tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21156590987252272082024-03-05T01:36:59.309-05:0014th Street GirlI live in Washington DC on 14th Street, where one alternately trips over luxury condominiums and homeless people. Oh, and rats.14th Street Girlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07222098754122072488noreply@blogger.comBlogger135125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2115659098725227208.post-89236409814137547602008-07-06T08:04:00.002-05:002008-07-06T08:38:05.268-05:00Slutty Women of Washington...Put Down Your Pens!So even though I am now far away from 14th Street and all that DC offers, my sensibilities still managed to be assaulted at a distance. And by preface, it goes without saying that DC is still a man's town - we've all been in that meeting in the Pentagon where a general is staring you down like "what could YOU possibly tell me, chickie?" So I'm all in favor of women asserting themselves, using their wiles to outwit and manuver around the white-haired creaky creepys that run the town.<br /><br />However.<br /><br /><em>Washingtonienne</em> was bad enough, but we've all been interns and know that skeeviness comes with the territory, and that Jessica what's-her-name actually did us a favor by exposing the system in which so called powerful men with tremendous egos and family values will fork over dollars to get spanked by some pissant intern. Hell, just ask Julia Allison - if <em>Washingtonienne</em> had been just a tad more circumspect in her blogging, she'd probably be a columnist or Chief of Staff by now. However, despite exposing the men as horny scumbags, she also cast a pall on the hard working, serious women still stuck in crappy jobs on the Hill.<br /><br />Then someone sent me a link to the Pentagon Diva. If you haven't just eaten, PD is someone who clearly has hooks into the upper echelons of the Pentagon, blogging about Cohen's bow-tying prowess as an indicator of his S&M capabilities or which way David Kilcullen is hung. She was recently exposed as Mongomery McFate, which anyone who has spent more than 15 minutes in the parking lot of the Pentagon knows better as the anthro-gal who's major crime thus far has been to sell a grasping-at-straws US Army the concept that "culture is important". As in, you should probably know the hand gestures an Iraqi is making as you shoot him. While I could go on and on about La McFate and what an utter phony she is (I had the pleasure of being forced to a dinner party in her company some years back, during which my first comment was "if her husband was ever legitimately Special Forces, I'll eat my stilettos" and my brother's - a finance geek and uninitatied into the strange tribes of Washington - second comment was "don't ever make me hang out with tools like that again" - but that's another story), the real crime is again, some girly-come-lately to the Washington game screwing it up for the rest of us who were doggedly rising through the ranks by being smarter, tougher, and twice the men that the men were.<br /><br />By all accounts, McFate was (undeservedly) embraced by the Pentagon "elite", so to speak, given contracts and latitude to peddle her enormous mound of steaming poo in the form of "human terrain", and this is what she has to show for it - <em>not</em> parlaying it into a position where she could affect change, <em>not</em> breaking through the toughest glass ceiling of the E-Ring, <em>not </em>changing one single man's perception of women in this industry, but rather reinforcing it tenfold with her idiotic and calculated-to-shock blog. All of which reads as far too desperate to try to shock and get a <em>gasp!</em> than anything that could be remotely construed as sexual or titillating.<br /><br />Now of course La McFate would say she never asked to be a role model and well, gosh, she's counterculture, so what did we expect? Bullshit, I say. It's indicative of how little she understands the culture in which she was mucking about to not know the table at which she'd been given a seat, and how much crap women have put up with to sit in the chairs that line the room around that table. Actually, even if she had the ability to see that (being an anthropologist, I highly doubt it) I'm sure she didn't care. Well, the blog's taken down now and I'm sure her contract will not be renewed any time soon, and we can all go back to studying culture rather than "human terrain", and she'll be yet another annoying footnote to this war.<br /><br />However, I suppose the real issue here though is the fallability of men (and women) for thinking that this snake-oil saleswoman actually was peddling something of value in the first place. You created her, Elliott Cohen et al, by giving this two-bit "human terrain specialist" a platform instead of leaning on the <em>thousands </em>of scholars and practicioners in the intelligence and defense communities to help you fight this war. So strap on your leather and get what's coming to you, because you deserve to be fed Montgomery McFate's steaming special.14th Street Girlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07222098754122072488noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2115659098725227208.post-1257402598235658962008-06-18T16:17:00.002-05:002008-06-18T16:25:19.230-05:00Today's Fun with British Culture MomentThe title alone with probably bring both people who read this to go "snotty Yank, who are you to talk about the Brits?" Relax, I love the Brits - wonderful sense of irony and all that. But I especially love their quirky culture that is modern and convenient on the surface, but if you scratch a bit you find everyone just really wants to go back to life in the castle on the wold where you had to churn your own butter. Having come from NYC, where I was born and raised in that uniquely American/New Yorker vantage point of having absolutely anything you want delivered right to your doorstep in the wee hours of the morning, I am the first to acknowledge that my sense of the term "convenient" is a tad skewed. But the Brits do seem to tak eit a higher level, where not only is convenience not always assured but occasionally logic gives one the slip as well. Case in point: today, I am in Ikea trying to put my life together with cheap pine and brightly colored carpet. I need a bed but am not sure if I want just a mattress on the floor (ooh, how Zen of me) or a proper bed. I finally settle on a bed that's less than ideal (Ikea's fault, not Britain's) and is also more than I wanted to spend for a less-than-ideal bed. Oh well, I need a place to sleep. As I continue to walk through the store, I turn a corner and there it is - the bare-bones bed stand with room for storage underneath and hey, it's 25 quid! So if I hate it after I week, I can donate it and not feel too bad and buy something else. So I get in the queue and wait. And wait. And wait. Finally I get to the front of the line, show the guy the mattress I have already picked out and ask him to order me the frame. He orders it for me, and I'm in such a good mood about it that I throw in an overpriced mattress pad, just for fun. After the entire transaction is completed, the guy stops and goes "oh, but one thing."<br /><br />"What? You're going to send someone to set it up for me?"<br />"No, but I just realized that I forgot to tell you that the mattress frame is 120cm, while your mattress is 140cm, so the mattress will hang over the frame."<br />"oh, that's no trouble, just swap out the mattress I selected for one that is 120cm."<br />"well, we don't make that size."<br />"ok. so who does? I'll just get it somewhere else."<br />"it's not actually made by anyone, it's not a standard size. I don't actually know any store that makes it."<br />"so...what are my options here?"<br />"well, other people buy the single mattress, which is 90cm, so you could do that."<br />"but what on earth do they do with the extra 30cm?"