And when you listened to their songs, you wanted to hit the internet to find out what movie soundtracks they were featured on, because you are POSITIVE that any scene set to their music would make you cry?
I’m at a point in my life where I am forced to admit that I ain’t no spring chicken. I’m a grown-ass woman of 35 now, which means that I can’t even pretend I am anything other than a grown-ass woman.
There are certain things I always thought would be true by now:
1. I would have a house.
2. I would have a husband.
3. I would have decided what I want to be when I grow up.
4. I would have at least one child, and probably a puppy.
Sadly, none of these are true. Well, #3 is half true, but while I have decided what I want to be, I haven’t decided how or where I want to be it.
There are also certain things I thought wouldn’t be true by now:
1. I wouldn’t have to worry about whether I’m in the right job.
2. I wouldn’t have to worry if I’m good at my job.
3. I wouldn’t have acne.
4. I wouldn’t have to deal with bullies.
Sadly, one of these statements is thus far patently untrue.
I feel the need to clarify, because I feel the term "bullying" is egregiously overused, especially when describing adult interaction.
I don’t think “bullying” means “not getting along with someone.” Not even “being mean to someone you don’t like.” Bullying means a pattern of behavior. It is a constant belittling of someone by someone else in a position of either real or perceived power. If you put me down, and you mean nothing to me, I can get away from you, or disregard you, or fucking punch you. But if you work with me…and are tenured and I am temporary faculty…I have no choice but to take every pot-shot “joke” with a smile on my face and quietly flip you off under the table while I fantasize about all of the job applications I am going to send out over the looming break.
There are two ways this kind of niggling could be interpreted:
1) Certain people are so insecure/threatened by the fact that people like me that they are determined to take offense at every joke I make and then bite back with deliberately hurtful jabs, or...
2) They THINK that they are bantering with me, and just really suck at it.
I'll admit that I have been assuming #1, but #2 just occurred to me as a possibility. Either way... Bitch, please.
I will not apologize for being cute, funny, smart, and younger and thinner than you. Perhaps you think I am trying to needle you because you actively try to offend people on a regular basis so that they won’t stand up to you. That’s not who I am. I don’t need to intimidate to get what I want. I prefer to just be GOOD AT WHAT I DO.
Go ahead…mock the research I’m talking about. You do know that I came here from a world-fucking-class research institution, and that work was done by someone with a Ph.D. AND an M.D. and sponsored by not one, but two tenured professors at said institution? And that it has opened up a whole new field of research that nobody thought was even possible?
Go ahead…sip your Riunite and 7-UP while someone else goes to open the beer you brought me because you “didn’t know they still made beer that wasn’t a twist-off.” I’m sure you’re right, that it’s strictly some sort of hipster affectation, and has nothing to do with pry-offs involving cheaper bottling equipment and providing a better seal against oxygen.
And go ahead…make implicit threats that you’ll be here longer than I will. THAT’S EXACTLY WHAT I WANT.
You just keep thinking you’re better than me. Meanwhile, I’ll be moving on to bigger and better things.
Long-time readers are aware that I am actually pretty good at my job. I am smart, I am capable, and I take pride in a job well-done. I am constantly making efforts to be better at what I do.
If student evaluations are to be believed, some of my students think my expectations are too high. What they don’t realize is that I have high expectations for EVERYONE in my life. Myself…my students…my friends and family…my co-workers.
Which leads me to the reason for my post.
I ended my day today cranky. This is fairly unusual these days – I have been having a FANTASTIC semester. Good schedule, good balance, good rapport with students, awesome group of kids.
BUT…I teach two lab sections for another professor’s lecture. Said professor is a great guy, and students historically love him. But most of those historical students are second-year or older. He is scattered. He is highly disorganized. He is…frankly, not that bright when it comes down to it.
He is definitely smart enough to teach the classes he does, and he is probably a lot better than me at organic chemistry. But that’s not saying much – I suck in that area.
(Keep in mind that every opinion in this post comes from someone who has had multiple students evaluate me as, “not suited for freshman-level classes. Should be teaching higher-level students.” <bullshitsneeze>)
I believe he has fallen into the trap that so many tenured professors do – he is complacent. He knows that students will find their way through his class, no matter what he does. I know this is true…my job is not so much to teach, but to help. To put my students’ mind at ease, so they can relax and learn on their own, because this is really the only way they do learn. I can’t force knowledge on them…I can only encourage them and make them WANT the knowledge they cultivate within themselves.
BUT…there is NO FUCKING EXCUSE for having a poorly-organized class. NOT WHEN YOU HAVE TENURE. NOT WHEN YOU HAVE TAUGHT THIS COURSE BEFORE. That is PURE. FUCKING. LAZINESS.
And I’m not very understanding of that.
Last summer, due to my contract’s stipulation that I work a couple of extra credit hours to justify my summer benefits, my department head told me he would designate me as a “Laboratory Coordinator” for my and my colleague’s laboratory sections. The idea was that we would both do the same labs, and since I have been teaching this class more lately, I’d send him my schedule so he knew what I was doing.
I did this.
