Category: Lists

  • Reasons why I’m glad my roommate is home

    • fresh, objective material to use for justifying the frivolous purchase I made over the weekend
    • she can take pictures of me in the frivolous purchase I made over the weekend so I can send them to my mother
    • I don’t have to face up to the fact that I’m the only one who’s been drinking gallons of Diet Coke when I see all the cans in the recycling bin
    • someone to call out, “it’s on!” when Jon and Kate Plus Eight comes back from commercial
    • she’s not too scared to go tell the super that all the lightbulbs in our hallway are burned out
    • she missed me while she was away, too!

    This is what I’ve been listening to this week (when I’ve turned off TLC)
    Te Busque (Spanish version) by Nelly Furtado
    Crushcrushcrush by Paramore
    Spring Street by Dar Williams
    Blue Skies by Blackpool Lights
    Te Busque (Spanish version) by Nelly Furtado (again)

  • This is what we talk about when we go out for Italian

    “You never called spaghetti ‘pasgetti’ when you were little?”

    “No.”

    “What did you call it?”

    “I called it ‘spaghetti.’”

    I also pronounced “available” with a Y until I was nine, put “Please Do Not Disturv” signs on my bedroom door, and thought an emergency vehicle that drives people to the hospital was called an “amblee-ance,” but I left all that out.  It’s not lying by omission if he doesn’t ask, right?

    This is what I’ve been listening to this week:
    Naked Eye by Luscious Jackson
    Time by Sarah McLachlan
    Live Your Life by T.I.
    Just Like Heaven by The Cure
    We Looked Like Giants by Death Cab for Cutie

  • I won’t put on tomorrow’s bra before I get in bed tonight.

    Highly Notable Events in August 2008

    • Browsed wedding dress possibilities with my dearest friend Jill (her dress, not mine)
    • Tuned in to coverage of the Democratic National Convention
    • Tried a new Thai restaurant in Park Slope before my roommate did
    • Acknowledged my compulsive need to be “the favorite”
    • Visited Camp Jewell for the first time in almost five years

    I started this blog five years ago today by summarizing the highly notable events of Summer 2003.  For two weeks, I coded every entry in Notepad and loaded them page by page to my web space on the school server.  Then my HP laptop crashed (surprise.) and I started posting to Blogger.  Google had just acquired Blogger, and as an early-ish adopter, I was one of the first ‘citizens’ from outside the Googlesphere to receive a Gmail invitation.  I’ll keep boasting about that even though I switched to WordPress in February 2006; and, nobody cares when I was invited to Gmail.

    September.  It was the time of year when new pens still smelled new and I had all kinds of plans for a school year more productive, accomplished, and fulfilling than the last.  Before my notebooks got dogeared and my penmanship got sloppy.  Before a leaky highlighter in the bottom of my bag bled through half of Tuesday, and Wednesday, Saturday and Sunday on every single page of my planner.

    I used to resent this time of year in this sort of subterranean way, veiled by typical complaints about the end of the summer and by the goody-two-shoes excitement to go Back to School.  In my unseen heart, I considered it a mean trick. I wondered if the summer off was worth the consequence.  It was a false start—a new year in September?  It promised all these new chances and beginnings, but nothing seemed to change.

    I remember staying up later than I’d ever stayed up on a school night before my first day of fourth grade.  I was organizing my closet.  Sorting troll dolls and amateur pottery.  I cleaned my room like it had never been cleaned before.  I thought if it looked like a Pottery Barn catalog (or like the set of Full House) when I woke up on The First Day of School, it would stay that way all year.

    In the days right before the seventh grade, I dropped hints to my mom that I wanted my first real bra because the narrow straps on my First Day of School dress would expose the sports bras I usually wore.  I also refused to kneel on the carpet, which is how I usually watched TV or worked on craft projects, because The Dress revealed my knees and I didn’t want them to look chafed.

    Every night for three weeks before my senior year in college, I sneaked out of the house and drove into town to walk the length of Main Street and loops around the Middle School for an hour or more, sometimes into the next morning.  Ever since, I’m tempted to go for a long walk when I can’t sleep.  I’ve tried to think of a safe place to go in the middle of the night.  At home, my biggest concerns were distrustful cops and groups of stoned teenagers.  In New York, I have to wait until the gym opens at five if I need to outrun insomnia.  I’ve done it before.

    Outrunning—that’s what it’s always been.  And when I tried to dodge bad habits, quick fix damage, or elude depression, they always caught up with me.  They’ve chased me down.  I decided to expunge ten years of slobbery on the night before fourth grade?  Perfect timing.  I had really started to believe that life worked that way; that time was defined either from one day to the next or over the span of three seasons, and never in between.  Time dropped paperweights and bookends in the same spots every year until graduation.

    Since my days of First Days of School, I’ve been more free to take each day as it comes.  To take.  Each day, individually.  For what it is.  As it comes.  Not before.  Nor after.  One at a time.  In chronological order.  I know it sounds indifferent, like how you live when you’re just getting by.  But, honestly?  I would rather get through every day without walking all night just to get to it.

  • Emily is Twittering . . . until she gets distracted.

    I’ve added a new link category to help you find me elsewhere on the web, including my Flickr photostream and Sugar, Sugar, the tumblelog I started tumbling (this is so embarrassing) while on vacation at the beach last month. It rained every morning, and if it didn’t rain in the morning, it rained in the afternoon. I had a lot of quiet time and I spent some of it adding a new layer to my mixed media web presence.

