...Not the kind of wheel you fall asleep at...

Two Quotes


"Home is where one starts from. As we grow older
The world becomes stranger, the pattern more complicated
Of dead and living. Not the intense moment
Isolated, with no before and after,
But a lifetime burning in every moment
And not the lifetime of one man only
But of old stones that cannot be deciphered.
There is a time for the evening under starlight,
A time for the evening under lamplight
(The evening with the photograph album).
Love is most nearly itself
When here and now cease to matter.
Old men ought to be explorers
Here or there does not matter
We must be still and still moving
Into another intensity
For a further union, a deeper communion
Through the dark cold and the empty desolation,
The wave cry, the wind cry, the vast waters
Of the petrel and the porpoise. In my end is my beginning."

--T.S. Eliot, "East Coker"


* * *



"Working long and hard at things that others consider ridiculous builds the muscles of nonconformity."

--David Gessner, "Benediction: On Being Boswell's Boswell"



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Jesus Shaves


by David Sedaris


"And what does one do on the fourteenth of July? Does one celebrate Bastille Day?"

It was my second month of French class, and the teacher was leading us in an exercise designed to promote the use of one, our latest personal pronoun.

"Might one sing on Bastille Day?" she asked. "Might one dance in the street? Somebody give me an answer."

Printed in our textbooks was a list of major holidays alongside a scattered arrangement of photos depicting French people in the act of celebration. The object was to match the holiday with the corresponding picture. It was simple enough but seemed an exercise better suited to the use of the word they. I didn't know about the rest of the class, but when Bastille Day eventually rolled around, I planned to stay home and clean my oven.

Normally, when working from the book, it was my habit to tune out my fellow students and scout ahead, concentrating on the question I'd calculated might fall to me, but this afternoon, we were veering from the usual format. Questions were answered on a volunteer basis, and I was able to sit back, confident that the same few students would do the talking. Today's discussion was dominated by an Italian nanny, two chatty Poles, and a pouty, plump Moroccan woman who had grown up speaking French and had enrolled in the class to improve her spelling. She'd covered these lessons back in the third grade and took every opportunity to demonstrate her superiority. A question would be asked and she'd give the answer, behaving as though this were a game show and, if quick enough, she might go home with a tropical vacation or a side-by-side refrigerator-freezer. By the end of her first day, she'd raised her hand so many times, her shoulder had given out. Now she just leaned back in her seat and shouted the answers, her bronzed arms folded across her chest like some great grammar genie.

We finished discussing Bastille Day, and the teacher moved on to Easter, which was represented in our textbook by a black-and-white photograph of a chocolate bell lying upon a bed of palm fronds.

"And what does one do on Easter? Would anyone like to tell us?"

The Italian nanny was attempting to answer the question when the Moroccan student interrupted, shouting, "Excuse me, but what's an Easter?"

Despite her having grown up in a Muslim country, it seemed she might have heard it mentioned once or twice, but no. "I mean it," she said. "I have no idea what you people are talking about."

The teacher then called upon the rest of us to explain.

The Poles led the charge to the best of their ability. "It is," said one, "a party for the little boy of God who call his self Jesus and . . . oh, shit."

She faltered, and her fellow countryman came to her aid.

"He call his self Jesus, and then he be die one day on two . . . morsels of . . . lumber."

The rest of the class jumped in, offering bits of information that would have given the pope an aneurysm.

"He die one day, and then he go above of my head to live with your father."

"He weared the long hair, and after he died, the first day he come back here for to say hello to the peoples."

"He nice, the Jesus."

"He make the good things, and on the Easter we be sad because somebody makes him dead today."

Part of the problem had to do with grammar. Simple nouns such as cross and resurrection were beyond our grasp, let alone such complicated reflexive phrases as "To give of yourself your only begotten son." Faced with the challenge of explaining the cornerstone of Christianity, we did what any self-respecting group of people might do. We talked about food instead.

"Easter is a party for to eat of the lamb," the Italian nanny explained. "One, too, may eat of the chocolate."

"And who brings the chocolate?" the teacher asked.

I knew the word, and so I raised my hand, saying, "The Rabbit of Easter. He bring of the chocolate."

My classmates reacted as though I'd attributed the delivery to the Antichrist. They were mortified.