I even included a blanket statement of, “you did these labs for me last year…let me know if you have any reservations about them so we can work out something that works for both of us.”
Two days before classes started, I received an e-mail and syllabus that had ABSOLUTELY NOTHING TO DO with what I had sent him.
Naturally, the only person that teaches labs for both lectures is me, so I am the only one that has to teach two different lessons in one week as a result of this development.
Furthermore, aforementioned professor actually printed and distributed a syllabus that listed the same lab twice, with another lab in between.
I asked him about this before classes started. No response.
Brought it up again a week or two ago. Several e-mails back and forth were unproductive and more confusing. Finally caught him in-person as he was fleeing a meeting last week, and nailed him down to a schedule for the rest of the semester, which brings me to today.
Another e-mail to all of the lab instructors, this time about how he has not yet covered this material in lecture, so we are responsible for teaching it in lab first.
Fair enough: shit sometimes happens.
BUT…I HAVE TAUGHT THIS LAB BEFORE. I USUALLY TEACH IT A MONTH FROM NOW. IT IS REALLY LONG AND DIFFICULT TO FINISH IN TWO HOURS, EVEN IF THE STUDENTS HAVE SOME CONCEPT OF HOW ACIDS AND BASES REACT IN WATER.
This…is my fault. I should have leaned on him – if he wants to do this lab now, he should cover this material in lecture now. I should have earned my “Laboratory Coordinator” title.
But shouldn’t he have earned his “Professor” title??? Shouldn’t he have READ THE FUCKING LAB when he put it on his syllabus? TWICE????
If you tell me this is the lab you want to do this week, THEN FUCKING BACK IT UP.
In short: DO NOT MAKE ME DO YOUR JOB. YOU GET PAID MORE THAN I DO.
A couple of weeks ago, someone else in my department came into my class to admonish me about how I was running the lab and how much of the various chemicals students were using. I actually heard some of them say, “her boss came in…we’re using too much…” and chuckling.
I was running the lab the way I was, in part, because the solutions she gave me were of incorrect concentration and, thus, my students were not seeing the results the way they were supposed to. Once again, I had told her this, and she had not fixed the problem. By doing the reactions in test tubes and using SLIGHTLY more of the chemicals, they might see what was supposed to happen.
She is not my boss. She is the person who prepares the chemicals and watches the budget. She should NOT have said ANYTHING to me in front of my students…but she doesn’t realize how much she undermines me when she does this.
She doesn’t have a degree in chemistry – she literally follows recipes for a living. She doesn’t know how to actually MEASURE the concentrations of the solutions she prepares for us. She doesn’t know how to prepare enough of a fresh solution to last for an entire week of lab sections.
I am sick of answering to people who are not as good at this as I am. People who have little to no expectation of themselves, but expect other people to do whatever they want. Please, God, either put me in charge…or give me a job where I answer to people who KNOW WHAT THE FUCK THEY’RE DOING.
One of the things I love about where I currently live is the fact that I have a little outdoor space in which to garden. Unfortunately, I travel a lot in the summer, so said garden probably isn’t as productive as it could be if I were here to dote on it constantly. But I do take a lot of joy in running out there to grab some lettuce for a salad, or snip some fresh basil for my pizza.
And…I love having tomatoes.
There is nothing more delightful than a home-grown tomato, still warm from the sun when you slice it. And my balcony isn’t big enough to produce enough tomatoes to ever tire of them before the season is over. Which means, as the trees are starting to show some color and the nights are getting colder, I’m scrambling to get as many of the little buggers to ripen as possible.
Mostly for the purpose of making one of my favorite sandwiches ever.
Growing up, during tomato season, we had a LOT of bacon and tomato sandwiches. They were fantastic. Just very good bacon, garden tomatoes, a little Miracle Whip, done. My brother now has an extra-sentimental attachment to them, because his first son was born in peak tomato season, and our parents came to stay with them for the first week after he was born to help out. And my parents’ idea of “helping out” was to basically stay completely out of their way and cook for them while they locked themselves in their bedroom to fawn over their new little creation. Mom and Dad brought a good supply of tomatoes into the house, and my brother and sister-in-law practically lived on bacon and tomato sandwiches for the first couple of weeks of their son’s life.
Now that I’m growing my own sandwich fixins, I have taken the concept a little further. And I happen to personally believe that I have now perfected the sandwich.
Well, perfected for my taste. And considering that’s who I’m cooking for, that’s really all that matters. So I’m documenting it here, just in case I can’t remember what went into it when next year’s tomatoes start to roll in.
1. Some sort of whole-grain english muffin, toasted.
2. Homemade mayo – mine was a basic recipe, but I used all olive oil and lime juice instead of lemon. I like mayo with flavor, and tomatoes love olive oil. Apply to both halves of the muffin.
3. Truffle oil – the real stuff, made with actual truffles. A few drops sprinkled on the top half of the muffin.
4. Homegrown tomatoes – sliced and applied to the bottom half of the muffin.
5. Bacon. GOOD bacon. Sliced thick, and fried crisp. This goes on top of the tomato.
6. Arugula – also homegrown. Yep, this is actually a BAT. The top, truffled half of the muffin is now applied on top of the arugula.