<br /><br />And of course he had no answer, and that's the crux of it - you think you've found a workaround, a free lunch, an easier way of doing things, and then what really unfolds is something so bizarre and illogical that you have to just laugh and go "it's okay, I have no idea why I even asked."14th Street Girlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07222098754122072488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2115659098725227208.post-41084953493580012362008-06-16T17:49:00.002-05:002008-06-16T17:58:52.294-05:00From London with expenseHello! By now, all three of you reading this blog will have long moved on to "cooking with kumquats" or "my belly button lint for all to see" no doubt, but in case any friends aren't keeping up with my "wow, she posts a lot for such an old gal" facebook page, I'm back! Well, in the sense of having moved across the Atlantic to a strange country where the drug stores close at 6 kind of way. Yes, I'm here again in London, where I seem to return to oover an over. I thought about changing the title of this blog to Baker Street Girl but the echoes of dogs that don't bark were a little too obvious, and of course I'd always like to keep in mind that romantic fire escape I'd always dreamed of having, where I'd swing my legs over T Street and check out the line to get in to St. Ex.<br /><br />Strange though, now that I'm here it's as though I read about a life lived on 14th Street - I don't miss it in the sense that I rarely think about it. I think about running with Marian, or going out with other friends, and how many endless nights spent running around the various quadrants of our fair nations capitol, but it's almost as if it was someone else's life I'd read about, as I sit here in England. Still so shell shocked - only here two weeks - that it's nearly impossible too process how I feel about the here and now, much less the then and there.<br /><br />But I've bought some wellies and gotten used to rain in the mornings and the hours of the private sector, and I'm not so much ecstatic or depressed as I don't feel much of anything. Going to Jordan a few weeks ago and dancing until the sun came up was great fun, and I couldn't stop this organic feeling bubbling up of me thinking "I'm back, I'm back" before the reasonable me noted "you have never been here before" and I thought, what am I back to? Oh, yes, living for me, feeling untethered, chasing the perfect temperature, the perfect sand, the perfect song. And here I've turned 30 in the mix and feel younger and less directed then ever - welcome back me!14th Street Girlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07222098754122072488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2115659098725227208.post-77014047327112849732008-03-16T19:14:00.002-05:002008-03-16T20:29:25.372-05:0014th Street Girl No Longer......and yet, Upper West Side Girl just doesn't have the same ring to it, does it? Well, it's only for a bit before I become Some-Street-in-London-where-lattes-cost-$9.00. As much as I appreciate people's concern, I don't understand the need to immediately respond when I say I'm moving to London with "but oh my! it's so expensive!" as though I'd thought, up until then, that I was moving to just outside Omaha. But I digress, because this is a loving post.<br /><br />I no longer live in DC. I've lived there, except for a year in grad school, for the past decade. It's the city where I came into my own, navigated streets and friends and internships and monuments and boys and bars. I've lived all over, from Georgetown to 1st and R Sts. I spent a long evening in jail in North Georgetown and an even longer evening on top of the subway grating outside 1223, courtesy of that devilish all-you-can-drink happy hour. I've spend thousands of dollars on parking tickets and taxes that never seemed to go towards fixing the roads near U Street, lovingly nicknamed Nairobi by yours truly. I fell in love with the city every time I walked down Willard Street or through Meridian Hill park just before the prostitutes and junkies showed up. How many other cities have Chagall murals painted on the side of a house, for anyone to see? How many other cities can nearly guarantee that NPR will be on the taxi radio <em>and</em> the driver will add an additional zone without thinking twice, even as he claims you remind him of his daughter? Or the kind of city where you can roll into a bar for a quick drink and end up spending hours talking to the Ambassador to Lebanon?<br /><br />Everyone has a story in this town, it's not always pretty and the best intentions of public service are usually muddied with dreams of power and influence - easily seen in the ubiquitous photos of said wishfully-upwardly mobile individuals' photos of them with John McCain or John Ashcroft proudly displayed on their desks, and you know the official in question has no recollection aside from "hey kid, get me a tea and cover up those statues with the boobies while you're at it". Interns end up rubbing elbows, and quite often more (particularly if you were around when Strom Thurmond was on the Hill), with the nerd equivalent of Brad Pitt - Obama, or maybe just Scot McClellan. As silly as it can get, I found it fascinating.<br /><br />But I've left my government job (more on my conflicted feelings about leaving public service addressed later) and I left the city I called home, more than my birth city, New York. Have to keep moving, like a shark, but right now I'm looking around Bub's studio apartment covered in my suitcases and I find I'm homeless yet again. Stay tuned...waterworks of the non-shark variety likely to come.14th Street Girlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07222098754122072488noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2115659098725227208.post-82661310187912693772008-03-07T23:17:00.005-05:002008-03-07T23:54:24.802-05:00Me again......so despite my claim that I was through, through! with blogging, I may end up getting back into it to stay in touch with everyone as I move across the pond in a few weeks! More on that, and leaving the government, and giving up my awesome apartment, and becoming Baker Street Girl and leaving 14th Street Girl behind, here are some photos making me sad - my apartment in the middle stages of being packed up. However, it's been a great opportunity to go through my things - and I've accumulated a heck of a lot of things - figure out what I really need to have and what can be given away. I've made about four trips to Goodwill and clothing drop offs and it was something to think about the next time I A) go shopping or B) look at my bank account. But I digress...<br /><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh-tXsmDnZDQVDeXMKkN2wfMsaDvTKEjeU7pylQpPvL1XGKIXeX6iuh_coe-cFGc3FPGt8C20RusapqD-IgVDg4kWANWGxImYpRzq1Is8Dj2hXoMbwOn0Bv6tXgheyOO2oN9-5m96Lx3i4/s1600-h/IMG00035.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5175226603758536050" style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; CURSOR: hand" height="227" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh-tXsmDnZDQVDeXMKkN2wfMsaDvTKEjeU7pylQpPvL1XGKIXeX6iuh_coe-cFGc3FPGt8C20RusapqD-IgVDg4kWANWGxImYpRzq1Is8Dj2hXoMbwOn0Bv6tXgheyOO2oN9-5m96Lx3i4/s320/IMG00035.jpg" width="265" border="0" /></a>This photo is the saddest, because if you've ever been to my place, you know that this puzzle has been in progress for...about two years now. There are a lot of shades of blue in <em>Starry Night</em> is all I'll say. Now it is in pieces, back in its box, ready to be put together again whenever I grow tired of sticking pencils in my eyes or something equally as painful and difficult on the retinas as all those blues..<br /><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgjByFmSEIL1pHxAS7hz6Dk_wJQ74eCSB1D7uACM-KFYhHv27kTGTk9oqX7Syo9YI7eVllUgck2fa_tFRE1h_ygoTGhg809lurebiT-zINqwjIPSrQ0chQxwDqwQbHKp8mvc-43Fomw4AY/s1600-h/IMG00024.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5175227144924415362" style="FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 0px 0px 10px 10px; CURSOR: hand" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgjByFmSEIL1pHxAS7hz6Dk_wJQ74eCSB1D7uACM-KFYhHv27kTGTk9oqX7Syo9YI7eVllUgck2fa_tFRE1h_ygoTGhg809lurebiT-zINqwjIPSrQ0chQxwDqwQbHKp8mvc-43Fomw4AY/s200/IMG00024.jpg" border="0" /></a><br />The color might be too dark on this photo but you can see my favorite Lichtenstein poster - still no idea where that is going to be stored - and a few boxes. Those shelves are gone to craigslistland and I'm trying not to think that I bought them only a year ago...