I went bowling the other night. I can count on my thumbs the number of times I’ve been bowling in my life.
Now check out this photo. That’s the scoreboard. I’m J Lo, pulling up the rear (insert ass joke here).
And I won. HA! Even I can’t believe it.
And no… I wasn’t playing against a bunch of children. Or drunks. Or blind people. Or armless dudes who roll the ball down the lane with their noses. No! They were regular celebrities, like me... J Lo.
We might form a league.
Now, don’t ask me what all the numbers, Xs, dashes, and slashes mean. Might as well be Chinese. I have no clue. I just know I scored 76, which is probably horrible by normal standards but was enough to chalk me up a W with this crowd.
Given the fact that I’ve been bowling 3 whole times now, I’d like to impart 3 shining pearls of Big Lebowski wisdom that will make you want to stitch your name on an unflattering shirt and eat chicken wings without washing your hands:
Tip #1: Bowl granny-style. It isn’t pretty, but it gets the job done.
Tip #2: Believe the ball’s slimy exterior is due to the Purell shower it takes on the journey back to you.
Tip #3: Wear thick socks to protect your feet from rental shoe infestation. Toss socks immediately after.
Is it a sport? I don't know. (I’m sure the Bowlers of America work up a great sweat growing their beer guts and receding hairlines). But it was goodtimes. Except for the weird guy I ran into outside the bathroom. He wanted me to listen to a song, and offered me his headphones. Mmmm. Using someone’s headphones is like using someone’s toothbrush. If we haven’t swapped spit, I want nothing to do with your earwax.
So that was a firm no. But otherwise, super fun.
Need more convincing? Watch this inspirational video clip from the cinematic treasure, Grease 2:
I think Adrian Zmed may have disinfected my shoes.
So, fellow natural athletes of pseudo-sports, share below your tales of darts, ping-pong, frisbee, bowling, or golf (which, let's face it, is just rich man's bowling).
Yep, I said it. Discuss...
tags: sports
11/04/2011
10/26/2011
5 Fall TV Shows You Must Watch
Ahem. Is this thing on?
I haven’t blogged in ages. I could give you a million reasons why. But honestly, who cares? We have more important things to discuss here.
Like Fall TV.
You KNOW this is my favorite time of year. (Really, it is!) Baked, mashed, fried, scalloped, or au gratin, I become a couch potato every October. And I love it.
There’s probably 100 shows on my DVR. No joke. I’ve suffered through some stinkers (Hart of Dixie, Pan Am, Playboy Club, Whitney, Charlie’s Angels, Last Man Standing and Man Up, you owe me 5.5 hours of my life back).
Others were disappointingly ok, despite having some awesome casting choices (like Sarah Michelle Gellar in Ringer, Dave Foley & Rhys Darby in How to Be a Gentleman, Michael Patrick King who created 2 Broke Girls, Jeremy Sisto & Cheryl Hines in Suburgatory, Hank Azaria in Free Agents, and Christina Applegate & Will Arnett in Up All Night).
A handful have already been (mercifully) cancelled. But I’ve found 5 new shows that are already must-see TV.
Can you please watch them, so they don’t get cancelled too?
FOR A GOOD SCARE:
American Horror Story (FX)
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW:
Dylan McDermott & Connie Britton have moved clear across country to escape their marital problems (she delivered a stillborn baby, his grief drove him to cheat, she caught them in the act). Unfortunately, they’ve chosen to live in a haunted house that has killed every one of its former owners. A dude dressed in a black pleather sex suit lives in the attic. And a fang-toothed monster baby lives in the basement and eats people.
WHY YOU NEED TO WATCH:
I’m just scratching the surface of the crazy shit that happens on this show. You’ll have to watch each episode 2x to catch all the juicy bits.
FOR A SOAPY DRAMA:
Revenge (ABC)
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW:
A woman moves to the Hamptons to avenge the death of her father by picking off all the people who destroyed her family. She was just a young girl back in the day when he took the fall for a crime someone else committed. Now she moves among them, like a social assassin, unrecognizable while she dismantles their lives one by one.
WHY YOU NEED TO WATCH:
The people are pretty (and loaded), the setting is over-the-top. They say revenge is a dish best served cold. Better grab the ice cream AND the chips for this one.
FOR YOUR INNER TWEEN:
The Secret Circle (CW)
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW:
A 16-year old moves to New Salem (what are the odds?) and discovers she is popular – and a witch. Or is she popular because she’s a witch? Regardless, she is the missing member of a magic circle. And the kids don't get to hog all the power, their parents have the gift too (do yourself a favor and check out Gale Harrold -- try not to drool, he steals every scene).
WHY YOU NEED TO WATCH:
This is Heathers meets The Craft. You could skip it, but then they’d cast an evil spell on you AND play croquet with your head.
FOR A GOOD LAUGH:
Happy Endings (NBC)
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW:
Ok, technically this was a mid-season replacement in the spring, but it’s back for a regular season and I love it. The show follows 6 twenty-somethings in Chicago, two of whom were engaged but broke up on their wedding day. Think Friends, remixed. Monica = Jane. Chandler = Brad. Joey = Max (but gay). Phoebe = Penny. Ross = Dave. Rachel = Alex.
WHY YOU NEED TO WATCH:
If you don’t legit laugh at least once an episode, you have dead shark eyes.
FOR ANYONE (me) LIVING UNDER A ROCK FOR THE LAST 2 YEARS:
The Good Wife (CBS)
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW:
Bill Clinton, John Edwards, Eliot Spitzer… Peter Florrick. Juliana Margulies plays the dutiful wife, humiliated, but standing beside her cheating husband -- Illinois state's attorney, Chris Noth. This lasts for a little while. He goes to jail. She becomes independent. The amazing Alan Cumming reinvents his political image. More lies are revealed. She secretly dumps hubby and hops in the sack with yummy Josh Charles.
WHY YOU NEED TO WATCH:
Let’s face it, this show is already a HUGE hit. But if you’re late to the victory party, totally Netflix seasons 1 & 2 like I did.
Disagree? See anything I missed? Put the DVR on pause and comment below...
tags: entertainment
I haven’t blogged in ages. I could give you a million reasons why. But honestly, who cares? We have more important things to discuss here.
Like Fall TV.
You KNOW this is my favorite time of year. (Really, it is!) Baked, mashed, fried, scalloped, or au gratin, I become a couch potato every October. And I love it.
There’s probably 100 shows on my DVR. No joke. I’ve suffered through some stinkers (Hart of Dixie, Pan Am, Playboy Club, Whitney, Charlie’s Angels, Last Man Standing and Man Up, you owe me 5.5 hours of my life back).
Others were disappointingly ok, despite having some awesome casting choices (like Sarah Michelle Gellar in Ringer, Dave Foley & Rhys Darby in How to Be a Gentleman, Michael Patrick King who created 2 Broke Girls, Jeremy Sisto & Cheryl Hines in Suburgatory, Hank Azaria in Free Agents, and Christina Applegate & Will Arnett in Up All Night).
A handful have already been (mercifully) cancelled. But I’ve found 5 new shows that are already must-see TV.
Can you please watch them, so they don’t get cancelled too?
