Week 10, Day 6

16 09 2009

LivedByBanner

I confirmed my magical powers &/or psychic ability through rigorous scientific testing.  I also fit myself into a very small glass box.

Now, as Day 6 of GEEK WEEK draws to a close, I have accomplished almost nothing… just as GeekMaster Trafford directed.

For starters, I’ve 1. Posted his banner. But that’s only a taste of what I can achieve!

In the afternoon, as directed, I went to see 2. District 9. I went alone for the novelty of it.   Also, I didn’t know what this film was about.  As I purchased the ticket the machine warned me that there was extreme graphic violence!  Oh dear.  I loathe violence.  When I went to see the most recent James Bond movie in the theater it made me cry three times.  I also screamed in terror during Enchanted (prompting laughter from the unforgiving audience).  So I kind of wished I had brought a shoulder to cry on.

But, armed with popcorn & a Coke, I bravely entered the theater.  It was sparsely populated — mostly middle-aged men there alone.  The previews were scary & I briefly considered sitting next to a stranger for comfort, but I thought that might be misconstrued.

I watched the movie.  I managed.  I didn’t even cry once!  It’s easier when it’s aliens & so clearly pretend.

I have limited experience with such films but I have to say as far as violent sci-fi goes, this was very good.  It incorporated a lot of psychologically dramatic elements which made it more interesting for me than the average sci-fi movie &, for the first time in my life, I actually experienced a grim pleasure in watching someone get his head ripped off.  It was all very manly & the moral message(s) was(/were) strong without being uncomplicated — like the violence.   I’m sure if I were a man it would have spoken to me on a very primitive level & I don’t think this movie will contribute to the downfall of society in any way.  The violence was somehow extreme without being gratuitous.  Also, I thought the lead actor was very good.  My minor quibbles with the film relate to things like alien character development & might ruin the plot for you so I won’t bother with those.  All in all, I thought it was quite well-executed.  But not exactly uplifting.

I felt a little perturbed & jumpy as I walked to Elfsar to pick up my 3. geeky t-shirt.  & what a geeky t-shirt it was!

Oh look. It's the inaugural comic strip.

Oh look. It's the inaugural comic strip.

Apparently Mr. Trafford & Ethan selected the shirt together.  It is an unpleasantly coarse orange number, men’s medium.  A lovely warning on the front states: WARNING: Hentai (H) Very Dangerous Person.  The tag that came with the shirt informs me:

Rated H. In Japanese, the letter H (ecchi) is used to represent anything sexual, and people who are “H” have extremely perverted minds. Enjoy our wacky “Rated H” shirt designs, recommended for anyone who likes sex just a little too much. The Japanese version says “This person is extremely perverted, please be sure to exercise caution.”

Thanks, guys.  The back of the shirt repeats the H symbol with the additional words of guidance: “Extremely Ecchi, Supremely Sukebe… USE EXTREME CAUTION.”

How very repellent.  I put it on when I arrived home.  It’s awfully humiliating to be forced into a costume that doesn’t look like a costume.

Anyway, I thought I would download 4. Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan but I needed to update iTunes first.  Boo.  I started the update & ordered pizza (in keeping with the spirit of GEEK WEEK), so I’d have something to eat while I 5. watched another sci-fi movie.

Gee that download was taking a long time.  I mean, holy mackerel.

I picked up my pizza.

Bella encounters pizza for maybe the 3rd time in her life.

Bella encounters pizza for maybe the 3rd time in her life.

It was awful.  Most Canadian pizza is.  I don’t know why.

I decided to watch Trekkies 2 because I own it on DVD & I’ve already seen Trekkies at least 600 times this year.  I’ve never seen an episode of Star Trek, but I have an absolutely geeky fascination with subcultures of all kinds.  I thought this film might put me in a companionable mood.  I was right!  I’m always right.

I ate pizza as I watched.

At one with the geekiverse?

At one with the geekiverse?

Once the film was over (& it was full of delights, from French Trekkie quiche parties to heartfelt filk [that's science-fiction based folk music, for the uninitiated] ballads) I was no nearer to having iTunes 9.0 than I was when I began.  So I began to trudge all over the city looking for a video store that had the Trek film I needed.

I won’t bore you with the details, but suffice to say it took a very long time.  Fortunately, Ptolemy was posting Livedby-based found “poetry” in the comments section & I entertained myself by texting little responses as I dragged my feet from creepy neighborhood to creepy neighborhood.

I had covered my geek-shirt with a decidedly non-geeky coat of my very own. I’m pleased to inform you that each video store asked me if I was a film student or if I had to watch this movie for some sort of project. “Yes,” I told them.  & when they searched their computers “It’s called wrath of… something.”

Anyway, I got it eventually.

I intended to watch the film before writing this blog post, but once home I frittered away the hours on facebook & so forth.  So I’ll watch my Star Trek in bed, 6. Sandman, as ever, by my side.

Please stay tuned for my final day as a geek.  Not only will you be enlightened by my experience as a “fangirl,” you’ll get to experience the true, heart-stopping horror that is my schedule for Week 11.

***

p.s. I found the below — deeply perplexing! — fragment in my “Drafts” box in gmail today.  I have no recollection of writing it.  It is dated September 12 of this year.

“Nobody advocated a ghost town, yet the glue of cross purposes had the negating effect of favori

Is it a partial quotation from somewhere?  does anyone recognize it?





Week 9, Day 3

6 09 2009

You know what? I’m having trouble concentrating.  You know why?  My 1. house is a mess. You know why my house is a mess?  Because I 2. flipped a coin which determined it would be so.

You know why I flipped a coin? Because I’m being lived by the Bailey sisters.  You know why the coin said my house would be a mess?  Because I selected commenter Suzanne’s either/or proposition: 3. heads: clean/tails: slob.  Today I’m a slob.

The table is covered in empty beer bottles, soda cans, scraps of paper, plastic cups full of scraps… of plastic, & empty containers of breath mints & fish eggs.

I'm in a mood again.

I'm in a mood again.

I took a picture & I’d post, but it’s too humiliating.  As if, friends, I haven’t suffered enough indignity!

Keep your either/or propositions coming.  Through Wednesday, anything is fair game.

Back to the matter at hand.  The day’s directives.

