Whereas when you go to Shoney's or TGI Friday's, they really have to sell that crap to you, so they have to use words like "sizzlin'" and "ooze."
Sunday, October 14, 2012
Restaurant Words
Have you ever noticed that the fancier the
restaurant is, the number of words in the menu gets lower and lower? It's
like they know they don't have to prove anything to anyone, because you know
whatever you get is going to be spectacular, so all the items are like
"charcuterie" and "paella," no explanation. Maybe
they'll throw in a couple of the sub-ingredients, like "vidalia onion
glaze," but that's it. And then the price is just a number: 28.
Whereas when you go to Shoney's or TGI Friday's, they really have to sell that crap to you, so they have to use words like "sizzlin'" and "ooze."
Whereas when you go to Shoney's or TGI Friday's, they really have to sell that crap to you, so they have to use words like "sizzlin'" and "ooze."
Monday, September 3, 2012
Remember The Plane (Or, A Lesson in Decisions Made with Poor Oxygen)
So I just got back from a weekend
visiting my friend in Phoenix, which is one of the hottest places in the entire
world as far as my conditioned-for-lake-effect-snow body is concerned. Getting there and back to Chicago required
flights of at least three hours, and sitting in that recycled air, watching the
sun set and the lights in the cities below come on made me wonder if that was a
real thing when on 30 Rock, Carol
broke down in front of Liz and then apologized for his uncontrollable emotions,
saying that it’s a condition that regularly happens to people who change
altitude more than four times a day.
I once dated a guy who had some
major behavioral and emotional issues, which I gamely ignored until I couldn’t
any longer, and at one point during our short relationship we flew together
from my hometown in Kentucky back to Pennsylvania, where we were in college. We’d already had plenty of ups and downs by
this point, but during that flight together, somehow, things were just right
between us. We snuggled up to one
another, watched the clouds outside our window, and at one point one of us
(probably me) said, “Whatever happens in the future, let’s just say, ‘remember
the plane,’ and everything will be okay.”
And the other one of us (probably him) agreed.
Maybe a week later I broke up
with him.
The point is, never make any big
decisions on a plane.
I didn’t, in case you were
worried. I’m just looking out for you.
Wednesday, July 11, 2012
A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Beach
The heat wave
we've been having finally burst on Sunday and temperatures were in the frigid 80s, so I thought I’d
finally take myself down to the beach.
All summer long I’ve been wanting one simple thing: an afternoon of reading
on the sand, falling asleep with the sound of waves crashing a few feet
away. Insert your own Oprah moment here.
Last summer I found the beach
pretty quickly, and that was back when I knew pretty much zero about Chicago
geography, so I didn’t even bother Google-mapping my trip this weekend. I figured I’d just wander until I got to the
shore, like I did back when I was a greenhorn.
Well, I did wander, and that’s
how I ended up the Lincoln Park Zoo for the first time.
I generally dislike zoos. They’re inevitably hot, crowded, and full of
miserable animals who are all like, Why am I heeeeeere? I want to be chomping on my prey in the
African plains/Arctic dessert/other awesome place, not sitting in this cave, eating
this piece of grass, watching you watch me.
But stumbling upon a zoo
accidentally, when you’re by yourself and can go wherever you want, is much
more pleasant.
I found this black rhino chilling
in the shade. He got up and ate part of
a tree branch and all the kids squealed.
I also found some wild African
dogs, and after that I pretty much left because all of the big cats were off
sleeping somewhere cool, and zoos are no fun if you can’t see any big cats.
The point is, I was so glad this
happened. I hadn’t been to the zoo
before. And without meaning to go there,
I was there, and I didn’t even let myself be like GET OUT OF HERE RIGHT NOW WE’RE
GOING TO THE BEACH HURRY UP. What did it
matter? It didn’t. Insert another Oprah moment here about
spontaneity and accepting the present.
Then, as I continued on my way to
the beach, I found several women’s rowing teams. I think they were racing:
![]() |
Wow, you can really tell what I was taking a picture of, right? |
They made me want to start rowing
competitively, just so I could wear a bikini top and look super hot and muscle in
it, and I could get in a boat and start screaming and people would listen to
me.
