Wednesday, December 21, 2016

"I like corny. I'm looking for more corny in my life."

The title line is from The Holiday, and it's the best line possibly in any movie ever, and I wish every day that I had written it. 



When you're a writer who's not writing, I guess it's only natural to end up where I currently am.

Which is knowing that something's wrong and missing, and just being grumpy about it all the time.

So I did what any writer in a slump does - put on a movie with a fantastic screenplay and wished for the day the screenplay writer is me.

I think as I get older, I want instant results or an immediate change more and more, and I forget that old cliche that the best things in life are worth waiting for.

I also forget that I've had to work damn hard to get literally everything I have in my life. So why should writing be any easier.

I want writing to be easier. Being a writer was how I defined myself for so long, I felt like I was entitled for it to be easy, for the inspiration to just flow naturally.

But tonight as I sat on my couch with a half-eaten bag of Cool Ranch Doritos and yelling at Nancy Meyers for making The Holiday almost too good, I was struck with humility and pride all at the same time.

The humility because I don't deserve anything I've worked hard for, but God in His mystical and crazy ways has allowed me to have it. If it's in my best interest and His best will, then I'll get what I work hard for. Period.

The pride because do I really want something to be published that I half-assed? I'm way too much of a perfectionist for that. I should be submitting the seventeenth draft, not the second. I should be thoughtful and deliberate in my writings, not willy-nilly or just cause. I should write something that I can be proud to show strangers and friends alike.

I hate slumps. So I'm going to get out of this one.

Watch and learn, kids.


Tuesday, October 25, 2016

You’d Think By Twenty-Seven

You’d think by 27, I’d have figured out how to not spill water all over myself like I did this morning.

You’d think by 27, I’d have learned how to not oversleep.

You’d think by 27, I’d have figured out what to do with my hair. Today so far, I have straightened it, put a headband in it, taken the headband out, put the headband back in, taken the headband out and put bobby pins in it, taken the bobby pins out and tried braiding a portion of it, only to finally just wear it down and let it do what it wants. All before 9 a.m.

You’d think by 27, I’d have found my shade of lipstick. Or at least learned how to wear lipstick without feeling like a five year old who just raided her mom’s makeup case.

You’d think by 27, I’d have my dream job. Or at least make enough to not count my pennies and feel that buying new underwear at Target is a splurge.

You’d think by 27, I’d have a house full of playful kittens who all love each other along with the one neurotic old grumphead cat I currently have. Some day…

You’d think by 27, I would have at least something to show for my passion for writing besides a weird blog I sometimes write in and a movie review blog with a grand total of three movie reviews.

You’d think by 27, I’d know how to walk in heels. Or walk in flats, for that matter.

You’d think by 27, there would be nothing left for me to pin on Pinterest (just kidding, there’s always more to pin).

You’d think by 27, I’d have stopped envying other girls for the way they looked and learn to take care of my body properly.

You’d think by 27, I’d have learned which Instagram filter is the most flattering, and never to get on the Facebook because it just pisses me off every time.

You’d think by 27, I’d be better at time management.

You’d think by 27, I’d know that eating $15 of Taco Bell will make me sick.

You’d think by 27, I’d have learned the value of spending time every day alone with God and actually do it.

You’d think by 27, I’d know how to not be awkward when opening presents in front of people.

You’d think by 27, I’d have found my soulmate and someone who not only gets my sense of humour, but shares my sense of humour to a tee.

Oh wait, that last one has come true. 27, you’re too good to me.


Sunday, September 25, 2016

Why I Go To The Movies Alone

[Note: I actually wrote this piece as a guest article for another blog, but as it simply never got published, I decided it would be a waste not to publish it on my own blog.] 


The first time I ever went to see a movie by myself, I went to see Seeking A Friend For The End Of The World.

I was terrified as I walked up to the counter and asked for one single ticket.

I also felt hilarious because of the irony of my movie choice whilst being alone, but that’s beside the point.

I had this preconceived notion that it was sad and depressing and just plain pathetic going to the movies alone. I thought everyone in the theater would judge me or feel sorry for me, and I didn’t like either of those options. I remember being in high school and seeing people alone at the movies and swearing that I would never be that pathetic.

And then after college I moved to a city where I had no friends and was five and half hours away from family, and had no choice but to be pathetic and go to the movies alone. I befriended my town’s $2.50 movie theater after living in the city for six months and swallowing my pride long enough to tell the guy at the counter that I just needed one ticket.

An hour into the movie, it hit me that going to the movies alone was the best thing that could have ever happened to me at that time in my life.

No one is watching you. Literally.

I have always been a self-conscious person, caring way more about how people view me than I should.

But in a dark movie theater, I realized that literally no one is looking at me or cares that I’m there by myself. They’re there to watch a movie, not watch me.

