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8.31.2008

Stace, you know how you said...

...that the reason it worked with Nick the second go round is because you learned how to cook?

Well, I'm in trouble.

I tried tonight I really did. And the thing is, I want to like cooking. Trust me, it's not for lack of desire that I constantly come up short.


Dumplings. Sounds easy enough right?

Wrong.

They take much too much time to boil. Then, you put them in a frying pan slicked with a tiny, seemingly miniscule amount of oil and the little devils cause that oil to spring up onto your poor, unsuspecting arms and hands.

This was after I lost two of the little things down the disposal as I tried to drain the water. They slipped away like live fish and before I even knew what had happened I was left staring down at an empty sink, debating whether to go in after them. I know, I know that would have been bad. So they're still there. Sad little dumplings stuck in a drain.



And they weren't even that good. Jonathan was nice, he told me otherwise to make me feel better, but I know the truth.

I know.

Oh yeah, and that tiny, little bit of oil that managed to add calories but no flavor is all over the kitchen floor.


How will I ever become marriage material?


The wild and wily ways in which we pranced around New York City: Day Three


I've been itching to see In the Heights and thought Jonathan wouldn't mind coming along for the ride. We got to 46th street. We stood in line. We made our way to the ticket counter. We asked for two standing room tickets. And we were promptly told they had just sold the last one.

Okay. Regroup.

We were not to be deterred from having a good time. We walked up 9th Avenue to El Centro and experienced a staple of the NY experience: brunch.


Jon, get of the iphone will ya?


Fine then, I'll entertain myself with my camera.


How can a person dislike Mexican food--its just so colorful?



After lunch we headed up to the Time Warner center and passed some sunbathers--New Yorkers will do it wherever they can.


What girl doesn't need a good butt lift--I'm just helping her out.


Jon got a good, full view of Central Park today. We started on the western end of central park south and ended up on east 105th street. Not bad for one day.

Walking down the poet's walkway.


He seemed to think I could help, but I just stood there and let him move my hand.

Okay, and why does my hair still appear to be so red, ahhhhh, I hate that!


This guy is always out and about and yes, it is always exciting.


The park was teeming with people--I couldn't believe it. And there were more street performers than we knew what to do with.


Bethesda Fountain.


Jonathan in a moment of reflection overlooking Jackie Kennedy (Central Park) Reservoir.


After the park (culminating in the conservatory garden) we hit up Arte Around the Corner (73rd and Columbus)for some great organic wine.

3 ways I know I'm tipsy...

1. I suffer from giggle attacks
2. My eyebrows seem to freeze 2-inches above their normal resting position
3. I embarrass easily and the color of my cheeks betrays any secret

Jonathan took advantage of this knowledge...damn him.

Through the booze and my own laughter, this is what things started to look like...



...Really great picture, I know.




The day wasn't complete without a trip to Magnolia Bakery's new location on Colombus. We each scarfed down two cupcakes hoping to soak up a little wine.

Jonathan--I need you to leave so that I can't use you as an excuse for eating poorly (well, not poorly so much as, just way more than any one person should consume)



Yum.

A little gem found. And a first time for my blog.






First the scanner. Now videos. Uh-oh. 

The wild and wily ways in which we pranced around New York City: Day Two


We weren't wild and we weren't wily. And there was certainly no prancing. None at all.

I woke up early and no longer able to honor being in a state of patience, I got myself to the closest CVS and bought a $4 dollar hair dye in the attempt to get my hair back to its natural shade of boring brown. I like my boring brown. Every time I saw the red sheen (most especially in pictures) I wondered who I was looking at. False, that's how I felt. I needed to return to my brunette roots and my bombshell attitude.

John slept in, or just stayed in bed for a while. Then he got work done, went for a walk and left me to take a nap--my poor sleeping habits are taking their toll.

Eventually we went to dinner at Charlie Brown's...I took pictures but they are conspicuously absent seeing as how I took them without my memory card in the camera and now they are locked in that little silver box and I don't know how to get them out.