FOR A GOOD SCARE:
American Horror Story (FX)
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW:
Dylan McDermott & Connie Britton have moved clear across country to escape their marital problems (she delivered a stillborn baby, his grief drove him to cheat, she caught them in the act). Unfortunately, they’ve chosen to live in a haunted house that has killed every one of its former owners. A dude dressed in a black pleather sex suit lives in the attic. And a fang-toothed monster baby lives in the basement and eats people.
WHY YOU NEED TO WATCH:
I’m just scratching the surface of the crazy shit that happens on this show. You’ll have to watch each episode 2x to catch all the juicy bits.
FOR A SOAPY DRAMA:
Revenge (ABC)
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW:
A woman moves to the Hamptons to avenge the death of her father by picking off all the people who destroyed her family. She was just a young girl back in the day when he took the fall for a crime someone else committed. Now she moves among them, like a social assassin, unrecognizable while she dismantles their lives one by one.
WHY YOU NEED TO WATCH:
The people are pretty (and loaded), the setting is over-the-top. They say revenge is a dish best served cold. Better grab the ice cream AND the chips for this one.
FOR YOUR INNER TWEEN:
The Secret Circle (CW)
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW:
A 16-year old moves to New Salem (what are the odds?) and discovers she is popular – and a witch. Or is she popular because she’s a witch? Regardless, she is the missing member of a magic circle. And the kids don't get to hog all the power, their parents have the gift too (do yourself a favor and check out Gale Harrold -- try not to drool, he steals every scene).
WHY YOU NEED TO WATCH:
This is Heathers meets The Craft. You could skip it, but then they’d cast an evil spell on you AND play croquet with your head.
FOR A GOOD LAUGH:
Happy Endings (NBC)
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW:
Ok, technically this was a mid-season replacement in the spring, but it’s back for a regular season and I love it. The show follows 6 twenty-somethings in Chicago, two of whom were engaged but broke up on their wedding day. Think Friends, remixed. Monica = Jane. Chandler = Brad. Joey = Max (but gay). Phoebe = Penny. Ross = Dave. Rachel = Alex.
WHY YOU NEED TO WATCH:
If you don’t legit laugh at least once an episode, you have dead shark eyes.
FOR ANYONE (me) LIVING UNDER A ROCK FOR THE LAST 2 YEARS:
The Good Wife (CBS)
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW:
Bill Clinton, John Edwards, Eliot Spitzer… Peter Florrick. Juliana Margulies plays the dutiful wife, humiliated, but standing beside her cheating husband -- Illinois state's attorney, Chris Noth. This lasts for a little while. He goes to jail. She becomes independent. The amazing Alan Cumming reinvents his political image. More lies are revealed. She secretly dumps hubby and hops in the sack with yummy Josh Charles.
WHY YOU NEED TO WATCH:
Let’s face it, this show is already a HUGE hit. But if you’re late to the victory party, totally Netflix seasons 1 & 2 like I did.
Disagree? See anything I missed? Put the DVR on pause and comment below...
tags: entertainment
10/04/2011
Primus
Roseland Ballroom. Primus. Floor Seats. Mosh Pit. Me.
Which one of these things doesn’t belong? If you said, ME, you really couldn’t be more wrong.
Don't believe me? Have we met? I'm not all pearls and sensible shoes, you know (yes I am). My concert history isn't ALL Bon Jovi and Dave Matthews and Hootie & the Blowfish and Celine Dion (she really does put on a helluva show).
No!
I almost saw Radiohead and the White Stripes once. I HAVE seen Tool and Nine Inch Nails. On purpose, even!
So when my brother invited me to see Primus with him on Friday night because his buddy bailed out, I was, of course, down for an adventure. How could I resist? Me and Primus are like peanut butter & jelly.
Ok, okaaaay, more like peanut butter and onions. But whatevs. I'll always jump at the chance to hang out with my (not so little) brother, and we had a total blast.
It was an illuminating evening in Primusville... here's 5 life lessons I learned at the show:
1. The band I thought was Primus… wasn’t.
All day long, I had an angry metal song stuck in my head, I'm doing the best I ever did. I'm doing the best that I can. When I told my brother that Whatever was the only Primus song I knew, his eyes just about popped out of his head. Turns out, that's Godsmack. Huh. Oops? Then he played, Jerry Was a Racecar Driver, and I realized THAT was the only Primus song I knew.
2. My idea of edgy… isn’t.
See that shiny silver-ish foot sticking out from a very wide pant leg? That's me. I thought this getup would help me blend in with the natives. Unfortunately, my fashion sense is a step past Amish and I don’t own the appropriate clothes/footwear to swim in this pool.
3. My thought that I can go beer for beer with a guy… can’t.
First, there was the 6-pack we split at my apt. Nothing but the finest (Bud Light). Then, there were the beers at dinner. Next, came the giant bar at Roseland. By the time I nearly cut my thumb off while whipping up late-nite snacks for us back at my apt, I remembered a lesson hard-learned in college: I do NOT have a hollow leg. Luckily, homemade BBQ chicken quesadillas eaten at 1am soak up quite a lot of alcohol.
4. My worry that I’m too old and no longer cute… shouldn’t.
It's amazing what hanging out in a room loaded with stinky, hairy dudes does for your self-esteem. Suddenly, you're a supermodel! It was literally 200 to 1 in there, so flashing my pearly whites just after the intermission equaled a 1-way-ticket to the VIP balcony. Always a quick thinker, my first question (to the bouncer) was, can my brother come? My second question (to my brother) was, do you have a $20? Ahhh. Worth every penny.
5. The concert I was afraid might suck… didn’t.
See that big red thing behind us? That's the bar. That helped. And sure, I didn't REALLY understand the giant inflatable astronauts that flanked the stage. Or the screen behind the stage that showed film of car crashes and albino flying squirrels and kids playing Ring Around the Rosie. Or the fact that the fans chant, "Primus Sucks," and that's a good thing. Or the exceptionally long Popeye cartoon that ran during intermission. OR the Willy Wonka theme song that played while we exited the ballroom. But the concert was awesome, nevertheless.
I'm pretty sure that had more to do with the company I was with than anything else. Plus the beer. But mostly... the company. Good times!
So, what's the strangest concert YOU've ever been to? (Bonus points if you could actually identify their hit songs.)
tags: city life, music
Which one of these things doesn’t belong? If you said, ME, you really couldn’t be more wrong.
Don't believe me? Have we met? I'm not all pearls and sensible shoes, you know (yes I am). My concert history isn't ALL Bon Jovi and Dave Matthews and Hootie & the Blowfish and Celine Dion (she really does put on a helluva show).
No!
I almost saw Radiohead and the White Stripes once. I HAVE seen Tool and Nine Inch Nails. On purpose, even!
So when my brother invited me to see Primus with him on Friday night because his buddy bailed out, I was, of course, down for an adventure. How could I resist? Me and Primus are like peanut butter & jelly.
Ok, okaaaay, more like peanut butter and onions. But whatevs. I'll always jump at the chance to hang out with my (not so little) brother, and we had a total blast.
It was an illuminating evening in Primusville... here's 5 life lessons I learned at the show:
1. The band I thought was Primus… wasn’t.
All day long, I had an angry metal song stuck in my head, I'm doing the best I ever did. I'm doing the best that I can. When I told my brother that Whatever was the only Primus song I knew, his eyes just about popped out of his head. Turns out, that's Godsmack. Huh. Oops? Then he played, Jerry Was a Racecar Driver, and I realized THAT was the only Primus song I knew.
