I’m a Magpie
I stayed up til a little past seven this morning, working on the final paper for one of my classes. I got up three hours later, and I swear all I must’ve done while I was sleeping was dream my way through the paper and wander some dreamscape paper cut-out of my house, because all day long I’ve been plagued by deja vu. My darling seester likes deja vu, because she thinks it means she’s on the right track. And so all day I’ve felt oddly reassured, even though part of me worries that this is some sort of Donnie Darko scenario, where I’ve already been squished by a plane toilet in some alternate reality, and the reality I’m experiencing is just some faint echo of my last days. Or maybe I just need a nap. |
Brian and I have just gotten back from a gallery talk, and are hanging out in his studio, settling down for a long winter’s paper writing and sculpture carving. All of a sudden, we hear voices in the alley. Drunk voices, yelling “Whaddaya doing?” “I’m peeing!” “We’re all peeing!” In unison, we spring in to action. Brian goes for the door, I hit the lights. Two women are squatting in the alley, pants around their ankles, their bottoms glowing in the moonlight like the face of the Timex watch I used to wear back in college. “Uh oh,” one cries, her bare bottom disappearing around the corner and into the darkness. “Uh oh!” |
Here it is again, the hotses and notses for the week, inspired, as always, by Loobylu: Hot: Library school: Like, sizzly hot. Like water sputtering across a hot pan hot. Like, too much work to even think about hot. Plus it’s time to select courses for next semester. How much can I realistically put on my plate? And the reference class I wanted to take is all full up. Poop. Not: Communication: My cell phone’s still MIA (I’m sure it’s around here someplace, but where?). I can’t access one of my email accounts. Seriously, how much more out of touch with my life could I be? And speaking of which: NaBloPoMo: As you may have noticed, I fell off the blogging wagon for two days running. So much for blogging every day in November. Oh well. It’s not like I ever win any of the prizes anyway. |
More from the Social and Cultural History database:Letter from Lydia Maria Child to Anne Lynch Botta, 1839
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May I present: Owl in a Box! (Found via the ever-enlightening Mimi Smartypants). And can I just tell you that the first owl photo looks disconcertingly like Brian when he’s annoyed? (And how is it I never noticed that I’ve paired off with X the Owl? Does that make me Henrietta Pussycat, meow meow? And while we’re comparing people to puppets, have you seen this?). I’ve got three assignments due this weekend, and I still can’t find my phone. Over and out. |
I think he must have rolled in something at the park. OOoo-eeee! In other news, I haven’t seen my cell phone in two days. And my (main) computer up and died on me. Reviving the computer and recovering the therin looks to be a bit spendy, so I’ve decided just to sit on my dead computer for now (not literally. That’d be weird). I’ve got my cheap and tiny pc, and right now nothing’s on my Mac that I need too desperately. Luckily, it died at just-the-right moment in the semester: there’s nothing on it that hasn’t been turned in or can’t be recreated quickly and easily. And there’s a scrap-it-all luddite inside me who feels kind of liberated. Computer breaks? Computer gone! Ha! |
I was walking along Walter Street today when a big gust of wind blew past, scattering leaves and papers and making a cute toddler, who was tromping sturdily along the curb and holding her father’s hand, giggle and clap with delight. It was just getting dark, and as I looked up at the porch lights of the houses, admiring the dark stained glass panes on the doors and decorating imaginary homes with dark, cozy rooms, I got such a feeling of there-ness, of Cambridge, or Somerville, of streets and houses and fall nights, and the snow and the smell of it, and oh, I just wanted to go home. Home home, twenty years ago home (though now that I think of it, not twenty years ago, because twelve was kind of awkward). Anyway, Christmas will be here soon enough, and Brian and I will be holed up in my old bedroom, and I can sit awake at night and look out over the porch roof at the bright pools the streetlights make on the snow. That’ll be nice. |
Just when Library School was getting all dry and stressy, the simple joys of research come to the rescue. Among the many cool databases my school library subscribes to, I found Alexander Publishing’s North American Women’s Letters and Diaries collection. Which is basically just what it sounds like: a database of letters and diaries, all available online with full text and searchable by date, subject and author, as well as historical and personal events. I searched for mentions of the Titanic’s sinking, and ran across this letter (written on my birthday, as it happens), that I knew was written by a Quaker before I even got past the date:
From Hobbs, Mary Mendenhall, 1852-1930, Letter from Mary Mendenhall Hobbs to Gertrude Mendenhall Hobbs Körner, April 23, 1912, in Letters to Gertrude, 1910-1913.. Shamburger, Mary I.. Philadelphia, PA: John C. Winston & Co., 1936, pp. 175. [Bibliographic Details] [4-23-1912] S7477-D095 And there you have it: history, happening someplace offstage while meanwhile at home the yard work gets done and the dogwood and Judas Trees are blooming at Virginia Ragsdale’s house and no one has time to listen to Teddy Roosevelt. |
Things I have: 1. A computer that won’t start 2. A back up computer (thank goodness) 3. A headache. 4. Two assignments due tomorrow, two more this weekend. 5. A slipping GPA. |
Scientists agree global warming is real. Scientists agree world faces mass extinction. Scientists agree it’s in his kiss. Scientists agree ocean acidification is caused by humans. Scientists agree Denny’s is dangerous. Scientists agree — Star Trek wins. |
I'm a freelance writer and perpetual graduate student living in San Francisco. Special skills include dog charming, brochure writing, slapdash cooking and long-winded nattering. I also enjoy watching the sunset reflected in the tall buildings downtown.
For a while there, I taught classes on Classical literature, philosophy, and the history of religion at New College of California. I have an MA and an MFA in Writing, and started library school in the fall of 2009.