<br /><br />I've decided that I either need to accept my quasi-nomadic lifestyle (must shake everything up every five years) and stop buying crap or just accept my love of buying crap and stop moving around. The former appears to keep winning out, so we'll just keep that credit card in the freezer for now and try and remember this insight when the Consumption Demons rise again...14th Street Girlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07222098754122072488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2115659098725227208.post-58988093523366622062008-01-07T20:01:00.000-05:002008-01-07T22:46:31.431-05:00Goodbye to All That...so I've been captivated, along with a number of other New Yorkers, by <a href="http://jakobandjulia.com/">Julia Allison and Jakob Lodwick's </a>self-obsessed relationship blog, and then <a href="http://juliaallison.tumblr.com/">Julia's blog</a>, which includes numerous pictures of herself in various and sundry outfits that highlight her boobs. And if you read anything about Julia Allison, you have to read the many, many comments from her many, many detractors, mostly on <a href="http://gawker.com/">Gawker</a>, who resolutely despise everything from her vapid-ness to her career as a TV commentator on silly gossip issues to those oft-highlighted boobs. All for a good laugh.<br /><br />But then Julia <a href="http://gawker.com/339795/julia-allison-answers-your-questions-evidently-not-your-prayers">live-blogged on Gawker </a>-- which I don't know was a brave move, as some hypothesized, as opposed to an insecure girl's twisted but understandable logic that "if they just get to know me, they'll like me!" and she was slayed from the moment Nick Denton announced she'd be on, before she even made an appearance. Then she goes on and makes some really idiotic comments about how people should hate her because of her "perfectly symmetrical breasts which I like to display in v-neck sweaters" and how thick-skinned she really is, and all is going as expected, and then she drops a bomb that Jakob has bi-polar and is off his meds, and they finally broke up because he was in the middle of an episode. And people went, frankly, apeshit. They accused her of everything of being a whore, being evil, being a golddigger, and so on and so forth, in mock horror that someone would "dare" expose something so personal, in a world where exposure is how you get the hits.<br /><br />I'm not going to defend this girl - she's way over her head in blogger-dom, where one has to have nerves of steel, quick wit, and insights beyond "gosh, math is hard!" That is not to belittle her, although it may sound like that - the problem I see with Julia is that she wants it both ways. She wants to be a pretty, fluff commentator on Fox and CNN (witness the many photos and screen captures of herself on her blog) with an exciting life of tapings and parties and features in those silly socialite magazines -- then she wants to be a deep, thoughtful <em>yet</em> sassy blogger who is with it and knows it's all a joke (witness the comment about her boobs). And those worlds are like oil and water, or at least she hasn't found the formula so they mix. The online world, like it or not, is a lot of smarmy anonymous people who spend their days and nights in that world and have mastered it - you can't just flit in with no street cred. And Julia doesn't appear to fundamentally understand that. She <em>is</em> a pretty vapid 26 year old girl and it's sort of sad to watch her try to be someone she's not - she needs to appear on Fox and be pretty and have her actress girlfriends and soon, get married and get out of the rat race. I say this having considered what was I'm sure an excellent Georgetown education in political science - having read her work, etc, the real intelligence just isn't there. Fine, no harm, not everyone's going to be Clausewitz or Einstein.<br /><br />That being said, the vitriol with which people swarmed all over her was somewhat frightening. Why hate this girl so much? And in hating her, they revealed exactly how much they knew about her - they'd read closely her silly relationship blog, they'd read her personal blog and probably steamed over the many pictures of her posted there. I don't think it was simply jealousy, which is what Julia and her friends say to each other to make themselves feel better. But there was a palpable bitterness - some idiot made a video and noted how she goes to fancy dinners with her rich parents - do we really believe this was just about this girl, or did that dumb guy have some issues of his own which led him to turn on his webcam and start ranting the most vile language at this girl? The problem is there's no easy answer - Julia makes note of her "fancy apartment building" but then notes she has the smallest apartment in it - again, wants Dear Reader to know she lives in a nice building but she still has street cred, it's really small! So she's kind of a pathetic person to be defending. But piling up on this girl? It says more about the piler than the girl, frankly. Yes, that's the world and it's <em>always </em>been so - some people have nice boobs and go to a good school because they got good grades rather than being truly intelligent; some people date Congressmen and get mentioned in the gossip pages and then catapault to Fox News - is this a revelation? She ain't the first, but she's one who tried to hang in the world of those who sit in front of their computers hating the world that allows those things to happen.<br /><br />And further, I'm going out on a limb here and saying I don't agree with but can see why she sold Jakob out about his bi-polar. When you go back over their relationship (explicitly run down in their joint blog), it becomes clear that this It-Boy is a condescending prat - witness the post in which he is shocked - shocked!! that she has not seen Star Wars or heard Radiohead. He outwardly says "isn't that cute" but the guy is horrified. If ever there was a poster child for the emasculation of the American male, it's this guy - his nerdiness is his weapon, it's made him millions, and it's going to make him superior over the girl who's had everything handed to her and run through the world blissfully ignorant of the torment of Thom Yorke, fellow nerd. And if we take Julia at her word, he hooked up with her friend and has also been stringing her along with comments like "it won't get any better than me". Take that recipe, if you will - this pretty, vapid girl looking to establish her street cred and this dorky web guy who probably loves those boobs and plays on her insecurities in a desperate attempt to overcome his own. What a perfect mix. And she finally got wise and went for the nuclear option - classless, but that feeling when you finally wake up and realize that Svengali whose word you took above all because he seemed so smart on the things you wanted to be smart on is nothing but a prat whose own insecurities necessitate him saying he has to "educate" you on Star Wars is priceless -- and fills you with venom. So you bite. The problem is, most women scorned do it to girlfriends and the occasional unfortunate specimen who sidled up to the bar and asked if she was single - this dummy did it in a public forum with people who are vastly more sympathetic to Jakob's worldview than the one she gained at The Tombs.<br /><br />But point is (in my very long post), it got me thinking. Why did I start this blog, and why do I continue it? I started because I wanted to record my travels and my thoughts. But I could've passworded it or kept it private -- but I didn't. I wanted it out there, in the world, where people could read my musings about life, the universe, and everything and maybe remark on how insightful I am. And you know what? If you're sitting in front of your computer all day, like these gawker commenters clearly were, I don't see how you or anyone else would be qualified to judge my statements as insightful or complete bullshit, and I see that it's the people I care about who I should be sharing these things. I thought about bloggers I liked and envied, like Dooce. When I was thinking about Jakob and Julia, I realized Dooce has made a deal with the devil - her whole family depends on her exposing their warts to millions of people who spend their days trolling blogs. Why not just go with prostitution, then? Or sell a kidney? Because, as Julia has shown us, you can't just show the cute pictures of yourself in front of a Christmas tree, you have to show the worst of the worst to get the hits on your site and make money - which Dooce does, extolling on her depression and hospitalization and her miscarriages. What is her child going to think when she's old enough and realizes that <em>her</em> every move has to be documented in order for her parents to pay the mortgage? And she's in junior high school and kids are reading about how she wet the bed until she was 10? Is life - the life outside, the life in which you truly interact with people and your statements have meaning because there is a face behind them who has to defend them - no longer worth it?