There is a lot of freedom in realizing that you don’t have to worry what others are thinking about you because they’re not paying you a bit of attention.

A movie theater alone can be a little slice of heaven.

I was in a place where it didn’t seem to matter that I didn’t know anyone or was alone. I could laugh with people, cry with them, be shocked, amazed, inspired, and all without even talking to them. I could eat snacks and junk food in public to my heart’s content, and no one judged me because no one was looking at me.

An introvert’s paradise, really.

Going to the movies made me take myself on a date.

That may sound silly, but I was alone in a city I didn’t want to be in, and it was really easy for me, on my days off, to stay in bed till 3 p.m. feeling sorry for myself. The movie theater got me out of bed, dressed in something other than sweatpants.

I used to consider going to the movies as like taking myself out on a date. Before going, I would shower, put on makeup, do my hair, dress up a little even maybe, not for anyone but myself. I would buy popcorn at the movies and not have to share with anyone. I didn’t feel so gloomy and self-pitying while I was enjoying a movie.

Even though I currently actually have a few friends now and am dating someone I can drag to the movies, I still sometimes take myself to a movie alone, just to cheesily remind myself that I’m my friend and I’m pretty cool.


Saturday, August 6, 2016

New Blog Because I'm Cool (I'm Not)

I decided to get off my butt and do something I've been thinking about doing for months: Create a film review blog.

If you had asked me junior year of college where I would be in five years, I would have probably told you some cockamamie answer. I was naive and dumb junior year.

But somehow writing would have been involved in that cockamamie answer, and that's the one thing I wasn't dumb about junior year; I knew I loved to write.

I graduated college four years ago, and still have yet to actually do anything in my vocation that really involves writing.

Don't get me wrong, I've learned to accept and (most days) be relatively happy in my current vocation. And while the majority of my job is writing e-mails in a customer service-type setting, that's not the kind of writing I thought I'd be doing post-graduation.

I still cling to the hope that one day, I'll find myself in a job that allows me to really write like I want. But that's not today, so instead of moping about it, I choose to be proactive.

Thus this new blog was born.

I'm still creating and word vomiting on this blog, never you worry, three people who actually read this blog. But if you're tired of my rantings on nothing in particular and long for me to be consistent in my writings, then maybe hop, skip, wander, or whatever form of movement you'd like on over to my new blog that will be exclusively film reviews, found here:

http://andnowthefeaturedpresentation.blogspot.com/

Enjoy and stuff.

Monday, July 18, 2016

"I'm not superstitious. But I am a little stitious."

So Robert and I finished The Office a few weeks ago.

Not gonna lie, season 9 was hard to get through. Not because we were prolonging the end, just because the season was rough. The show was never the same after Michael left, but that last season just felt really off.

But they redeemed themselves with the last episode.

As far as last episodes of shows go, The Office made pretty top ranks in my book.

I really judge shows based on the very last episode (cough The Newsroom cough I pretend it doesn't exist cough) and I'm not gonna lie, I teared up multiple times in the last episode of The Office.

I was thinking about the last episode today, and it made me have some serious The Office withdrawals.

So if you are too, then don't worry. I got you covered.

 :



Haha! Michael and Toby have the best interactions out of any other two characters on the show.:


When he was all of us around food. | 21 Times Kevin From "The Office" Was An Inspiration To Us All:


The Tao Of Michael Scott #refinery29  http://www.refinery29.com/2015/03/83753/michael-scott-office-quotes#slide-7  Let this one marinate in your brain for a few minutes before you decide if you agree with him or not.Watch here:




The Office Jim Halpert:




Holly and Michael make me so happy but when Michael leaves it the saddest episode of The Office there is :(:



This gutsy (but temporary setback) in Dwight and Angela's courtship: | The 17 Most Romantic Moments On "The Office":





17 Times Jim Halpert Made You So Happy You Cried:


He knew how to enforce a dress code. | 82 Reasons Why "The Office's" Michael Scott Was The World's Best Boss:



And finally, perhaps the best moment of the entire show.



When Kevin stayed up all night to make his famous chili, but he dropped it on the ground. | 26 Hilarious "The Office" Moments That'll Make You Laugh Every Time:


Office, come baaaaaaaaaack. I love you.






Wednesday, July 13, 2016

The Politics And Stuff

I don't talk about politics.

Mostly because I know nothing about them.

I fully admit that I probably should learn something about politics besides really liking The West Wing but struggling to understand anything that happens on the show besides who's kissing who.

I think it would do our country an enormous amount of good if people my age - aka kids who have been out of college long enough to understand a wee bit about the world but not adult enough yet to really truly understand a 401k - took it upon themselves to be educated about politics (and in my humble opinion, saying you don't want Hillary to be president because she's a girl is NOT a good enough reason to not want her as president).

I mean have a comprehensive, basic understanding of politics. Enough that you could at least stumble through a grown-up conversation about politics.