It’s nutritious…it’s flavorful…it has bacon. It’s basically the perfect breakfast.
And I might still get to squeeze 3 or 4 more of them out of my garden!
I’ve mentioned recently that I’m on the cusp of making some changes in my life. I may have hinted that I’m not sure I’m currently where I am supposed to be.
This pains me, because I ADORE Michigan. So, while I’m trying to keep an open mind about where to go next, I’m also trying to keep an open mind about whether that place might be right here.
All of my Indiana roots boil down to my community theater experiences. My grad school friends have all scattered, as grad students are wont to do after graduation. The people I am still close to in Indiana are the people I did shows with. Those were my people, my community while I was there. They kept me sane when grad school was throwing me deep into depression, and they are the people I think of when I think fondly on that part of my life. They are the ones I ate deep-fried appetizers with over beers late at night, and the ones that celebrated birthdays and my Ph.D. defense with me.
When I interviewed here, my department head told me there was a community theater in town. I didn’t pursue it the first year because I was too busy trying to keep my head above water at school and keep up with friends back in Toronto on the weekends. Last year, my teaching schedule had me doing back-to-back 75-minute lectures that kept me in the classroom until 7:30. The last thing one wants to do after talking for 3 hours straight is go somewhere else to do more talking. Plus, there wasn’t anything on the season that was all that appealing.
But this year, I’m done by 6 every day, and the season has several shows that I am interested in. This week, they held auditions for Guys and Dolls.
I believe I have posted here before about how badly I want to be Adelaide in that show.
I’m still probably a few years too young to really play her, but I played 30-somethings fairly convincingly in my mid-20’s, so it’s not outside the realm of reason. Plus, I can belt the FUCK out of her songs, and I’m a strong dancer. So, even though I haven’t auditioned for anything in seven and a half years, I sucked it up and went for it.
And I rocked it. I actually heard a “wow” from the audience when I sang Adelaide’s Lament.
Here’s the point where I should probably mention that this was billed as a “co-production” of the local high school and the local community theater. So I walked in thinking I was at a handicap, not because I wasn’t good, but because the vast majority of people auditioning were going to be teenagers. Any adults present were probably already going to have history with this theater, and nobody knows me yet.
But again, I rocked it. Several of my competitors complimented my dancing and reading, and did I mention the “wow”?
These kids couldn’t sing on-key. And they certainly couldn’t be heard from further back than the 10th row in an empty theater.
So naturally, I got a callback. And I was feeling pretty good about it, even though the director had said that the casting would come down to matching the couples age-wise – they weren’t going to put an older Adelaide with a teenage Nathan, or a teenage Sarah with a 40-something Sky.
Callbacks came, and there were four potential Adelaides. Me, a younger girl from my night of auditions, and two age-appropriate candidates from the second night of auditions, one of whom was also called back from Sarah. And has a doctorate in music. It should go without saying that her voice is heaven.
But hey, she looks more like a Sarah, and she doesn’t even really want Adelaide because it will be too hard on her voice.
But they only called back one actual grown male for Sky, and he doesn’t have a strong enough voice to pull it off.
At this point, I am bracing myself for the fact that I might lose the part I want to the angel voice. I can deal with that.
The other Age-Appropriate Adelaide is half of a married couple. She waxes philosophical about what parts she and hubby will play. Hubby has a gorgeous voice – would, in fact, be a perfect Sky – but she can’t sing Sarah. He is called back for Nathan and Nicely-Nicely Johnson.
At this point, I am bracing myself for the fact that I might lose the part I want to the Age-Appropriate Adelaide who is not as good as I am, but married to the Age-Appropriate Nathan. Because they seem reluctant to let each other kiss other people on stage.
So…I wait.
And when the cast list goes up, I see that I did not get Adelaide.
The part went to the only candidate that was, at the very least, a decade younger than me.
Most likely because the best Nathan was a high-schooler. Never mind that there were older men that COULD have played him – let’s face it, it’s NOT a rigorous singing part.
So I look to see who is playing Sky and Sarah. Again, they have CHILDREN in these roles. ALL of the major singing roles have been filled with high schoolers.
High schoolers who CAN’T FUCKING SING.
Meanwhile, I have been cast as a streetwalker and a backup dancer. The woman with the amazing voice has not been cast, nor has the man with the amazing voice. This appears to be because they declined the smaller roles they would have been offered.
Any time I have auditioned for a show, I always say I would accept any role. I’m usually doing it for the social experience, because I need to get out of the house and meet some new people, so I don’t care what part I’m playing. I always have fun just working on a show. It wasn’t until after I finally got to play my first lead that I even started indicating what roles I was interested in on audition forms. I have been considered for leads and not gotten them, and been offered chorus parts instead. And had a fantastic experience. And I really did go into this just hoping to become a part of the community.
But I wanted to become part of an ADULT community. I hang out with 18- and 19-year olds all day, every day. I don’t exactly want to go spend an extra 3-4 hours of my day with people who have never lived in a world without instant messenger.