2. My idea of edgy… isn’t.
See that shiny silver-ish foot sticking out from a very wide pant leg? That's me. I thought this getup would help me blend in with the natives. Unfortunately, my fashion sense is a step past Amish and I don’t own the appropriate clothes/footwear to swim in this pool.
3. My thought that I can go beer for beer with a guy… can’t.
First, there was the 6-pack we split at my apt. Nothing but the finest (Bud Light). Then, there were the beers at dinner. Next, came the giant bar at Roseland. By the time I nearly cut my thumb off while whipping up late-nite snacks for us back at my apt, I remembered a lesson hard-learned in college: I do NOT have a hollow leg. Luckily, homemade BBQ chicken quesadillas eaten at 1am soak up quite a lot of alcohol.
4. My worry that I’m too old and no longer cute… shouldn’t.
It's amazing what hanging out in a room loaded with stinky, hairy dudes does for your self-esteem. Suddenly, you're a supermodel! It was literally 200 to 1 in there, so flashing my pearly whites just after the intermission equaled a 1-way-ticket to the VIP balcony. Always a quick thinker, my first question (to the bouncer) was, can my brother come? My second question (to my brother) was, do you have a $20? Ahhh. Worth every penny.
5. The concert I was afraid might suck… didn’t.
See that big red thing behind us? That's the bar. That helped. And sure, I didn't REALLY understand the giant inflatable astronauts that flanked the stage. Or the screen behind the stage that showed film of car crashes and albino flying squirrels and kids playing Ring Around the Rosie. Or the fact that the fans chant, "Primus Sucks," and that's a good thing. Or the exceptionally long Popeye cartoon that ran during intermission. OR the Willy Wonka theme song that played while we exited the ballroom. But the concert was awesome, nevertheless.
I'm pretty sure that had more to do with the company I was with than anything else. Plus the beer. But mostly... the company. Good times!
So, what's the strangest concert YOU've ever been to? (Bonus points if you could actually identify their hit songs.)
tags: city life, music
9/18/2011
Three Candles
If my blog could speak right now, it might channel the immortal Samantha Baker and say, "They effing forgot my birthday."
Uhhh... oops?
Work's been crazy. It's a full moon. Mercury is in retrograde. The dog ate my homework. And I plain forgot that I wrote my very first post on Sept 14, 2008.
Bad Jenny.
So, just as I did after the first year, and the second year, it's time to take stock. And, more importantly, to send a heartfelt thanks to everyone who reads my silly ol' blog -- especially YOU.
Now, let's jog on down memory lane...
Total Posts I've Written (including this one):
166
Average Number of Posts I Write Per Month:
4.3 (down from 4.7 last year)
Average Number of Unique Visitors Per Month:
81 (up from 62 last year)
Average Pageviews Per Month:
697 (up from 338 last year)
Average Time Spent Per Visit:
3 minutes 18 seconds (down from 4 minutes 47 seconds last year)
Most Read Blog Post (6-way tie):
Time
Memorial Day
Thinking Out Loud
Trick or Treat
Pepe Le Pew
Royal Wedding Mania Is Running Wild
Post Nobody Gave a Crap About (3-way tie):
Fly the Friendly Skies
12 Angry Men
Cable Guy
Most Comments:
Time
Most Popular Poll:
Federal Un-Reserved
Most Frequently-Used Tag for the Posts I Write:
Pop Culture
Most Popular Search by Visitors (2-way tie):
Dating
Breakup
So, there you have it. I'm not sure if it's age-appropriate to spill my guts once a week on topics both trivial and personal, but I don't care. Truth is, I really do love blogging.
But I wrestle with how often I should do it. That's where you come in...
Vote below, Hot Stuff!
tags: holidays, polls, writing
Uhhh... oops?
Work's been crazy. It's a full moon. Mercury is in retrograde. The dog ate my homework. And I plain forgot that I wrote my very first post on Sept 14, 2008.
Bad Jenny.
So, just as I did after the first year, and the second year, it's time to take stock. And, more importantly, to send a heartfelt thanks to everyone who reads my silly ol' blog -- especially YOU.
Now, let's jog on down memory lane...
Total Posts I've Written (including this one):
166
Average Number of Posts I Write Per Month:
4.3 (down from 4.7 last year)
Average Number of Unique Visitors Per Month:
81 (up from 62 last year)
Average Pageviews Per Month:
697 (up from 338 last year)
Average Time Spent Per Visit:
3 minutes 18 seconds (down from 4 minutes 47 seconds last year)
Most Read Blog Post (6-way tie):
Time
Memorial Day
Thinking Out Loud
Trick or Treat
Pepe Le Pew
Royal Wedding Mania Is Running Wild
Post Nobody Gave a Crap About (3-way tie):
Fly the Friendly Skies
12 Angry Men
Cable Guy
Most Comments:
Time
Most Popular Poll:
Federal Un-Reserved
Most Frequently-Used Tag for the Posts I Write:
Pop Culture
Most Popular Search by Visitors (2-way tie):
Dating
Breakup
So, there you have it. I'm not sure if it's age-appropriate to spill my guts once a week on topics both trivial and personal, but I don't care. Truth is, I really do love blogging.
But I wrestle with how often I should do it. That's where you come in...
Vote below, Hot Stuff!
tags: holidays, polls, writing
9/11/2011
Angels
To say I have unresolved feelings about 9/11 is the understatement of the decade.
I thought about not writing this post because I don’t want to read it. I have spent the last 10 years burying every emotion, ignoring every image, and suppressing every memory because I just can not deal.
Even now.
It was a time of bottomless sorrow. No question about that. Although I must say, of all the unimaginable things to come out of that sunny September day (and the weeks, months, and years that followed) came one important realization: I now believe in guardian angels.
Call it fate, faith, whatever you will, I am thankful for several interventions that changed the course of events that day. Here's how the universe said, it’s not your time...
SCHEDULE
Several days prior to the attacks, an executive at my company was scheduled to attend a conference. He was to be a guest speaker at a breakfast being held on Sept 11th at Windows on the World, a restaurant on the 106 & 107th floors of the World Trade Center, Tower 1.
I had a good relationship with the publication sponsoring the breakfast, and I had been in contact with the event organizer via phone and email several times to coordinate the details. My boss, another colleague, and I were determining which of us would attend the event with this executive, when a scheduling conflict arose. He decided last-minute to cancel his appearance, making it unnecessary for any of us to go.
I can't even remember what the excuse was, but everyone who did attend, including the woman I was emailing with, lost their lives that day.
SCHOOLTEACHER
I was living in Pine Brook at the time, and left for work that Tuesday like I did every morning. I would drive to Hoboken, park my car in a lot, and take the PATH train across the river to my office in lower Manhattan -- about 8 blocks from the WTC.
I was about to turn on to Changebride Road, the main street that ran through my town, when a woman flagged me down. Never in my 20+ years of living there had someone stopped me, but there she was, needing help. She said she was a teacher at one of the elementary schools in town. Her car had broken down (though there was no car in sight), and she wondered if I could give her a lift to school. Taking her clear across town would have made me very late for work, so I offered her my cell phone instead to contact her principal, or AAA, or her husband for help. She made a quick call and we parted ways.