Today I was to 4. toss The Coin of Destiny to determine small decisions & 5. consult the I Ching to determine big ones.  This is old hat by now & I did not keep track of each of the many, many minor decisions I made today.  The remembered ones will turn up, now & then, over the course of the post.   The forgotten ones are forgotten (or unspoken) for good.  But suffice to say they’ve certainly shaped my destiny.

Shortly after waking (flipping the coin for a series of mundane decisions) I made plans for tonight’s 6. date.  Answers (those previously determined in parentheses)?

  • makeup
  • (nighttime)
  • outdoor
  • pants
  • hair up
  • no booze
  • smoke
  • don’t talk about project
  • goldfish

Then I arose for the day.  I 7. consulted the I Ching to divine the answer to the question “What should guide me today?”

I got hexagram 64 (Not Yet Fording / Before Completion) with the alternate 32 (Persevering / Duration).   Themes included incomplete transition from disorder to order, necessity of “helpers,” drinking with moderation, cusp of new era, marriage, & the lines “what endures is the unswerving directive, the inner law of his being, which determines all his actions.”  Right.  Of course.

Obviously, I was intended to listen to Radio Lab’s 8. “Stochasticity” podcast.  After a double espresso & plenty of procrastination, that’s just what I did.

Notes?

  • “If you don’t see past yourself you fall prey to superstition”
  • “We have to be careful not to find meaning here when in fact it’s just coincidence”
  • “On the subject of predictability, humans & coins are similar”
  • “At the very moment you think you’re hottest you’re actually freezing cold”
  • “Pattern rules the brain”
  • “One of the best things about gambling is that you can do it by yourself”
  • dopamine & pattern finding — “this is how your brain makes sense of reality”
  • “The noise is filtering itself”
  • The blog is the organizing principle keeping me sane — should I stop writing it?

It was very informative.  I won lots of solitaire too.  I 9. Asked the coin for details for my Monday trip to Qualicum. Answers?

  • travel solo
  • with Bailey Sisters soundtrack
  • camp
  • eat out
  • lighter (not matches)
  • water (not earth)
  • poem (not short story)
  • no reservations
  • goldfish

So that’s settled.  I had a few more questions. 10. Should I write to the Radio Lab people (NO). Should I 11. Make a video? (NO). Then I asked 12. Should I go shopping?  (YES). I procrastinated some more.

Went shopping, coin-guided.  I 13. Called my father on the way & purchased 14. The shoes the Coin told me to & didn’t buy the sweater it told me not to.  The coin was wrong, however.  Shoes are strange & too small.  I will return them tomorrow on my day off & buy the sweater I wanted all along (forbidden by coin).

Soon it was time for 15. Date #2.  I had Simon (of Week 3 fame) as my ally.  He picked me up around 8:00 (I was wearing 16. make-up & 17. pants, 18. hair up) for our outdoor, goldfish-including date.  He greeted me with a bowl of 27 19. goldfish (three to the third, I believe! Correct me if I’m wrong, but if so, appropriate)

Cause they're so delicious

Cause they're so delicious

We headed out to release them in the pond near our very first “date.”  One of them was dead already, sadly.  But we thought maybe the fresh pondwater would revive him.  Before you ask, yes.  These are the sort of goldfish that you’re supposed to put in ponds.

From here, proceed left

From here, proceed left

We released the goldfish into a little pond.  I feel very bad because I think I killed some in the process.  But most of them swam off very happily.  Bats flew above them & some nearby nudists conducted some full moon ritual in the ocean nearby.

We went for a short walk. We 20. Didn’t discuss the project.

Then we headed back into the city proper.  We had dinner reservations & some time to kill, but a 21. no booze restriction!  Did have to 22. smoke however.  Went to a hookah bar.

How does THIS thing work?

How does THIS thing work?

Simon was curious about Fate & it’s workings as well.  He wanted to know if he should buy a new raincoat.  He decided to flip The Coin of Destiny to determine his answer.

Well, it's very expensive, but...

Well, it's very expensive, but...

Coin said? Worth it.

Puff the Magic Dragon approves.

Puff the Magic Dragon approves.

TD called while I was in the hookah bar.  “Why did you go to a hooker bar on a date?” he asked.  Ha.  I enunciated each word clearly.  Oh.  Who was I with? Simon!  He remembered Simon.

“The balloons!  Magical.”

Yes, everything is magical.

Then we had to race to make our dinner reservation.

We ended up at a very nice French restaurant.  STARVED.  So it was perfect.

No booze! No booze!  We struggled with this.  But wasn’t our date over?  After all, we were indoors & all tasks were accomplished… let the Coin of Destiny do the talking?

Date? Over!

Date? Over!

So from then on we enjoyed a real post-date dinner as friends.  Booze included, & as much talking about the project as we desired.  After all, this was our six week anniversary!  Simon & I only see each other infrequently, so this allowed us some much-needed catching up.  I’ll have you know, however, that during the two hours project-talk was verboten, we had plenty to talk about regardless.  Wrinkle-mouthed bats, for one thing.

Dinner was delicious.  Escargot! Steak frites! All reasonably priced.  &  well-earned bottle of wine to top things off.

A ______ at the end of the __________

A ______ at the end of the __________

After dinner, headed to a local bar.

Just checked my pockets to flip The Coin to determine an answer to a very pressing question.  Well, I’m absolutely broken up.  I can’t find it anywhere.  I even went outside & looked around.  How could I have lost The Coin of Destiny? This is extremely troubling, as I’ve come to rely on it.  So much that I intended to carry it around with me forever.

I can’t tell you if I’ll find it.  I certainly hope I do.  At the same time, it seems unlikely.  If I don’t encounter the coin in my searching, I may only presume that it’s destiny of another nature & I’ll substitute another.

Keep your fingers crossed for me.

Tomorrow is my day off. The next time you hear from me, I’ll be speaking to you from Qualicum.

WHERE IS MY COIN?

.

.

.

FOUND IT!!

As for my question:

Should I begin asking my readers a daily question?

NO.

Well, it serves you all right for commenting so infrequently.





Week 8, Day 5: Part 2

31 08 2009

Well I’m halfway through an episode of Mad Men, but I stopped to write this blog because I care very deeply about each & every one of you.