I DIDN’T want to be a 34-year-old, fat Hot Box girl when the rest of them are literally half my age and half my size.
So I think I’m out. I don’t think I will enjoy this experience – I actually think I will hate every. fucking. minute of it. I can already tell that, while the choreographer and vocal director seem like they are pretty good at what they do, the director is…a small-town high school drama teacher. Who has built herself a small-town high school musical. I can’t take direction from someone who I can’t respect.
But I still feel like an asshole for going back on my word. And I feel rejected. And downright insulted. And I STILL don’t know if I will ever feel like I truly belong here. At the beginning of the week, I felt like this might be just what I needed.
Sometimes it’s frightening how well my iPod knows me.
Earlier this week, I was Angry. For reasons I won’t go into now, because it no longer seems important. But I drafted my anger. I reworded it. I saved it, and slept on it for more than one night.
I received a pre-emptive apology. Which I accepted.
I deleted the draft the next day, but here’s the problem with the pre-emptive apology: at that point, you can’t be Angry without being an Asshole. Or at least, you can’t express the Anger.
So where does it go?
It doesn’t just evaporate, no matter how much I would like it to.
In my case, I usually just kind of bury it and wait for it to go away. Emotional compost, if you will. Which generally works…but it takes a while.
In the meantime, I had an 11-hour drive with only NPR and a loaded iPod to keep me company.
Music is a powerful thing. Often, it would take me hours to come up with the words that are expressed in a single song. Those are usually the times that I come here and post nothing more than a YouTube video. I’m not just promoting my favorite singers…there’s a reason I posted that particular song. Some people get it, others don’t, but it’s out there.
And as I drove the long road home with my iPod on shuffle, a song came on that ran through my veins like ice.
AND IT FELT SO. FUCKING. GOOD.
So I’m posting it here. Let me be frank – I am not posting it to be passive-aggressive, or because I need sympathy. I am posting it because, until I put the anger somewhere, it will not leave me. Life is too short to let it fester and putrify – I need to shoot this shit into space so it can dissipate into the ether.
And yes, I realize it’s completely trite that it’s Alanis, but whatever works. Play it on surround sound if you want to know what it sounds like in my head.
Since finals ended in May, I have been on trips to Traverse City, San Francisco, St. Louis, Virginia, Chicago, Iowa, Omaha, Minneapolis, Madison, Ann Arbor, and Western Pennsylvania. And Virginia again. And now that I’m back home in my little hamlet, I am literally at a crossroads.
It’s a common mantra in higher education that the learning curve at any new institution is about 3 years. This is why it is generally discouraged to do more than one degree at the same school, or to spend more than 3 years in the same post-doc. I do find the fact that this is a philosophy generally espoused by tenured professors as ironic as all hell, but if you think about it, it makes sense. In most undergrad programs (at least in science), your HARD year is the third year. For me, it was the first time I took truly high-level classes (and more than one at a time) and the first time I attempted research. (Keyword: attempted) It was also the first time I experienced panic attacks…every time I thought about going into the lab to attempt research. (This was also the first time I started to second-guess my plans to go to graduate school. Frankly, I’m still wondering if I made the right call there.) But senior year (or, if you’re a pretentious ass like me, FOURTH year) was more about tying up loose ends. The classes were easier, I had job interviews and GREs and grad school applications, but really it was all a piece of cake compared to third year. The tough part was coming to terms with leaving behind the best social network I had ever known – the emotional challenge, not the intellectual one. (Ever since my mom and dad made the executive decision to put me in kindergarten at age 4, I have known that my intellectual readiness generally exceeds my level of socialization.)
Grad school follows a similar pattern. Not that those last few years were a piece of cake, but the vast majority of the learning happened in the first three. It takes about two years to get your classes out of the way and get the hang of group meetings and break the instruments enough times that the senior students start making you fix them. In third year, you spend the fall working on your orals (which is really just an extended exercise in developing and defending a proposal), and in the spring you REALLY start your research in earnest. Then you’ve got two years (or…ahem…more) to actually produce and train someone to take your place. The stress is just starting, but the learning is mostly done in those first three years.
Postdocs: same old story, they just don’t make you stick around because you are expected to teach WHILE you learn. I felt like I probably had given everything I had to offer to my lab in Toronto after about two years – at that point, I had pretty much taught them everything they needed me to, and learned as much as I was going to. I stayed a third year because my project wasn’t done, and managed to squeeze out another paper, but I knew I was on the downswing. I think that’s the number one sign that you are getting smarter – you start to recognize when the learning curve is tapering off. I stayed for that last year for a variety of reasons – loved the group, loved the environment, was actually enjoying research, even when it wasn’t going as smoothly as it had when I started, and I had started to branch out and find friends outside of my little bubble. But it wasn’t my best WORK at that point.
So now, I’m headed into the third year at my current job, and the last year of my current contract. And, through the course of all of the road trips, I have had the same conversation with nearly every friend and relative I have:
“So, how’s the job?” ”Good, I have a really good deal, and my students are very sweet.”