    Using Tumblr is like pasting together a string book of newspaper clippings on a theme. In the 10th grade, my string book was themed: “Typos and Misprints.” It required more close-reading of the local papers than has probably ever been done by someone outside of the press offices. My tumbling theme is “For the sweet life.” I’m posting images, quotes, videos and links that I’m sweet on.

    I’ve also linked to myself on Twitter. Can someone tell me why this tool isn’t called twittr? Because even if you appreciate that ‘e’ you know that neologically, it doesn’t belong there. There are days when I feel like my brain is on Twitter—thoughts come in a choppy stream of 140-character phrases. I don’t know if I’ll translate that to the web very well, but I’ll register for any site where I can customize my own page.

    Twitter would be more fun if I were also a texter. I’m guessing that all the people from whom I’ve refused text messages are going to be mad when an online gadget is what finally sways me to subscribe to a texting plan.

    Relax, I’m not going there yet.


    Sarajo Frieden via ffffound.

    This is what I’m listening to this week:
    Circle by Paramore
    The Sounds of Silence by Simon and Garfunkel
    Out Loud by Dispatch
    Save Tonight by Eagle Eye Cherry
    Come Back Home by Lisa Loeb

  • After which I roll over and commence with drooling

    These are some names I’ve been called this week:
    Sick Puppy
    Snotty McSnotterson
    Miss Sniffelupagus

    As in, “Need a tissue, Miss Sniffelupagus?”

    Hey now, didn’t your mothers teach you that it’s not polite to call people names?

    Mine did.

    My mother also taught me the words to a Contac cold medicine jingle from the 1960s, when “they were allowed to sell the really strong stuff over the counter.”

    “A summer cold is a different animal
    An ugly animal, oooh!
    It hits you in the summer,
    When you’ve got a lot to do!”

    This is what I’ve been listening to this week while I breathe noisily through my mouth:
    I Do by Jewel
    Feeling Good (which I do not) by Nina Simone
    Something Good This Way Comes by Jakob Dylan
    Casual Viewin’ by 54-4
    Forever by Chris Brown

  • This is a Manhattan-bound Vain Train. Next stop, Wednesday.

    I was applying Champagne to the crease above my left eye when Jonathan appeared beside me, a little pinched in my squinted sight line, on the F-train platform.

    “Hi.”

    “Heeey.”

    What was that; did I just hear a locker slam? Instant flashback to high school, when I would put on make-up in the unflattering fluorescent hallway lighting while we waited for the first bell to ring.

    Jon and I rode the train into the city together. Five or six stops in, I said, “We must be the most vain people on this train, because you’re too vain to take off your Ray-Bans and I can’t stop staring at myself in the lenses.”

    “So it’s working out for both of us, at least,” said The Only Living Hipster in Park Slope.

    Jonny, I’m really glad we’re neighbors again. I like rolling with you.

    So, here’s what I’m listening to this week:
    Lousy Lullaby by Marry Me Jane
    No Hay Igual by Nelly Furtado
    Red by Sara Bareilles
    Wait a Minute by the Pussy Cat Dolls
    Late Night, Early Town by Lloyd Cole

    “Just another bunch of would-be desperados . . . Strung out on semantics, Holiday-Inn vigilantes, late night, early town.”

  • I eat chocolate for breakfast

    I realize that sounds like a threat to chocolate, but I don’t mean it as a threat to chocolate.  I mean it as a threat to you.  As in, “It’s time for breakfast.  Give me some chocolate, or I’m going to eat you.”

    This is what I’ve been listening to this week:
    Say by John Mayer
    Rooftops (A Liberation Broadcast) by Lostprophets
    Take Me Home Tonight by Eddie Money
    You’re The Voice by Heart
    Divorce Song by Liz Phair

  • Highly Notable Events in July 2008

    • posted almost every day
    • visited my brother at his house in DC
    • read three books in one week
    • watched seals watch me on the beach in Cape Cod
    • went on a coffee run and saw my all-time favorite America’s Next Top Model, Danielle Evans
    • spent $98 on running shoes designed for overpronators
  • Have all those unsorted loads of laundry finally caught up with me?


    From ffffound.

    My mind feels tired and sort of droopy, like it’s fallen slack. Has my brain atrophied from disuse? I’m in a list-and-label mood; maybe I’d benefit from a thorough cataloging project, like a tough workout for my head. I suffer this withdrawal the way some people suffer iron deficiencies.

    I’ve been milling around on the look-out for things to stick Post-its on. I wish I had a tape measure handy because I have this funny itch to measure my office and draw up its floorplan. What I should do is clear off the top of my desk, but it is so cluttered that I’d require a clean surface for the de-cluttering process.

    For now, here’s what I’m listening to this week:
    Moses by Patty Griffin
    Bleed for Me by Saliva
    Her Eyes by Pat Monahan
    When I Said I Would by Whitney Duncan
    Prince of Spades by Dispatch

  • Highly Notable Events in June 2008

    • Reconnected with my very first English professor
    • Became the object of a stranger’s lust in Prospect Park
    • Had “Welcome to New York” brunch with Marie
    • Had “Farewell for a while, New York” lunch with Rachel
    • Heard the Doobie Brothers live at Bethel Woods through my mom’s cell phone