Today was my first day of 1. eating locally, my fifth day of Week 8, & my fourth day of being lived by Allyson.  She’s a masterful architect!  Her children are lucky.

As you can see, I 2. posted a list of the foods I normally eat, before noon very early this morning, along with a frantic plea for understudies for Week 9.  It looks as if Week 9 will be taken care of, thank goodness.  So now I can focus on the food.

Week 9 also promises to be very challenging & bizarre.  So those of you who have been boycotting this week (& the past few, from the looks of the blog stats) because it is pleasant & relaxing will be relieved to see me undergoing a series of radical psychological experiments in the week(s) to come.

The Chancellor is glad to have me to himself

The Chancellor is glad to have me to himself

TD left early this morning, so I was grateful for today’s directives: they gave me something to do besides weeping into my pillow & plucking petals one by one from the wilted flowers in my vase.  Maybe we’ll see him again sometime.  His elbows, anyway.

For now, all that’s left is a filthy kitchen with a  sink full of oyster shells & a lot of crumpled Kleenex littering my apartment.

After a somewhat hazy early morning goodbye, I re-rose around 10 & had a breakfast of 3. local blueberries left over from Galiano.

Then, luxuriating in my lack of a rigid schedule, I busied myself doing nothing until around 1:00.

But by then I was getting hungry.  I knew if I didn’t feed myself, no one would!  I headed to Granville Island in search of some 4. local groceries. I was supposed to 5. find as many foods from my list as possible.

It was lovely going around Granville Island with this mission.  I’m developing a real affection for this place.  This isn’t the first week that has taken me there, & it won’t be the last.  But it’s very interesting to experience it from so many different perspectives.  The last working day I was there, I was in a wheelchair!  This time, I was keeping my eye out for LOCAL! & BC-GROWN flags.  So each visit I seem to have a different guardian angel.

It took some searching, but I got a real bounty of food.  From my list:

  • some kind of fish (trout, as a nod to Ptolemway)
  • organic, locally-baked bread (a delicious Fantain from Terra Breads)
  • fruit, especially berries, especially blueberries (peaches, blueberries)
  • greens (romaine lettuce)
  • zucchini
  • cheese (basil goat cheese from Salt Spring Island)

I also got an abundance of non-listed things!

  • venison salami
  • rabbit terrine
  • large jar of salmon roe
  • green beans
  • new potatoes
  • carrots
  • cucumber
  • brown mushrooms

Just look at (some of) the spoils!

Beautiful, British Columbia!

Beautiful, British Columbia!

There was plenty of locally-made pasta but none of it was organic.  I was also surprised to find NO local onions & only one stall with local garlic ($2 per shriveled head)– I didn’t buy any.

After my shopping (it takes longer when you can only buy local things), I sat down by the docks for an impromptu sandwich.  Wow it was one of the most satisfying sandwiches ever.

It was only fantain bread, goat cheese, venison salami, & lettuce, but it tasted like absolute heaven.  I’m supposed to 6. post one reason why people should eat local foods each night.  Well, I’ve come up with many over the day.  But here’s the most selfish & unexpected one: eating locally is difficult, but it makes it that much more rewarding.  Eating my sandwich, I had a feeling akin to the one you feel when you are eating a fish you have caught yourself or a tomato grown from your own garden.  A sense of accomplishment enhances flavor remarkably well!  I strongly encourage each of you to try your own local eating day (or week, or month, or year).  It’s enormously satisfying.

I took the water taxi back.

Scenic enough for you?

Scenic enough for you?

We nearly capsized, because some foolish man decided it would be a good idea to let his girlfriend drive his boat.  She careened in front of us & the force of their wake nearly resulted in tragedy– or, at the very least, inconvenience.  Crazy woman drivers.  I’m very glad my groceries & iPhone, not to mention the gaggle of senior citizens also aboard, did not end up in the filthy water.

On my way back home I picked up a couple bottles of 7. local wine.

Then, I headed off to meet Shannon & Kyla on Kyla’s patio.  Where I drank the better part of one of the aforementioned bottles (a white).  To my own dismay, I drank it with some delicious local ice cubes.  As the wine was unrefrigerated & ice was, in this case, preferable to warmth.

Eventually we went inside.

Are you pondering what I'm pondering?

Are you pondering what I'm pondering?

Kyla was enjoying a raw foods dessert involving a mango & raspberries on a complicated crust.  Sadly, I could not partake.

After leaving her place (we are both, after all, working artists), I stopped by the store where I purchased some 8. local tomatoes & butter & what may or may not have been a non-local onion.  Grown in Canada, but it didn’t say where.  It was the most local onion I’d seen all day & I caved, if only a little, knowing my trout wouldn’t be much without it.

I looked, but did not find local vinegar or olive oil.  That’s not too surprising.  I’ve decided however, that basic condiments & spices which I already have in my cupboard are acceptable for use.  It’s only three days of eating, after all, & I’m already somewhat over budget (thanks to vacation).  I think it would be frivolous to purchase new salt, pepper, olive oil, herbs, etc. when I have perfectly good bottles in my pantry.  Though I’m sure the search would be interesting.  Does this violate the spirit of the week?  Tell me, Allyson. I’m under the impression that it doesn’t, but if it does I will eat my food unseasoned. Not sure how pleased Wednesday’s dinner party guests will be, however!  Ha.

Went home to cook my dinner.  Onion, salt, & pepper were the only non-local ingredients.   I had whole trout pan-fried in butter with onions & tomatoes.  Deglazed the pan with some of the white wine (I very tackily took the bottle home with me) & enjoyed the whole mess with some Fantain bread.

Taste the rainbow (trout).

Taste the rainbow (trout).

The Chancellor nibbled a few scraps before growing bored.  When I was done, I laid my plate down for Bella, curious about what parts she would eat.  Well, she ate the leftovers, head, bones, fins, & all & left me a very clean plate (shall I just return it to the cupboard?).  She seems very happy & has suffered no choking &/or vomiting fits thus far.

So now Day 5 is behind me.   Here we come, September!





Week 7, Day 7

26 08 2009

Wow!  Final day of being lived by Fernando, guys.  I got everything accomplished, much as I always do, though I have yet to have read, have dinner, write for an hour, & go for a final walk.   I won’t bore you with the details as I’m on an island in the middle of nowhere with a half hour of wireless access in a restaurant about to close!  So I’ll stick to the most interesting things.  Today oatmeal just doesn’t make the cut.

