Monday, November 28, 2011

Five Things I Love...

1. Blackberry Sage Tea
The Republic of Tea
Though I consider myself a bit of a beer connoisseur, this tea really is my favorite beverages, period.  Drinking it iced takes me back to early college, visiting one of my Bests (William) in East Lansing and going to one of our favorite little shops in Okemos, The Triple Goddess Bookstore.  Afterwards, we'd eat next door at the Traveler's Club, where I was introduced to this delicious blend.

2. Goodwill Industries


I know that there are other nonprofits out there with similar aims for bettering the community as Goodwill (Salvation Army, to name the most obvious contender), and though I fully support all of them in theory, my loyalty is to Goodwill.  I love this company.  I love donating there.  I LOVE shopping there.  I am addicted to bargains, which is a good thing to be addicted to when you are unemployed and sitting on a heaping pile of college debt.  You know those people who boast about their $5,000 purses?  Yeah...I don't know those people, either.  But I got my purse for $2.50, and I get compliments on it constantly.  Win.

2. Tetris

This picture gives me goosebumps.
As a little girl (and boy), I begged my parents for video games.  My dad continually told me that I already watched too much TV, and he would be damned if he was going to give me another reason to sit on my butt all day in front of the "boob tube."  Now, looking objectively at my addiction to Tetris, I have to admit, I can see his point.  Some nights I lay awake, staring at the ceiling, imagining it as a giant game board.  It's like counting sheep to me.  L block...line piece...L-block...L-block...square...

4. Knee high boots

Steve Madden 'Dyme' knee highs
As a short, curvy girl, it is important to know the secret of the knee high boot.  It will make you look taller and thinner... IF you can find a pair that will fit over your curvy-girl calves.  And THAT is why I have an extremely love/hate relationship with knee high boots.  I recommend suede boots for girls who suffer from what I have self-diagnosed as "Fat Calf Disorder."  They typically have just enough give to slide over those honking log-legs of ours, and enough elasticity to stay up fairly well.  As for where to find them, I shop at Goodwill (see #3), so I couldn't tell ya.  Just keep your eyes peeled.

5. The Jaw Clip

Before you ask, no, I don't own a fanny pack.
Call me a mom from 1995 if you want.  I make no apologies.  Jaw clips are my favorite way of semi-tricking people into thinking that I maybe sort of tried with my hair a little bit today.  They make the front wisps of my hair fall lightly around my face in a flattering way that gives off that vibe that I've been working really hard and haven't had a chance to glance in the mirror in hours, but it's okay!  I still look good(ish)!

Saturday, November 26, 2011

Adventures in Shmizney World

In just a few short weeks it will have been a full year since I donned cap and gown and bid adieu to formal education.  I then packed up my 1999 Mercury Villager "Mom Van" with everything it would hold, and drove from America's High Five

to America's...other appendage...

...and took a job at a very large and popular corporation in that state.  For the purposes of this entry, and because I'm pretty sure I signed a document on my first day giving them permission to end my life with brute force if I ever utter a negative word about them, I will call said company Shmizney World.

The thing about taking a job at Shmizney World is that you basically have to be clinically insane to do it.  Or really into cults.  Or both.

...will ride all the rides with you.
Now, I am admittedly a crazy person.  I work really hard most of the time to hide this fact, but there it is.  I build up an exoskeleton of feigned sanity, and the thicker it gets, the less people can tell that I actually am, at my core, completely batsh*t.  Every few years, though, I shed this exoskeleton, and this is when things like platinum blonde hair, doing keg stands with my aunt, and moving to Florida to work for a fascist rodent happen.

Some people eat the oatmeal on their first day and happily resign themselves to a life of creepy grinning, waving, singing, and an unsettling dedication to a supreme overlord they will never see.  They cry at orientation, because their dreams are coming true, and they use the word magical so much that it loses all meaning.  Everyone walks around in a docile fog, intensified by the humidity, slack smiles plastered to their faces that don’t quite reach their eyes.

During training, I tried really hard to be into it.  I clapped politely when a guy in a mouse suit walked in with our name tags, while the girl next to me started hyperventilating like she was meeting the Pope.  [I thought of photoshopping a picture of the Pope wearing mouse ears here, but I decided against it.  If there’s any chance my soul isn’t a completely lost cause at this point, I don’t want to consciously tip the scales.]