"A rabbit?" The teacher, assuming I'd used the wrong word, positioned her index fingers on top of her head, wiggling them as though they were ears. "You mean one of these? A rabbit rabbit?"

"Well, sure," I said. "He come in the night when one sleep on a bed. With a hand he have the basket and foods."

The teacher sadly shook her head, as if this explained everything that was wrong with my country. "No, no," she said. "Here in France the chocolate is brought by the big bell that flies in from Rome."

I called for a time-out. "But how do the bell know where you live?"

"Well," she said, "how does a rabbit?"

It was a decent point, but at least a rabbit has eyes. That's a start. Rabbits move from place to place, while most bells can only go back and forth--and they can't even do that on their own power. On top of that, the Easter Bunny has character; he's someone you'd like to meet and shake hands with. A bell has all the personality of a cast-iron skillet. It's like saying that come Christmas, a magic dustpan flies in from the North Pole, led by eight flying cinder blocks. Who wants to stay up all night so they can see a bell? And why fly one in from Rome when they've got more bells than they know what to do with right here in Paris? That's the most implausible aspect of the whole story, as there's no way the bells of France would allow a foreign worker to fly in and take their jobs. That Roman bell would be lucky to get work cleaning up after a French bell's dog -and even then he'd need papers. It just didn't add up.

Nothing we said was of any help to the Moroccan student. A dead man with long hair supposedly living with her father, a leg of lamb served with palm fronds and chocolate. Confused and disgusted, she shrugged her massive shoulders and turned her attention back to the comic book she kept hidden beneath her binder. I wondered then if, without the language barrier, my classmates and I could have done a better job making sense of Christianity, an idea that sounds pretty far-fetched to begin with.

In communicating any religious belief, the operative word is faith, a concept illustrated by our very presence in that classroom. Why bother struggling with the grammar lessons of a six-year-old if each of us didn't believe that, against all reason, we might eventually improve? If I could hope to one day carry on a fluent conversation, it was a relatively short leap to believing that a rabbit might visit my home in the middle of the night, leaving behind a handful of chocolate kisses and a carton of menthol cigarettes. So why stop there? If I could believe in myself, why not give other improbabilities the benefit of the doubt? I accepted the idea that an omniscient God had cast me in his own image and that he watched over me and guided me from one place to the next. The virgin birth, the resurrection, and the countless miracles -my heart expanded to encompass all the wonders and possibilities of the universe.

A bell, though, that's fucked up.



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Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter.

-Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.



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I Said Jump! Down on Jump Street!


Back in primary school, one of my favorite shows to watch each week was the sweet-ass 21 Jump Street. For those of you not familiar with the show, it was *THE BEST SHOW EVER*. In it, an undercover police unit of younger cops masquerades as high schoolers to bust crime in the schools. Officer Tom Hanson (played by Johnny Depp) was one of my first ever crushes. He was hot and oh so bad ass.







I found out a week or so ago that they actually HAVE the show on dvd, so I of course immediately ordered it from the library. It is one of the most fantastically terrible shows I've seen in a long long while. I now walk around shouting "Spit on you, man! Spit on you!" because of it--that's some Oscar-winning screen-writing. I mean, just listen to the theme song and try not to cry with laughter:

THEME SONG


Ahh, the '80's. How you torture us so.*


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*Officer Hanson (aka Johnny Depp) is *still* wicked hot on that show, despite the fact that it's so horribly '80's. In yesterday's episode, he hooked up with his English teacher. Oh, to be that English teacher.



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Happy Anniversary to Me


Just recently, a friend of mine confessed to me that she really wasn't sure whether she could date a non-vegetarian. She told me this in a slightly-embarassed manner, questioning whether or not it was strange and wrong that she felt this way. This came at a time when I was (and am) celebrating my tenth year of vegetarianism (two of which were years spent as a vegan). Ten fucking years. I don't give a shit whether or not it's self-indulgent, but I'm patting myself on the back for that. That's more than 1/3 of my life. It also coincides with my adoption of my two cats who were previously strays who hung out in my yard (and which I found myself in awe of, being that I am shocked on pretty much a daily basis about the extremely potent feelings of love I have for the two of them). It also happens to coincide with a discussion I just recently had with a co-worker about Vitamin B12 and her children's semi-vegetarianism. And even moreso, it coincides with my viewing this Saturday of a short film called "The Witness"--a film that surprised me even while it told me something that I already knew.