BRUSH HARDER!

BRUSH HARDER!

TD woke early & took the dog for a walk.  Came back & brushed her as I ate my oatmeal.  She’s going through her late summer shed.  Plenty of fun, I assure you.  Then watched Viridiana — at first thought I hated it (it’s not exactly a morning movie. Is ANY movie?  Why, Fernando, did you have me watch all these movies in the morning?), but then I realized it wasn’t the movie, just the main actress.  I actually liked the movie very much.

Then I did the most interesting project-related thing of the day: I ate 6 slices of bacon as a low-carb snack.

We went for a walk.  On assignment, of course.  I wrote, in a public place, the word “HI” with my finger on TD’s back.  Check, check, check, I lose track of my own gold stars over time, people.

Then ate some lunch (seared tuna appetizer & a glass of pinot blanc for me; tomato soup, bread, & beer for my carb-loving gentleman caller).

We headed to the car rental place, which was ludicrously expensive, I won’t budget it in.  It will come out of my own pocket.  I mean my pocket & the project’s pockets are one.  But I’m hoping some kind donor will bail me out if I fall too hard towards the end of the year.

Can I keep you?

Can I keep you?

Our car was parked in spot 13.  Uh oh!

Then we got some supplies & raced to catch the ferry.

Made it!  Made it straight to lane 13.

Farewell happy fields

Farewell happy fields

After a very enjoyable twilight ferry ride, passed this restaurant.  Open!  They are open late tonight, for some reason.

But closing as we speak!  Run over to the weekly schedule, I’m about to put up our very own ashroyer’s!  She’s living vicariously though me starting tomorrow.  Her bio & video will be up tomorrow, when I’m not working with such a tight external deadline!

Sleep well all.  Or good morning.





Week 7, Day 5

25 08 2009

My mood has gotten progressively fouler as this week has gone on.  Glad I had two days off this week! I’ve been wondering what’s wrong with me.  But finally—an explanation:  Jess is working on a documentary about the Atkins Diet—according to her research, a very bad mood is a well-documented side effect of a low-carb diet.  This is corroborated by anecdotal evidence from my peers.  I’d be relieved to hear this, if I was capable of feeling any relief!  But I do feel a vindicated sense of bitterness, which is a close low-carb substitute.  Also, this weekend my evil mood prompted the first poem I’ve written since January.  So there’s a silver lining to every etc.

After six hours of sleep (& a very curious nightmare, more on this later) I stayed in bed sulking for 1. Two more.  Dragged my heels around the house (as Bella & Chance napped in the sunshine).

We're much cuter in person

We're much cuter in person

Then, shortly after noon, I proceeded to the bank, where I drafted some money to my US account so I could sort out my credit card woes & pay my Idaho speeding ticket.  If my check doesn’t arrive by Wednesday, my driver’s license will be suspended!  (I, of course, only got this information after 6:00 on Friday).  The man beside me asked for $100 in fives & $100 dollars in quarters, while the teller spent most of his time looking down my shirt.

Too cold (L), Too hot (R)

Too cold (L), Too hot (R)

Home again, home again.  I discovered I have now mastered the exciting art of cooking oatmeal.  I didn’t realize I was doing it wrong before.  But the trick is in the stirring.  I felt like Goldilocks.  I also felt like I was married to Fernando.  This project is a lot like being married, if you think about it, but to 52 people consecutively.

I 2. Added blueberries towards the end then 3. Sweetened with honey.  Added a lump of butter for good measure.  This was the first time my oatmeal managed to approximate goodness.  I 4. Put on Cría Cuervos (my mother purchased it & three other required DVDs for me this weekend, much to my vindicatedsenseofbitterness) & savored my only carbohydrates of the day.

IMG_0967

The movie was ok.  It’s a seventies Spanish film with an unhappy, recently orphaned 8-year-old girl as its protagonist.  It’s one of those movies that makes a big point about the innocence & happiness of childhood being a myth.  There’s not a lot of conversation and it’s all uncomfortably intimate but slightly unreal—not surreal, despite the frequent appearance of the ghosts of her parents. Whenever there is dialogue, it’s generally people being nasty to/not understanding each other.  Lots of long shots of children’s blank faces.  Lots of political points using the family as an allegory.  So forth. It’s the sort of movie that’s successful in the sense that it seems to accomplish absolutely everything it set out to do—& nothing more.   So for me, it fell flat.

Once the movie was over, I 5. Read the informational booklet that came with the DVD.  It was exactly like the movie.  It told me a lot of things that I had deduced for myself, including some interesting facts that I didn’t know.  But it didn’t teach me anything.  There’s information & then there’s knowledge.  Knowledge is a harder gift to give, a little more nebulous.  This movie had an (telling) artful touch but not a (teaching) magic one.  Does that make sense?  The film’s worth watching but I wouldn’t recommend it to anyone.  Except perhaps to someone with related academic interest in the film’s central themes.

Then I got up for my 9. Walk.  To the post office.  I was supposed to 10. Write (just letting in happen) in a public space.  I’m very creative.  I wrote my address & the address of the Idaho court.  Then I 11. Posted what I just wrote.  HA!  I also wrote a text message or two.

Stopped to pick up a lunch of grilled chicken breast & hot sauce.  Blah.

Unjust, not right

Unjust, not right

12. Ate it.  Took my time.  Enjoyed it as much as possible.

Then I 13. Read a poem by Octavio Paz & headed back to bed for a long while.

My friend, Jess (P) arrived at my house around 8:00.  She’s in town & she’s staying with me tonight.  We went out for 14. Dinner & a glass of 15. Wine. Jess (E) & her sister joined us.  I had carpaccio, but forgot to take a picture until it was mostly devoured.  Jess (P) got the bread that came with it.  Sadly.

Unsightly scraps of raw beef = (recently) living proof

Unsightly scraps of raw beef = (recently) living proof

After that, we all went for a long 15. Walk with Bella by the sea wall.  It’s a nice time of year.  The weather’s very back-to-school.  I took Bella off leash for a while & she ran around in the ocean.  Then we returned here & I 16. Am writing for an hour, while Jess (P) reads Eat, Pray, Love (much to her own chagrin) in the living room, eating the delicious blueberries I’m not allowed.

