Sonic, to satiate my Cherry Vanilla Dr. Pepper lust. Also, while down there, I replenished my supply of Cheerwine as well as sought out another six-pack of the official beer of the lair, White Wolf Golden Ale. I tend to enjoy the darker, richer side of the beer spectrum, but this is actually a pretty tasty ale (which was a great surprise, considering the fact that I only originally bought a bottle because of the obvious attraction to the name).
Oh, rewinding a little: Cheerwine is one of the staples of my childhood memories of summer vacation. That and Sundrop were the two drinks that we always brought back with us from visiting my grandparents. Not necessarily because they’re unique (Cheerwine is a cherry soft drink and Sundrop is a less syrupy Mountain Dew), but just because we couldn’t get them here in the Old Line State. Still can’t (although I found a store near my office that sold Cheerwine for a while).
I remember the summer when we couldn’t find Cheerwine. It was the second most traumatic summer vacation of my youth, surpassed only by the summer I was bitten by a dog. Yes, I love Cheerwine that much. It wasn’t until years later that I realized why we couldn’t find Cheerwine. Remember the red dye cancer scare in the 80s? Cheerwine was colored with that dye, just like the red M&Ms. Thankfully, Cheerwine wasn’t gone from our lives as long as the red M&Ms were.
Mr. Data, report!
For those of you who found your way back to the lair from my Angry BloggerTM days, you’ll be happy to know that my lovely Doodle-Cat, Mr. Data, is still chugging along. He’ll be 17 years old sometime in June. He looks a bit more bedraggled than he once did in his glorious fluffy kitty days, but I love him to death. He’s my sweet little gutter rescue. He’s a lot surlier than he was, but that’s allowed since he is now officially an old man. He just wants to be left to sleep on a comfy chair positioned in the afternoon sunlight and to be tolerated when he bites your elbow when he wants you to feed him or turn on the faucet in the kitchen sink. Nothing unreasonable, right?
This was also the trip that I finally decided to sort through all the boxes and bags that my parents transported with them from my old room when they moved. I had originally packed everything up in a hasty, half-assed sort of way, promising that I would go through everything once they were settled in their new place. This was almost five years ago. There was a lovely patina of attic dust all over everything (as well as the slightly mummified remains of a field mouse hidden beneath the piles of trash bags…eek!).
I was honestly surprised at how much fun I had going through my old stuff. I didn’t keep a whole lot from my adolescence, but I kept a lot more than I remembered. And, of course, the bulk of what I kept was delightfully geeky. I took plenty of photos, which I suspect will make excellent submissions for future “Flashback Friday” entries.
I also found two remnants from my high school days that I had completely forgotten I’d saved: my varsity jacket and my graduation cap and gown, complete with my National Honor Society collar (which still looks to me like one of those toilet seat sanitary rings you find in public restrooms). Yes, I was a geek/jock hybrid. Of course, at a school as small as the one from which I graduated, everyone sort of had to chip in and wear a multitude of different hats just to keep the ship from sinking (as if that would have been a terrible thing).
geek. jock. queen. docs.
Strangely, I couldn’t find either my homecoming queen tiara or my senior yearbook. I must have them stored somewhere here in the lair. Where, though, I’m not quite certain…”Just hang a right at the Gates McFadden hypospray shrine, go straight until you see the Todd McFarlane Masters of Horror statues, then take a left. The tiara and yearbook should be somewhere around there, near the geek chic T-shirt rack.”
Of the high school things I found, I think the only thing that gave me a twinge of reminiscent joy was my varsity jacket. I loved that silly thing, with its pleather sleeves and all the pins on my letter. Here’s Loba Geeky Confession Number 8,648,097: I used to imagine that the bars were like TNG collar pips. As you can tell here, by the end of my high school sports career, I had reached the Starfleet rank of Captain (to go with the “real” Captain pins I earned). My increasingly creaky knees will attest to this ranking.
I suppose I should end this entry. I’m getting ready to break the 1,000 word barrier and all on utter silliness about my weekend. I will, however, leave you with the following as my parting shot. This was stuck to one of the drawers on my dad’s tool chest. It’s something he typed up while playing around with an old label maker that he found in his garage. See? I come by my geekiness quite honestly 😉
I have been promising my old blog posts. So here they are, still residing where many of you already knew them to be, at think.lobablanca.com. I used to call that blog “incite.thought.” I think I should have called it “Terminally Pissed” (and not in the drunk sense of the word).
I was an angry mofo through most of these posts. Hulk angry. As you’ll be able to deduce, a lot of it was Bush-related fury. Some of it was religion-related fury…and some was government (federal, state, and local)-related. Still, that was a whole lot of fury. It’s no wonder I once called it the “blog of Dorian Gray.” I can’t imagine what kind of wolf I would have been if I hadn’t been dumping all that venom somewhere.
It is true that my anger remains to a certain extent. However, I have tempered my outlook on many subjects, dropped certain viewpoints and altered others. We are an ever-evolving species after all. Also, apathy does wonders for dulling anger. Perhaps this new blog should be called “incite.meh.”
I suppose I’ve linked to these posts anyway because…well, hell, I spent almost 4 years blathering on about various things (sometimes even posting funny or happy things). And even though I don’t feel that way about several things anymore (or even agree with some of what I wrote back then) I guess those entries and feelings should somehow be acknowledged.
Plus, I know it sounds strange, but I kind of want all the posts made about my beautiful Jodie girl to remain out there for people to read. She was the best dog in the whole world (IMHO, of course) and, even though she was taken from me in an utterly horrible way, I guess I want others to see what I was so blessed to see every day for a little more than 8 very short years. She had the soul of an angel and a punim that could have made even the Grinch’s heart melt.