This was after John presented me with the most beautiful pen in celebration of my graduation. It was so unnecessary but lovely and inscribed with a now necessary mantra, "All great accomplishments have beginnings." He wanted to get it for me since I am constantly writing things down in the form of lists (one small way in which I'm a quintessential Libra, Gavin). And one day I'll use it to sign autographs and very large checks (I'm putting that out in the universe, Karen). And when someone offers me a pen, I will smile my coy, disarming little smile and say, "Thank you, no, I have my own." Want to know what it looks like?...Not to worry I'll post some pictures tomorrow when my camera and I have come to a peace agreement.

Then John sat down to more school work and I hit up the neighborhood theatre for the documentary, Man On Wire. Vic, Rob, I'm so glad you suggested it because it was perfect.

After which, I headed home for a little ginger tea. Love ginger. Hate tea. But I'm working on it. And read a little book of astrology with John, getting good laugh as it nailed some of his idiosyncrasies head on.

Then to bed I headed and here I am an hour and half later wondering what happened. And wondering how time moves so quickly when I talk to him. Let's run away...really.




On a separate note. Victoria--I looked up the song from the Happy, Go Lucky movie trailer we saw. It's entitled Merry Happy. And speaking of songs right now I'm taken by Charlotte Sometime's How I Could Just Kill a Man. What do you think this means?

And today I tried to subsist only on junk food. I know it can't really be done, but a girl can give it a shot can't she? Well, the verdict's in: don't do it. Not that this knowledge will stop me from trying again in a few months.

8.30.2008

By the way...

I like talking on the phone the old-fashioned way. With you.

I'm kinda glad to be friends with this girl...



1. because we're the opposite in so many ways. and yet with one glance we know what the other is thinking.

2. because she's way cooler than I could ever hope to be.

3. because she's gonna be in my wedding party.

4. because she's gone raw. and it works for her.

5. because she lets me take a whole grocery sack full of books from her apartment. for borrowing purposes of course.

6. because we trade favorite poems. and secrets. so many secrets.

7. because we can still giggle and talk about boys and have sleepovers.
and serious stuff too, ya know?

8. because she'll hug me even if I try to run away.




The wild and wily ways in which we pranced around New York City: Day One


So Jonathan and I began our whirl-wind tour of the city this afternoon where he ran a business errand at the Harley-Davidson store. I felt like we were on a scavenger hunt. So exciting...

Plus, I feel like I was born to dress in biker gear (unfortunately I have no picture to validate this claim).


We met up with his lovely friends from Chautauqua, Hannah and Diana and proceeded around the corner to a hole-in-the-wall Irish pub (my favorite kind of hangout) for good old hamburgers. I was disappointed in my turkey burger sans cheese until I took a good look at Diana's $10 "Ceasar" salad and realized I had it pretty good. She basically ate lettuce and pre-packaged croutons. So sad.


Jonathan asked the bus-boy for spicy mustard and was rewarded with Tabasco sauce. Mustard, tabasco--same thing, sure.


Posing outside the pub (which we gathered from random signs placed on the walls that its going to close this weekend. And when I say close I mean forever.) We made it just in time.


We passed a sign for the US Open and Hannah took this opportunity to get a little mouth action going with Nadal. I looked in to getting tickets, but decided the $400 dollar ticket price was just ever so slightly out of my range.


Then off to the Moma we went. It was Friday, after 4, so admission was free (if you waited in a line that wrapped around the side of the building to 54th street--keep in mind that the Moma is on 53rd). Luckily, Diana's parents are members and the kind woman at the desk allowed us to use their privileges to bypass the line and get in in no time.

Now I've said again and again: live in NY as if you're a tourist. I now know I must amend this statement. Live in NY and enjoy the city as a tourist would, but use your New Yorker's sense that has come from years of living and learning the ins and outs of the city. And know this: TAKE THE PLUNGE AND BUY YOUR TICKET FOR THE MOMA AT A TIME WHEN YOU KNOW IT WON'T BE CROWDED. I almost lost my shit (pardon my French). I couldn't handle it. I felt like I was in stop and go walking traffic. I couldn't see a damn thing because their were so many tourists crawling along at a shockingly slow pace. Needless to say I didn't last long and my poor friends had to deal with my crankiness. Sometimes this city that I love so much can bring out the best in me. But more often than I'd like to admit, it brings out the worst.


