Monday, March 27, 2006

The Word of the Day for March 27 is:

What a crazy word ....

Götterdämmerung \gher-ter-DEM-uh-roong\ noun

: a collapse (as of a society or regime) marked by catastrophic violence and disorder; broadly : downfall

Example sentence:
Although we all hoped for a peaceful transfer of power, we feared the conflict would instead end in a chaotic Götterdämmerung.

Did you know?
Norse mythology specified that the destruction of the world would be preceded by a cataclysmic final battle between the good and evil gods, resulting in the heroic deaths of all the "good guys." The German word for this earth-shattering last battle was "Götterdämmerung." Literally, "Götterdämmerung" means "twilight of the gods." ("Götter" is the plural of "Gott," meaning "god," and "Dämmerung" means "twilight.") Figuratively, the term is extended to situations of world-altering destruction marked by extreme chaos and violence. In the 19th century, the German composer Richard Wagner brought attention to the word "Götterdämmerung" when he chose it as the title of the last opera of his cycle Der Ring des Nibelungen, and by the early 20th century, the word had entered English.

Friday, March 24, 2006

I Heart New York


Disclaimer ... this is in no way a reflection of my love for Chicago, I love Chicago. BUT...

I LOVE NEW YORK.

What is it about this city? Is it the city or my friends or is it that I loved the time in my life here? It still feels like home. I still get a rush. I still love it as much as I ever did.

I'm here for a few days and it's home again.

Wednesday, March 22, 2006

No guarantee of comprehension

As mentioned previously, in my day job I recruit for the international offices of a fantabulous company. Being an ever expanding corporation and with my flexibility of scheduling and my tenure with the company, I am frequently tossed new requisitions to fill and new continents to tackle. At one time this summer I had a candidate on every continent, well except for Africa, and North and South pole...anyway...lately I've been doing less recruiting for China and more recruiting for Brazil. Below is the read receipt from an email I sent to a candidate for a role in our office in Sao Paulo:


From: email from brazilian candidate
Sent: Wednesday, March 22, 2006 6:31 PM
To: me
Subject: Notificação de leitura

(email address) with subject "FW: It was a pleasure speaking with you today" was displayed this is no guarantee that the message has been read or understood

Wednesday, March 15, 2006

Ides of March

What a bizarrely unhappy thing for such a hopeful time of year - when it's almost the end of winter and almost the beginning of spring...

Definitions of ides on the Web:

Definitions of ides of march on the Web:

  • The fifteenth day of March and the day that famous assination of Julius Caesar by the conspirators ,Brutus and Cassius, took place.
    library.thinkquest.org/26907/glossary.htm
  • March 15. A prophet told Julius Caesar to "Beware the Ides of March." Julius Caesar was too arrogant to take this threat seriously. He was also too arrogant to respect the Senate properly, and a number of Senators were rather upset with him, to put it lightly. On March 15, BC 44, Caesar went to the Senate to make an announcement, but was assassinated by 60 Senators, lead by Brutus. Caesar died at the foot of the statue of Pompey the Great.
    www.people.fas.harvard.edu/~frankwu/lac61vocab.html
  • In the Roman calendar the ides of March falls on March 15. The ides was an auspicious day in the Roman calendar, falling on the 15th of March, May, July and October and on the 13th of the other months.
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ides_of_March
  • Ides of March was an American rock band.
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ides_of_March_(band)

Sunday, March 12, 2006

Cheese Glorious Cheese

Friday afternoon started like most of my Fridays, with drinks after class with classmates at Exchequer. What was different than other Fridays is that instead of going home and either resting (read napping) and then going out again, or just coming home and enjoying a quiet Friday night at home still feeling slightly buzzed from drinking beers at 4 in the afternoon … well this Friday instead, we went straight on to other bars (and I continued to drink, trading up beers for stoli and sodas).