<br /><br />I love the blogging world, I love the ideas, I love the creativity, I love the discourse - but it doesn't seem real to me. I don't want to take photos of nature so I can post them on my blog, I want to sit in nature and not think of how it might sound in a posting. I don't want to take a normal conversation and spin it so it's funny and someone will read my blog and laugh. I've realized I'm not reaching out to anyone in the vein of "always connect", which I thought I was doing; rather I'm putting <em>myself</em> out there and saying "I think I'm worth your time - do you agree?" You should be asking who the hell am I to ask for that, just as I now say who the hell are you to say yes or no?<br /><br />I keep thinking of that Ian Fleming quote, bastardized here for my purposes - "I shall not waste my days trying to blog them. I shall use my time." I'm going outside. I signed up for a ballet class. I'm teaching on Tuesdays. I'm going to always connect with the kids I tutor and the garbage guy and the bartender and my next door neighbor and my mother, who see my expressions and sense my emotions and understand my meaning when I say -- not blog -- something. Take the vitriol and judgement and use it on someone like Julia Allison, who will be ruined by it. I shall use my time.14th Street Girlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07222098754122072488noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2115659098725227208.post-60482096549424775592008-01-06T15:32:00.000-05:002008-01-06T15:40:16.886-05:00Amazing Lemon Holiday Cake!<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg0g_-HC4-AG_nfuZBkeYoOvL4LDN3C20bY1aYAem0-jhD0z0_LXzUHI-qyIVnJ_BD7lBvgkPKK3zu9c3D2WmfZ6TUBjD3gW_Smx9X3lp6LeioCmo2VGvCgrwwcNj9BrxdUlXbkBpo9sq0/s1600-h/100_1148%5B1%5D.JPG"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5152465535066406578" style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; CURSOR: hand" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg0g_-HC4-AG_nfuZBkeYoOvL4LDN3C20bY1aYAem0-jhD0z0_LXzUHI-qyIVnJ_BD7lBvgkPKK3zu9c3D2WmfZ6TUBjD3gW_Smx9X3lp6LeioCmo2VGvCgrwwcNj9BrxdUlXbkBpo9sq0/s320/100_1148%5B1%5D.JPG" border="0" /></a> The title is slightly misleading - it could just as easily be "amazing lemon Tuesday cake!" or something, I just happened to make this for Xmas Eve. I recently signed on to <a href="http://www.blogger.com/epicurious.com">epicurious.com</a>, which has some pretty incredible baking recipes, because I wanted to start making cakes and such from scratch. Anyway, this cake is perfect for lemon lovers but also mild enough for those who don't particularly care for lemon (case in point, my mom, who had two pieces!) I made it again for a friend's birthday and it was also a big hit with colleagues. I skipped the lemon curd mini-filling and just frosted the two layers and stuck em together.<br /><div><br /><div></div><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5152465247303597730" style="DISPLAY: block; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; CURSOR: hand; TEXT-ALIGN: center" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjkLKVRdP8p8dgR_mBqNVBsu2LwjwlZDFWSs34DKTL_9nH3-nz3qEpykLB2WrseRT4oFjMd1tASBG4HWvro4fNdhXvnzo9M0Z-Db31POFm_f_bxoLWSXCZlK41wbiZjPEwjq0RORYaTBeo/s320/100_1149%5B1%5D.JPG" border="0" /><br /><div>Here's the <a href="http://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/233013">recipe </a>- it's a bit labor intensive but not difficult, and it just happens to be <em>gluten free!!!!!!!! </em>No worries if you are not celiac, all the wheat-loving people in my family thought it was fantastic. </div></div>14th Street Girlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07222098754122072488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2115659098725227208.post-83222155738384670272008-01-02T20:05:00.000-05:002008-01-02T20:46:00.019-05:00That reminded me of why Bub is so greatso one of my non-resolutions for 2008 (they are decidedly <em>not </em>resolutions, they actually stand a chance of being undertaken that way) is to be more honest with people. Not as in "wow, I never realized just how big your ass is", but rather in admitting that something hurts, or how sensitive I can be. I have trouble doing it even with people to whom I'd say I'm close. For instance, my best friend Shmoopy and I have been friends for 9 years and it took me about 6 to open up. Now she wants me to shut up because now I'm an introspective never-ending-story, lucky girl.<br /><br />But I digress - I realized that I blogged on New Year's and mentioned my failed engagement. It's one of those stories that most people know but certainly didn't know how bad the relationship was until it was over and I told them what had gone on. Then, through a combination of openness and, okay, fine, vindictiveness, I told pretty much anyone who asked how bad it really was. This ended up being a good thing, because it made me feel better to admit to making such a tremendous mistake and it resulted in a moment of knowing I did the right thing - a friend of a friend was engaged to a guy she had dated since college and the wedding was coming up quickly. At nearly the last minute, she broke it off and supposedly said, "hey, if 14th Street Girl can do it, so can I". And then she dropped 20 pounds and looks absolutely banging and went off to live in the Middle East. So, several things - I learned a lot about myself, I learned to share those things, and someone took that small point as a springboard to make a really tough decision herself. I still say I got off easy.<br /><br />But I continue to digress. As I re-read the blog, I remembered a conversation I'd had with Bub in 2003. He and I had been friends in high school and continued to keep tabs on each other with a yearly email or so and through friends - I always said I'd only go to our high school reunion was so I could see him. Anyway, he happened to call right around the holidays that year, and we hadn't spoken in ages. He opened the conversation with: "so, talk your engagement." And I guess I gave the usual spiel, and eventually he said in his perfectly straightforward way, "for someone who's engaged, you really don't sound very happy". And I made the usual excuses, that this whole process was a lot harder than people make it out to be, and it's a very big decision, and it takes a lot of effort, and so on. We continued to talk for about an hour until my mom needed to use the phone (another high-school-esque moment).<br /><br />And I don't want to overstate the effect, because I didn't go and dump my fiance that day. But I started realizing that there's a difference between working on a relationship and a relationship that's a lot of work. And that you should probably sound happy when talking about the person you're planning to spend your life with. And I stopped giving in to this guy's many idiosyncracies - mind you, very slowly and not always guilt-free. And I started re-asserting myself - including the night we were heading out for dinner at the pub where Shmoopy worked and he was being his usual complaining self about how much money we were going to spend and how hungry he was and how he hadn't gotten to work out that day - comments that would've made me feel guilty and turn around and make dinner at home and go to the gym with him the next morning - and I just stopped the car in the middle of the street and said "just get out. I'm sick of you ruining every nice thing we try to do." And to make a long story not too much shorter, a few weeks later the same feeling hit - just stop the car - and I went into the living room and I told him I was moving out the next day. And he cried and he asked me to stay and it was like a lightbulb had blown, it wasn't coming on again - I slept in the living room, and got one of the best nights sleep I'd gotten since we started living together. And there were horrible fights after, and pettiness all around, and of course the lovely revelation that he'd been cheating on me for several months, and so forth. But I got out.