I forgot one of my best tricks. Ask for coffee with a shot of Jameson on the side. That gets you two Irish coffees for the price of one. The ratio might be a bit off at first but you get used to it. Just like the taste of cheap beer. It’s not what you want but quantity outranks quality when you are killing time. I have nowhere else to go. Can’t even afford the cover at shows I want to support. The cheapest way to deal with it is get loaded during happy hour and play video games all night. Continue reading Happy Hour
Category Archives: Quick Thoughts
Getting Laid Off
I knew I’d never last – I didn’t gain any weight. The manager told me on the first day of training, “Just so you know, you will gain weight working here.” I have a Mona Lisa smile for statements like that. It’s my only civil response to stupid assumptions. As a walking cliche, you get used to leveraging stereotypes and associated prejudices. I’m a blonde girl with a mohawk in The Seattle Times. I’m that chick with nice tits at the CSPC. I’m the quiet one at the dive bar. I’m a terrible singer at The Mecca. All of these things are me but I am not any of them. No more than my hair is blue.
I should be more distraught by the loss of a job that came so hard won. Unfortunately, I didn’t see this coming so soon. The epic level of silent treatment by my coworkers became almost comfortable. Every phone call was a refuge. The strangers wanting to make reservations transported me directly to anywhere but there and I’d have civil interactions for as many as one or two minutes. Hanging up the phone I’d dive back into whatever book I was reading. Not hearing things in the interim got easier with practice.
It’s not that I didn’t get along with the people in the office. The opposite, in some ways. I can relate all too well to their shallow middle class struggles. I remember all too well the days spent worrying about how many calories I’m eating. Oddly, I identify with the gay millennial living in a post-Ru Paul era. Making sure everyone knows how unique he is without the mess of actual struggle. At least he has accountability, as opposed to the lazy single mother that complains about everything constantly.
Of course, in that office having a child is more important than work ethic. I was reminded repeatedly that my lack of children makes me less of a real person. I guess my mom was right, you aren’t really an adult until you’ve had kids? I wish that came with some magical discount on my cost of living. If not having dependents is suppose to make it easier to survive I must be doing it wrong.
Strange Days Indeed
I’m not afraid of spiders. I’ll even say I like zebra tarantulas. Not so much that I’d keep any as pets but seeing arachnids in general doesn’t give me the heebie-jeebies anymore. I spent a year volunteering at the Memphis Zoo and cleaned the spider tanks once a month. Experience cured my genetic arachnophobia (on my mother’s side) and gave me valuable perspective. In most situations I do my best to trap a spider and release it outside as a result. Unless the little fucker’s got me cornered. Continue reading Strange Days Indeed
Goats
*Hic* Oh, excuse me! Continue reading Goats
The Office
My work situation is frustrating enough I’m talking to strangers about it. I have a strange compulsion to organize everything around me. Not because the disarray bothers me but because I know it will ease the work of others. Watching someone try to cross a bridge that’s poorly made makes me want to build a better bridge so I won’t have to worry anymore. I know the simpler solution is to not care in general but I just can’t seem to do that. Continue reading The Office
Unsolicited
My tone is a bit didactic. It’s why strangers assume I’m in a position of authority. It’s why I make a great tour guide. It also seems to be why people don’t like being around me. I can sound like a lecture when I’m just expressing my thoughts. This is confusing for me because my worldview is based on the assumption I don’t matter. That’s not a fish hatchery for compliments – I just accept in the greater scheme of things most of us are fairly insignificant. I feel like I’m the person that is mentioned in history books as an early influence of someone that really makes a difference. And that’s good enough for me. I don’t think the world can completely change in my lifetime. I do think my existence proves change is coming. I probably would’ve been a civil rights activist in an earlier life. Continue reading Unsolicited
Genius
Human nature never ceases to amaze me. Invisibility has an upside from a research perspective. Witnessing some of the things in my past would make millennials cry. I didn’t worry about the dreaded Freeze after my first few months here. Seattle is one of the greatest choices I’ve ever made and I’m pretty sure she feels the same way. By the end of spring I fit in with most of the natives. It’s ironic I didn’t encounter The Freeze until August. Reaching maturity is a tricky thing. We all get there at different times, in different ways. Continue reading Genius
Influences
My cat associates me doing yoga with getting attention. She’s the best personal trainer I’ve ever had.
Assertion
I once had a girl mad at me because I don’t make eye contact when I talk to her. In her eyes, I was being dismissive and rude. I told her in my world eye contact is considered a challenge. That’s when I realized I am part dog and I learned everything I know about nonverbal communication from canine culture. She took my submission as an offense which still confuses me. When I explained how things work in a pack environment she thought I was being intentionally obtuse. Continue reading Assertion