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Writer's Block: At the Hour of Preference [Jul. 29th, 2008|09:48 pm]
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[feelin' a little... | sore]
[listenin' to... |'genius of love' -- the tom tom club]

What time of day is best? Why?

Submitted By [info]adosthebitty


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When left to my own devices, I'm your typical night owl, full of energy and creativity long after the sun goes down. In college, I fell into the unintentional habit of never starting any writing or homework until the late evening news came on, because I discovered that the hours between 11:00PM and 2:00AM were always the most productive. I'd sit at my desk typing away, while my roommate read or surfed the internet and Leno then O'Brien played softly in the background. The noisiness of the dorms would finally settle down around that time, so the environment was much more calm than during the day.

I feel more alive at night. I like the feeling of being inside, settled, safe and secure, but I also like to go outside when it's black and quietly observe the darkness and stillness all around. One of the worst things about having a traditional eight-to-five day job is its insistence on changing my internal clock. I am not a morning person and I will never be one, yet I have to get up at 6:30AM every morning to be at my desk by eight. Conversely, the times when I'm most ready to work -- that aforementioned three-hour window -- have to be spent in bed nowadays in order to rouse myself for the morning shift.

One of my favorite memories is of my first jaunt up I-65 on the way to Chicago, back in November 2005 for the Live & Electric Tour. It had grown late, and though we were still an hour from the city, the sky had taken on a reddish haze, an amalgam of the vast downtown's collective lights, visible even from a solid sixty miles back. By the time we were finally cruising the Skyway Toll, we were surrounded by huge, imposing black buildings dotted with tiny rectangles of light, the real-life equivalent of my childhood Lite-Brite.

When we finally checked into our hotel downtown -- around midnight -- we spent a good thirty minutes exploring its options, and we found a rooftop deck on the top floor, adjacent to the pool. Walking outside in the chilly November weather, I was a little overwhelmed, in a good way, by the beautiful nighttime cityscape. As Krystal, Chelsea, and Jennifer walked forward to the rails to peer out over the city, I hung back and grabbed a photo to capture the moment:




This was my first impression of Chicago -- lit up in its element, at night -- and I think it goes a long way to explain why I love that city.
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Writer's Block: Clumsiest moment [May. 19th, 2008|10:55 pm]
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What's your most embarrassing memory?


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When you have such a rich treasure trove of mortifying memories to choose from, how can you just settle on one? Is it the episode where I crashed and burned, flat-out face-planting into the concrete outside the Winchester theater just as the 7:00PM movies were letting out? Is it the time in college when I somehow won a ham raffle (Thanks, Dad, for submitting my name in the pot without asking) and had to go have my picture taken with a giant country ham to be published in our local paper? Or maybe when a loud, obnoxious, drunken redneck hissed at me in front of the Blue Moon with a good 50 people watching (after I turned down his offer of a date)? Or hey, that whole Taylor Hanson autograph business?

Nah. I wrote this several years ago, but I'm reprinting it for the purposes of answering the above question. :)




I’m not sure why I thought college would be different. Why, upon taking my first steps on the University of Kentucky’s campus, that all that irritating awkwardness and my tendency toward social blunders would magically disappear, just because I was officially an adult. As if the aura of UK’s enormous library, distinguished Administration Building, and award-winning Donovan Hall would rub off on me, filling me with a sense of dignity and purpose. Naturally, not long after arriving, I realized that the library was impossible to navigate, the Administration Building burned down, and Donovan Hall really had nasty showers.

I trudged out of Donovan’s set of fingerprint-smeared glass doors at 5:25, wrapping my light coat around me. In front of the dorm, several smokers sat on the large concrete platforms surrounding the dorm’s columns. I passed them, paying careful attention to wind-strewn debris on the sidewalk, so as not to trip and make a complete spectacle. I made my way to where the sidewalk met the road. Eric had given me specific instructions to wait there until he picked me up at 5:30. I stood there awkwardly, feeling sophomoric (ironic for a second-year student) and watching car after car swish past me without slowing down. Why couldn’t he just park and call me to meet him like a normal person? I checked my watch. 5:29. I felt like a little kid waiting at the bus stop, clutching her Strawberry Shortcake lunch box.