Casey Moran’s. It made me feel quite old, being in a bar with all those early twenty-somethings, drunk and horny and on the prowl. But I spent my time at Casey Moran’s on the dance floor. I am not a dancer. I have no graceful movements. I am notorious clutzy and uncoordinated. For the most part I just sort of jump. CC and I for the whole time, and part of the time LM and PJ joined, danced with complete abandon. I felt like I was thirteen again and was jumping on the couches in Alison Gubser’s living room, and air guitaring to Brian Adams. It was the combination of the eighties music that they were playing, and that, in my pigtails, t-shirt and sneakers, I could care less what I looked like, surrounded by the overpainted and hormonal kids around us (most of which were macking down with determination all around the dance floor)

It was embracing the cheese and giving in to it.

I should add though that I am no longer twenty-three, so when most of my early twenties friends called it a night, I should have done the same. In stead, I went on to another bar with a smaller concentration of our group (two people to be exact) and drank more until after 4am.

I had a meeting with my grad projects advisor at noon at Ann Sather (good eggs benedict there). The first thing she said to me was “Are you just waking up?”

I painfully croaked, “Yes.”

I danced (and drank) like I was twenty-three but man o man, I woke up feeling every one of my thirty-three years of age.

Thursday, March 09, 2006

Linking

See my Links... Look to your Left... I finally got it figured out ...Thank You to ya'll that I sat on the floor with this afternoon on the 16th floor... Happy Linking..

Wednesday, March 08, 2006

the mood today

Earlier I was thinking I would blog how to have a good morning...which would be,

wake up before your alarm goes off, naturally, slowly, easily, not in that, dammit I have five more minutes of sleep, but in that slept all I needed ready to start my day...make yourself some great scrambled eggs on a whole wheat muffin with some havarti cheese...watch good morning america and write the lesson plan that you should have written the day before...walk to the coffee shop on your corner and treat yourself to a non-fat large latte..walk to the el listening to ella fitzgerald on your ipod.... enjoy sunshine on the el platform... get a window seat on the el and watch this wacky city spin underneath you...drop off copies of your latest draft of a story to your advisor, and everyone in your workshop class, smile as you walk north toward the river because it's 10 am and you've already gotten so much done ... enjoy the spring window displays at Marshall Fields...it's sunny and in the 40's outside...spring is coming... notice the rhythm of the city as you trot up Dearborn listening to Louie Armstrong.... get to the office early enough to not feel guilty that you only wrote the training session you are doing that day that morning ... and then ...

clunk...

call your 21 yr old nephew (such a baby still - at least in your imagination) to say "please don't be a hero" because he is shipping out to Iraq for his 2nd tour at 0300... promise that THIS time you'll actually do more than send him one or two emails...

proceed to have an exhausting day ... do two days of work between 10:30 am and 8:30 pm... speak to people in both Brazil and China trying to keep track of different currencies and different slang when asking they same ol same ol recruiting questions ... between EIGHT phone interviews some three in row (and never having more than a 30 minute break between anything …which between interviews running over and submitting feedback and responding to emails becomes less than 10) ... answer emails from your mother about a family situation that is DRAINING...and some how you have been nominated to have a conversation with someone that no one wants to confront ...

and still you are in the office at 8:30 at night...

How to start your day in a great mood and end it exhausted…

Tuesday, March 07, 2006

In the end it IS about words

In a previous post, I incorrectly described my friend as talking through a moment of anguish. That was writer's embellishment. It was the word that I liked in the sentence, but she pointed out to me last night that Anguish was a little too intense a word. She's right. That was lazy writing. So below are some better word choices:

Disappointment n.


    1. The act of disappointing.
    2. The condition or feeling of being disappointed.
  1. One that disappoints.

Frustration n.


    1. The act of frustrating or an instance of being frustrated.
    2. The state of being frustrated.
  1. Something that serves to frustrate.

Vexation n.

  1. The act of annoying, irritating, or vexing.
  2. The quality or condition of being vexed; annoyance.
  3. A source of irritation or annoyance.

Exasperation n.