As the months at Shmizney World progressed, I realized that I was not among my comrades.  The complete lack of intellectual stimuli was steadily sapping me of the emotional strength I needed to go on.  Orlando offers convenient, single serving experiences.  The problem is that when you live in Orlando, you must continue to intellectually feed on the same experience over and over and over.  Imagine, if you will, having one book that you have to read for the rest of your life.  Also, that book is Twilight.

It was early September when I escaped.  I ran for The Mitten without a backward glance.  Standing in the rubble of a failed career, a failed relocation, and a failed relationship (did I mention I moved down there for a guy?  No?  I moved down there for a guy.) I could choose to be pretty miserable right now.  However, looking back on my nine months in Florida, I feel like I’m waking up from a really drugged out dream.  If nothing else, it’s given me a really solid concept of exactly the kind of life I DON’T want.

Give me new experiences.  Give me trials.  Give me challenges that I may overcome.  For the love of all that’s good, give me reality, and let me fight for the happiness that I deserve.

That, my friends, will be a magical day.

Thursday, November 24, 2011

Thank You For...

...my Aunt Jody's cheesy mashed potatoes/waistbands that stretch/digestion.
...going to see The Muppets tomorrow with Mom and Sister.
...coming home from the movies and listening to this on vinyl.
...Christmas season starting in an hour and twenty-seven minutes.
...both sides of my amazing family being within ten miles of each other.
...friends who have rallied around me and shown me unconditional kindness and love lately.
...stout beer.
...my new favorite nail polish.
...pajamas and bare feet after a long day in heals.
...new beginnings.
...laughter.

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

A Bit of Backstory

I was in fourth grade when I turned into a boy.  It was on the day that my dad took me to get my new glasses.  A few weeks prior to this, I had left my old glasses outside in the yard, in silent protest of their continued existence, and my mom had run over them with the lawnmower.  I had considered this a victory, until I realized that I could no longer sit in the back of the classroom with my friends, as I could no longer see what was written on the chalk board.

On this day I was sitting in the cab of my dad’s old Ford pickup, riding home from the eye doctor, where I had been refit with a new pair of equally ungainly spectacles.  At the age of ten, my vision was already worse than that of most grandparents, and eyewear technology was still struggling to catch up to my rapidly increasing nearsightedness.  I was also contending with my parents’ belief that the larger the frames, the less likely I was to lose them again.  Imagine Peter Jackson’s glasses circa Lord of the Rings, but way thicker and on a ten year old.

I love peripheral vision!
Because my dad’s pickup had no working air conditioning, and it was mid-August, we were driving with the windows down.  My long, dirty blonde hair whipped and danced in the wind, getting more and more snarled by the mile.  I tried cramming it up inside my baseball cap, but it was thick and heavy and ultimately, a losing battle.  My dad glanced over at me from the driver’s seat and said, “You know, we could go get that cut if you want.”  My magnified, bug-like eyes turned to him hopefully.  I had been begging to get my tresses chopped for years, but my mom had flat refused.  “Short?” I asked expectantly, and he grinned.  “As short as you want.”  Years later I discovered that I had been a pawn in a calculated scheme: my dad lived with three long haired women, and he hated unclogging shower drains.

The rest of the ride back to my hometown was spent daydreaming about my adorable new “do.”  I pictured myself, a classy twentysomething, my frail, delicate features accented eloquently by my sophisticated pixie cut.  Of course, my vocabulary was slightly less advanced back then, and I couldn’t remember Winona Ryder’s name, so when we pulled into the parking lot of Phil’s Barber Shop, I was ill-prepared for what lay in wait.

The bell above the door jingled merrily as we entered the shop.  The walls were covered in dark wood paneling, and deer heads dominated the décor.  Phil was deep in conversation with an elderly gentleman about fishing, into which my dad animatedly joined.  I sat quietly in the corner, awaiting my turn, oblivious to the red flags surrounding this hair cutting venture.  I glanced around, hoping for an InStyle magazine, so I could find an example of my vision.  To my left, there was a hefty stack of Field & Stream, and a lone, battered, out-of-date copy of GQ.