The little kid feeling was something I felt was a step in the wrong direction. College was all about maturity, right? I was supposed to become an independent, self-sufficient, graceful member of society, not some self-conscious girl anxiously waiting on a guy to drive her somewhere. Nevermind that they just sort of glossed over the parking situation at the university when I’d come for my visit. Oh, parking? Well, they have buses that come by and drive you all over campus, so you don’t have to walk! Yeah. Well, they forgot to mention that after the rush of classes was over, those buses made their rounds every half-hour at most. And that sometimes the people riding in that enclosed space were a hell of a lot scarier than the people you’d see if you simply walked. I found that out the hard way.

5:31. Directly to my left, a long-forgotten shrub stretched and flailed its limbs in the wind. Apparently, it once had a spherical sort of shape to it, but too many weeks sans haircut had passed and now the branches poked out over the sidewalk, scratching and smacking anyone who happened to stroll past or who stood on the sidewalk to wait for a ride. I briefly wondered why the university could afford to build million-dollar science buildings and parking structures but evidently couldn’t afford to hire a gardener to hack off a few limbs every couple of weeks.

What color did Eric say his car was? Green? Blue? I fervently wished I had more than a flea-sized attention span. My mother had always complained about it, and despite my best efforts to change, I remained as spacey as ever. Case in point: just last week, while in the midst of a particular fond daydream, I had been rammed into by a cyclist who felt the sidewalk was a more appropriate place to ride than the provided bike route.  

Plus, I hated talking on the phone. It provided far too many opportunities for distraction. I had an annoying habit of “zoning out” while others were talking. It’s not that I don’t care, usually I do, but some things just can’t be helped… especially when The Simpsons are on.

The wind was fierce. That’s another thing I felt I’d been misled about – hurricane-force gales whipping through the campus. Why hadn’t any upperclassmen giving a tour thought to tell us poor undergrads to invest in a full-size golf umbrella that wouldn’t blow inside out every five minutes? Or tell us not to even bother fixing our hair, because it would just look like stale hay by the time we got to class anyway? That’s what real campus life was all about.

5:38. Eric was officially eight minutes late. I shouldn’t have been surprised, because after all, he is a guy – and I had no room to talk, because after all, I’ve never been on time in my life. But I became more agitated, standing out on the sidewalk alone. I felt exposed, like everyone was staring. Like a hooker waiting for her next customer – shifting from side to side, hands on hips, eyes warily scanning every car that approached.

A dark green car drew near, slowing down carefully and pulling up right beside me. Hunter green, or maybe forest green. I’m no art major, I don’t know the finer nuances of the color wheel. The windows were dark-tinted, probably darker than legal. The sun was in my eyes, and I lifted my hands to shade them, trying to get a better look. The driver appeared to be male, dressed in a wrinkled white T-shirt, but his face was obscured by a wide tinted strip running across the top of the windshield. I made another quick watch check – 5:43 – and resolutely adjusted my purse strap over my shoulder. I marched the few short feet over to the passenger door and pulled on the handle, which was unlocked. I shoved the door open against a sudden gale of wind and flung myself into the car.

“Well, it’s about damn time. Now we’re gonna be late, and my hair looks like shit because I’ve had to stand out here in a tornado for 20 minutes,” I bitched to my driver. Unzipping my purse, I searched vainly for my Estee Lauder pressed powder and a comb. Eric didn’t respond. “Really. And what’s up with those bushes? They’re growing into monsters. They’ll be growing out into the road here pretty soon.”

From the corner of my eye, I noticed that we seemed to be completely stationary. I turned to Eric, about to demand to know why we weren’t moving.

Oh, shit. Now I see why.

A strange young boy sat silently in the driver’s seat. His eyes were wide and white, his knuckles discolored from gripping the black steering wheel. We stared at each other; he at me with horror, I at him with utter humiliation and shock.

“Uh,” I said slowly, my thoughts frantically racing to offer up some sort of reasonable excuse. My mind offered up a blank slate. Oh, screw reasonable, I’ve just got to say something. “Sorry about that.”

He did not respond, seemingly unable to move a single muscle in his skinny frame. He was frozen, like stone. I patted my hair self-consciously. Apparently the wind had given it a Medusa-like appearance. I shoved the door open and leaped out, muttering another half-hearted apology behind me as I walked away. Not really knowing how else to gracefully recover from such an indignity (I’m unaware of proper protocol after accidental carjackings) I walked back to my original spot and resumed my position. He’ll be gone in a minute, I reasoned.

Unfortunately, his car didn’t move, not an inch. I cringed, knowing he must be staring at me through that tinted glass. Why the hell isn’t he moving? I looked to the stop sign, four cars ahead of where I stood. I grimaced, fighting the urge to smack my forehead with my hand like they do in those overacted sitcoms.