I still have fifteen more minutes of writing, so I’m going to tell you my dream.  Altered dreams are, by the way, an interesting side effect of this project.  I dream every night, for example, that each of you post several detailed comments (inevitably, very interesting ones) on the blog.  & often my puppetmasters appear in my dreams.  During Ptolemy’s week, we had all sorts of adventures every night.  Sometimes, I dream that I’ve received a schedule that makes all sorts of interesting demands.  I’m always a little disappointed by reality when I wake.

Last night, I dreamed I was on a boat tour in a jungle with an anonymous female friend & her family.  So far, it was a good dream.  Though everyone mocked me because I didn’t know how to “telescope shadows” with a camera.  “Why does everyone always make fun of me?” I complained, burying my head in my lifejacket.  My companions laughed.

When I arrived home to my apartment, I sat down to write.  Then I realized that the feeble mutant creature  (looking something like a child, something like an old man, & something like ET if each of those things were pale & blue-tinged, two feet tall, shaped out of putty, with a tiny head & very long arms) which would sometimes cause mischief around my apartment, was back, fiddling with the electrical sockets.  I was very angry.  I had locked him out previously.  “No!” I said, & he ignored me, fixedly yanking my computer cord out of the wall until it finally broke.  I grabbed him by his arm, probably a little harder than I needed to, & began to drag him to the door.  He resisted me, but he was feeble as always.  Though his arm was curiously stretching in my grip.

As I dragged him through my apartment, I noticed that the edges of doors & windows, cupboards, etc. were gnawed, bent & a little bloody.  He had somehow snuck in through all these tiny spaces, very deliberately.  I didn’t know he was this smart.  When we got to the door he suddenly became much stronger.  His arm started coiling tightly around my wrist with a firm, snake-like pressure.   He looked up into my face with his black eyes & I realized he was actually very smart—or perhaps not smart, but possessing a predatory, shark-like intelligence— & very dangerous.  I shoved him out the door & locked it.

He turned into a slug & started creeping through above one of the hinges.  I locked him out several times & he managed to get in every time, shifting into increasingly sinister, vague shapes.  I realized, with horror, there was no getting rid of him.  He began to grow & grow.

I then realized that he was the external physical embodiment of my own malevolence.  Malevolence is a strange sort of word to choose, & it sounds perhaps inaccurate, but I didn’t choose this word– in my dream it was, very precisely, malevolence.  Anyway, I’d believed I was a wholly good person, free of evil etc. & I was!  In my dream, at least.  But by eliminating  this evil from my own self I had not eliminated it entirely, but displaced it—I had unconsciously created this creature, much worse than ordinary human evil as it was wholly autonomous & quite out of my control.  So my horror was now tinged with a very unheimlich sense of recognition.  If this creature were not destroyed, it would rapidly gain strength & destroy the entire world.

I knew the only way to destroy this creature was for someone to eat him.  “Should I eat him?” my anonymous friend asked.  No.  She couldn’t.  If anyone but me ate him, he would continue to grow & destroy her & everyone else.  I guessed that I had to do it.

I squeezed him into a ball & felt, with horror, that while he had previously been boneless there were now sharp, calcified pieces of something inside him.  I grimly broke him into two pieces.  I needed some bread to swallow him, as I wouldn’t be able to chew with these pieces inside him.

I rolled him into two pieces of bread as my friend watched me anxiously.  I ate him.

“What does he taste like?” she asked.

“What do you think?” I said.  “A tooth, & a shard of bone.”

Upon which I woke up, quite unsettled.

Now all I have left to do is 17. Go to bed at 2:20am & 18. Stay in bed for 8 hours. I also 19. Can’t use electronic devices after 1:20.

A few nights ago I tried so hard to stay up until after two that I woke up at 4:00am on the floor of my closet.  I don’t know if that counts as a failure or not.  But I must have been awfully tired if I decided to “rest my eyes” there for a moment.

Also, I’ve been sleepwalking again.  & I’ve hid my keys so well that no one will ever find them.  Fortunately, my mom had a spare.





Week 6, Day 5

18 08 2009

Well, here we are.  Did you miss me? I’ve missed you terribly.

Yesterday was my day off.  I spent most of it in bed, gravely ill.  In fact, I thought I had tuberculosis, as I was coughing up blood.  But today I’m practically back to normal.  A little feverish, a few sniffles.  But certainly no coughing-of-blood.  What a relief.

Today, I was back in a wheelchair, as this week’s schedule requires.  I stayed in bed until shortly before noon, milking my illness as much as possible.  Then I arose & 1. took a shower.  It’s an uncomfortable affair these days, as I must transfer myself out of a wheelchair & onto the edge of the tub, then from the tub’s edge to a little stool.  Then I must shower seated upright with only a little shower nozzle for my companion.  I soaped up quickly then got out!

I was also supposed to 2. prep dinner from a specified recipe.

You'll have to make do with an awkward self-pic.

You'll have to make do with an awkward self-pic.

The recipe was for a “vegetable bake” from some British healthy foods cookbook.  I’ll admit, it was extremely bland.  Basically: tomatoes, oregano, zucchini (“courgette”), eggplant (“aubergine”), onions, mozzarella, & a shockingly minimal amount of garlic (three cloves).  Prepping took much longer than it would normally, however.  So I’m glad the recipe, if uninspiring, was easy. Some of the cleanup I will actually have to leave for Wednesday!

The fruit flies, already having a little party above the empty wine bottles in my sink (some of them [the flies] quite purple by now), will be ecstatic for the next few days.

As I cooked, I 3. Listened to Music for Egon Schiele, by Rachel’s. Not my sort of thing, but it lent the preparations for dinner a somber air that I quite appreciated.

Kyla wants to “control my senses” this week & so far it has certainly worked. Strange perfume!  Unfamiliar music!  New foods!  Not to mention no real use of my legs.

During this time, the girl (excuse me, woman) who was supposed to accompany me for my tasks tomorrow suddenly bailed.  Panic!  There’s no way I’d be able to accomplish anything alone.  Fortunately, I posted a desperate plea on facebook, & I’ve found someone.  All it will cost me is $50, lunch, & my dignity.  But that’s better than failure by far.