  1. The act or an instance of exasperating.
  2. The state of being exasperated; frustrated annoyance.

Aggravation n.

  1. The act of aggravating or the state of being aggravated.
  2. A source of continuing, increasing irritation or trouble.
  3. Exasperation.

Monday, March 06, 2006

And now a word from our sponsors...

These are some of my professors...

Carol is my grad projects advisor this semester. We meet every other week. It feels like we only talk about my work for ten minutes of the hour and gossip the rest, but when I sit down to write I realize she's given me a lot to think about, and to write about... she's a groovy chick.

I had Janet for workshop last semester and this semester I am taking her class "Situation of the Writer." It's all about making a living as a writer...everything from getting an agent, applying for grants, doing your taxes, and how not to become suicidal. Janet's another groovy chick and I love her classes. She is the ultimate story teller, and so excited and supportive about all the work that my fellow classmates are doing...


I am taking a class this semester in Narrative Prose from Jim McManus. He's a character. In class he refers to himself as Jim Bo Sweetness.


Saturday, March 04, 2006

Simulacrum

Word of the Day for Saturday March 4, 2006

simulacrum \sim-yuh-LAY-kruhm; -LAK-ruhm\, noun;
plural simulacra \sim-yuh-LAY-kruh; -LAK-ruh\:
1. An image; a representation.
2. An insubstantial, superficial, or vague likeness or
semblance.


***
Something has happened. I started writing today. And something came to me. I don't know where it is going. But I am either titling it Simulacrum or The Allegory of the Cave on Wall Street. It's something new. And it might be horrible. But finally my fingers are moving across my keyboard instead of staying pearched at f and j waiting for inspiration.

a fraternity of quirkiness

The other day a dear friend who I have known for many years and someone with whom I’ve blurred the platonic/romantic friendship lines many times, called me quirky. He used other words, but quirky was what stayed with me. Because he meant it with affection, and he knows me quite well and knows that I’m weird, and that I think I’m weird.

One of the greatest things for me about being a writing student, is meeting other writers. We are different. Each of us our own bizarre collection of idiosyncrasies. Kind of like the table of food at a church pot luck dinner. But I’ve found that some of my weirdness is not uniquely mine, but actually part of a shared fraternity.

I own books. I have a hard time walking out of a bookstore without spending a lot of $. “Ma Belle Mere” keeps lecturing me to use a library card. But I like to own my books. I like to keep them long after I’ve read them, even if I never open them up again and re-read them. I loan them to friends, always asking that they return them to me. My non-writer friends, many of whom are also avid readers, find this unnerving. They are afraid of losing my book, or forgetting to return it to me. They don’t quite understand why I need to keep them.


My fellow writing students, own books, keep them, loan them out but ask for them back.

I edit my thoughts. I have an inner dialogue, sometimes it’s the characters in my stories. I imagine what they would be thinking if they were standing on the L platform with me. Sometimes it’s a replaying of my day and how I would describe it in an email (or a blog). And sometimes it’s my own fragmented prose word play. Just me on the bus trying to describe how the Lake looks to me at night. But even in my own thoughts, I edit. I catch myself using cliché’s or obvious word choices, and I struggle to find new ways, my own way, to say something. No one will hear my thoughts but still I have to write them the best way that I can.

The other night I was on the phone with a writing friend, she was tipsy, smoking cigarettes and talking through a moment of anguish. As she was re-telling the nights events, she used a phrase, one that I can’t remember now, something clichéd like maybe “stars in my eyes”, some phrase that we use in every day speech, and she stopped herself, saying, “Well, if we were in workshop someone would scratch that out.” It made me smile.

I am among other quirky people who are also in constant play with words.

a few of my favorite things

things i love about chicago:

  • foamy soap ... in most public restrooms. it's foamy, it's fun, i feel like a kid in a bathtub with rubber toys...when cleaning yourself was still playtime.
  • the lake...walking by it, driving by it, seeing from the 12th floor of the michigan building. it has a tropical aqua color and an arctic layer of ice. it is always, at all times of day, night and season magnificent.
  • the L ... above the city, weaving through apartment buildings, looking down on starbucks and traffic lights, i feel like a fisher price toy in a lego village.

