Saturday, March 29, 2008
Coworkerus Idiotus
me: By the way, Jim offered to translate Spanish for us.
her: How did you know that he speaks Spanish?
me: Well, he works in the Latin American Sales department, I sure hope he speaks Spanish!
her: Whats Latin America? Don't they speak Latin?
me [stifling laughter]: Um, you know, South America....where they speak Spanish. [and of course Portuguese, but why get into that] No one speaks Latin anymore.
Seriously, the dude's name is Jim, not Caesar. That the only name I could think of that would cause any such confusion.....can you imagine!? "Hola, como esta!? Bien, et tu Brutus?"
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
Hold Me Accountable, Tiny Dancer
1) Working out affects one's metabolism. I have the metabolism of a 24-year-old. To mess with that would clearly be akin to looking a gift horse in the mouth.
2) I never sweat. Ever. On my several attempts at working out, I have been a reluctant witness to the fact that it does, in fact, cause people to sweat. Sometimes profusely. Apparently it even activates sweat glands in people who normally don't sweat, so clearly I would be opening up quite a can of worms, the thought of which makes me nervous, but thankfully, not sweaty.
But most importantly, the following story illustrates why I can never go the gym again (and should probably avoid anything even mildly strenuous, just for good measure). The last time I was at the gym, I was participating in a hip hop dance class. I say "participating" in the sense that I was there and following along with the spotty comprehension of a tourist asking for directions in a foreign language, and I was definitely putting in enough effort to look ridiculously white, middle class, and straight. This is not the look you're going for in a hip hop dance class. But its the gym, and who cares what you look like, right? Anyone who looks okay looks out of place anyway (see bullet point #2). So I didn't think much about it until the next day at work when a guy who I'll call "Elton" said to me, "Hey, didn't I see you at the gym last night?" Now, statistically speaking, the odds of running into me at the gym are right up there with seeing Bigfoot, so my automatic response was "No, that wasn't me." But then of course I remembered my rendez-vous with Terrence-the-gay-dance-instructor. Unfortunately Elton continued with "Yeah, I saw you in an erotic dance class!" Now, I can't for the life of me think what Elton could have possibly considered erotic about anything I did in a class which included a move the instructor called "the retarded hula." So in a knee-jerk reaction, I blurted out, "It wasn't an erotic dance class! It was hip hop! Hip hop!!" "Aha!" he said. "So it was you." Damn. Immediately I flashed back to memories of my much-too-retarded Retarded Hula, girly pushups, and the move where the whole class spun clockwise and I, the lone left-hander, naturally spun counter-clockwise and nearly took out my neighbor's eye. Erotic?? How was someone supposed to take me seriously in the business world after witnessing that? Thankfully, Elton was headed out of the office, but not without a sly "See ya later, Tiny Dancer!" I am never going back to the gym. And possibly work.
Saturday, March 8, 2008
An Eye for a Guy
Monday, February 25, 2008
For your viewing pleasure...
Thursday, February 14, 2008
a squeaky-clean soapbox!
1) your = belongs to you. you're = you+are.
2) the letter "A" is not in the word "definitely"
whew! I feel better now...a little exposed, but definitely (no "A") better
falling for the catch
like the knight to Rapunzel
wanted me to come
said i was a catch
so i fell for you
and all the while
you knew you'd drop me
hoping i wouldn't catch on
but i'll hit the ground running
trying not to look back
now i'm off the pedestal
a million places to go
and you're still standing there
but with no one to hold
Wednesday, February 13, 2008
first post....The Beauty of Travel
Its no secret that traveling can wreak havoc on your looks. Just ask anyone who has stepped off a six hour flight (sans more than 3 ounces of cosmetics, of course) to be greeted by a bleary-eyed mess staring back at them in the airport bathroom mirror. Usually the flight itself is enough to make even the most gorgeous passenger look and feel like a deflated oxygen mask, but when a few friends and I traveled to Tonga last summer, I discovered that in terms of taming the beauty-stealing beast, getting there is half the battle.
Before actually getting to Tonga, our plane stopped in Samoa, or as I came to know it, Land Where the Little White Maiden Has Hair Bigger than Banyan Tree. Based off the presence of my morning breath and bed-head hairstyle, I determined that it was just before sunrise when we got there. Once the sun rose, which, that close to the equator is surprisingly fast, I got a good look at myself and my traveling companions. I was really grateful we weren't going to be greeted in Tonga like the Beckhams at LAX because we were not looking very posh. My clothes, which seemed very LA sloppy-chic when I left home that morning, were now coated with crumbs, juice, and the kind of wrinkles that can only be created by contortionist-style sleeping positions necessary for spending 12 hours in coach. But no matter. We didn't know anyone there anyway, and in just an hour we were back on the plane headed to Nukalofa.
Once we landed in Tonga's capital city, the first person I saw was dressed much sloppier than a paparazzo (which, if you've ever lived in LA's Westside, you know that is really saying something). He didn't have a camera in hand, thank God, but he did have two straw-impaled coconuts. And he certainly didn't seem to have any concern about appearances. At first glance, I thought he must have joined a cult...and it sure was nice of him to consider that his visitors would need some rum to ease their shock upon realizing what had happened to their open-minded friend...but then I realized his long hair and beard and dark conservative clothing were the results of living in Tonga for much too long. I'd say he had probably been there for about 6 months - with the Peace Corps, no doubt - and upon speaking with him for a moment I discovered he was, in fact, there with the Peace Corps and employed as a prison guard. He was wearing flip-flops and a long, dark, flowy skirt. That kind of outfit wouldn't go over well at any prison back in America. But the Tongan cultural aesthetic is different, which brings me back to my original point.
The process of getting somewhere to photograph beautiful sights is not always a pretty picture.