<br /><br />But the point is that no matter how hard you try to keep that face on, some people can just see right through you - like Bub. And so few people can be honest back to you the way he was. I had friends and family around me throughout the whole relationship and no one sat me down even though in retrospect it was obvious what a mess I'd become, that I'd lost 20 pounds, or that I was scared of the world. I asked people later and guess what, turns out the face worked on almost everyone in my life - almost uniformly people responded, you always know what you're doing, I figured you knew what you were doing. And yet Bub gets on the phone and goes "gee, you don't sound happy" and it was like turning a leaf blower on a house of cards. He still does that to me and it still has the same effect, a sudden realization that there's no point to the face. And to his credit, he never had any intention of belittling my engagement--we didn't have our first date for another 2 years--and has since never overstated, from his side, what he did during that conversation - and why should he? Now he's stuck with me!14th Street Girlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07222098754122072488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2115659098725227208.post-69968242630284707072008-01-01T15:40:00.000-05:002008-01-01T16:10:39.803-05:00Let's Recap 2007I've been in the same position on my couch since I woke up at 1:30 this afternoon - I need to bake a cake for my friend who's birthday was yesterday but I don't have baking powder. Which seems awfully suspect to me - how can I not have this key ingredient? Anyway, I digress. 2007 was a banner year, I was just thinking (which is less painful for my head then baking). In 2007 I:<br /><br /><p>-Traveled to Hawaii with Bub, stayed four days, saw two islands, and made the killer Kuaui-Honolulu-Oakland-Dulles flight in one day and went to work the next morning.<br />-Visited Bub four times in San Francisco/Palo Alto, including the weekend in January when he found out he matched for residency at Columbia.<br />-Flew to Hotlanta for a weekend with Bub and friends for an insane re-wedding of a crazy former Maxim cover girl and her baseball-playing husband with a wandering eye. Great shellfsh bar and chocolate fountain!<br />-Went to Miami for the Winter Music Conference and stayed up all night eating Cuban food and dancing to Goldie.<br />-Flew to Miami and then Barbados to see a friend get married on a lovely cliff and went boogie boarding and dressed for dinner.<br />-Went to Los Angeles for a gorgeous wedding in a friend's backyard and spent the day on the beach in Santa Monica.<br />- Traveled to Malta with my crazy grandfather to chase an opera star.<br />-Ran around Istanbul with Bub and shopped till our suitcases burst, then flew to Ephesus and got a tour from Ernest Hemingway.<br />-Stopped in Paris on the way home for a marathon eating and shopping tour of a beloved city.<br />-Went to Israel and blew through Jerusalem and ran down the beach in Tel Aviv at 6AM. Oh, and ate a ton of cheese.<br />-Visited Santa Fe, the Four Corners, and Mesa Verde and made Bub speed through the desert in our Corvette.<br />-Drove down to Big Sur and marveled at nature.<br />-Drove to Philly on a lark for cheese steaks and to be berated by Eagles fans.<br />-Countless trips to New York to see friends, family, and an in-resident Bub.</p><p>Happy 2008!</p>14th Street Girlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07222098754122072488noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2115659098725227208.post-2645738319442337142008-01-01T12:44:00.000-05:002008-01-01T12:57:00.232-05:00Why Bub Likes Meso as you've probably gathered, Bub and I go to a lot of sporting events. Bub usually likes to buy tickets at the game and is great at negotiating with scalpers - naming prices that tend to make me go "that's it, we're going to die for that one" and usually getting that price.<br /><br />We went to the Giants-Patriots game last Saturday night - not too cold, tons of crazy fans, lots of fun - and Bub starts looking to buy tickets. Prices were ridiculous. He finally finds a guy who is willing to sell for a high, but fair amount for good seats.<br /><br />I usually sit back and watch and this time I saw that the seller was really fidgety - sort of understandable, given what he's engaged in - and then he thrust the tickets at me and ordered me to "put them away, NOW". He took the money from Bub and shoved it in his pocket and Bub jokingly asked "aren't you going to count it?" The guy got annoyed and pulled the money out, rifled through it and then started to walk away.<br /><br />I looked at the tickets. They looked <em>mostly </em>harmless, but a little dull in color. If you looked closely, though, they seemed fuzzy. I nudged Bub. "I think these are fake."<br /><br />"No!"<br /><br />"I'm telling you - and look, the guy is <em>running </em>away!"<br /><br />So Bub takes off after the guy, who is now changing his jacket mid-stride. Amazingly, he simply asks the guy to walk into the stadium with him to see if the tickets are real, the guy says "sure", they head towards the gates and the guy grabs the tickets, throws the money at Bub, and runs away. So all's well, and pretty soon after that we found great seats about 12 rows back. Awesome game.14th Street Girlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07222098754122072488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2115659098725227208.post-9578074204371360212008-01-01T03:11:00.000-05:002008-01-01T16:15:33.943-05:00...and a happy new year, tooit's 3:12AM, my cell phone's dead, and the lovely girl who found herself sick in my bathroom from too much champange has been escorted home by friends. Earlier in the evening--I threw a small anti-New Years dinner party in which I used my guests as guinea pigs for new recipes--another friend, M. and I had regaled the small group with a re-telling of a disastrous evening about 8 months ago at 1223 at that disastrous idea up there with the Napoleonic invasion of Russia of all-you-can-drink for $20, in which we'd drunk our weight by, no kidding, 8PM, and then I proceeded to show random passers by the contents of my lunch for the next three hours. And this poor beauty, who's seen so much sadness recently, found herself in a similar situation, and I kept saying to her, it could've been any one of us, we're all hurting, one way or another. The story I told earlier, I whispered in her ear, happened because I'd just found out that my ex-fiancee was getting marrried--to a girl that I'd suspected him of cheating on me with, one of the many reasons I left him. And the pain and the humiliation and the insult got caught up in this moment and I ended up on someone's floor, messy and angry and embarrassed. And tomorrow you get up, and after many cups of coffee and more time you'll see that life goes on, and the past hardships lead to better appreciation of the good, and of people who come into your life and truly enrich it. So we all cry, and at some point you're not the girl on the floor, you're the older girl standing over her, wanting to hug her because it's like hugging that former self who so needed it. And that pain is real, and it makes happiness much more happy, and the moments to come so much more wonderful.<br /><br />Happy New Year, everyone. To my family and friends and especially to Bub, I love you dearly and hope that I make that even more clear to you in 2008.14th Street Girlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07222098754122072488noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2115659098725227208.post-56406609089728363442007-12-25T01:59:00.000-05:002007-12-25T02:13:00.341-05:00Happy Holidays from 14th Street to NYCI'm in New York celebrating the holidays with my family - fun, lots of laughs, but it seems like it took a little longer this year for everyone to unwind and get to that place where we're all sitting in the living room, sprawled on couches or across the floor in front of the tree telling stories and jokes (usually about each other in fits that has the victim in question laughing hysterically)<br />...there's some tension in the air generally. It's probably our last Christmas in the house in which we all grew up and although that's a good financial decision and the best thing for my parents to do, it's still sad. Then there's the inevitable fact that people are getting older...like my grandfather, who lives with my parents and just wanders around the house from television set to set, or my great-aunt Helen, who has Alzheimer's and spent 15 minutes at the end of the night loudly insisting that this wasn't her coat, it didn't fit and her coat was longer and she hated this coat and why would she wear someone else's coat home anyway? which was hard to see. And the crowd, while always fun, was just subdued this year.