“Any chance of becoming tenure-track?”
“Actually, yes, but I’m going to look for other options this fall.”
This is usually the point where people jump to the conclusion that I hate my job and hate my institution. This is not true. It really is a good job, and I am reminded of that every time a friend at another Michigan institution posts job postings on Facebook. I have a great department head who supports me, and I am paid better than I would be anywhere else for a comparable job. I can just tell that I’m nearing the end of the learning curve, and at this point I have to decide whether to fish or cut bait.
I am currently living in a very small town. When I moved here, it suited me well, because I was still able to go back and forth to Toronto to see my friends, and I am not fundamentally small-town averse. But this particular small town is generally populated by students…married couples and families…and Townies. None of these options make for particularly good company for a single girl in her mid-thirties who still harbors pipe dreams of getting married and having babies. Sure, I can drive an hour to Grand Rapids whenever I feel like having a good time and meeting people, but this just hasn’t yielded any real connections that will last beyond a few beers. Even the online dating cognoscenti keep sending me matches that are 4-8 hours away in an effort to make me pay for a subscription, because they can’t come up with any local options. In short, aside from my genuine love for the state of Michigan, there is absolutely nothing tying me here.
So naturally, everyone asks “In a perfect world, where would you go?”
I’m a firm believer that home is where the heart is. I also believe you never truly know where your home (or your heart) is…until you leave it. I don’t mean vacation – I mean picking up your life, moving it somewhere new, and seeing if it fits. This takes, at minimum, a year. You need enough time to get over the homesickness, make new friends, and start to lay down roots. Nothing can change the fact that my roots are grounded in Virginia – that’s where I grew up, where my parents will live out their retirement, and where it appears my brother and sister-in-law will raise their children. Moving to the Midwest the first time made me realize how a big part of me belongs here – I have formed adult relationships with my aunts, uncles, and cousins, and now the next generation of tiny cousins are starting to invent games and jokes just for me. Toronto gave my repressed city mouse its time in the spotlight – it changed my personal style, the way I eat and drink, and tweaked my political views and the way I foster relationships. Coming back to the Upper Midwest consummated the love affair with the Great Lakes that started when I was about 8 or 9 years old. These lakes have a romantic pull that the Atlantic ocean never did…no matter how much I will always consider myself from the East Coast.
Generally, when I meet people, and they ask where I’m from or what my story is, I rattle off my sequence of hometowns, and get a response something like, “Wow! You’ve been all over!”
I really haven’t. I have never lived more than 12 hours away from where I grew up, and all in one quadrant of that radius. Okay, fine, having spent some of that time in Canada makes it SOUND much more exotic, but when you think about how large this country is, let alone this planet, I haven’t gone that far.
I had never seen the Pacific until May 2012.
This summer, I checked off four new states I had never been to, and I’m still not halfway. I’ve still only been to two of the Canadian provinces, even if I’ve been on all of the Great Lakes.
At this point, the one thing I know is that I can find happiness of some sort anywhere. When people ask if I would stay in Michigan, I answer “absolutely!” but…right now I can get anywhere in the lower peninsula in 3 hours or less. I’m not sure I’d be quite as happy in Ann Arbor, to be quite honest. At least where I am, my city mouse can get to Grand Rapids and my country mouse can find beaches, hiking, kayaking, biking, etc….all within an hour’s drive.
Right now, I have paid my dues where I am, both professionally and personally. I have learned a lot about being a better teacher…I have probably formed all of the meaningful friendships I am likely to find here. I have shared inside jokes with the preschool cousin set. In short…each place I settle takes a piece of my heart…but I can always come back.
At Pennsic, I had a tarot reading. It said that previously, my life has been all about work. This is sadly true. Despite my best efforts, my career has always been the only thing moving forward in my life - the only thing that I can really put my faith in - and I have followed it wherever it takes me. The reading went on to say that a change was coming. It might be scary, but I need to have faith, and trust in it.
Bitch, please. I don’t need a tarot reading to trust my gut. Frankly, it has yet to steer me wrong, although it does have a sick sense of humor. 7 years of grad school, IBS and whatnot. But this summer, as some friendships have faltered, others have strengthened, and new ones have been forged…even my personal life is in flux. It’s hard to know who (if anyone) to trust, but I have nothing tying me down, and for once I feel like I have only my own heart to answer to.
I have to say I’m ready. Ready to find my next Home.
In this moment, I am just the right mix of exhilarated and terrified.
It’s easy to be brave when one has a steady job to fall back on and a family that loves you no matter how ridiculous you are, but there it is. I am, once again, waiting for my real life to begin.*
This picture has been making the rounds of the Facebook since we all came home from War last weekend:
Pennsic is pretty much the ultimate in romanticized excess, and some people get very caught up in it, particularly at night. Let’s see if I can paint a picture for you:
Step 1: Imagine yourself on vacation. Not a visiting-people vacation, a foreign-locale-nobody-knows-you’re-here vacation.
Step 2: Now remove all traces of your normal identity. Clothes you would never wear in normal life. A different home, one made of canvas. Different hairstyles. A different name. Different friendships. A different accent perhaps, a different personal history.