Shall we dance?

Shall we dance?

I still needed to 4. Take Bella for a walk as I have learned to in a wheelchair. Walking her myself in a wheelchair, I’ve learned, is nearly impossible.  Much better to get her estranged father over for a little custody visit.  He showed up with Shannon & they took her out for an hour.  Meanwhile, I wandered around YouTube, expanding my horizons.

Some of my horizon-expanding entailed watching old Peter Cook & Dudley Moore clips.  The original Bedazzled is one of the most highly underrated films of all time.  Perhaps it resonates more deeply with me lately because of this project?  But I encourage each of you to rent & watch immediately.  Am I George or Stanley?  I want your thoughts.

Speaking of YouTube, I find it intriguing that “Putting Away Groceries in a Wheelchair” has already reached well over 1,000 views– by far more views than any of my videos has yet enjoyed, including Meg Tilly’s famous Week 1 address.  I can’t imagine why this is. Can you?  I’d like to hear your thoughts.

Then I 5. Made dinner and 6. Read excerpts from Mee’s A Nearly Normal Life while the food was in the oven.  Then I 7. Welcomed guests (Kyla & her fiancee).  I also 8. Made conversation.

We ate the bland dinner that I had prepared, then proceeded to more enjoyable things.  Like discussions about horror, torture, & suffering around the world.

Kyla & I, making up for the technical failures that prevented her first video from reaching you, also made a nice little film for you all.

At some point, our conversation was supposed to 9. lead to stereotypes and myths of the disabled without seeming contrived. I realized this hadn’t happened & said, quite naturally, “Have you noticed that I haven’t led the conversation to stereotypes of the disabled without seeming contrived?”  Well, I’ll count that as a dodgy success.  But I’ll put it in my failure book just in case.

Now, all I have left to do is: 10. Lie in bed and contemplate my last few days for at least 10 minutes.

I’ll accomplish that no sweat unless I fall asleep first!

But here’s where I need your help: my participant for Week 7 is very late with his schedule.  He has, however, promised to get it in by tomorrow.  A new clause allows me to take one day off for each day the schedule is late.  So next week I have the chance of having a three day weekend.  Somehow, this doesn’t rest easy with me– though I’d welcome the time off, three whole days on my own seems like an awful lot. Still, the psychological demands of this project are enormous, & a day & a half is not always adequate time to prepare.

I thought I’d leave it up to commenter vote.  Should I get an extra two days off?  Or only one?  None?  Or should I get my two days off but blog about them as usual?  Please leave your response in the comments.  YOU, friends, will determine my fate.

I will accept it uncomplainingly, whatever the outcome.

Now, onward!





Week 6, Day 3

16 08 2009
She's willing to wait it out.

She's willing to wait it out.

So.  Third day in a wheelchair.

Saturdays seem to be my most “normal feeling” days, so I accomplished basically everything.  But I’m also getting sick so that added a twist to things.  Keep coughing, feel about to die.

I stayed in bed till nearly noon.  I was supposed to 1. read the selected essay excerpt in bed.  Unfortunately, though I kept checking my trusty iPhone, I did not have the selected essay excerpt, as Kyla was sowing her wild oats till late last night.  I was unable to read the excerpt in bed.  However, after finally arising slightly before noon & 2. transferring out of bed, I found the file in my email.

I don’t have all the citation info, but the essay is called “Beauty & the Freak” & is written by Rosemarie Garland Thomson.  I’m not able to make much sense of it now, late at night after a long day, but suffice to say it makes the sort of points you’d expect about “freakish” bodies put on display & the history of such displays. In the essay, Garland draws a somewhat predictable parallel between freak shows & beauty pageants.

I read it, & was also supposed to 3. ask someone without an MFA to read & discuss.

The trustworthy Ptolemy Tompkins answered my plea.  & we discussed the essay over Skype.

Somehow captured single instance in which he looks beningn & I creepy

Somehow captured single instance in which he looks benign & I creepy

Afterwards, Shannon & the man arrived & The Man 4. took Bella for her daily constitutional. Then the three of us (Shannon, man, I) 5. Went for lunch at restaurant of their choice. It wasn’t inaccessible so I didn’t make note of it.  Though we did pass other inaccessible spots along the way.

We had a nice long chat about how America is the best country in the entire world, & how awful it is to live surrounded by culturally illiterate Canadians.  That was my thesis (I jest. I jest-ish.) at least.

Then 6. headed to Shopper’s Drug Mart nearby me. I was supposed to 7. find an article in a magazine that related to disability.

Obviously– & I’m not saying this is a good thing– none of the magazines related directly to disability.

I did search.

I did search.

So I rolled around, encountering a few obstacles.  Noticed, for first time, how most tempting junk food is placed at a child’s eye level! Never noticed this when I was two feet taller.

Also encountered inaccessible barrier.

Observe the frustration!

Observe the frustration!

Did you see my lap?  I’d eventually found the perfect magazine.  LIFE magazine’s tribute to Marilyn Monroe.  Not only is it full of pleasantly voyeuristic photos, it also has plenty of text to keep one occupied.  Well, I didn’t note any of this.  I just knew it was perfect, posed for a picture, & purchased.

I want to be lived by you, just you.

I want to be lived by you, just you.

“I sense a project!” The salesgirl said.  Right she was.

I was supposed to 8. Make a convincing connection between the magazine & disability & blog about it. This seemed much easier six or seven hours ago.  Fortunately, I wrote notes, “Beauty & the Freak” still fresh in my mind.

Garland notes how, after the 1920s, freak shows began a decline & beauty pageants became much more popular.

I’ll give you my verbatim (sloppy) notes:

society turns away attention previously reserved for freaks & focuses it all on beauties.  marilyn monroe first casuality!  in tribute magazine, they speculate about abortions & cite her gynecologist.  what do we know of stephen hawking’s doctors?