<br /><br />At the end of the night we put on DVDs of past Christmases, when 25 people would invade the house on Christmas Eve, the whole extended family and tons of cousins and everyone had hair and my grandmother was still alive, sitting at the kitchen table running things, and I think it made things worse, brought home the fact that things change and kids grow up, and there are family members who were in those videos who are now dead, or not speaking to each other, or dying slowly in nursing homes before their time, cousins who have made bad marriages or bad investments and are stuck, and the crowd has gotten smaller every year since, and next year we'll be in some condo somewhere--or worse, in a restaurant--and all those ghosts sitting beside us in the living room won't follow us to a shiny new condo with no memories.<br /><br />On the bright side I baked up a storm, trying my hand at black and white cookies and a lemon cake I made from scratch. They came out great - that's what happens when you have all ingredients you can possibly think of at your disposal and don't have to improvise, plus the real-deal baking equipment and an oven that cooks evenly. I'll post pictures of the goodies one of these days.<br /><br />Tomorrow we go to my brother's apartment in the city for cocktails and dinner and poor Bub who has been working all night will try and pull through and stay up to meet us. He's fixing someone's collapsed lung right now at 2AM and I'm over here feeling sorry for all the times that have already happened and I was lucky enough to witness. How silly of me. Merry Christmas, everyone.14th Street Girlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07222098754122072488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2115659098725227208.post-69359871711980463202007-12-18T19:26:00.000-05:002007-12-18T20:00:50.653-05:00Now you see Bub, now you don't (but I do!)......some co-workers who read this blog have asked what happened to Bub, who used to feature prominently in my posts. He's still my guy but some things have changed - the least of which is that he's no longer called Bub, his nickname evolved into something that is now a secret, and so even though calling him Bub feels like calling him Pete or Jackass, I'll call him Bub here.<br /><br />The second thing is that his residency, as expected, has taken up a tremendous portion of his life. It's fascinating to watch a person undergo a transformation, and a little sad --but mostly incredible, as he shifts priorities and takes on challenges, and while certain things I loved about him take a backseat to new responsibilities, the essential Bub is always there. In some ways he was born to be a doctor - for one, he doesn't need much sleep; he also has this uncanny gift with people, any kind of person, that is a revelation to watch, he just always connects. Three, he has no problems with blood or poop, which I'm sure will come in handy someday.<br /><br />But the insane travel and wild weekends have slowed and the weekends together usually involve a night in which he's working and I'm out with other friends, which is fine because they tend to be friends I love and don't get to see very often--but it stinks because he's still my favorite person in the world. And if someone is that important, you just learn to work around all the other little things like his profession and yours and enjoy the time you have together. He continues to make fun of me for needing more sleep on an average night than he does after working an 18-hour shift, but still.<br /><br />So when we do manage to cut up a little, I figure it shouldn't go by without recounting it. Two weekends ago he had--gasp!--an entire weekend free, so he jumped on the train to DC. Amtrak being the wasteful, government-subsidy-ridden crapfest it is, it took him 5.5 hours to get from NYC to DC, so Friday night was shot. We went straight to sleep (he'd worked since 6AM the day before; I'd...gotten up as usual at 6:30 AND had an afternoon nap and I was exhausted) and the next day, we headed to brunch at St. Ex and then to Arlington Cemetary, which neither of us had been to. We saw all the "famous" graves including Joe Louis (who knew Joe Louis was buried in Arlington?) but couldn't find Oliver Wendell Holmes, sadly. After that we headed over to the Frank Lloyd Wright <a href="http://www.delmars.com/flwtrip/pope1a.htm">Pope Leighey House</a> which is now my favorite Wright house, it's amazing how little space he used but still managed to convey a sense of privacy and quiet. It was getting dark (around 5PM) and so we were heading back to DC when I mentioned that I'd never been to Mount Vernon, which was right across the way. We turned the car around and rolled up to Washington's house and Bub went in to see if maybe there were any tours on Sunday, because it was pitch black outside and likely closed. But no sir, they were doing their evening holiday tour, so we quickly parked and managed to not be at the absolute end of the line. The tour was fun, if a little rushed and hokey (Martha Washington handing out her recipe for Great Cake) but we got to see the bedrooms, that are usually closed to the public.<br /><br />We left Mount Vernon about an hour and a half later and headed back into the city. Now you're thinking - I bet they had a nice quiet dinner and a drink at Tabaq and called it a night. Yeah...something like that.<br /><br />Sometime on Saturday we started discussing a trip to Philly to see an Eagles game, eat cheesesteaks, and eat some more cheesesteaks. "no time like the present" seemed appropriate, so we hopped in the car and while I napped, Bub got us there in just under two hours. We caught a late dinner at <a href="http://www.buddakan.com/">Buddakan</a> (great food, epic portions, we couldn't finish) and in the morning, went down to South Street to grab <a href="http://www.jimssteaks.com/indexb.htm">Jim's steaks</a>, which were awesome, if quirky -<br /><br />So I can't eat bread, yada yada yada, and in a place like Jim's, they tend to give you that "hey, pretentious yuppie, we're not exactly big on the ol' calorie counting phenomenon, so maybe you could just pull up your big girl panties and eat a hoagie this one time" look, at which I quickly explain intestinal cancer at the worst and a lot of time in their restroom at the very least. So they're on board with the whole "no bread" thing but they have nary a plate in the joint. Nada. So the solution is to take a piece of bread, layer four or five pieces of wax paper, and then proceed as normal with meat, onions, mushrooms, cheese, etc. Hyper celiacs will tell you this is a problem because of the danger of cross-contamination but I counter that hyper celiacs were not standing where I was, with the tasty smell of meat wafting across the counter.<br /><br />So I'm eating, and I'm loving, and Bub is loving and wants to make sure I'm loving so he's all, you love? and I'm all, yeah, but it's awfully <em>chewy </em>in places. And then Bub realizes I am eating wax paper, and a lot of it. We laughed all the way to -<br /><br />The Eagles game! What is with you Philly fans? I loved the berating that every player, coach, and hot dog salesperson gets from the average fan. Woe unto you if you happened to be wearing a Giants jersey, hat, or the color blue that day - you were automatically subjected to chants of "Assssssssshoooooooole" over and over as you returned to your seat from the bathroom. The highlight was a- kid you not- 10 year old kid screaming "hey McNabb you f**king asshole! Learn how to throw!" and all I could think was, "gosh, I'll take that comment a lot more seriously when his voice drops". I loved the cold, the shouting, the fights, the spitting, and the overall hostility for the Philadephia Eagles displayed by their season ticket holders. Bub bought me an ear warmer and we ate fries and screamed at the Eagles along with all their fans. What a game.14th Street Girlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07222098754122072488noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2115659098725227208.post-7339018997223590172007-12-16T16:07:00.000-05:002007-12-16T21:00:47.158-05:00a poem rememberedi had an interesting conversation with someone who I didn't know thought the same way about death as me - we both appear to have a near-unhealthy obsession, probably more honest to say a terror, with death being the end, there being nothing more, that awful notion of eternity, and reconciling that with a certain healthy agnosticism about an afterlife, heaven, whatever keeps you warm at night and makes you think you're going to see your dog and your grandma again. It probably stems from the issue that we're both tremendously self-obsessed - not in a <em>selfish</em> way, per se, but in a Whitman, Ayn Rand, exaltation-of-the-individual kind of way (in my more generous moments towards myself, of course) - and anyway, the notion of there being no more <em>me</em> is, quite obviously, difficult for me to imagine. Not that I really would have to, would I - but the abstract notion - coupled with the sad reality that some of my most treasured possessions, for instance certain books - might wind up unnoticed in someone's attic or just thrown away, no one remembering that someone revered them and kept them close through moves, and relationships, and numerous accidental dunks in the bathtub - the way some of my grandmother's things--letters, photos--were just discarded by my grandfather in his grief, and I wish we'd known he'd immediately go home and make good use of a dumpster in the few hours he was alone so we could save them.