Step 3: Now wander around at night through woods only lit by the occasional row of tiki torches, past a bog covered with mist, all with the sounds of drumbeats, dancing, and laughter in the distance.
Okay, so Step 3 is kind of hard to try at home. If you are also carrying a mug and/or hip flask filled with something you have to be 21 to purchase, then you’re getting the idea.
There’s a saying among SCA folk. Let me see if I can capture the sheer romantic poetry of it…
If you can’t get laid at the Pennsic War…you can’t get laid.
I mean, seriously. There is a lot of drinking going on, some truly debaucherous parties, backrubs are handed out freely, and everyone is on vacation. Your average Pennsic evening could range anywhere from singing songs by the campfire and toasting marshmallows to naked bellydancers and moans of ecstasy emitting from the next Port-o-John.
It’s basically Medieval Spring Break (woo!).
With its population at around 11,000 people, Pennsic is a crowd you can easily lose yourself in. And some even manage to pull off the “What happens at Pennsic stays at Pennsic” thing. But it’s also something else.
Pennsic is, at its core, just another small town.
It has restaurants, shops, and small entertainment venues. It has greenspaces and neighborhoods. You can cover the entire area on foot, but it’s going to take you a while.
And, like every small town I’ve ever known, it also has GOSSIP.
Our camp is a mix of marrieds, families, and singles. Some of the singles are of the sort to go out to the parties, find people to make out with, and come home saying things like, “He was NOT CUTE. But he was SUCH a good KISSER! I need to find him again…” And I have no problem with that sort of thing…it’s just the sort of thing I grew out of long before I started going to Pennsic. (For the record, after a handful of gentleman callers stopping by throughout the week, it was this guy that she wound up with on the last night of War. Note to all gentleman callers out there: a woman’s “type” goes right out the window when confronted with a Very Good Kisser. True story.) These people don’t really get gossiped about, because everyone already KNOWS who they’re hooking up with. We just do lovingly mocking impressions of her the next day.
I, on the other hand, have never hooked up at Pennsic. Okay, full disclosure: I have, once or twice, engaged in some hot-and-heavy hand-holding. I know…SCANDALOUS. I don’t hook up because it’s impossible to bring someone home without everyone knowing about it. It’s impossible to spend the night in someone else’s tent without your walk of shame being duly noted. It’s impossible (for me, at least) to have any romantic fun without making recognizable noises and those tent walls aren’t as thick as they seem. I just don’t want people all up in my bidness. Other people can put their bidness out there for everyone to see, and I’m fine with that. Live and let live, and at Pennsic, anything and everything goes as long as it happens between consenting adults. I just happen to always hang out with my Clanmates, and go to bed alone.
And yet, according to this year’s in-camp gossip mill, I have apparently slept with at least 3 men (2 of whom are married) and one woman in our group.
Perhaps it’s due to my personality – my natural way of relating to people and putting them at ease is to joke and flirt, and innuendoes fly like that weird floatie stuff in a snowglobe everywhere you go at Pennsic. Ever since my first War, I have gotten more than my fair share of backrubs and doting from various men in camp, and it’s expected that some people will be jealous of that. Jealous and/or bored people have nothing better to do than to make shit up to keep themselves entertained. But I refuse to apologize for being attractive and fun to be around. Healthy self-esteem is not something one should be ashamed of.
So for next year, I have made a resolution: I will not rest until the rumor mill links me to, at the very least, a sex tape, a ball gag, and a very confused hamster.
Ages ago, I started a draft of this post. Not a draft, really, just a list of hot-button topics. I thought it was time to actually write it.
I love weddings.
I hate Wedding Crap.
I hate the hoopla. The dresses, the flowers, the Hall, the invites and politics, the Expense.
(I will admit to enjoying Say Yes to the Dress, but only because I love watching how the salespeople suss out the customers, NOT because I give a shit what they eventually pick. Both the Atlanta version and the Bridesmaids edition thereof can go straight to hell.)
(Also: I may or may not be writing this to an Ani DiFranco soundtrack, which is damn near guaranteed to make me more bitter than necessary.)
Let me get anecdotal on yer ass.
Case #1: Labmate
Yep, THAT Labmate, from years ago. Never a romantic role model, but I don’t believe I’ve ever shared with you the circumstances of her engagement. She and her boyfriend had been dating for at least a couple of years when I met her. A couple of years later, he graduated and was ready to start his postdoc. He had been offered a position at a Very Prestigious University approximately 4 hours away.
It is understandable that Labmate wanted to go check out the area with him.
Less understandable is the fact that her parents went as well. Not his, HERS.
But okay, fine. Cultural differences and whatnot.
While visiting VPU, they naturally stopped into a jewelry store, where they were promptly sold on putting a deposit on a diamond that had not yet arrived in the store.
Yep, you read that right.
Oh, but the paperwork was very impressive. Nothing really says everlasting love like some irrefutable paperwork.
A few months later, on Labmate’s birthday, Boyfriend went all out. It was an all-day-Labmate-extravaganza. Overpriced dinners, pricey jewelry, desserts from her favorite bakery.