“freaks” now at least are granted dignity & privacy.  but when have you heard a parent tell a child not to stare at a beautiful woman?   in the case of many, beauty is a debilitating & often terminal illness, disguised as a blessing.

does this coincide with the decline of the nuclear family?  everybody becomes everybody else’s property, so we can ruthlessly exploit the commodity of others’ beauty while feeling a sense of  guilty responsibility towards weaker members.  decline in the boundaries of the body?  hmm

I’d originally intended to formulate those, & other thoughts (I assure you, I have many), into a coherent argument, but no hope for that now.  Though I feel a little queasy about providing you with my basically arbitrary jottings, at this point it’s preferable to the alternative (attempt at lucid argument). Now you might choose to challenge me, but I have an excuse!

Finally, I went to Kyla’s for 9. Dinner & a movie. I wheeled the whole way by myself!  Five blocks (all uphill!) took me about thirty minutes.  It was difficult, but making it there was a matter of pride. I was somewhat surprised that NONE of the people who passed me offered help.

After dinner (thanks, Kyla!) we watched my grandfather’s film The Men.  Marlon Brando’s first movie.  Actually very good. Probably resonated with me more this week than it might have otherwise, as Brando plays paraplegic war vet.  For its time, very progressive.

Finally, 10. Wheeled home (with Shannon’s help) to sleep.

Tomorrow is my day off!  I’ll spend it doing errands, etc. Happy to answer any questions, realize this post was fairly cursory.  See you on the other side.






Week 6, Day 1

13 08 2009

Today was my first day in a wheelchair! I’m currently on hour four.

I took a long time accomplishing the day’s directives.  Knowing I had a lot to do, I stayed in bed for a long time, almost till noon.  I felt I needed to conserve as much energy as possible.

I did my directives out of order.  But that’s just how I roll.

When I eventually got up, I 1. Wandered around making sure things were at a reachable height & made my home more accessible (took my plates out of the cupboards, removed a shelf from my fridge, cleared space in my closet, etc.) ran some errands (bought household staples: dog food & whiskey), then went out in the rain to 2. Get a chair to use in my shower for the week. I don’t have use of my car, so there was only one store option.  Thankfully, though I did not find a chair under $100 (?!) they did have a little vanity stool.  I have full use of my upper body so I figured that would do.

Then I 3. Took Bella for a half hour walk. Ten minutes of that was her standing resolutely on a patch of sidewalk staring into traffic.  Neither of us were really feeling it.

I'm not a trained monkey.

I'm not a trained monkey.

With the “walk” done, I headed to Kyla’s, full of nervous anticipation.

After chatting a bit about the project, gossiping about the commenters, & handing over the week’s texts (Kyla is, by the way, a model participant.  Not only has she provided a wheelchair for my use, she has thoughtfully procured the week’s required books, & will provide stickers & postcards for assignments later in the week.  Take a page from her book, slackers!)

We also tried– & failed– to upload her video to YouTube.  For some reason the file is enormous & we can’t figure out how to compress it.  Maybe she’ll make videos on my trusty little MacBook later this week.  At present, you’ll have to do with a video from me.  Keep reading.  It’s a little further down.

From then on it was all business.  4. I got into the wheelchair I will be in until Sunday morning.  She showed me how to transfer myself onto a sofa without using my legs.  We didn’t know how I’d get into my bed… it’s almost chest height when I’m standing up.  Eventually we decided that I would just use my legs as little as possible when climbing into it.  But that didn’t seem right!

There was also the problem of the shower.  I soon realized, once I experienced the exertion of getting onto a sofa, that there was no way I could navigate over a five inch ledge from a wheelchair onto a rickety little stool without cracking my head into pieces.  It took some brainstorming, but we’ve got it!

I have a bathtub with a flat square edge & a detachable shower nozzle.  I could put the stool in the bathtub.  Then, when I needed to shower, I could transfer from the wheelchair to the tub’s edge & then to the stool.  I was happy!  It feels good to figure things out.

That’s one of the things I’ve been thinking today– a lot of people are talking about how difficult this week is (like they talk about how difficult every other week is), but what they don’t seem to realize is that with the completion of every task comes an extraordinary sense of accomplishment.  Many people spend their lives trying to avoid challenges, when, in fact, facing challenges is one of the most rewarding parts of life.  It’s a cliche, but a cliche to live by.

It may be difficult to live one’s life for a year according to arbitrary directives, & it is certainly much more difficult to live with a  permanent spinal cord injury, but there is a real pleasure in having problems– the pleasure of figuring them out.  I discussed this with Kyla & she concurs. I believe the Mormons, scientologists, athletes, & other exceptional individuals I’ve encountered in the past month & a half would all agree.

Honestly, & perhaps this is premature as I’m only beginning Week 6, I feel that my mood is best during the hardest weeks.

As a sidenote, I’ve noticed the following general pattern in my temperament:

  • THURSDAY: methodical, meditative
  • FRIDAY: manic, delirious
  • SATURDAY: essentially normal
  • SUNDAY: total hibernation
  • MONDAY: happy, at home in schedule
  • TUESDAY: irritable– very
  • WEDNESDAY: bored & lazy

Weird, right?

Facing things

Facing things

I still had to 5. go grocery shopping (without leaving the chair, obviously).

I headed to the store, accompanied very generously by Kyla’s caregiver, Petra (pictured beside me).

Wow.  Rolling up even a slight incline is extremely difficult.  I made it myself most of the way but occasionally Petra had to step in.

Buying food wasn’t the hassle I thought it’d be.  I’ve always been an impulse shopper & I just grab whatever’s at eye level.  So this works just fine for me so far.

Petra helped carry the basket & groceries up to my apartment.  I wouldn’t have been able to do it myself, I realize.

Once in my apartment, we reached another ingenious solution to the bed problem– we took out the boxspring!  Or, more accurately, Petra took it out for me.  Now, using the transfer technique Kyla taught me, I should be able to transfer myself into bed.  Then she helped me move the stool (& my shower products– couldn’t reach those from wheelchair!) to the bathtub.  It’s hard not to feel guilty for accepting this help, despite knowing that I can’t really do anything to help myself.

Then Petra left.  & I put away the groceries.  How did it go, me in a wheelchair & all?  Check out the video.

Then I 6. made dinner. Kept things simple with a tuna melt.  Good call on my part, though the sandwich was fairly disgusting.  Doing things in a wheelchair really does take a lot longer. Especially with a dog underfoot.  Very grateful this apartment is so accessible though.