<br /><br />But <em>anyway -</em> this all reminded me of a poem from Aspects of Love, a book that was turned into a play most famous, from what I remember in the <em>New York Post </em>during high school, for an all-too-quick full frontal nudity moment well before Nicole Kidman bared her Botoxed limbs for a Broadway audience. But I digress again, because I loved this book for its rustic south of France setting and its quintessentially French and British characters--the French women passionate and quick to despise as well as love and the British men who had no idea how to handle such emotion--for all their moral ambiguities and willingess to fall madly in love and into bed after eating omlettes and drinking beaujolais. Although I can see it right now, unopened for years, on the top shelf of my bookcase, I think I'll stay tucked in on the couch and see if I can remember the lines that conversation triggered a memory of:<br /><br /><em>Set down the wine and the dice, and perish the thought of tomorrow!</em><br /><em>Here's Death twitching at my ear. "Live," says he, "for I'm coming".</em>14th Street Girlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07222098754122072488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2115659098725227208.post-33265676091199109542007-12-12T22:39:00.000-05:002007-12-12T22:40:41.307-05:00Two for two....yippeeeeeee!!!!<br /><br />Dear XXX: I am very pleased to inform you that you have been accepted as a Evening division student in the Fordham University School of Law fall 2008 entering class.<br /><br /> This acceptance is recognition of your promise as a student and as a lawyer. It is also an invitation to join a very select group of scholars, who will show you how to take the lessons of the classroom and apply them to the world at large.14th Street Girlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07222098754122072488noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2115659098725227208.post-20595505002448585422007-12-08T20:02:00.000-05:002007-12-08T20:03:27.292-05:00Hate to beat a dead horse, but oh, it gets betterDear XXX:<br />The challenges facing America today call for strong Christian leadership. At Regent Law School, we desire to attract and foster the gifts of future leaders who will be bold attorneys for Christ. With that goal in mind, we invite you to apply now to Regent Law School. In recognition of your strong academic credentials and Regent's commitment to develop lawyers of excellence:<br /><br /><div align="center"><em>Your application fee will be waived. </em></div>14th Street Girlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07222098754122072488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2115659098725227208.post-64349290899759583812007-12-06T21:16:00.001-05:002007-12-06T21:16:36.176-05:00The way it's going today..."when I am king, you'll be first up against the wall"14th Street Girlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07222098754122072488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2115659098725227208.post-85636690764434410022007-12-04T22:04:00.000-05:002007-12-04T22:05:21.424-05:00Greatest Slate.com headline EVER"Build a Bear...Into an International Diplomatic Incident!"14th Street Girlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07222098754122072488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2115659098725227208.post-49848834107607645452007-12-04T21:35:00.000-05:002007-12-04T21:49:38.521-05:00My day is MADE...Check out what I had in my inbox- and don't be a hater cause they want a piece of me and not you...<br /><br />Dear Prospective Law Student: As you begin the process of deciding which of the 195 American Bar Association (ABA) accredited law schools best serves your goals and calling, I encourage you to take a close look at Regent University School of Law. Below is a summary of Regent Law School highlights, which addresses the most frequently asked questions about our program.<br /><br /><em>Notice that they do not mention almost having their <span class="blsp-spelling-corrected" id="SPELLING_ERROR_0">accreditation</span> status threatened because it's much more important to focus on...</em><br /><br />Regent's Mission: Regent Law is unique among ABA-accredited law schools because our mission is to build on your values and foundations. We seek to enroll students who are called to serve in the legal profession and who are committed to being part of the solution to the challenges that face our nation. Students choose Regent because of the commitment to biblical integration within the law school classroom.<br /><br /><em>Interpretation: just in case you're say, Jewish, we don't want to be TOO obvious right off the bat that when we say "your values", we mean ours. And Jesus'. Whose values we've interpreted to be almost nothing like the ones he supposedly lived by. But who cares? We're lawyers!</em><br /><br />In the summer of 2005, former Attorney General of the United States, John Ashcroft, joined our faculty as the Distinguished Professor of Law and Government.<br /><br /><em>Immediately following his arrival, the mermaid statue in the courtyard at Regents that kinda had boobies poking through her long hair was covered with very expensive curtains paid for with your tax dollars...</em><br /><br /><em>Strangely enough, this brochure does NOT mention how many Regents-trained lawyers, until unfortunate and <span class="blsp-spelling-corrected" id="SPELLING_ERROR_1">unforeseen</span> circumstances with the pesky House Judiciary Committee, were serving at the Justice Department where they made incredible strides towards establishing political litmus tests for US Attorneys!</em><br /><em></em><br />I'm so there.14th Street Girlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07222098754122072488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2115659098725227208.post-33433757749342966432007-12-04T20:30:00.000-05:002007-12-04T21:35:01.466-05:00The definition of insanity...is pulling on over-the-knee black socks, yoga pants, three layers on top including a super-charged, nothing-is-getting-through-this-baby-and-it-damn-well-better-not-given-what-you-paid-for-it shirt, a pullover, and a fleece at 5:45 this morning hoping it'll do the trick and you'll still feel your fingers and toes afterwards...<br /><br />...getting in the car and driving down utterly still streets lit by the few working streetlights, thinking, "I thought it'd be lighter by now," noticing that the moon is a perfect cutout against an inky sky, wondering if maybe you should just go back home...<br /><br />...parking the car, pulling headphones over ears and hat over headphones and tuning the ipod to the one motivational song that'll propel you out of the car and into the wind...<br /><br />...picking up the pace down the hill to the running path by the Kennedy Center, watching the wind whip the Potomac waves into and over each other, seeing other crazies jogging by, waving because you're all so nuts, why not be friendly as well...<br /><br />...noticing that almost instantly you've gone from feeling like the cold is slicing right through you (cold-weather-beating shirt be damned) to hoping that the wall of wind that smacks you in the face at the top of the stairs next to Memorial Bridge as you run up and down them gets just a little stronger so maybe you can cool down a bit...