Some idiot wanted to make a left-hand turn in five o’clock rush hour traffic. The cars were backed up and my new friend had nowhere to go. I thought long and hard for a moment as I studied the sky, the ground, the squirrel in the tree next to me, anything but that stupid green car. I had nightmarish visions of 11 o’clock news headlines like Teenage Boy Escapes After Assault, or at the very least, a little nugget in the Kernel Crime Report stating March 25, 5:43 PM: Attempted carjacking investigated at 100 Huguelet Drive. Female suspect.

I had a small, internal debate about walking away or hiding behind the bushes. I then decided that neither sounded like a particularly good idea. Besides, mature people don’t run. Or hide. They smile, accept their mistake, and move on. Right?

So instead of leaving, I became vastly intrigued with the intricacies of bark patterns on a nearby tree.

Eventually, the cars moved. I watched from the corner of my eye as the green car finally, thankfully, turned onto Rose and drove off. I cleared my throat and straightened up, surveying my surroundings. When I was certain that there was no one remaining who witnessed the incident, I relaxed. Inner poise, I thought, silently chanting Bridget Jones’ mantra. I neatly pulled down the hem of my jacket and carefully crossed my arms, trying to look casual.

A bleating horn startled me. I suspiciously looked over from the corner of my eye, just to make sure. I breathed a sigh of relief when I saw a silver, not green, Mitsubishi had finally rolled up next to me. The passenger side window whirred and lowered, and Eric’s maniacal grin peeked out at me. I smiled and started to walk over. Dignity recovered, I thought. Mission accomplished.

“HOW MUCH?” he shouted, loud enough for anyone within a 50-foot radius to hear. In my peripheral vision I noticed several pedestrians turning to look at me questioningly. Seething, I skulked over to the car and slid in. Any hope of a graceful exit had fled.

Well, if nothing else, college was teaching me to deal with my gaffes. And that’s what it’s all about – right?

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Writer's Block: Almost Famous [Apr. 22nd, 2008|10:31 pm]
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What do you want to be famous for?


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For writing something -- be it a novel, short story, memoir, op-ed piece, or even a feature article -- that people have read and thought, 'Yes... this, I can relate to.'
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Writer's Block: The Things We Carry [Mar. 12th, 2008|10:45 pm]
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[feelin' a little... | pensive]
[listenin' to... |'uncle john's band' -- indigo girls]

What do you always carry with you?


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In my old age, I have discovered (much to my chagrin) the need for a larger purse to carry all the little essentials in life. Rewetting drops for my contact lenses. Aleve for headaches or cramps. Tissues for runny noses. Some form of balm for cracked lips. Tampons for unexpectedly early monthly visitors. Money, of course, in varying forms. Pens for note-taking and check-writing. These are all givens. A purse basically becomes a Women's First Aid Kit as she gets older and wiser, ready to be whipped out at any sign of minor emergency or discomfort. "Oh, you have dry hands? Hang on, I have some lotion for that..."

But in addition to the reliable old standards, I carry a few things that may be a little more unique. I keep my camera in the side pocket of my purse, always ready for immediate deployment. Because you never know when an impossible-to-replicate moment is going to present itself. I had a dream the other night that I was in a house by the beach, looking out over the ocean. The sun began to drop because it was late in the day, spilling strands of bold, honeyed light all across the horizon. For a scant few moments, the entire sky was awash with gold, glowing magnificently like treasure out of a myth. I immediately ran into the house, searching frantically for my camera, because I knew the shot would be priceless, but I couldn't find it. By the time I finally discovered it, it was too late; the sun had dropped too low and the golden hues had faded to dusk. And even though that didn't really happen, it's no less of a lesson learned.

I also have a real four-leaf clover, flattened and preserved in a plastic sleeve of my wallet. During the Chemistry II class of my senior year in high school, the teacher had taken us out to the pond for an outdoor experiment (water testing, perhaps?). A small group of us sat in the grass, picking blades of grass to blow between our thumbs (a handy makeshift kazoo). Crystal, without even trying, simply reached down, plucked a tiny clover, and held it up for all of us to see. Four leafs, right off the bat. I think I must have asked to keep it, and that's why I ended up with it tucked away in my wallet... and hey, I still have it now, eight years later. It may not always bring me the best of luck, but it brings back good memories, and I'll take that any day.
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