I still have to 7. read excerpts from a book on disability (Eli Clare’s book was out so Kyla provided me with a few alternatives) &  8.  Write a 500 word essay for Kyla.

Oh, I’ve also got to 9. Go to sleep & have good dreams. Well, as a child I was a lucid dreamer & I’ve always considered sleep one of my favorite hobbies (until this year, apparently) — but anyway, I’ve lost the knack for stuff like that & can’t guarantee what my dreams will be like tonight.

I am very, very, very, very, very tired.  & tomorrow will be a very long day.  I’m not sure what the blog will look like this week, but I feel I should remind you (as I often remind myself) that this blog is NOT the project.  My life is the project.  The blog is merely a medium by which I inform you of how the project is going.

I do love the comments though.  It’s nice to know I’m not shovelling everything into a void!  It would feel much lonelier, I think, & more meaningless without the eyes of hundreds of strangers on me.

I’m very excited for this week.  But Bella is worried.  I knew she knew the sound of my footsteps by heart, by the way.  But I did not know that she didn’t know my voice!  When I wheeled up to the door she started barking, & didn’t stop even when I reassured her.  Then she ignored me when I came in, excitedly greeting Petra.  When she realized it was me in the chair, she was very embarrassed, leapt into my lap, & started licking my face.

She’s not normally that demonstrative.  & now she is sticking much closer to me than usual.





Week 5, Day 7

13 08 2009

Friends, it has been another long day. My days, however, will only get longer!

The schedule for next week is up, along with my participant’s bio.  Due to technical difficulties, her video will follow tomorrow.

I got the schedule a day late.  In the future, I will take one additional day off for each day the schedule is late.  The psychological demands of this project are enormous & I believe this is only fair.  Kyla’s schedule, however, is so extraordinarily good that I have decided to fulfill each of her directives without complaint.

Now it comes to the day at hand!  I 1. Woke up early (no small feat, considering the antics I was up to last night).  After posting the below entry, I went back to bed for a long while.  Then I 2. ate a salad, 3. warmed up & 4. ran two miles. I am so proud of myself! For the first time in my life, I ran a full mile without stopping!  It took me nine minutes & fourteen seconds.  I 5. stretched afterwards.

IMG_0712 IMG_0714

I have yet to 6. weigh myself, but I can assure you that I am much slimmer.  As of yesterday, I had gained one pound.  Of muscle, I presume.

In the shower following I delighted in my new (soon to be lost) muscle tone.

Adam had also informed me that there was free outdoor yoga at 5:00pm & he would “like for me” to attend.  His desire was duly noted.  Since I was very busy, had no yoga mat, & am a lover of loopholes, I did not oblige.  Let this be a lesson to future participants!  Phrasing is everything.

I feel guilty but only a little.

Then I had another nap.  By the way, the Chancellor’s beverages of choice are: diluted whiskey, balsamic vinegar, & contact lens solution.  Keeping these things out of his reach requires constant vigilance.  What’s his deal, anyway? & as a kitten, he loved olives.  Also lighting himself on fire.

Today I also had to 7. climb five trees. What a chore!  Fortunately, I recruited Simon, my blind date from Week 2, & we went to Stanley Park.  He very obligingly held my purse & took pictures with my iPhone while I accomplished my directives.

onward, ho

Onward, ho.

onward

Onward!

this one was particularly filthy

This one was particularly filthy. & I had to leap into Simon's arms when I was done.

downward, dawg

Downward, dawg!

Mission? Accomplished.

Mission? Accomplished.

Then we sat on the beach & watched the sunset, drinking some leftover wine.  Simon is my new BFF!

Also, by the way, I found some blackberries.  Blackberry picking has always been one of my favorite activities.

The worst part of everything was that I had to 8. go dancing. I’m excellent dancing in darkened living rooms, but not a big fan of other scenarios.

We went to a blues club (where, I might add, I saw the whitest blues I’ve ever heard!) & it turns out everyone there was swing dancers.  They had special shoes & everything.  It took us about an hour to gather our nerves.  After some liquid courage, we got up on the stage & danced for approximately one minute.  No pictures, thank god.  We left partway through the song & never looked back!

I hope that Simon & I will continue to platonically date until the end of time.

9. Drinking nothing but water has really taken its toll on me. Tomorrow I will subsist entirely on slurpees.

All I have left to do is 10. Core exercises.  I’ll exercise my core like there’s no tomorrow.

Unfortunately for me, there is a tomorrow.  Fortunately, it’s a tomorrow in which I learn what it’s like to live as a paraplegic.  Next week should be an incredible experience for all of us.





Week 5, Day 6

12 08 2009

Dear Readers:

Yesterday, I accomplished everything I was meant to.

Bella thinks invisible is the new visible.

Bella thinks invisible is the new visible.

What was I meant to accomplish?  Look at the schedule.

Last night’s guests included award winning poets, Olympic athletes, & a horticulturist (not, I was informed, a horticulturalist).

Not pictured: Olympic athlete, horticulturist

Not pictured: Olympic athlete, horticulturist

I cooked for 18 &, though we were not 18, we ate it all.

I'm sorry, but it was invitation only

I'm sorry, but it was invitation only

Why am I up before 10 the night after throwing a party?

I menaced my guests with the wine bottle

I menaced my guests with the wine bottle. Can you spot the dog?

Because of the schedule.

& I sang my song quietly in the hallway

& I sang my song quietly in the hallway

I will note that the schedule says nothing about when I may go back to bed.

I rode my bike past your window last night

I rode my bike past your window last night

& as for today, I’ll get that done too.

Consider each of these photographs credited to the venerable Jessica Earnshaw

Consider each of these photographs credited to the venerable Jessica Earnshaw

Though a two mile run sounds less than appealing.

New schedule, video, & bio will be up tonight.

If you have any questions about what I cooked for dinner, what size shoe I wear or whether my dog ate any of the leftovers, I am happy to address them in the comments. However, at present I hold the firm belief that, when it comes to yesterday’s story, your imagination is the best medium.

Thank you for your continued undivided attention.

p.s. there is a stupid little bird with a yellow head stuck in the solarium.  Chancellor votes to eat him but I vote to adopt him.  Anyway, I don’t want him to die so I might throw little pieces of bread at the ceiling.