With the tickets we just barely managed to get (thanks to Diana).


The effect of the print on this sign was what my brain felt like by the time I found the light and managed to get the heck out of that slow moving swarm of human bodies.

I didn't see a thing (okay, okay, this may be slight hyperbole--but that's the way it felt). People got so close to the works, yet art is meant to be viewed from a slight distance and if people respected that it would work out quite well for everyone because more people would be able to see one thing at one time. I know, I know, just give me a moment and then I'll climb down off of my soapbox.




I must say the architecture exhibit (3rd floor) was pretty great.



A $5 dollar shelter which can be provided to the homeless for no charge.

Yet, its really, truly a statement more than anything else, "This shelter should disappear like the problem should. In this case, the real designers are the policymakers."


It was just oh so much fun to touch.


After narrowly escaping a complete collapse of my nervous system, I instead turned to my drug of choice: Starbucks.
Note: I actually have a clean Starbucks cup next to my bed and on it I've listed in Sharpie all the things I could do with my money if I could kick this addiction. Clearly, you can see how well its working out for me.

Jonathan (who might be the only person who deserves the term "massage whore" more than me) coaxed Diana into giving him a shoulder rub right there in a public setting. I turned away and pretended not to know them


I didn't think it could get any worse until Hannah convinced Jon to hold up her mirror so she could apply her makeup right there at the table.

Outwardly I winced, but secretly I fell in love with all three of them for their quirky and quite practical actions.



We had meant to walk across the Brooklyn Bridge to Grimaldi's, but the threat of rain coupled with my rainy disposition (I think allergies have really taken their toll lately) convinced us to stay closer to home. So off we ventured to "Restaurant Row" where we took in the bellydancing, fine cuisine, and vocal stylings of gay, Portuguese lounge singer at Brazil, Brazil.


The girls were so good. They got up and danced their little hearts out.


And then we ate until we were out of our minds with the repercussions of overindulgence. I asked if it would be unladylike to lick the dish clean. This picture is the exact reason why my mom fears that I will never get past the point where a guy takes me to a nice restaurant. Well, that and sometimes I have trouble cutting steak--I tend to hack away at it. But my skirt steak was so good that no hacking went on tonight. That is until I almost took my knife to Jonathan when he revealed he'd been eating my medium-rare steak. What, I had been eating medium? The indignity of it all!


Hannah and I loved the dessert so much we got another one. I have to say it wasn't as good the second go round. The law of diminishing returns--when will I ever learn? And even worse, it still had the same calorie count. However, see that heart in the corner? The waiter put that on their for Hannah. He was flirting. He liked her. She liked him. Magic was in the air. And I was left with an ever-expanding waistline. The injustice of it all!


Love NY? I don't think so. Love some very cute Brazilian student moonlighting as a waiter? Yes, that's more like it.


She planned on giving him her number...



After all things were getting serious...notice the gentle, affectionate hand to shoulder archetypal pose.




Little did she know, he had the same plan...and he beat her to the punch!


What will happen tomorrow... only time will tell.




Oh yeah, I've decided to give up chocolate for a month. Until my birthday. That and Starbucks and shopping. And spending any kind of money. On anything. Except maybe food. Because I might need that.

8.29.2008

Lets run away together...


How about...

buying more books than we can carry in El Ateneo and then wandering through San Telmo?



blending in withe the countless extras that populate Bollywood films as we meet street-dwellers and millionaires alike in the perfumed mecca that is Mumbai?


biking all over Amsterdam and getting lost in the clouds of smoke seeping out of the coffeehouses?


or following in the footsteps of all hopeless romantics and great intellectuals as we sit along the Seine wearing berets and smoking Gitanes?



sneaking through the dark alleys of Prague and getting a little lesson in history?



What do you think?