I think that's probably how you know you're a true adult - you want to at least sort of understand big things like politics and 401k's.

And as much as I find politics icky and terrifying, I want to do some research or take a class or talk to someone who can patiently explain things to me.

But, until that time comes and I can say with reasonable confidence why I want to vote for someone, I 100% for sure can say that even if you don't agree with Obama's way of being president or whatever, you have to admit that he seems like a cool guy.

Like, even if sometimes I roll my eyes and say, "Thanks, Obama," I still think he got swag and we should be besties.

If you think I've lost my mind at this point, I submit this link of some awesome photography of the prez.

http://twistedsifter.com/2016/07/pete-souza-white-house-photog-favorite-obama-photos/

You won't be disappointed. Promise.


Saturday, January 23, 2016

"I Can't Go Back Now"

I listened to Matthew Perryman Jone's "I Can't Go Back Now" on repeat one, and I wrote a thing.




I never meant to fall in love with her. 

I even tried not to. 

Told myself it was just sadness confused, that we would get over his death and then realize we didn't need each other anymore, that the only thing bonding us together was a grief neither of us could carry, but just in that moment, and we could and would learn to carry it alone. 

But holding her right then lessened the grief just a little, and I was looking for any morsel of relief during those days after he died. 

Maggie and I felt it the most after he died. 

Not that other people didn't feel it or grieve, I know they did. 

Just not the way we felt it. 

I remember the first time I met Rex. I was the weird new boy in third grade, braces and glasses and a head so full of useless facts that sometimes they all spilled out when I tried to talk normal. 

None of the other boys liked me, but that was sort of okay with me. I didn't mind playing by myself during recess. 

But then Joey Franklin stole my toy helicopter and refused to give it back and so I did what any other self-respecting eight year old boy would do when the Joeys of the world steal their toys during recess and laugh at them for crying about it - I punched him square in the nose. 

And when Joey ran to Mrs. Feathershed the teacher with his face covered in blood, Rex whispered to me to shut up and waltzed up to Mrs. Feathershed and told her he did it because it was about damn time someone broke Joey's nose. 

Rex was suspended from school for a week for punching Joey, and grounded by his parents for a month for using a bad word. 

But he also gained a new best friend. 

I told that story during my best man speech at Rex and Maggie's wedding. Got a huge laugh from everyone. 

I don't remember what story Maggie's maid of honour told, but it sure wasn't as good as mine. 

That's what I felt about anyone else's friendship with anyone else ever - it wasn't as good as mine and Rex's friendship. 

Maggie once asked me if I was mad at her for stealing my best friend for her own. I told her that I guess I should be, but couldn't because Maggie just felt like an extension of Rex. 

When Maggie showed up at my house a few months after he died, I was listening to Rex's favourite album on my record player. 

I realize how cliche or fateful that sounds, but whatever. Maybe it was both of those things. 

When I opened the door, she tried to pretend like she wasn't crying. 

I didn't know what to say to her, so we stood there staring at each other for a few seconds before she shrugged her shoulders and tried to smile, and the tears poured down her face, and I grabbed her and hugged her as hard and I knew how. 

We laid on my bed and listened to the album all the way through three times and didn't say a word to each other. She rested her head on my chest the entire time, and I played with her hair. 

That was ninety-seven days after he died, and I thought I was just comforting the widow of my best friend. 



Friday, January 15, 2016

That Moving Day Mindset Though

In fifteen days, I get to start over.




I found a new place to live, and these final fifteen days until I get to live there feel like a hundred days.
Obviously I’m excited.
I’m currently sick and couldn’t sleep last night, so as I tried to drift off, I sappily thought about all the wonderful and weird and happy and dramatic and stupid things that happened in this apartment.

Wonderful = My man told me he loved me for the first time in this apartment. That’s the most wonderful thing I could have asked for.

Weird = I grew up in a lot of good but weird ways here. I learned I’m better and healthier living alone, I learned when to keep my mouth shut when I really want to yell at certain individuals when I see them in my neighborhood, I learned what I had to write on work order requests to get the maintenance guys to leave notes when they fix things, I learned to not sweat the small stuff sometimes.

Happy = I discovered who I should keep around in my life, and who is unhealthy. Which was an extremely happy thing for me because I’ve always dealt with being desperate for friends and being wiling to be friends with anyone who smiles at me. But over the past 13 months living here, I figured out who is healthy for me and who’s not.

Dramatic = See above where I said I figured out who was unhealthy. Enough said.

Stupid = Lots and lots and lots of stupid mistakes were made in this apartment. Selfish decisions, saying words that felt great in the moment but weren’t even thought through a little bit, stuffing myself with Taco Bell and Fazzoli’s until I really just wanted to throw up.


I can’t wait for the new wonderful and weird and happy dramatic and stupid and sappy things that will happen in my new home.