The whole exchange took less than 10 minutes, but I know the time I spent with this stranger on a street corner in the middle of nowhere saved both my life and my dad’s. Here’s why…
DISCONNECTED
I was running late after stopping for the schoolteacher, eventually pulling into the lot in Hoboken around 8:45am. I should have already been on the train, so I quickly paid the parking attendant. My back was to the city, as I simultaneously heard an explosive sound and saw an expression cross her face that made me afraid to turn around.
Past the train station, I had a clear view of lower Manhattan. One of the Twin Towers was billowing with grey smoke. My dad worked in Tower 1, on the 25th floor. I panicked and immediately called him. He told me they felt a pretty good jolt but they were alright. He said they’d been instructed to “stay put” and then the phone cut out.
I tried re-dialing but it was no use. The lines were all jammed, and would remain that way for hours. I saw a crowd gathering by the entrance to the trains, and I made my way over to a policeman so I could hear his radio. It was then that I watched the second plane fly directly into the left side of the second building, disappearing into a puff of fiery smoke. It was about 9am. I remember someone in the crowd grabbed my hand and cried, “Oh no, not again.”
Completely frantic and realizing no one was getting in or out of the city, I ultimately left to be with my mom. I was in a fog, driving past the Meadowlands on Route 3 about an hour later when Peter Jennings’ voice on the radio told me the first tower had come down. I nearly ran my car into the barricade in the median. I was home with my mother and my brother, glued to the TV, when we saw the second tower fall at 10:30am. No one had heard from my father since he told me he planned to stay put. We all feared the worst. My brother collapsed into a ball on the living room floor. I ran to the kitchen to vomit in the sink.
Sometime after 12:30pm, the phone rang. It was my dad, from a pay phone. I can remember screaming to the operator that yes, we would accept the charges of his collect call. He sounded disoriented, and had no idea the towers had fallen. Apparently, he had been assisting the first responders to pass out wet rags for people to cover their faces and was in the lobby helping to direct people away from seeing the carnage left by people who jumped 100 stories out of sheer desperation. Then, he suddenly left and headed south towards the Staten Island Ferry. He knew I worked on Water Street, but he wasn’t sure in which building, so he went door to door looking for me.
Our call earlier had been disconnected before I could tell him I never made it across the river that morning. He just assumed I had. His need to find me is what drove him away from that scene in the nick of time and undoubtedly saved his life.
ELEVATOR
Several hours after we heard my dad was ok, he arrived at my aunt’s apartment at 65th and Madison. With no way to get in or out of the city, and all streets shut down, he walked the 5 miles, covered in ashes. A dear friend of mine worked in Tower 2 of the WTC at the time. Her company occupied some of the highest floors in the building, putting her above the point of impact and seemingly sealing her fate.
I can remember being too afraid to know the truth, but I gathered up my courage to give her a call. It rang and rang, then went to voicemail. I had a sick pit in my stomach. Around 5pm that evening, my phone rang again. It was my friend. She would later learn that her colleagues made a life-changing decision to leave when they did. The group that went down in the elevator with her -- in the 15 minutes between the first and second hit -- were saved. The others were among her nearly 200 co-workers who never made it out.
FACE IN A CROWD
Thousands of stories surfaced over the next few days. It took a full week for the city to open up again. The following Tuesday, I boarded a ferry, bound for lower Manhattan because the PATH trains were nonexistent. The boat was jam-packed, but totally silent, as we rode across the Hudson, utterly shell-shocked.
The smoke and soot still hung in the air, coating every surface. A burnt smell stung my nose. Tears were streaming down my face as we pulled into the dock. Along the shoreline, I could see dozens of armed guards, dressed in camo and carrying assault weapons. A tank was there to greet us. It would stay like that every day, for months. It was more than I could handle. This wasn't New York. It was a warzone.
As I stepped off the boat, a familiar face appeared. It was my boss. No, he was more than that -- he was a wonderful friend who came down to the ferry to escort me to the office. It turned out my mother had called him to let him know how upset I was. Ordinarily, I would have been humiliated by that, but these weren’t ordinary times. I was a petrified 28 year old girl. I will never forget his kindness that day, especially when I later learned that his partner had been sick, but he dropped everything to help me. He is an angel on earth, and still has a special place in my heart.
Divine intervention changed the course of our lives, and countless others, that day. I personally knew 10 people who were not as fortunate.
Every year, I go out of my way to avoid the retrospectives. I'm just not that strong. Besides, I don't need to watch a recap of that unthinkable day -- all I need to do is close my eyes and see it unfold. This year, I decided to avoid the city altogether and set up camp with my brother, sister-in-law, and the munchkins up in CT.
We'll spend the day at the zoo, celebrate life, and count our many blessings. Here's hoping you can too.
tags: city life, family, jersey, politics
I thought about not writing this post because I don’t want to read it. I have spent the last 10 years burying every emotion, ignoring every image, and suppressing every memory because I just can not deal.
Even now.
It was a time of bottomless sorrow. No question about that. Although I must say, of all the unimaginable things to come out of that sunny September day (and the weeks, months, and years that followed) came one important realization: I now believe in guardian angels.
Call it fate, faith, whatever you will, I am thankful for several interventions that changed the course of events that day. Here's how the universe said, it’s not your time...
SCHEDULE
Several days prior to the attacks, an executive at my company was scheduled to attend a conference. He was to be a guest speaker at a breakfast being held on Sept 11th at Windows on the World, a restaurant on the 106 & 107th floors of the World Trade Center, Tower 1.
I had a good relationship with the publication sponsoring the breakfast, and I had been in contact with the event organizer via phone and email several times to coordinate the details. My boss, another colleague, and I were determining which of us would attend the event with this executive, when a scheduling conflict arose. He decided last-minute to cancel his appearance, making it unnecessary for any of us to go.
I can't even remember what the excuse was, but everyone who did attend, including the woman I was emailing with, lost their lives that day.
SCHOOLTEACHER
I was living in Pine Brook at the time, and left for work that Tuesday like I did every morning. I would drive to Hoboken, park my car in a lot, and take the PATH train across the river to my office in lower Manhattan -- about 8 blocks from the WTC.
I was about to turn on to Changebride Road, the main street that ran through my town, when a woman flagged me down. Never in my 20+ years of living there had someone stopped me, but there she was, needing help. She said she was a teacher at one of the elementary schools in town. Her car had broken down (though there was no car in sight), and she wondered if I could give her a lift to school. Taking her clear across town would have made me very late for work, so I offered her my cell phone instead to contact her principal, or AAA, or her husband for help. She made a quick call and we parted ways.
The whole exchange took less than 10 minutes, but I know the time I spent with this stranger on a street corner in the middle of nowhere saved both my life and my dad’s. Here’s why…
DISCONNECTED
I was running late after stopping for the schoolteacher, eventually pulling into the lot in Hoboken around 8:45am. I should have already been on the train, so I quickly paid the parking attendant. My back was to the city, as I simultaneously heard an explosive sound and saw an expression cross her face that made me afraid to turn around.
Past the train station, I had a clear view of lower Manhattan. One of the Twin Towers was billowing with grey smoke. My dad worked in Tower 1, on the 25th floor. I panicked and immediately called him. He told me they felt a pretty good jolt but they were alright. He said they’d been instructed to “stay put” and then the phone cut out.