It is strange how sometimes you can only pick a star out of the sky when you stop staring so intently at it and look away to other things. Only then does it suddenly blaze bright out of the corner of your eye. Only while not so focused on its energies are you able to read its light.

I was thinking this on Saturday night, not realizing how this notion was going to come to interconnect so intimately with the sudden epiphany brought on by the film I saw--here I was with my vegetarianism so strongly in the foreground of my brain that only once I looked away from it, once I saw these things as new again--the pain, the suffering that drew me to it--that I was able to recognize its light again. And its light doesn't just encompass vegetarianism anymore--the sudden epiphany that eggs, milk, and other animal by-products lend it its fuel as well.

So, weirdly and suddenly this weekend, in a move not far removed from those cartoon characters that step on a rake in the grass whose handle shoots upwards from the motion, smacking them right between the eyes, I've decided I need to attempt the road of veganism again. This scares me. All Saturday night and Sunday it scared me and I could think about little else.

It's a fucking hard thing to do. I say this not to pat myself on the back, not to win your admiration, not for any of those reasons. I say it because it IS a fucking hard thing to do, and I *AM* fallible and so I'm fucking scared that I won't have the willpower. I'm scared because this sudden realization coincides with other major changes in my life that I've implemented over the last couple months (the cats, That Which Will Not Be Spoken of Here, etc.). I'm scared and intimidated.

But goddamn if I'm not gonna try my hardest again on this one. I need to.

I don't think I'm better than anyone else. I don't. I sure as *shit* am not perfect. But I do think that I'm doing the right thing when it comes to being vegetarian. This doesn't mean that I think less of you for eating meat. But it also doesn't mean that I'm gonna feign that I don't think there's a "right path" on this one--because I do.

I've been brainwashed by meat-eaters (and by some vegetarians too, sadly enough) to think that it's not alright for me to talk about how meat-eating is wrong, even if a meat-eater opens the door to that discussion, through poking fun, through nastiness.

I've been guilt-tripped into that for much too long, having to quietly take it up the ass from meat-eaters in an attempt to dispel the myth that all vegetarians constantly think they're better than everyone else and constantly feel the need to lecture everyone else. I've sat next to plenty a meat-eater for years and years while they eat a big ol' sloppy plate of meat and I've not said a word, and yet I *STILL* get crapped on. I don't feel the need to comment on *YOUR* eating habits each time I go out to eat with you, so shut the hell up about mine.

There is not one of us vegetarians that's vegetarian just so we can rub it in your face. Just like there's none of you folks who are pro-choice, pro-life, anti-Bush, pro-the war, etc. for the sole reason that you want to rub it in the opposing side's face. And if you actually think that, you are just goddamn being silly. You are these things because you feel strongly about them, just like we're vegetarian because we feel strongly about vegetarianism--the majority of us feel passionately about animal rights. So stop convincing yourself that this is why we choose to not eat meat, that we like to sit around and think we're better than you, because who in their right mind would waste their time and energy completely changing their diet for only that reason? I mean, goddamn, I can sit there and think that right now without having to change ANYthing about my life. =)

Instead of picking on us vegetarians, instead of poking fun, instead of rolling your big stupid eyes, recognize that vegetarianism is hard work and give us a fucking break. Recognize that the major reason that you are *NOT* a vegetarian is because you KNOW and RECOGNIZE it is hard work and that you don't have the willpower to take that step. And instead of giving us crap, give us a goddamn encouraging word for once, a pat on the back, a little sparkle in your eye of admiration for the fact that we have the willpower to do something that you have not had the willpower to do yourself. And if you can't take it that far, at least just hold back the joke, silence yourself when you're about to make fun.

Most of you know where I stand on vegetarianism and animal rights. Those of you I love and am friends with have at some point in time argued with me about my vegetarianism or at least sat and listened to me ramble on about it. And (I hope) most of you recognize that I'm not the kind of person who sits around and lectures people every time they eat meat in my presence.