Anyhow, I made it to the beach,
finally. And I fell asleep on the sand.
It was a good day.
Tuesday, July 3, 2012
What Windows Do
I owe a lot of the last few weeks
of my life to east-facing windows.
Specifically, the east-facing
windows in my bedroom.
In the morning, when I wake up at
5:45 to get ready for work, the sun has already risen. Outside, the birds are chirping. There’s no sun to watch rise, because it’s
already risen. It might as well be 9:30
on a November morning.
As a result, two things: one, I
had to buy one of those eyeshades to keep myself from waking up at 5 on the
weekends. And two, my circadian rhythms
are all thrown off, and now my body thinks that it’s always daytime and I
should always be awake and I should never be tired.
It’s fantastic.
Something has shifted in me with
the advent of a Chicago summer. I go on
dates with boys. I go out to bars with
friends and stay for hours and have more than just one drink. I let myself stay up past eleven.
I’m not being irresponsible, but
I am having fun. Fun is something of a
new concept.
In college, I did well, I made
friends, I had a good experience. But I
was almost always the good kid. Now I’m
trying to let myself go a little bit. So
I haven’t been running in over a week.
So what? I’ve been traveling and
socializing, which are healthy in their own ways. My calluses can be built back up later. Plus it’s a million degrees outside right now. So, I don’t have to run, and I don’t have to
feel bad about not running.
So what if I only sleep four or
five hours a night? I’m not going to
look back on the nights I was out with my friends, laughing, having a ball, and
wish I’d gone home a little earlier, slept a little longer.
I spent the first nine months of
my time in Chicago going to work, going to class, coming home, and being good.
And I suppose I’m still being
good. But I’m living a little bit
more. I’m less worried about doing
everything exactly right.
The life that exhausted me a few
months ago seems hopelessly boring to me now.
I want to be outside with a bunch of people, just enjoying things. Anything.
I’m 24, and have decided that being 24 is the very best age to be.
Thank you, east-facing windows,
for giving me a wonderful start to my Chicago summer.
Saturday, June 23, 2012
En Route
Recently,
in honor of SUMMERTIME!!!, my hours got changed slightly at work. Not dramatically—I just come in and leave a
half-hour later than usual—but it’s enough to give me an extra half-hour’s
sleep, and it required me to learn The Rules of my new commute.
During
the rest of the year, I’ve pretty much had my commute down to a science that
involves a healthy combination of reliance on the CTA Tracker and my own experiences with
each bus and/or train. I’ve also gotten
to know some people quite well, even though we are strangers. Seeing them for a few minutes every day is
enough for a lifetime. Know what I mean?
Here
are a few of the characters I’ve gotten to know, and whose faces I doubt I’ll
see again until September when my schedule returns to normal:
The
Ceremonial Smoker. Middle-aged woman,
slight, with a dark, bobbed haircut.
Every morning we get off the bus together and she makes a beeline for
the awning of the Chase Bank, where she lights a cigarette and huffs it down
before getting to the train. I can just
imagine her being like, This is MY time,
dammit.
The
Boy Next Door. Nicely-dressed young
professional. Muscle Milk drinker. Totally adorable. One time this other guy drove by while the Boy Next
Door and I were waiting for the bus at 6:30 a.m. and demanded directions to
Magnolia Ave. Boy Next Door said, with
the slightest Southern drawl, “Magnol-ya?
Ah don’t know. Ah
apologize.” My heart died of happiness.
Peanut
Butter. A thirty-something nurse with a
Peter Pan haircut who rides a crowded bus eating a peanut butter sandwich on a
regular basis. Kudos on a healthy breakfast, but that early in the morning, in a crowded space, there are few smells more
nauseating.
Rat’s
Nest. Older woman, petite,
rides the bus to Hyde Park.
She reads books on a wide variety of topics and seems utterly normal
except that her hair is always a gigantic mess.
What’s going on? Does she not
brush it? I don’t know.
Angry
Face. I used to think this guy who rides
from Hyde Park to the Loop every afternoon was a musician or
something because he likes to gesture emphatically with his hands and face, and
I thought he was conducting music in his head. But now I think that he’s just having a
fantasy argument with someone he hates.