A few more minutes passed, and the elderly gentleman shook Phil's and my dad’s hands and departed, tipping his hat cordially at me as he left.  I smiled back, unperturbed.  My dreams were about to come true, after all.  What were a few minutes compared to a lifetime of beauty?  Phil turned to me and pointed to the chair.  “Hop on up, kiddo.”  I complied, visualizing this old fashion, cracked leather seat as my throne.  Behind me, my dad plopped into the chair I had just vacated and began leafing through a Field & Stream, whistling a cheery tune.

“So, what are we thinking today, Morg?” Phil asked.  For years after I would regret my responding brevity.

“Short.”

Phil turned to my dad.  “Short, short?” he asked tentatively?  Phil was a family friend and knew my mom.   Without looking up, my dad gave a single nod of consent.  Phil shrugged and turned back to me.  “Well, alright then.  Let’s lose these goggles and get started.”  He reached around and pulled my glasses from my face.  The world instantly became a haze.

Snip went the scissors.  Buzz went the electric razor.  And within a few short minutes, away went my girlhood.

“All done!” Phil announced.  A thrill of excitement shot through my stomach.  I reached blindly forward, groping for my glasses, expecting to see this:

I make this look sooo easy.
My hand slid over its target, and I drew my glasses up to my face, slipping them on and looking up into the mirror for the dramatic reveal.  What met my enlarged, expectant eyes was far more reminiscent of Kevin McCallister, right after he slaps aftershave on his cheeks.

WHAT HAVE I DONE?!
Phil smiled at me through the reflection in the mirror.  I hitched up a grin bordering on a grimace and whispered, "Thanks."  My dad, looking up from his magazine, smiled broadly.  He finally had a son.

At school the next day, I baffled other students and was asked by first and second graders on the playground whether I was a boy or girl .  Admittedly, I exacerbated the problem by responding more often than not, “Wouldn’t you like to know?”  With the name Morgan Lee and my affinity for flannel button downs and jeans, even adults struggled to deduce my gender.  I was, without question, the “Pat” of my elementary school.

I didn't get invited to many sleepovers.
Looking back on the two years (you read that correctly) of my life that I spent with that haircut, I believe that it is these experiences which turn children into interesting adults.  How many girls do YOU know who went by the nickname George until their freshman year in high school, when most of her friends couldn’t even remember the origin of said moniker?

It wasn’t until college that I truly figured out how to be (kind of) pretty, though I experimented a lot with skirts, fishnets and old man cardigans throughout high school.  Form a line, gentlemen.  Not all at once, now.  I believe that I appreciate my femininity more than girls who have never had it unceremoniously wrenched away from them, as I did.  So thank you, Phil.  Sorry I haven’t been back for another haircut in 14 years.

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Let's Get This Thing Rolling...

Okay, so truth time.  The blogosphere intimidates the sh*t out of me.  Now, don't get me wrong; I've been reading blogs since I was about 13, and back in the days of OpenDiary and Xanga, I was all about sharing my adolescent woes with unfiltered abandon.  As blogs started becoming a means of artistic expression, however, I lost my gusto for sharing with the entire world how much I wanted a boyfriend and how lousy my hair had turned out from my last box job hair dying excursion.  Suddenly, I felt irrelevant and, frankly, boring.  I became an internet recluse, deleting my former blogs and changing the settings on my LiveJournal to private, no visitors allowed beware of dog KEEP OUT.

So why am I here, you wonder?  Good question.  I suppose I'm here because I am ready to challenge myself.  The past year of my life has been a whirlwind of changes, for better and for worse.  I am ready to put my thoughts out there again and to dare the world to put up with me.

I would love to say that I have some epic goal for this blog, like that Julie & Julia chick, because that's how you get books published and prove, once and for all, that your thoughts are valid and interesting.  For now, though, I'll summarize with this: I want to document my intellectual and emotional growth.  I have spent the better part of 2011 hiding from my fears and letting myself believe that other people have more to say than I do, but that's simply not the person that I want to be anymore.

So look out, Internet.  I'm back.