But on this, my tenth year of vegetarianism, I say once and for all, to those of you I love, and I say it this once only, so you know and I don't have to say it again and listen to you roll your eyes and talk about the "high horses" of vegetarians:

  • I think meat-eating is wrong.


  • I think meat-eating is lazy.
    "In any case, the idea that "humans come first" is more often used as an excuse for not doing anything about either human or nonhuman animals than as a genuine choice between incompatible alternatives. For the truth is that there is no incompatibility here... there is nothing to stop those who devote their time and energy to human problems from joining the boycott of the products of agribusiness cruelty... [W]hen nonvegetarians say that "human problems come first" I cannot help wondering what exactly it is that they are doing for human beings that compels them to continue to support the wasteful, ruthless exploitation of farm animals.""
    --Peter Singer


  • I would never date a meat-eater (and in fact never have). I don't even think I'd *fuck* a meat-eater. Call it my own personal protest, minus the picket-signs.


  • It makes me sad (not in any condescending sort of way, but because I know how it is) to see all you anti-authoritarian, "fuck the man and his corporations" folks (who question, who are disgusted with the state of our country, who are disgusted to be the pawns of propaganda, who are wickedly intelligent) to allow yourselves to be brainwashed by a huge (and hugely lame) industry such as the meat industry. It amazes and scares me (though I do understand because I was a pawn at some point too) that meat-eating is pounded so completely into our head from such a young age that many of us never really reach a point where we realize that it is something that *CAN* be questioned.

    There are tons of folks who are against the war in Iraq because of the torture and death that goes along with such a war. There are tons of you who are against capital punishment for the same reasons, against abortion as well. And yet, you don't bat an eyelash at eating meat. You complain about how you're stuck funding a war with your tax-money, funding death and destruction that disgusts you to your very core. You don't have much choice on that one--pay your taxes or go to jail. And yet you WILLINGLY shell out money to an industry whose very existence rests on the need for this death and destruction. The meat industry is one of the few industries that relies on death in order to stay in business. The funeral home industry is another, but those folks aren't going out and killing people just so they can keep the money rolling in for themselves. The meat industry would not be here were it not for the fact that they've made death an industry. They are making money off of killing beings and hording it in their big corporate pockets, and that is nothing but fucked up.

    In all these other realms--abortion, capital punishment, the war in Iraq, the fact that death and what some perceive as torture/cruelty is involved opens the door for these issues to be a question of morality. Is capital punishment a moral response to an immoral action? Or is it equally immoral? Meat-eating has cruelty and death at its very core as well, making it also a moral issue. And yet, it is the only moral issue whose viewpoint is a whisp of ethereal vapors in the air. There are books and books and books and essays and essays and essays written to protest the practice of abortion. There are books and books and books and essays and essays and essays written in defense of abortion. Same with capital punishment. Same with the war in Iraq. There are books and books and books and essays and essays and essays written in support of vegetarianism/against the meat-industry. But I'd like you to show me even *ONE* book that dedicates itself to offering an argument in support of meat-eating that really just makes you stop and think, that makes you go, well, damn, I'm glad I make the active decision to eat meat (and it *IS* an active decision). I'd like you to show me one book that even ATTEMPTS this, even if not doing the best of jobs in defending this viewpoint. You'd be hard-pressed to, let me tell you. Don't you wonder why that is?

    Don't ask yourself what reasons you have for not being vegetarian. Ask yourself what good concrete justifications you have for being in support of eating meat. These are two hugely different questions. I can list off a multitude of reasons not to be vegetarian--if you don't get your daily balance of vitamins and nutrients, it can leave you feeling off-kilter and even affect your health; it's a difficult thing to do; it is more expensive than eating meat, etc. But I can't think of one good reason *TO* eat meat. Heart attacks. No. Potential illnesses stemming from the fact that the meat industry has some of the shittiest regulations in existence. No. Unnecessary killing of animals. No. Supporting the mistreatment/suffering of workers. No. Shelling out money to a huge disturbing disgusting industry that makes money off of death and torture. No.

    Perhaps this is because the justification for eating meat ultimately comes down to the following reasoning: Because I wanna! And this is a sad attitude--it's an attitude akin to little kids in a toy store who scream their bloody guts out because they feel that they are deserving of a new barbie or bike just because they want it. It's an attitude that parents and educators spend tons of time trying to beat out of these children's heads by saying, time and again, "That's not a good enough reason." And really, it's not.