I tried re-dialing but it was no use. The lines were all jammed, and would remain that way for hours. I saw a crowd gathering by the entrance to the trains, and I made my way over to a policeman so I could hear his radio. It was then that I watched the second plane fly directly into the left side of the second building, disappearing into a puff of fiery smoke. It was about 9am. I remember someone in the crowd grabbed my hand and cried, “Oh no, not again.”
Completely frantic and realizing no one was getting in or out of the city, I ultimately left to be with my mom. I was in a fog, driving past the Meadowlands on Route 3 about an hour later when Peter Jennings’ voice on the radio told me the first tower had come down. I nearly ran my car into the barricade in the median. I was home with my mother and my brother, glued to the TV, when we saw the second tower fall at 10:30am. No one had heard from my father since he told me he planned to stay put. We all feared the worst. My brother collapsed into a ball on the living room floor. I ran to the kitchen to vomit in the sink.
Sometime after 12:30pm, the phone rang. It was my dad, from a pay phone. I can remember screaming to the operator that yes, we would accept the charges of his collect call. He sounded disoriented, and had no idea the towers had fallen. Apparently, he had been assisting the first responders to pass out wet rags for people to cover their faces and was in the lobby helping to direct people away from seeing the carnage left by people who jumped 100 stories out of sheer desperation. Then, he suddenly left and headed south towards the Staten Island Ferry. He knew I worked on Water Street, but he wasn’t sure in which building, so he went door to door looking for me.
Our call earlier had been disconnected before I could tell him I never made it across the river that morning. He just assumed I had. His need to find me is what drove him away from that scene in the nick of time and undoubtedly saved his life.
ELEVATOR
Several hours after we heard my dad was ok, he arrived at my aunt’s apartment at 65th and Madison. With no way to get in or out of the city, and all streets shut down, he walked the 5 miles, covered in ashes. A dear friend of mine worked in Tower 2 of the WTC at the time. Her company occupied some of the highest floors in the building, putting her above the point of impact and seemingly sealing her fate.
I can remember being too afraid to know the truth, but I gathered up my courage to give her a call. It rang and rang, then went to voicemail. I had a sick pit in my stomach. Around 5pm that evening, my phone rang again. It was my friend. She would later learn that her colleagues made a life-changing decision to leave when they did. The group that went down in the elevator with her -- in the 15 minutes between the first and second hit -- were saved. The others were among her nearly 200 co-workers who never made it out.
FACE IN A CROWD
Thousands of stories surfaced over the next few days. It took a full week for the city to open up again. The following Tuesday, I boarded a ferry, bound for lower Manhattan because the PATH trains were nonexistent. The boat was jam-packed, but totally silent, as we rode across the Hudson, utterly shell-shocked.
The smoke and soot still hung in the air, coating every surface. A burnt smell stung my nose. Tears were streaming down my face as we pulled into the dock. Along the shoreline, I could see dozens of armed guards, dressed in camo and carrying assault weapons. A tank was there to greet us. It would stay like that every day, for months. It was more than I could handle. This wasn't New York. It was a warzone.
As I stepped off the boat, a familiar face appeared. It was my boss. No, he was more than that -- he was a wonderful friend who came down to the ferry to escort me to the office. It turned out my mother had called him to let him know how upset I was. Ordinarily, I would have been humiliated by that, but these weren’t ordinary times. I was a petrified 28 year old girl. I will never forget his kindness that day, especially when I later learned that his partner had been sick, but he dropped everything to help me. He is an angel on earth, and still has a special place in my heart.
Divine intervention changed the course of our lives, and countless others, that day. I personally knew 10 people who were not as fortunate.
Every year, I go out of my way to avoid the retrospectives. I'm just not that strong. Besides, I don't need to watch a recap of that unthinkable day -- all I need to do is close my eyes and see it unfold. This year, I decided to avoid the city altogether and set up camp with my brother, sister-in-law, and the munchkins up in CT.
We'll spend the day at the zoo, celebrate life, and count our many blessings. Here's hoping you can too.
tags: city life, family, jersey, politics
8/27/2011
Creepy Peeper
I’m stuck at home (as I’m sure many of you are), thanks to a total jerk of a gal named Irene. If you want to read about HER, hop on Facebook or Twitter.
Here, I’ve decided to discuss the creepy Peeping Tom who lives across the way. My windows are like his personal giant movie screen.
I first noticed him a few months ago. It was hard not to, really, since his apt is directly across the street, on the same floor as mine. He used to hang out over his terrace (occasionally eating a banana or what appeared to be a bowl of soup) to watch me. For hours. Like a 200lb paperweight.
And he wasn’t shy about staring. I felt like a brisket.
At first I thought, this guy can’t possibly be looking into my tiny 550 sqft studio. There must be a naked pilates session happening in the apartment directly above mine. And then he waved.
At me.
Since I didn’t reciprocate his friendly gesture, he retreated to his living room, where I could see him perched on the arm of his couch like a large bird. There he sat, night after night, with all the lights on and the terrace door open. He doesn't appear to have much in the way of furniture.
Recently, I’ve noticed his apartment goes completely dark around 8:30ish. I don’t know what he’s doing in there, but I can only imagine it involves a telescope that rivals the Hubble in both size and intensity.
But what a blockbuster movie he’s watching!
I mean, who can resist when I get home at night, tie my hair up in a ponytail and change (behind a closed bathroom door) into sweatpants? Who wouldn’t want to be a fly on the wall as I bask in the soft glow of a laptop while paying bills, or catching up on work, or blogging? And really, how could you NOT be riveted as I devour microwave dinners at my coffee table and burn through marathons of bad reality TV on my DVR?
Needless to say, this is the most boring pervert ever.
So, before the inevitable happens and he fashions a 3-piece skin suit from my flesh, I would like to publicly establish my wish that Tiffani (hold the Amber) Thiessen play me in the made-for-TV movie. I’d like it to follow in the grand cinematic tradition set by Mother, May I Sleep with Danger, Baby Monitor: Sound of Fear, and Do You Know the Muffin Man?
Please also cast Tracy Gold as his nosy neighbor who reports a foul odor and Kelly Lynch as the detective who shoots from the hip and goes with her gut. And Tori Spelling should make a guest-starring appearance as the jealous co-worker who openly wishes I would just disappear.
Every thriller needs a red herring.
As for the Creepy Peeper, they should find someone stubby like Jason Alexander. But my story might be too pedestrian for him. So lock Joey Lawrence in a closet full of Whoppers for a month. He'll pop out all pale and bloated and will be perfect for the part.
Whoa.
So before this hurricane knocks out the electricity... tell me, who'd play you in the Lifetime movie of YOUR life?
tags: city life, entertainment
Here, I’ve decided to discuss the creepy Peeping Tom who lives across the way. My windows are like his personal giant movie screen.
I first noticed him a few months ago. It was hard not to, really, since his apt is directly across the street, on the same floor as mine. He used to hang out over his terrace (occasionally eating a banana or what appeared to be a bowl of soup) to watch me. For hours. Like a 200lb paperweight.
And he wasn’t shy about staring. I felt like a brisket.