Probably one of his coworkers. I
feel bad for Angry Face because I think he hates his job.
The
Bear. My favorite bus driver of all time. I usually catch him on the way home from Hyde
Park. He’s a big guy with dreadlocks and
a drawling voice. When you say thank you
to him, he says, “Uh-huh, watch your step,” really adorably.
Farewell til September, commuter friends.
Saturday, June 16, 2012
Why I Eat Meat
Today I bought some ground bison
and some hickory-smoked turkey bacon and some wild-caught salmon fillets, and I
got to thinking about meat in general.
A
knife, and you: the bird lies in the sink
(I don't love this poem but some people have told me that they do. So whatever.)
![]() |
Oh man. |
![]() |
OH MAN. |
A while ago the New York Times
ran a contest of sorts where people could send in essays about their ethical
reasons for eating meat. Obviously,
there are plenty of ethical reasons NOT to eat meat. For some people it’s a religious thing; for
others it’s political; for others stll, it’s environmental. For a lot of people it’s a health issue. Some people just plain don’t like it.
I get all those, but if I don’t
eat meat, I feel like a sad little anemic red blood cell. My insides have frowny faces if I don’t get a
regular dose of hamburger.
Also I’m training for a 10K, and
while it’s totally possible to be vegetarian or even vegan and have a really
hardcore athletic lifestyle, it just wouldn’t work for me. I promise.
I don't know when the Times' contest closed, and honestly I don't really have a good ethical reason to eat meat; I just need to eat meat.
I’m also not sure why I feel the need
to defend my omnivorism. I suppose it really
only comes down to the fact that I wouldn’t mind eating steak for breakfast.
In fact, I have eaten steak for breakfast. And I feel like a lot of people would judge
me for that.
Here’s a poem I wrote a few years
ago about the process of cooking a whole chicken:
Dinner
for Two
A
pair of shears, the yellow, mottled fat.
Insistent
hands tear bone from shiny pink
Muscle,
and I toss some to the cat.
I
never knew a “tender” was a part—
I
just thought fast food chains devised the name.
You
show to me the kidneys and the heart,
The wishbone sits to dry, our little game.
The
Pope’s nose cut away, the spine thrown out,
The
pieces, two by two, lined on a pan.
Defrocked,
defiled, the skin is strewn about,
We
scoop it up, we dump it in the can.
By
ten o’clock, our dinner’s nearly done.
I
don’t mind eating late—my heart, you’ve won.
Tuesday, May 29, 2012
Trying to Be Fun
This weekend a friend and I went
to Chinatown for dinner, where the two of us ordered five enormous dishes
(duck, beef, and crab for the proteins, with green beans and baby bok choy
alongside) and I had the misfortune of ordering what turned out to be a child’s
drink. It was labeled in the menu as “Japanese
Soda.” When I ordered it, the waiter
informed me that “that’s for a baby,” and then enjoyed bringing it to me,
snapping a rubber nipple-type thing on top, and letting me drink it:
It was fine. It tasted like orange soda. It was full of high-fructose corn syrup. I was only briefly humiliated.
Anyway, back to the story. We planned to watch a movie after our
adventurous dinner, and to make that happen we had to make sure we were fully
stocked with wine and ice cream, and then by the time we did that, and watched
our movie, I was nearly asleep. At this
point it was suggested to me that I should stay the night.
This had me a little bit panicked
at first, as the following thoughts went through my head:
HOW WILL I BRUSH MY TEETH?
I DON’T HAVE ANY SPARE CLOTHES!
I DON’T HAVE MY SPECIAL
ALLERGEN-FORBIDDING PILLOWCASE!
I DON’T HAVE MY MOUTHGUARD AND I
WILL BE GRINDING MY TEETH ALL NIGHT!
Then I decided, screw all that, I’m
not going to die.
So I slept on my friend’s plush,
wonderful couch. The next morning I
splashed some water on my face and we went out for pancakes. I wore all the same clothes I’d had on the day
before. And we had a grand time.
Sometimes I’m anal, and it takes
some work to get me out of my funk. But
it’s worth it. I’m fun. I promise.
I ORDERED A CHILD’S DRINK!
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