Wednesday, March 01, 2006

etymology

I do have a love affair with words. I wonder if I played with the dictionary some if I might get unblocked and see the end of my writing ennui … in the meantime, I came across this website. http://www.wordorigins.org/

I find it rather fun, and slightly less geeky than my dream of owning a real Oxford English Dictionary (how can you not love a dictionary that gives pages of definitions for one word including the etymology?). Unfortunately, since I don't even own a bookcase to house all the books (as you can sort of see in the attached picture, my books are in stacks around the walls of my apartment), I don't have the space, nor the finances for the OED, but yes, geekily enough, I do dream.

I am both a word geek as well as a book geek.

Short Hand:

In the past several weeks I have visited or been visited by the following people that have been in my life for many years (even decades):

  • A college friend, she was a sorority sister, and an old housemate, a partner in crimes, and in our college days we even shared some of the same crushes (and kissed many of the same boys). She was in Chicago for a few days for business. We met first for brunch on a Sunday and then for drinks on a Tuesday night. She introduced to me her colleagues as one of her dearest friends. I thought that was a lovely phrase.

  • My Little Brother, sometimes referred to as my Baby Brother. This is an endearment that he accepts with a grain of salt and a bit of humor. We are eleven years a part in age but we are very close and actually enjoy spending time together. Although, we have discovered (on many occasions) that there is a limit to the amount of intense time we can spend together. Seven to eight days seems to be the magic number. Like milk, we turn around the 8th day. My calling him my baby brother causes a great deal of amusement to people. He is 6'2" and while he is twenty-two years old, he looks more like he is in his mid to late twenties. There's nothing baby about him. I do however like to tell people that I used to have to change his diapers. I'm not sure if he finds this amusing or annoying, but what the hell, I am the older sibling.
  • My best friend and all of the friends she considers to be close enough that she would invite them to her bachlorette party. With a friend I threw her a bridal shower and a bachlorette party. I've known KW for twenties years now. We met in our ninth grade drama class. We didn't get to be close friends until our senior year in high school and then proceeded to become best friends. We were roommates in the DC area for three years after college, and then she moved to New York, and I followed a year later. I truly enjoyed the parties for her because I am in a unique situation in that her friends are my friends and I know the people in all areas of her life. I had the joy of throwing her a party with some of my best friends and favorite people.

What I noticed in these recent encounters with old friends and family is that there is a short hand that is unique to old friendships. With just one word you can have an entire conversation. When you've shared a bathroom with a person, had to fight with them over who's turn it was to wash the dishes, or when someone was there when you were drunk making a true ass of yourself, when someone knew you when you were nineteen as well as when you were twenty-nine, even if you have not seen them in three years, in the first three seconds of seeing each other, it's like they've always been sitting next to you.

It's the short hand conversations that I miss. I love my new Chicago friends. And finally the new-ness is wearing off. It's nice when a friendship stops being about getting to know a person to being what the friendship is and will always be.

Where Have I been?

Where Have I been?

Receding into my writer's blocked mind. Like most writers, I believe, I possess a ludicrous amount of self doubt and loathing. I hate my writing. However, I've managed to write, to somehow enjoy writing and understand the compelling force that sends my fingers clicking across a keyboard and stringing together letters and words. Now that I am in my second semester as a writing student, I have fallen into a pit of ennui. I hate my characters, I have no new ideas, I can't read what I've written. Is it some sort of seasonal affected depression? Is it the six weeks of fighting a knarly and inhumane cold? Is it second semester jitters? Or have I reached the end of my writing career before it even started?

I am chatty cathy, loquacious, as I've stated earlier. I once commented (in reply to someone calling me chatty) that I have a LOT to say. And yet, as of late, I have nothing to say.