At first I thought, this guy can’t possibly be looking into my tiny 550 sqft studio. There must be a naked pilates session happening in the apartment directly above mine. And then he waved.
At me.
Since I didn’t reciprocate his friendly gesture, he retreated to his living room, where I could see him perched on the arm of his couch like a large bird. There he sat, night after night, with all the lights on and the terrace door open. He doesn't appear to have much in the way of furniture.
Recently, I’ve noticed his apartment goes completely dark around 8:30ish. I don’t know what he’s doing in there, but I can only imagine it involves a telescope that rivals the Hubble in both size and intensity.
But what a blockbuster movie he’s watching!
I mean, who can resist when I get home at night, tie my hair up in a ponytail and change (behind a closed bathroom door) into sweatpants? Who wouldn’t want to be a fly on the wall as I bask in the soft glow of a laptop while paying bills, or catching up on work, or blogging? And really, how could you NOT be riveted as I devour microwave dinners at my coffee table and burn through marathons of bad reality TV on my DVR?
Needless to say, this is the most boring pervert ever.
So, before the inevitable happens and he fashions a 3-piece skin suit from my flesh, I would like to publicly establish my wish that Tiffani (hold the Amber) Thiessen play me in the made-for-TV movie. I’d like it to follow in the grand cinematic tradition set by Mother, May I Sleep with Danger, Baby Monitor: Sound of Fear, and Do You Know the Muffin Man?
Please also cast Tracy Gold as his nosy neighbor who reports a foul odor and Kelly Lynch as the detective who shoots from the hip and goes with her gut. And Tori Spelling should make a guest-starring appearance as the jealous co-worker who openly wishes I would just disappear.
Every thriller needs a red herring.
As for the Creepy Peeper, they should find someone stubby like Jason Alexander. But my story might be too pedestrian for him. So lock Joey Lawrence in a closet full of Whoppers for a month. He'll pop out all pale and bloated and will be perfect for the part.
Whoa.
So before this hurricane knocks out the electricity... tell me, who'd play you in the Lifetime movie of YOUR life?
tags: city life, entertainment
8/17/2011
5 Reasons I Love The Great Food Truck Race
It’s NO secret I love TV.
I’ve been equally open regarding my love of food. So, whenever the worlds of TV and food collide, you can bet I’m buckled in for the ride.
There are tons of culinary competition shows out there (and I watch most of them), but one of my new favorites is The Great Food Truck Race. If Top Chef and Cannonball Run had a baby, it would be this show.
It’s an 8 week road trip from Malibu to Miami and the second season just started on Food Network. After watching the first episode, I’m happy to report it’s still a tasty little morsel.
Here’s 5 reasons why:
Forget restaurants. Some of the best food in the city is coming from trucks. We’re NOT talking street meat here. This is not fast food -- it's food served fast, with good, local ingredients. Plus each truck usually has a gimmick, which I kinda love. And they’re easy to find... like right now!
A quick check of my handy Eat Street app (iPhone, I heart you so much I could EAT you), shows Korilla BBQ, who just happens to be in the race (go NYC!!), Cupcake Stop, and Feed Your Hole trucks all within a few blocks of my apt.
Good thing I’m afraid of the dark, or else I’d be chowing on a Porkinator right now like it was my job.
Sold yet?
Whet your appetite with the meals on wheels that I've eaten recently (glamorous desk not included):
Wafels & Dinges
Motto: Good Things Belgian
Order: The BBQ pulled pork on a Brussels wafel, with a side of slaw and a coolickle (kinda like a red pickle)
Tip: Try their Spekuloos Spread – it looks like peanut butter and tastes like gingerbread cookie goodness.
Red Hook Lobster Pound
Motto: Serving the best crustacean in the nation
Order: Lobster roll, Maine style, on a buttery toasted bun split down the middle
Tip: Bring a $20 -- the roll is $16 alone, pricey but loaded with big chunks of tasty lobstah.
Mexicue
Motto: The sweet, sweet love child of red-hot Mexican cuisine and down-home barbeque
Order: A smoked short rib taco, BBQ beef brisket slider, and pulled pork slider. I like to call that the Carnivore's Trifecta.
Tip: Budget about 30 minutes for this one, the line is long, but worth the wait.
Eddie’s Pizza Truck
Motto: Home of the Bar Pie
Order: No clue. The first time I tried to eat here, they closed the main window in my face. The second time, they gave me attitude about needing to order through the passenger seat door instead of the giant, gaping hole on the side of the truck. Needless to say, I left.
Tip: I hear the wait is 20 minutes. Hopefully they're as good at making pizza as they are at being rude.
So, do YOU have any favorite food trucks? List them below!
And remember, this is best left to professionals: Don’t cook and drive.
tags: city life, entertainment, food
I’ve been equally open regarding my love of food. So, whenever the worlds of TV and food collide, you can bet I’m buckled in for the ride.
There are tons of culinary competition shows out there (and I watch most of them), but one of my new favorites is The Great Food Truck Race. If Top Chef and Cannonball Run had a baby, it would be this show.
It’s an 8 week road trip from Malibu to Miami and the second season just started on Food Network. After watching the first episode, I’m happy to report it’s still a tasty little morsel.
Here’s 5 reasons why:
- Tyler Florence. Tyler Florence. Tyler Florence. Yum.
- The prize is for real. $100K in cash. Not a fake title as executive chef at a restaurant they may never work in. Not a restaurant makeover of a business that may not succeed. Cash. And while that may not go super far to support a restaurant with 4 walls, I’m guessing it’s a jackpot for one with 4 wheels.
- The challenges in each city all come down to who makes the most money. Earn enough and you move on to the next. Earn the least and drive home, broke and humiliated in your giant yellow truck shaped like a banana. Ouch. That stings.
- The cities they visit are like a character in the show. Teams start each leg from scratch without supplies, permits, parking spaces, or customers. And each place they visit throws its personality into the mix, for better or worse.
- Food trucks are just plain awesome.
Forget restaurants. Some of the best food in the city is coming from trucks. We’re NOT talking street meat here. This is not fast food -- it's food served fast, with good, local ingredients. Plus each truck usually has a gimmick, which I kinda love. And they’re easy to find... like right now!
A quick check of my handy Eat Street app (iPhone, I heart you so much I could EAT you), shows Korilla BBQ, who just happens to be in the race (go NYC!!), Cupcake Stop, and Feed Your Hole trucks all within a few blocks of my apt.
Good thing I’m afraid of the dark, or else I’d be chowing on a Porkinator right now like it was my job.
Sold yet?
Whet your appetite with the meals on wheels that I've eaten recently (glamorous desk not included):
Wafels & Dinges
Motto: Good Things Belgian
Order: The BBQ pulled pork on a Brussels wafel, with a side of slaw and a coolickle (kinda like a red pickle)
Tip: Try their Spekuloos Spread – it looks like peanut butter and tastes like gingerbread cookie goodness.
Red Hook Lobster Pound
Motto: Serving the best crustacean in the nation
Order: Lobster roll, Maine style, on a buttery toasted bun split down the middle
Tip: Bring a $20 -- the roll is $16 alone, pricey but loaded with big chunks of tasty lobstah.
Mexicue
Motto: The sweet, sweet love child of red-hot Mexican cuisine and down-home barbeque
Order: A smoked short rib taco, BBQ beef brisket slider, and pulled pork slider. I like to call that the Carnivore's Trifecta.