I think it was Valentine’s Day when he actually proposed. Apparently it was “so romantic.” He gave her a beautiful box…when she untied the ribbon and opened it, it was filled with rose petals…and…
…a blank check.
You know, for the balance of the unseen-but-pedigreed diamond.
Let’s be clear: I could give a shit about a ring. If you want to marry me, say so. If you want to give me a ring, make it one you can afford when you ask me.
So now it’s time to actually have the rock put into a setting. She asks for the setting that will make the diamond sparkle as much as possible. Naturally, this means it will be set very high so that light can pass through it as often as possible for maximum jealousy.
For at least the first year they were engaged, that ring sat in her parents’ safe. The reason? She couldn’t wear it every day because it was set too high and would interfere with her work.
<FACEPALM>
See? I hate this shit.
I believe Labmate and Mr. Labmate are FINALLY planning their wedding this year.
Case #2: Facebook
During my postdoc, I had an acquaintance who got engaged and later married. They were one of those couples who posted everything about their relationship on Facebook.
Don’t get me wrong – I was very happy for them. They were a very cute couple, and while I didn’t know her, he was a really neat guy.
But every aspect of their wedding planning seemed to be captured on FB:
Professionally-shot engagement photos? Check.
Dog adopted out of wedlock? Check.
Status updates about every aspect of the wedding? Check.
Wedding photos? Check.
Mobile uploads from the honeymoon? Check.
And even after all of this, I was still almost enjoying the process, until they posted a link to their favorite photographer of joyous events.
It has been a long time, so I can’t find the link to share the delicious irony of the situation, but upon entering said photographer’s site, you are greeted with sample videos from previous satisfied customers…
…one of which is set to Mika’s “Happy Ending.”
Um…call me crazy, but I don’t particularly want my night of golden memories set to the dulcet tones of:
This is the way you left me, I’m not pretending. No hope, no love, no glory, No happy ending…
WHY ARE PEOPLE IN LOVE SO FUCKING STUPID???
Case #3: Facebook (Part Deux)
So I decided to finally write this post thanks to a video that is making the FB rounds lately. I will not link it here because it pisses me off too much to give them extra hits. If you must know, it is entitled “Isaac’s Live Lip-Dub Proposal.”
I HATE SHIT LIKE THIS.
You videotaped your elaborately staged proposal. For your future wife to reminisce by? Aww…how cute.
Wait…you uploaded it to YouTube. To share with your friends and family in distant states? Aww…how cute.
Wait…in approximately two days it has gone viral on FB. Because you are hopelessly narcissistic? Aww.
If you haven’t already seen and/or Googled it, the video is a VERY elaborate proposal, set to “I Think I Wanna Marry You” by Bruno Mars.
How original.
If you’re the sort of person that has to surround yourself by a gaggle of friends and family (including a token gay couple – how progressive!) in order to commit to a woman, then fuck you.
If you have to put the proposal up on YouTube and have it go viral to validate your love, then fuck you.
And if you need my female friends, who don’t even know you, to “AAAAAAAWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWLLLLLLL” to feel like you are a good boyfriend/fiancee/husband, then FUCK YOU.
To me, the best part of every relationship is what happens behind closed doors. I don’t like public displays of affection or girl talk. I don’t like meaningless tokens. You will never see my relationship status on Facebook. My best friends will never understand why my most meaningful relationships were such, because that is just between me and him.
My relationships aren’t for a diamond, a party, or a dress. Not even for a viral video. They are for my heart, my head, my body, and my soul.
My relationships are for me, not for you.
But my mom is particularly good at keeping her cool. The cracks only show when I move to a new area, far away, with no pre-established roots.
It is sound Mom-logic. It goes like this: If something happened to you…would anybody know? Would anybody tell me?
This is, when it comes down to it, a very good question. If I get in a car accident, I believe my license/registration/insurance all have her listed as my emergency contact.
But if I were to have an accident in my home?
If I were to choke on takeout?
Sure, when school is in session, someone would notice after a day of not showing up to class. In summer? Maybe a couple of weeks. And that’s only because I have enlisted the department secretary to come look after my garden once a month when I go out of town. They might not notice until fall. Thankfully, all of those trips involve friends, who would surely be concerned if I never show up. But they might just assume I was flaking out.
It’s an occupational hazard when one is a poor correspondent.
…
…
…
One of my students didn’t show up for his final this week. He didn’t forget what day it was – he had sent me an e-mail the day before expressing regrets that tomorrow would be our last day. He isn’t a ridiculously irresponsible 19-year-old – he is in his late 40’s.
He is the sort of person that, were he stricken with food poisoning, would have e-mailed me. Had his car broken down en route to campus (he lives about 40 min away) he also probably would have e-mailed. Family emergency? E-mail. He loves my class and needs a good grade to move on. Plus, he is a diligent student and GROWN-ASS MAN.
Right after the exam, I sent him a concerned e-mail.
The next day: a concerned voicemail.
Neither got a response.
I contacted my department head, and the Dean of Students’ Office.