    I challenge you to compose for me a developed argument in support of eating meat--not an argument that rests on picking apart vegetarianism, but one that offers a cogent line of reasoning for eating meat. And if you can't, I challenge you to question why that is. I challenge you to pick up Slaughterhouse by Gail Eisnitz and read it, to jump around on the PETA website (I may disagree with how their organization chooses to endorse vegetarianism, but the pictures and stories they show/tell about factory farming are true), Mercy for Animals, Veg for Life, etc. (folks, this shit *isn't* sensationalism--these are the cold, hard, unbiased facts of the matter) and educate yourself (look at the pics, read the testimonials about what's involved in what you choose to eat) and then continue to eat meat if you so choose, but at least do it as an informed consumer. I challenge you. Right here and right now.

    That is all I have to say about the subject. You now officially know where I stand, on this tenth year of my vegetarianism. I don't look down upon you for eating meat. Beyond this blog entry, I feel no need to lift my voice to "lecture" you again about why I think eating meat is wrong. *UNLESS* you open that door. If you open your mouth to criticize me for being vegetarian, if you say something making fun of the tofu on my plate, if you joke about slipping meat into my food, if you as much as roll your eyes, you *ARE* opening that door, and I am *NOT* gonna shut the fuck up.

    You feast on your plate of flesh. I know where you stand on the topic. You now know where I stand. But do not even *BREATHE* a word about my eating habits, because goddamn if I'm not feeling like the Ali of the veggie world this year, this month, this week, this day, and I *WILL* fuck you up.

    Happy anniversary to me. =)



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  • Joyas Voladores


    by Brian Doyle
    (from the August 2004 issue of American Scholar)


    Consider the hummingbird for a long moment. A hummingbird's heart beats ten times a second. A hummingbird's heart is the size of a pencil eraser. A hummingbird's heart is a lot of the hummingbird. Joyas voladores, flying jewels, the first white explorers in the Americas called them, and the white men had never seen such creatures, for hummingbirds came into the world only in the Americas, nowhere else in the universe, more than three hundred species of them whirring and zooming and nectaring in hummer time zones nine times removed from ours, their hearts hammering faster than we could clearly hear if we pressed our elephantine ears to their infinitesimal chests.

    Each one visits a thousand flowers a day. They can dive at sixty miles an hour. They can fly backwards. They can fly more than five hundred miles without pausing to rest. But when they rest they come close to death: on frigid nights, or when they are starving, they retreat into torpor, their metabolic rate slowing to a fifteenth of their normal sleep rate, their hearts sludging nearly to a halt, barely beating, and if they are not soon warmed, if they do not soon find that which is sweet, their hearts grow cold, and they cease to be. Consider for a moment those hummingbirds who did not open their eyes again today, this very day, in the Americas: bearded helmetcrests and booted racket-tails, violet-tailed sylphs and violet-capped woodnymphs, crimson topazes and purple-crowned fairies, red-tailed comets and amethyst woodstars, rainbow-bearded thornbills and glittering-bellied emeralds, velvet-purple coronets and golden-bellied star-frontlets, fiery-tailed awlbills and Andean hillstars, spatuletails and pufflegs, each the most amazing thing you have never seen, each thunderous wild heart the size of an infant's fingernail, each mad heart silent, a brilliant music stilled.

    Hummingbirds, like all flying birds but more so, have incredible enormous immense ferocious metabolisms. To drive those metabolisms they have race-car hearts that eat oxygen at an eye-popping rate. Their hearts are built of thinner, leaner fibers than ours. Their arteries are stiffer and more taut. They have more mitochondria in their heart muscles -- anything to gulp more oxygen. Their hearts are stripped to the skin for the war against gravity and inertia, the mad search for food, the insane idea of flight. The price of their ambition is a life closer to death; they suffer heart attacks and aneurysms and ruptures more than any other living creature. It's expensive to fly. You burn out. You fry the machine. You melt the engine. Every creature on earth has approximately two billion heartbeats to spend in a lifetime. You can spend them slowly, like a tortoise, and live to be two hundred years old, or you can spend them fast, like a hummingbird, and live to be two years old.

