Just a synopsis of my daily adventures and things I think people would like to know... :)

Monday, September 19, 2005

Excorcism of Emily Rose

I don't make it to the movies very often. I have to be really compelled to pay to sit somewhere for 2-3 hours (I sit all day during the week). And I need to have some popcorn when I go b/c movie popcorn is just SO YUMMY.

I saw this movie this weekend and it was really creepy. I read about the show afterward and found out that it was more "inspired by a true story" rather than "based on a true story." However, it was still very entertaining.

Check out the true story of Anneliese Michel:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anneliese_Michel

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/09/02/AR2005090200559.html

Happy Hour!

My friend Viet's last day at work was last week and we celebrated at the Front Page. It was a blast! The Front Page is always a good time, and their happy hour is great. $2 draft beers and half priced apps.

Here are pics from the night!

http://www.dotphoto.com/go.asp?l=quanandviet&P=&AID=2830111&CID=1371067&T=1&E=Y&ILD=1231953

Sunday, September 11, 2005

Cross Country Inspiration

I went to Cross Country Camp 2 summers in high school. We ran twice a day, ate a lot, and had pep talks. On the last night of camp one year a counselor read this article to us.

Below is the story. The copy I have doesn't have an author, which is a shame b/c now I cannot credit he/she.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------A cold wind blew the golden leaves across the hard ground. They made a rasping sound, like a death rattle.

It was a sound that matched his breathing. Harsh and grating and painful.

The sweat was frozen in crystal crusts at the end of his hair that flopped each time he took another stride and his feet fell heavily, jarringly, on the ground.

He wore sneakers that were tattered and shredded from the shrapnel of a thousand small pebbles over which he had run. His sweatpants were gray. It was a color that matched his complexion.

His arms drooped with exhaustion, like the flowers bending to give way to winter, and his was a lost, hopeless cause. For the winter was already across the finish line, far ahead, out of sight. And the other runners had long ago left him behind.

His legs screamed at him to stop. His scorched lungs pleaded for rest. Even his socks seemed to fly at half-mast around his ankles, soiled flags of surrender.

Still, he ran.

In the autumn of our dreams, we are all quarterbacks. We are cunning and graceful and when we step into the huddle everyone bends forward eagerly and the crowd rises expectantly because it knows we will deliver the bomb just as the clock blinks down to zero.

Ah, but that is the autumn of our dreams, no in the winter of our reality.

You want to know about reality? Then go watch the other autumn sport. It is called cross-country. Watch it and you will know what they mean when they speak of the loneliness of the long distance runner.

Cross-country runners don’t get scholarships. Or no-cut contracts. Or offers to endorse deodorant or pantyhose or coffee or cars.

Cross-country runners get shin splints and blisters on their feet and runny noses and watery eyes. One thing more. They get a special kind of self-satisfaction that few of us are ever privileged to experience.

Oh, it is not from winning. It is from merely finishing, from ever going out there in the first place and running through puddles and briar patches and up hills and down hills and telling lies to your legs, and running on even when the others pas you, one-by-one, and geez, don’t they have a chest that’s on fire, don’t they ever get the dry heaves, and who cares anyway, b/c there’s no crowd, no cheerleaders, just hard ground and ugly ol’ trees with no leaves and some guy driving by a car, honking his horn and grinning like an idiot, and oh God, why don’t I just slow down and walk for a little ways?

That, friends, is reality.

Oh, us silly damn sports writers, we get caught up in down-and-outs, and slam dunks and power-play goals and a frost-bitten World Series and sometimes we get the notion that what comes out of the mouth of some semi-literate who is a millionaire only b/c his glands went berserk at an early age ranks right up there in importance with the Dead Sea Scrolls.

So we tend to dismiss things like cross-country as “minor” sports, and besides, who the hell knows how to read a stopwatch past the 4-minute mile anyway?

So in our jock fantasies, the hero is the guy who scores the winning touchdown. But that is not the reality. Reality is the kid you’ll see when you’re driving through a park or past a golf course, the kid with the stocking cap and the sweat-stained sneakers, loping along way behind the field, his eyes rolling wildly, this hypnotic trance of pain and puzzlement contorting his face.

Maybe he will not be able to put into words exactly why he still runs. Maybe he will mention something about “gutting it out” or pushing through the pain barrier or running on b/c he has this curiosity that drives him to discover just how much he is capable of….or not capable of.

That can be the harshest kind of reality, and anyone who is willing to confront it, then he is, in the truest, purest sense, an athlete.

Wednesday, September 07, 2005

Carolyn Hax

I've had a slight obsession with Carolyn Hax for 2 years now. She is the advice columnist for the Washington Post. Here is the link to her column:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/linkset/2005/03/24/LI2005032402809.html

I think she gives real solid advice for people , often times things they don't want to hear. Her opinions are well-thought out and funny.

She has a sweet job!

I've thought about writing my own column in a newspaper. It would be called "A day in the life." I'd work a different job every 2 weeks and report on the good parts of the job, the bad, etc. Last night my roommate, Josh and I were discussing being a bike messenger. I'd love to try that job for 2 weeks! I have such a lousy sense of direction though, I'd end up getting lost and losing money for being late. But wow, on a day like today, when it's 80 degrees and sunny, what more could you want?

Stop Spamming Blogs!

Ew, the porn industry is spreading everywhere. Please, whoever you are, stop posting comments on people's blogs that have a link to your nasty site or some stupid scam to lure innocent people into losing money.

ARGH!

Another Blogger Friend

This is my friend Meghan's blog. Meg and I worked on our college school newspaper together. We were "Newsies!!" Her post about being tall was hilarious to me, b/c when I meet people for the first time they often comment on my height. The best was when my friend Viet and I went to get our nails done. I am 5 foot, and Viet is about 4'9. The girl who was doing our nails asked us if our prom was that night, or the next night. HA!!! I'm told I'll LOOOOOOVE getting these comments when I'm 45. We'll see about that.

Meg's blog:

http://growinginthegoo.blogspot.com/

My college newspaper blog:
http://www.cuatower.com/

I had such a great time working on the paper as a senior. We had a quoteboard where we would write down some of the moronic things we ended up saying at 5 in the morning, and I've been trying to start one of those in my adult life at my current job, but it doesn't seem to be going over well.

:)

Happy Hump Day!

Thursday, September 01, 2005

Rocky's Blog

Check out my friend Rocky's blog on ways to help make a difference and open your eyes a bit:

http://consciousprogress.blogspot.com/

Rock and I graduated from HHS together.