Tip: Budget about 30 minutes for this one, the line is long, but worth the wait.
Eddie’s Pizza Truck
Motto: Home of the Bar Pie
Order: No clue. The first time I tried to eat here, they closed the main window in my face. The second time, they gave me attitude about needing to order through the passenger seat door instead of the giant, gaping hole on the side of the truck. Needless to say, I left.
Tip: I hear the wait is 20 minutes. Hopefully they're as good at making pizza as they are at being rude.
So, do YOU have any favorite food trucks? List them below!
And remember, this is best left to professionals: Don’t cook and drive.
tags: city life, entertainment, food
8/10/2011
You Just Got Pringled!
What’s that? You say it’s about time for a new taste test? I couldn’t agree more!
Rather than go for sweets like this time, or this time, I dug deep into the salty category. Think crunchy. Think crispy. Think potato(ish) chips.
I’m speaking, of course, of Pringles.
Now, I can already see you turning your nose up at the crisp that isn’t legally allowed to call itself a chip because it’s only 42% potato. Oh, what a misunderstood snack!
I think there’s something beautifully precise about their uniform shape and the way they line up in a stack. I like the irony of organized junk food.
Plus, Pringles don’t fraternize with your average low-rent bag of chips, all hap-hazard and broken with that weird stubby green one that you're never sure whether to eat or whether to write a letter to the company's CEO and report a tainted bag (or is that just me?).
NO! Pringles are too good for that. Which is why they stand tall on the shelf in the high-priced nuts neighborhood. Fancy.
Here’s my top 3 reasons to give them a pop:
Not as easy as it sounds.
My sister-in-law had the good sense to stay out of this one, but my brother and I went head-to-head, armed with nothing but our wits and a gallon of water...
Here’s how the 18 flavors tasted (we could have had 20 -- if not for the elusive Bacon Ranch and Mozzarella Stick!):
tags: food, polls
Rather than go for sweets like this time, or this time, I dug deep into the salty category. Think crunchy. Think crispy. Think potato(ish) chips.
I’m speaking, of course, of Pringles.
Now, I can already see you turning your nose up at the crisp that isn’t legally allowed to call itself a chip because it’s only 42% potato. Oh, what a misunderstood snack!
I think there’s something beautifully precise about their uniform shape and the way they line up in a stack. I like the irony of organized junk food.
Plus, Pringles don’t fraternize with your average low-rent bag of chips, all hap-hazard and broken with that weird stubby green one that you're never sure whether to eat or whether to write a letter to the company's CEO and report a tainted bag (or is that just me?).
NO! Pringles are too good for that. Which is why they stand tall on the shelf in the high-priced nuts neighborhood. Fancy.
Here’s my top 3 reasons to give them a pop:
- You have to love Mr. Julius Pringle in all his olden-timey barbershop mustache glory.
- The guy who invented the Pringle asked to be buried in a can, and he got his wish in 2008.
- The brand recently sold for $2.35B – that’s a lot of chips (or crisps, as it were)!
Not as easy as it sounds.
My sister-in-law had the good sense to stay out of this one, but my brother and I went head-to-head, armed with nothing but our wits and a gallon of water...
Here’s how the 18 flavors tasted (we could have had 20 -- if not for the elusive Bacon Ranch and Mozzarella Stick!):
- Original: 2 correct guesses (if we didn’t get this layup, we would have quit)
- Sour Cream & Onion: 2 correct
- Cheddar Cheese: 2 correct (helps that these are bright orange)
- BBQ: 1 correct, 1 mistaken for Pizza
- Jalapeno: 1 correct, 1 mistaken for Mexican Layered Dip
- Pizza: 1 mistaken for Buffalo Wing, 1 mistaken for Cajun
- Ranch: 2 correct
- Loaded Baked Potato: 1 correct, 1 mistaken for Cheddar BBQ
- Salt & Vinegar: 2 correct
- Honey Mustard: 2 correct (and can I just say, yum?)
- Buffalo Wing: 1 correct, 1 mistaken for Cajun
- Dill Pickle: 2 correct (and tastes like your sneaker would after a long run)
- Cajun: 1 mistaken for Sweet BBQ, 1 mistaken for Onion Blossom
- Sweet BBQ: 1 mistaken for Pizza, 1 mistaken for Mexican Layered Dip
- White Cheddar Popcorn: 1 correct, 1 mistaken for Loaded Baked Potato
- Mexican Layered Dip: 1 mistaken for Jalapeno, 1 mistaken for Sweet BBQ
- Onion Blossom: 1 correct, 1 mistaken for White Cheddar Popcorn
- Cheddar BBQ: 1 correct, 1 mistaken for plain BBQ
By the end, we had a thirst that a thousand gallons of waters could not quench, and we had Pringles Claw from stuffing our hands in the tube. And I’m not sure who they think they’re fooling with that cap.
Let’s be honest: 1 can = 1 serving.
So who’s palate was the most particular? I'm only semi-ashamed it admit it was mine -- with 13 correct guesses. My brother got 8. I think he was congested. But the real winner here is Julius Pringle. I spent like $45 bucks on chips that are only 42% potato!
While we discovered a few new favorites (I'm talking to YOU Honey Mustard and White Cheddar Popcorn), I’m rather thankful we didn’t have access to the international flavors. The Prawn Cocktail and meaty Roast Turkey flavors popular in the UK, or Seaweed with its “natural ocean flavor” and Old American Circus (aka Funky Mustard) eaten in Asia just sound plain gross.
But if old Julius feels like taking a dip in a pot of chocolate, I’d be all over that! Just sayin.
Let’s be honest: 1 can = 1 serving.
So who’s palate was the most particular? I'm only semi-ashamed it admit it was mine -- with 13 correct guesses. My brother got 8. I think he was congested. But the real winner here is Julius Pringle. I spent like $45 bucks on chips that are only 42% potato!
While we discovered a few new favorites (I'm talking to YOU Honey Mustard and White Cheddar Popcorn), I’m rather thankful we didn’t have access to the international flavors. The Prawn Cocktail and meaty Roast Turkey flavors popular in the UK, or Seaweed with its “natural ocean flavor” and Old American Circus (aka Funky Mustard) eaten in Asia just sound plain gross.
But if old Julius feels like taking a dip in a pot of chocolate, I’d be all over that! Just sayin.
tags: food, polls
8/03/2011
Happy Birthday to Me
Oh, what a difference a year makes!
On my last birthday, I turned 37 (ahem), and I was totally down in the dumps. Devastated. Depressed. Drowning.
Ugh. That blew.
That's not me! I love my birthday! It's the best day of the year! If I had my wish, it would be declared a national holiday. And it would last 3 weeks. Seriously.
Last year aside, I have tons of amazing birthday memories.
Some of my favorites are from when I was little. Like the time I turned 4 and my entire family -- grandparents, aunts, uncles, everybody -- went to Disney to celebrate and I met Goofy (see, I loved tall guys even back then). Or the time I turned 6 and my mom had a pizza party for me on the front lawn and invited every kid in a 5 block radius because we were new to the neighborhood. Or the time I turned 10 and had my first sleepover party where we giggled about boys, ET, and Cabbage Patch Kids well into the night.