    The biggest heart in the world is inside the blue whale. It weighs more than seven tons. It's as big as a room. It is a room, with four chambers. A child could walk around in it, head high, bending only to step through the valves. The valves are as big as the swinging doors in a saloon. This house of a heart drives a creature a hundred feet long. When this creature is born it is twenty feet long and weighs four tons. It is waaaaay bigger than your car. It drinks a hundred gallons of milk from its mama every day and gains two hundred pounds a day and when it is seven or eight years old it endures an unimaginable puberty and then it essentially disappears from human ken, for next to nothing is known of the mating habits, travel patterns, diet, social life, language, social structure, diseases, spirituality, wars, stories, despairs, and arts of the blue whale. There are perhaps ten thousand blue whales in the world, living in every ocean on earth, and of the largest mammal who ever lived we know nearly nothing. But we know this: the animals with the largest hearts in the world generally travel in pairs, and their penetrating moaning cries, their piercing yearning tongue, can be heard underwater for miles and miles.

    Mammals and birds have hearts with four chambers. Reptiles and turtles have hearts with three chambers. Fish have hearts with two chambers. Insects and mollusks have hearts with one chamber. Worms have hearts with one chamber, although they may have as many as eleven single-chambered hearts. Unicellular bacteria have no hearts at all; but even they have fluid eternally in motion, washing from one side of the cell to the other, swirling and whirling. No living being is without interior liquid motion. We all churn inside.

    So much held in a heart in a lifetime. So much held in a heart in a day, an hour, a moment. We are utterly open with no one, in the end -- not mother and father, not wife or husband, not lover, not child, not friend. We open windows to each but we live alone in the house of the heart. Perhaps we must. Perhaps we could not bear to be so naked, for fear of a constantly harrowed heart. When young we think there will come one person who will savor and sustain us always; when we are older we know this is the dream of a child, that all hearts finally are bruised and scarred, scored and torn, repaired by time and will, patched by force of character, yet fragile and rickety forevermore, no matter how ferocious the defense and how many bricks you bring to the wall. You can brick up your heart as stout and tight and hard and cold and impregnable as you possibly can and down it comes in an instant, felled by a woman's second glance, a child's apple breath, the shatter of glass in the road, the words I have something to tell you, a cat with a broken spine dragging itself into the forest to die, the brush of your mother's papery ancient hand in a thicket of your hair, the memory of your father's voice early in the morning echoing from the kitchen where he is making pancakes for his children.



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    Today I am in the mood to be a Transformer: Robot in Disguise. One that transforms into a large van (perhaps a Baggin' Wagon of sorts). Oooh. Either that or one that changes into a praying mantis.



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    What I Wish My Brain Looked Like Under a Very Powerful Microscope






    We have to listen to the child we once were, the child who still exists inside us. That child understands magic moments. We can stifle its cries, but we cannot silence its voice. The child we once were is still there. Blessed are the children, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. If we are not reborn – if we cannot learn to look at life with the innocence and the enthusiasm of childhood – it makes no sense to go on living.

    --Paul Coelho



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    Lost Limbs and Gushing Blood


    Last night was a night of strange dreams. My grey cat, Zooey, was playing with a plastic bottle of some sort and her lip got stuck between a couple of the pieces of plastic tight in the rim. She started to panic and, before I was able to extract her lip from it, she'd pulled away and ripped what I though was her lip off. It turned out not to be her lip but her paw instead. It fell out of the bottle and onto the floor, and I twisted around to see her leg and whether it was gushing blood everywhich way, but she'd panicked and run off quickly, or moreso wobbled, given that she only had 3 feet now and one was lying on the floor in front of me.

    I ran to put the foot in something to wisk her off to the vet and hopefully have it reattached. I felt like such a terrible pet-owner. As I ran off to do so, I leaned over, and suddenly blood started pouring from my mouth. I cupped my palm up in front of my mouth to catch it so it wouldn't spill all over the kitchen floor, thinking it was just a light drip. But it quickly spilled over my palm which had filled up with the dark blood. I thought my lip was bleeding, but really, it was a kind of sore/hole under my tongue that was just POURING out blood.