<br /><br />...picking up the pace as you cross Memorial Bridge, watching the number of cars slowly increase and the clouds turn up purple and orange against Roslyn's permanently-lit skyline while Underworld's <em>8 Ball, </em>with its train-chugging steady beat and slow build to joy provide the ideal soundtrack, telling you over and over again that today makes you feel happy...<br /><br />...coming down the short hill from Memorial Bridge, in the almost-light that you could reasonably fool yourself into thinking is the light at 6 in the evening, not 6:30 in the morning...<br /><br />...wind pushing at you as you trudge forward, aware that it's getting harder and harder to keep going but if you stop, it'll just get colder and colder...<br /><br />...throwing yourself into the driver's seat of your car, peeling off layers of clothing, rolling down the socks because you've never been this hot, whose stupid idea was it to wear so much to run outside on a December morning...<br /><br /><em>...and it's awesome. </em>14th Street Girlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07222098754122072488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2115659098725227208.post-78575282987687209352007-12-02T20:10:00.000-05:002007-12-02T21:11:49.573-05:00These birds have flown...okay, bad beatles pun. But after a long weekend of fighting the creepy carpet beetles that have made a mockery of the wool items I hold dear in my closet, I think we can declare a small victory. The exterminator came on Saturday morning and as far as I know, sprayed the crap out of my apartment (I was hanging out all morning at that cute cafe 14U, which makes Busboys and Poets look like the poster child for conformity) and then I went to the Container Store to purchase all sorts of accoutrements to ward off future generations of critters.<br /><br />A word about the Container Store -- quite the testament to consumerism. A store in which you buy things to put all your things in. Let's be fair: I consume with the best of them -- witness the fact that I have so many clothes, I didn't know I had a carpet beetle problem until they decided to show themselves to their oppressor, having reach a critical level of support with their constituents, i.e., my favorite suits and sweaters -- and even this store got my hackles up (and yes, let's save the comments about how my hackles are constantly at the ready, just waiting for the slimmest of excuses to rise). There is an entire section dedicated to wrapping paper at the Container Store. This may be a random sticking point about excess in my mind, especially considering I think the perfect weekend includes clubbing baby seals and wearing six different kinds of endangered species on my back, but wrapping paper really serves no purpose. No matter how great a job you've done wrapping that gift up (and to be fair, the Container Store had some pretty nifty concoctions), the wrapping MUST be destroyed, unless of course your gift is an empty, prettily-wrapped box. You know it's a gift. They know it's a gift. In a second, they're going to know what the gift is. Why add the extra layer of uncertainty?<br /><br />So I wandered around the Container Store, thinking of all the things I have that need containing. I have some runaway greeting cards that simply refuse to stay put - the Container Store offers a neato Greeting Card Holder "for the cards you have gotten or the ones you will give!" I also hate the fact that my socks are in a basket and I have to spend at least 8 seconds rooting through to get to my favorite argyles -- why not purchase the Sock Organizer, which lets you line them up next to each other in a row? Two things: one, you must be kidding. Two, unless it comes with a little gnome whose job it is to line up my socks in the Sock Organizer, it ain't happening. Now, if only they had a Baby Seal Club holder in bamboo...<br /><br />Oh yeah, I spent $115 at the frickin Container Store on plastic holders for my clothes, cedars, and highly toxic bug spray. Bastards 1, anti-consumerist hypocrites, 0.14th Street Girlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07222098754122072488noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2115659098725227208.post-12697012880605538402007-12-02T19:20:00.000-05:002007-12-02T19:43:16.428-05:00On the Town...or in it, rather. Last night some friends and I went to Town, a fairly new club on U and 8th Sts. I'm not sure if it's billing itself as a gay club per se but the vast majority of attendants were very good-looking, ripped gay men, so if it is, mission accomplished. For starters, the club is massive, although difficult to tell from the outside. Two dance floors on two levels, huge bars, seating, wood paneling, very modern. Huge screens with nature scenes being shown--one minute we're watching waves roll in, the next, mountain ranges. All to the sounds of remixed Madonna tracks with deep basslines.<br /><br />There's something about gay clubs in DC--they're the few places where you can go and really let loose. Clubs in DC tend to be stiff and incredibly cheesy, which stems from the decor and music to the crowd - people rarely seem to be having fun, really dancing, loving the music, getting all sweaty, tying their hair up and kicking their shoes off. There are a few execptions--Fly, which I've blogged about before, always has a fun vibe to it; Panache, which I don't even know is still open, was killer for a bit; the roof at Five when they're doing a hip-hop night in the summer. On the whole, we're mostly stuck with the poseurs at 18th Street Lounge.<br /><br />Gay clubs, however, consistently deliver a balls-out (no pun intended) party. Sweat dripping, shirts off, pounding music, everyone jumping up and down almost in sync. Maybe my female/straight status has something to do with it, but there's no posing, no standing still. I'd post some pictures, but these are the kind that could ruin political careers, so I'm instead just going to say you shoulda been there...14th Street Girlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07222098754122072488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2115659098725227208.post-90538695908286597172007-11-30T17:17:00.000-05:002007-11-30T17:29:41.274-05:0014th Street Girl Finds Acceptance...to Georgetown University Law Center!! Received a letter in the mail the other day that was small and square and on lovely paper and looked like an invitation to a holiday party. I opened it, dreaming of fancy spiked eggnog and a certain black number in my closet (that hasn't been said hello to by my little friends <em>anthrenus verbasci</em>), sure to wow the academics right down to their argyle socks -- all said to illustrate <em>just</em> how little I was expecting to receive the news I got.<br /><br />Okay, when I read it I got a little teary.<br /><br />All the old adages about hard work and perseverence, sure, but come on now. The people closest to me know how I've struggled to gain confidence in my intellectual and academic abilities and even three or four years ago, I wouldn't have thought of applying to half of these schools. So, either Georgetown's admissions committee was enjoying the eggnog and lost their faculties (pun a bsolutely intended) or it's time to put those insecurities aside and enjoy the feeling. Whew!14th Street Girlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07222098754122072488noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2115659098725227208.post-69419643388511697102007-11-28T19:44:00.000-05:002007-11-28T19:56:07.397-05:00How I feel todayAh, love, let us be true<br />To one another! for the world, which seems<br />To lie before us like a land of dreams,<br />So various, so beautiful, so new,<br />Hath really neither joy, nor love, nor light,<br />Nor certitude, nor peace, nor help for pain;<br />And we are here as on a darkling plain<br />Swept with confused alarms of struggle and flight,<br />Where ignorant armies clash by night.<br /><br /><em>Dover Beach</em>14th Street Girlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07222098754122072488noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2115659098725227208.post-45190261418526509082007-11-25T20:56:00.001-05:002007-11-25T20:58:01.612-05:00Best time ever......the NYC-DC trip: 3 hours and 18 minutes. Completed Saturday night, 12:45AM departure time from the Upper West Side; arrived at 4:03AM to 14th Street.14th Street Girlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07222098754122072488noreply@blogger.com1