So there you go. Read if you’d like. Ignore if you’d like. Comment you cannot. E-mail you can. Talk like Yoda I will. Smile you may 🙂
Thank you for being a friend,
Travel down the road and back again,
Your heart is true,
You’re a pal and a confidante!
And if you threw a party,
Invited everyone you knew!
You would see,
The biggest gift would be from me,
And the card attached would say,
Thank you for being a friend!
I know, I’m a soppy git sometimes, but damn if it didn’t depress me when I read that Bea Arthur died on April 25. Anyone who knows me well knows that The Golden Girls remains one of my all-time favorite sitcoms. It’s one of the few that I watched as a child that can still make me laugh today as an adult (probably even more so now since I get so many more of the “adult” jokes than I did back then). And I have to say that Dorothy Zbornak was my favorite of the group (although all of them were absolutely amazing and a joy to watch every week; there was a chemistry there among those women that very few shows are lucky enough to capture).
And then there’s Maude. What an amazing sitcom that was! It’s been years since I watched it on TVLand, but I will still break out a resounding “God’ll get you for that” every now and again.
If anyone out there reading this has never had the pleasure of watching either of these shows, I urge you to rent them and catch up on some damn funny, poignant, and socially relevant television viewing. Bea Arthur was an amazing comedienne and I’m so very glad that she played such a prominent role in my youth and continues to remain important in my life even now. I might even have to break down and buy those Golden Girls DVDs now…
I realized something after yesterday’s follow-up cranky post: I’ve already got four posts under “Surly” but I don’t even have a “Happy” category. So consider this post me fixing that problem. I’m actually not an unhappy person; I just carry around a lot of surliness inside me. I might be an early 30s girl on the outside, but inside I think I’m more like that cantankerous old dude that Dana Carvey used to play every now and then on SNL’s Weekend Update.
So here’s my first official post on things that make me happy. Today, for instance, was a happy day. First day of the season to break the 80-degree mark (Fahrenheit, that is). It was hot, it was sunny, and it was perfect for a hiking trip to Great Falls. Of course, when I say “hiking,” what I really mean is, “walking along a dirt path for a few miles up and then turning around and coming back.” No actual climbing on rocks was involved this trip. But it was a perfectly lovely hike. Not too many people, but plenty of wildlife. We saw little lizards, turtles lined up on rocks to catch some rays, dogs running everywhere – plus two blue herons. One even let me get close enough to it for the lovely shot below. Of course, he probably felt more than safe since there was water between us, but it was still nice to be trusted that much by wildlife. And look in the lower right corner of the photo. I didn’t realize it at the time, but there’s a little turtle surfacing.
We even saw a snake swimming in the canal. I snapped a few shots, but the canal water is so disgusting looking…it didn’t make me happy to look at it, and I can only imagine that it didn’t make the snake happy to be swimming in it. So I left it out of this post. Maybe I’ll use it later…when I’m back to feeling surly 😉
Well, wasn’t I just the cattiest wolf ever in yesterday’s post? Slashing out at Gen-Y like the sad, still-sometimes-flannel-wearing Gen-Xer that I am. I would say that I’m simply out of touch because I’m now over 30 and I just “don’t get” the generation after my own. Truth is, though, that I don’t even get my own generation most of the time.
I really don’t get, however, the attitude that I have witnessed in some younger coworkers. Things like expecting kudos because they showed up at the time they were supposed to show up. This was a true moment from my last workplace (stupid me, thinking that such a thing was kinda sorta mandatory).
Uh-oh, I’m feeling another catty surge. Maintain, Loba. Maintain!
I guess I just don’t expect that much out of my work. I expect a regular paycheck. I expect to work with like-minded professionals (most of the time). I expect that I will enjoy some of what I do, but that’s not the point (see expectation number one). I don’t expect to get constant kudos for doing what I’m paid to do. When I started where I am now, I had to fill out a form stating when I would arrive and when I would leave. I just assumed that this would be a daily expectation, not something that required daily affirmation.
True, I severely stretch the limits of “business casual” with my Docs and more-casual-than-business attire some days (I tend to use as my excuse the fact that it’s just not the designer/IT style to be dressy, which works most of the time). I also indulge in the Gen-X/Y need for ADD-style computer use, with multiple programs and multiple tabs running in Firefox, all vying for a piece of my attention (like right now: I’ve got five programs running and seven tabs open to different Web sites, including one of the ones I manage).
However, I also know that when it comes time to buckle down and get the job done, I do just that. I come in early. I stay late. I take work home with me if I need to do so. I pull weekend duty or late-night duty. No, it’s not fun. It is what it is. Yes, my boss thanks me profusely and I very much appreciate that. But I don’t expect it, because 9 times out of 10, she’s right there in the trenches with me, doing the same thing.
I need to be more lenient, I suppose. The work place is a constantly evolving place. I know for a fact that I would not have made it in the work environment my grandparents worked in. Then again, look at all that has changed since then. Would their environment have existed if they’d had IMDb, blogs, and online news one mouse-click away? Probably not. But would they have lowered their expectations of coworkers and employees because of these things? Should they have? Should we?
So I come back to saying this good-by,
A sort of ceremony of my own,
This stepping backward for another glance.
Perhaps you’ll say we need no ceremony,
Because we know each other, crack and flaw,
Like two irregular stones that fit together.
Yet still good-by, because we live by inches
And only sometimes see the full dimension.
Your stature’s one I want to memorize–
Your whole level of being, to impose
On any other comers, man or woman.
I’d ask them that they carry what they are
With your particular bearing, as you wear
The flaws that make you both yourself and human.
{ from Adrienne Rich’s “Stepping Backward” }
How you left us is still hard to forget. How you loved us will be forever sweet to remember.
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