    Suddenly, J.D. (Zach Braff's character on Scrubs--yes, I've been watching *way* too much Scrubs) stepped on something, effectively slicing open his foot. (When he entered the dream, I have no clue--but I was no longer in my apartment and blood was no longer pouring from my mouth. I was still concerned about Zooey's foot, however.) He was woozy from the blood-loss, so we realized we should wisk him off to the hospital. I had no clue where the hospital was and we ended up at Marymount, which I was told by him (once he came to) was not in fact a hospital. We tried it just to make sure, but it looked like a large mall. We took the escalators up and down, confusing the up for the down on the way back. He was acting totally fine now and he didn't appear to be affected by the blood loss, so he and whoever else was accompanying us suggested stopping somewhere in Marymount (which was now a mall) to grab food. I was pissed because they'd dragged me out there for nothing and my cat was sitting at home with no foot, all because of me.

    J.D. was both my ex- and my brother.



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    Oh Angelina


    So I long ago grew out of my Angelina Jolie phase (which many of you will be thrilled about)--she's not even on my personal harem list anymore, for those of you not paying close attention to its waxing and waning... She's become much too expectedly unexpected, and all desire has been snuffed.

    But I saw this quote on my Wild Words from Wild Women calendar this morning, and I couldn't help but smile--it's like we share the same brain:

    "When other little girls wanted to be ballet dancers I kind of wanted to be a vampire."



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    Holy Paul


    This morning I got up and took a 20-minute shit before work. There was a lot of grunting and moaning. A couple times I think I may have spoken in tongues. Finally I birthed a 12-inch log. I named him Paul Gennessee Dunnegan, III. You will build a temple for him and worship daily.



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    Self-Fucking-Indulgent


    Some days I read blogs (both mine and others') and think, goddamn, do these people *really* think we give that much of a shit about every piddly little detail of their menial existence? I mean, why not document the 20 minute shit you took before leaving for work this morning? And then why not take a picture of it while you're at it? Then again, maybe I'm just grouchy, I say, fully aware of the fact that by saying as much, I'm expecting YOU to give a shit about that piddly little detail of *my* menial existence as well.

    Irony.*



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    *I suspect this is not really irony, but *I. DON'T. CARE.*



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    Yeah. That.


    I am so grouchy this morning that little could please me short of setting something on fire or spontaneous human combustion.



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    "Sometimes it's a form of love just to talk to somebody that you have nothing in common with and still be fascinated by their presence."
    --David Byrne



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    Tired Thursday Ramblings, Or Disorder in an Ordered Universe, Or Why God Hates You, Bronson Pinchot


    I think I have a thing for patterns. When I was little, my gifted teacher used to tell me that I had an unusual balance between logic and creativity--kids usually are more predisposed to one over the other, but apparently I've got (or once had) equal footing in both. *toot toot fart fart* And consequently, I always liked those stupid games where you have to figure out whether it was Sue, Nancy, or Fifi who ate the cow, hotdog, wristwatch in the bedroom, kitchen, toilet bowl based on what you are able to piece together based on the meager facts that are given. Nowadays, I find myself most enjoying brief respites in my mundane daily work that come in the form of trying to piece together patterns in the aforementioned mundane daily work and making adjustments accordingly. And often I find myself gleefully enjoying these kinds of moments in "the real world" as well, while driving down the street or listening to a cd or bantering playfully back and forth with someone. In my anal-retentive child-brain, this pleases it like nothing else. I love love love recognizing sudden moments where things fall into place and a tiny bit of order in the universe is exposed in a delicate un-penis-sticking-out-of-fly kinda way. There is something beautiful and god-like in doing so, like delicately sewing together the thinnest sheerest piecest of cloth with a skein of spider web that's wrapped around your pinky. Or wait. Maybe it's moreso like the moment you make it across the tight-rope that's dangling precariously over the Niagara and finally step on solid-ground after minutes of trembling, breath-holding gloriousness. Not like I'd know what either really feels like because it's all just speculation. But it is rewarding work.