They know nothing, and have told me this is the end of the road. There isn’t really anything more I CAN do. (I won’t go into all of the intricacies here.) They will let me know if they hear anything.
Something has to be wrong, but it is officially out of my control. At this point, all I can do is wonder and worry.
If you want to know what my head sounds like, this is it:
A cacophony of emotion that I can’t quite make sense of…but whatever it is, it is true, and I am feeling it.
And if it turns out that he is happy and healthy and just decided this school can shove it, I will kick his ass for not at least letting me in on it.
So there are times, when I’ve gone a long time without posting, that I am tempted to just turn this thing into a food blog. I could probably post at least a couple of times each month if I were satisfied with the sort of writing I see on nearly every food blog – rote repetition of the facts, pictures (sometimes pretty), and often some sort of rating system for the experience if it is had outside my own kitchen.
But there’s a problem with doing that…
Those sorts of blogs bore me to fucking tears.
When I read a blog, I want STORIES. Whatever the subject matter is, I’m only going to become a regular reader if you take me somewhere. Most of my favorite blogs are, much like my own, basically very long-format autobiographies, written in entertaining little snippets. (I once described Tina Fey’s book Bossypants as “a very entertainingly-written book about a pretty mundane life” and meant it as a very high form of praise.)
But sometimes I still want to share something I’ve come up with, and a picture posted on Facebook just won’t do it. So if I’m going to go the food-blogger route, I will at least give you some sort of context/story to go with it. It’s the least I can do.
On that note, I present my recipe for the Virginia Slammer.
A friend in Toronto hosted a Trailer (not so) Trashy dinner party tonight. I REALLY wanted to go, especially since I have an extra-long weekend. But snow and the crapload of stuff I need to do around the house intervened, so I’m relegated to participating in spirit.
Now, I feel the need to reiterate that this party was happening in TORONTO. And that I am, in general, the token Southerner in the group. It wasn’t just that I WANTED to go…I felt somewhat like it was my DUTY to go. And I ain’t even that Southern.
The point of this party was not to eat Frito pie and Hostess cupcakes – it was to eat classed-up versions of these things. Given my natural affinity for all things alcoholic, I naturally assumed the best way I could contribute would be to come up with a classed-up trailer-trashy cocktail (although admittedly, MadMup’s Twinkie Cake might have been just the right note to strike on this particular evening).
One question remained: which cocktail?
Unfortunately, most of the “cocktails” enjoyed in actual trailer parks are either twist-and-pour Kool-Aid + booze type things or involve Jaegermeister.
I refuse to put Jaeger in anything. I have been known to actually enjoy it straight, but it makes for ludicrously disgusting cocktails. I will never understand how it became frat boy catnip.
But then…then I remembered a little beverage from my bartending class in college called the Alabama Slammer.
Okay, so my memory was also jogged while watching the BCS Championship game at my local BW3, when the bartender started trying to sell them to anyone who even LOOKED like they were likely to utter the words, “ROLL TIDE”.
For those of you who either a) don’t drink or 2) have blissfully lost any and all recollection of an Alabama Slammer, it is usually comprised of:
Amaretto
Sloe gin
Southern Comfort
Juices (generally orange, may also involve sour mix)
It is a disgusting, overly sweet, overly pink concoction. It often has a flavor reminiscent of Hawaiian Punch.
So, for my more sophisticated take, I attempted to upgrade each of these ingredients:
Instead of amaretto (an almond liqueur), I opted for homemade orgeat syrup. Still almond-flavored, but tastes more like an actual NUT than some chemical extract with TONS of sugar. Also contains orange flower water, which has a lovely floral note if not over-used.
Since sloe gin is rarely made with gin anymore, it’s basically a berry liqueur. In its place, I used the liquid from my homemade cocktail cherries to get some fruitiness.
Southern Comfort…oh, where do I start? SoCo was originally made from whiskey, infused with “fruit and spices.” It is now made from neutral grain spirit, infused with “fruit and spices and whiskey flavoring.” Instead, I used bourbon. Actual, straight bourbon. I figured the spices from my cherry liquid as well as the fruitiness would cover the rest of the flavor profile, and MY drink might actually TASTE A BIT LIKE WHISKEY.
Finally…orange juice. This is going to be a very sweet, very fruity drink. I opted to use bitter orange juice instead of regular. I find it has a better orange scent, but a nice sour/bitter backbone to balance the drink.
I also added a slurp of cherry-vanilla bitters (also homemade – this is why nobody can ever follow my recipes) and a dash of orange bitters.
I wound up with:
It’s pink. It’s fruity. But it’s a HECK of a lot more drinkable than the original, and it’s a rather deceptively stiff drink. I might tweak the proportions a bit (and possibly add a dash of Angostura) but I think I accomplished what I set out to do. I made an Alabama Slammer that’s just a bit more classy. Thus, I’m calling it the Virginia Slammer: not quite as trashy as it could be.
Correction: When I went to mix a second one, it became clear that what it needed was a dash of, not Angostura, but tobacco bitters. NOW it’s trailer-trash-errific!