This picture you see here is from 1982, the year I turned 9 (if you count the candles on my cheesecake, you'll see 10, that extra one is to grow on). I love this shot because I'm surrounded by the people who mean the most to me and I look really happy. Hopeful. Carefree.
Like a little girl should.
If you've been reading this blog for a while, you know I have 3 birthday rules. So, with those in mind, here's 10 to-dos for today, one for each candle on that cake:
I will remember what it's like to be a kid, when everything seems possible.
I will not work.
I will eat cheesecake for breakfast.
I will read my horoscope and believe the good stuff.
I will wear my hair in a ponytail all day.
I will spend gobs of money on silly things.
I will ignore what I lack, and focus on all that I have.
I will paint my fingers and toes a happy color.
I will look forward to seeing and hearing from all the people I love.
I will chill out on my roofdeck and enjoy the day.
So, here's to turning 38! At least I'm not 40. That means I still have 2 more years to get my shit together before I hit my "scary age." And here's to each of YOU -- and to my trusty Amex card -- for helping me celebrate!
Now I think I'll close my eyes and make a really, really, really good wish...
tags: holidays
On my last birthday, I turned 37 (ahem), and I was totally down in the dumps. Devastated. Depressed. Drowning.
Ugh. That blew.
That's not me! I love my birthday! It's the best day of the year! If I had my wish, it would be declared a national holiday. And it would last 3 weeks. Seriously.
Last year aside, I have tons of amazing birthday memories.
Some of my favorites are from when I was little. Like the time I turned 4 and my entire family -- grandparents, aunts, uncles, everybody -- went to Disney to celebrate and I met Goofy (see, I loved tall guys even back then). Or the time I turned 6 and my mom had a pizza party for me on the front lawn and invited every kid in a 5 block radius because we were new to the neighborhood. Or the time I turned 10 and had my first sleepover party where we giggled about boys, ET, and Cabbage Patch Kids well into the night.
This picture you see here is from 1982, the year I turned 9 (if you count the candles on my cheesecake, you'll see 10, that extra one is to grow on). I love this shot because I'm surrounded by the people who mean the most to me and I look really happy. Hopeful. Carefree.
Like a little girl should.
If you've been reading this blog for a while, you know I have 3 birthday rules. So, with those in mind, here's 10 to-dos for today, one for each candle on that cake:
I will remember what it's like to be a kid, when everything seems possible.
I will not work.
I will eat cheesecake for breakfast.
I will read my horoscope and believe the good stuff.
I will wear my hair in a ponytail all day.
I will spend gobs of money on silly things.
I will ignore what I lack, and focus on all that I have.
I will paint my fingers and toes a happy color.
I will look forward to seeing and hearing from all the people I love.
I will chill out on my roofdeck and enjoy the day.
So, here's to turning 38! At least I'm not 40. That means I still have 2 more years to get my shit together before I hit my "scary age." And here's to each of YOU -- and to my trusty Amex card -- for helping me celebrate!
Now I think I'll close my eyes and make a really, really, really good wish...
tags: holidays
7/23/2011
Hot Mess
I’m not saying it was hot today or anything, but I think a pigeon spontaneously combusted outside my window.
I saw a ton of pics on Facebook with the temperature on people's phones and in their cars. It was 103, after all. So you may wonder why you’re looking at a medicine cabinet? Well, for starters, it’s MY medicine cabinet.
You may also wonder why it’s jam-packed with 10 deodorants? That’s because I think I might smell. I don’t believe I stink or reek (yet). But I’m pretty certain I smell. I mean, who can possibly stay fresh in this heat?
I have become a Crazy Deodorant Lady.
I'm obsessed. The human underarm is like a Petri dish. It’s loaded with bacteria. Sure, I’ve tried your typical girlie deodorants. Secret, Dove, Ban, Degree, Lady Speed Stick.
Child’s play.
So I upgraded to clinical strength – the kind you practically need a prescription to buy.
Sniff, sniiiiiff. Nope. Still smelly.
How could this BE? I shave and shower! Daily! Since when is that not enough?
(Side note: While I'm oversharing, I should also mention I have sensitive pits. I once tried Tom’s all-natural deodorant, which had an apricot flair and was supposed to be gentle. And it was. So gentle, in fact, that I would have had similar success rubbing an actual apricot under my arms. Turns out aluminum is a pretty important ingredient. Won't make THAT mistake again.)
So, back to the medicine cabinet.
You might also be wondering why I have Degree man deodorant in there? It's because I believe I have found the solution to my problem. See the cap? That’s Bear Grylls’ mug on there – he's the Man vs Wild guy on the Discovery Channel. That dude’s climbed Everest, eaten snakes, wrestled alligators, drank urine, given himself a guano enema AND used the corpse of a dead sheep for a sleeping bag.
If it’s good enough for THAT guy, it should be able to handle my 20 minute walk to work.
Let’s pray it does the trick. If not, I will have no other choice but to resort to this… (and you know how I love infomercials -- no, really, I do -- I'm helpless to resist):
I'm particularly horrified by "Lanny F." and his "odors in special places."
So, is this TMI about BO? Do YOU have any secrets for smelling sweet in this heat? Don't make me sweat it out.
Share below...
tags: commercials, gross, health
I saw a ton of pics on Facebook with the temperature on people's phones and in their cars. It was 103, after all. So you may wonder why you’re looking at a medicine cabinet? Well, for starters, it’s MY medicine cabinet.
You may also wonder why it’s jam-packed with 10 deodorants? That’s because I think I might smell. I don’t believe I stink or reek (yet). But I’m pretty certain I smell. I mean, who can possibly stay fresh in this heat?
I have become a Crazy Deodorant Lady.
I'm obsessed. The human underarm is like a Petri dish. It’s loaded with bacteria. Sure, I’ve tried your typical girlie deodorants. Secret, Dove, Ban, Degree, Lady Speed Stick.
Child’s play.
So I upgraded to clinical strength – the kind you practically need a prescription to buy.
Sniff, sniiiiiff. Nope. Still smelly.
How could this BE? I shave and shower! Daily! Since when is that not enough?
(Side note: While I'm oversharing, I should also mention I have sensitive pits. I once tried Tom’s all-natural deodorant, which had an apricot flair and was supposed to be gentle. And it was. So gentle, in fact, that I would have had similar success rubbing an actual apricot under my arms. Turns out aluminum is a pretty important ingredient. Won't make THAT mistake again.)
So, back to the medicine cabinet.
You might also be wondering why I have Degree man deodorant in there? It's because I believe I have found the solution to my problem. See the cap? That’s Bear Grylls’ mug on there – he's the Man vs Wild guy on the Discovery Channel. That dude’s climbed Everest, eaten snakes, wrestled alligators, drank urine, given himself a guano enema AND used the corpse of a dead sheep for a sleeping bag.
If it’s good enough for THAT guy, it should be able to handle my 20 minute walk to work.
Let’s pray it does the trick. If not, I will have no other choice but to resort to this… (and you know how I love infomercials -- no, really, I do -- I'm helpless to resist):
I'm particularly horrified by "Lanny F." and his "odors in special places."
So, is this TMI about BO? Do YOU have any secrets for smelling sweet in this heat? Don't make me sweat it out.
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tags: commercials, gross, health
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