    Problem is, I like the little titty-perk that comes with recognizing these patterns in everything, and after a while, this gets kinda irritating. For both me and other people. For example, patterns in people's behavior--I dig that psychological shit and find myself pointing out to people fairly frequently what the behavior they exhibit means based on the same behavior exhibited in 15 other people I've known. Problem is, this gets to be reductive. It doesn't account for chaos. It doesn't account for the fact that a person's behaviour might be an exception to the rule. It doesn't allow for uniqueness, which is something I of course treasure. And it also leads to over-analysis of EVERY FUCKING LITTLE THING.

    Conclusion: perhaps stereotyping = failure to acknowledge that oftentimes order is chaotic and vice versa.

    Conclusion Part Deux = despite my self-disgust, recognizing these patterns and what they could POSSIBLY mean is sometimes a good thing, when you're recognizing it in yourself.

    Conclusion 3 = STOP OVER-FUCKING-ANALYZING EVERYTHING. Patterns cannot be placed on *everything* everyone says and does, you stupid stupid girl.

    Conclusion D = Nobody has any clue what you're trying to say here, and neither do you, so stop while the getting's good or the going's good or whatever it is that's good in that stupid expression.

    I am tired today. Very tired. Very very tired.

    The new Strokes cd makes me wanna shag all day.

    And right now, I could go for a nice bowl of cereal. Instead I will have soup.

    Shit cock fuck.



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    I don't want what you want
    I don't feel what you feel
    See I'm stuck in a city
    But I belong in a field

    --The Strokes, "Heart in a Cage"



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    Endnote


    It is funny and strange to me, the obligatory note at the end of films--"The characters and incidents portrayed and the names used herein are fictitious and any resemblance to the names, character, or history of any person is coincidental and unintentional"--particularly when many of us go to the movies in a desperate attempt to find a character we connect with, an "every (wo)man," a character who *is* us.

    Legalities=shams.



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    Musicians Whose Voices I'd Like to Lay in Bed and Cuddle with on a Cold Winter Morning Just a Little While Longer, Even If It Meant Being Late to Work


  • Peter Gabriel

  • Guy Garvey from Elbow

  • Jeff Buckley

  • Meshell Ndegeocello

  • Nick Drake

  • Thom Yorke from Radiohead

  • Sufjan Stevens

  • Ben Folds

  • Ryan Adams


  • -------




    Musicians Whose Voices I'd Like to Fuck


  • Julian Casablancas of The Strokes

  • Jim Morrison

  • Beck

  • Robert Plant

  • Nina Simone

  • Fiona Apple


  • -------




    Tender


    For some reason, when I'm sitting real peacefully on my couch, my kittens resting in my lap, all quiet and sleepy, and I fart really loud, both my kittens will look upstairs.

    I have no idea why this is.

    But as a consequence, I fart a *LOT* more than I ever used to.



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    What I Did on My Christmas Vacation


    By Lindy Loo


    I was on vacation for 11 whole days. It was fun. My family came over for Christmas. They brought lots of food. It was good. I like food. I got lots of presents. I like presents too. Each day of My Christmas Vacation, I hung out with two different people. I hung out with old friends I haven't seen in a long time. I hung out with friends I see a lot. It was nice. I met my friend Michele at Arabica. She told me a story about a woman putting baby eels into her anus. Then we went to Friendly's. They have good iced tea. I ate lots of food all week. Especially chocolate. Chocolate makes me happy. And hyper. On Friday, I beat my friend at pool. He was not so good so we took a picture of his butt-crack. I am not allowed to show it. I'd get into trouble. Butt-cracks are funny. They are also good sometimes, but not as good as chocolate. I played Candy Land with my brother and sisters and E on Thursday. There were not enough pieces, so my brother was a knife. We laughed a lot even though knives don't make good pieces. I won. I got double-purple. My friend Kristen has a cat. Her name is Priscilla. I pet her on Thursday. She is large and black and fluffy and plays with pens. I also made New Years Resolutions. They are a secret though. If you tell them to someone, they won't come true. So I am not telling. No matter how much money and chocolate people offer me. My cat is in love with my friend Maura's hair. She rolls around in it and her face looks happy and funny like my mom's did the time I walked in on her and my daddy playing "tent" with the bed blankets. Maura gives good presents. So does my friend E. He gave me so many cool things for Christmas. I gave him things too. He liked them. He has freckles and is nice to me. He also likes pizza. This was the best Christmas vacation ever!!!!!!!

    The End



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