In other news, my best buddy and I had a foodie’s dream day on Sunday, catching up over some deliciously decadent food at La Parisienne on Lygon Street. We dived into an antipasto platter and baked camembert with oodles of fresh baguette slices. Then, we practically rolled out of the café, taking a long walk around the nearby shops and streets. When at last we felt we had room to contemplate dessert, we headed to Black Star Pastry, a Sydney popup just in Melbourne until June 30th. My friend had been there before and rhapsodised about their signature dish, Strawberry Watermelon Cake and so I had to get me some of that. Merciful Zeus, it was heaven on a plate – so light and yummy! The whole popup was filled with foodie bloggers taking pics of their dessert purchases, and so I had to join in and take a snap. Food pics (and a couple of Jack pics) under the cut.
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Surprisingly, the most embarrassing static electricity related memory I have is not my fault, but the fault of my household dryer.
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Multiple-Choice “How Well Do You Know Me?” Quiz
I'm betting no one will get 7/7 - and I promise to eat my favourite hat if anyone does!
1. When I was a teen I used to dot my “i”s with
a) tiny drawings of a skull and cross-bone
b) tiny hearts
c) pfft! I always spurned frippery such as the dotting “i”s!
2. When I was three years old my dream job was to one day be
a) a superhero
b) an educator of young minds
c) a garbage collector
3. I once fell down a
a) concrete stairwell (twice within a minute)
b) waterfall (once, but it was big with loads of jagged rocks)
c) an abandoned mineshaft (once, and never again will I go exploring inside deep dark holes)
4. My favourite TV shows are
a) “Full Frontal with Samantha Bee” and “Would I Lie to You?”
b) “Fixer Upper” and “The Walking Dead”
c) “Game of Thrones” and “The Bachelor”
5. Tonight for dinner, I am having
a) a home-made caesar salad
b) a succulent eye fillet steak, seared and sealed on both sides, and lying on a delicate bed of arugula
c) whatever I can scrounge from the fridge that doesn’t have mold growing on it
6. My favourite colour is
a) black
b) purple
c) wine-red
7. I’ve been to paradise, but I’ve never been to
a) Perth
b) San Francisco
c) Brussels
So as I walked across the asphalt this morning towards my class I was feeling a little pleasantly smug. At least in my professional life, I had it all together. I felt like a chic teaching machine. And then....
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I like this quote because it suggests that when I’m not updating here I’m off somewhere getting up to all sorts of mischief, breaking rules and being BAD. Sadly, the reality is somewhat less interesting – take this weekend, for instance. The baddest things I got up to, in no particular order of evilness:
- Had a bit too much champagne (i.e. three glasses!) and got into a very passionate and lengthy discussion about the nonsensical nature of perfume advertising. (Even sober, I struggle to see why perfume commercials all seem to be made by people who’ve been dropping acid. When I choose a perfume I’m not interested in going on an opulent surrealist psychedelic trip. And I don’t want to be draped in jewels, painted gold, host a decadent ball or writhe half-naked with a panther.) The baddest I got on my three glass bender was some enraged arm flailing as I declared “Perfume ads are all extravaganzas of wankdom!”.
- Lied to a friend to get out of catching up with her early on Sunday morning. Sunday mornings are for sleeping in, waking in slow increments (and trying to forget the spectacle you made of yourself as you loudly yelled “wankdom” the night before).
- Filled chock-full of good intentions, I brought a whole bunch of work home to do this weekend. Then didn’t take it out of my work bag. Back it goes tomorrow morning (but I flatter myself that the undone work at least enjoyed the drive and change of scenery).
- Hid dog poop in the green waste bin.
Eye contact is a lot like pooping. Some is good, but non-stop is not so good. I had to learn this the hard way, of course. I used to be painfully shy (whereas now I’d characterize my shyness as more of an intermittent dull ache, manageable but still sometimes unpleasant). The prospect of parties or social situations where I wouldn’t know many people filled me with palm-sweating clamminess, heart-palpitations and rampant blushing (the blushing remains an ongoing issue and cause of frequent embarrassment, but I digress).
Eye contact used to be a bit of a problem for me. I’d tentatively raise my gaze towards a stranger’s eyes, but at the last moment my eyeballs would behave like a skittish grey mare and gallop off. I remember having a very stern talk to myself before going to one particular party, telling myself that I would seem more normal if I made lots of eye contact with new people that night. And boy did I ever! My eye contact was unblinking, sustained and unremitting and I felt very very proud of myself. It took a while for the euphoria of my eye contact success to fade enough to realise that I was making my eye contact guinea pigs profoundly uneasy. It appeared as if some believed I wanted to fight them, while others thought I was doing some kind of sexy eyeball voodoo move. But I suspect most of my stare victims just thought I was unhinged (or possibly a serial killer).
Ultimately, the experiment was an extravaganza of cringe, but I learnt from it. Like laser beams or a pole dancer’s thighs, eyeballs are powerful and too much of a powerful thing can be dangerous.
When bored on my own, I would create and sculpt hundreds of worlds and I dreamt of possibilities that made me run the full gamut of emotions, from giggle fits to tears. I decided what I believed, gave myself nightmares, and developed my own life philosophies during these entertainment-deprived lulls. And when bored with a friend, or with a group of bored amigos, we’d make our own stupid stupid fun. It was usually ridiculous and juvenile, but it was ours – playing dress up to look like goths and roaming the city trying to out-depress each other by making up nihilistic poems about what we saw (I won with a little ditty called “stinky bin-liner, your time is finite”); lying across swirly chairs backwards and then staring at each other under the table (while imagining we were in a dive bar and had to drink upside down); daring each other to say stupid things to strangers; hours spent in a nearby park with a couple of discarded cans of paint as we meticulously coloured a patch of grass neon green and brown; stalking that hot guy who worked at Big W but then running away every time he looked in our direction; sand castle construction battles, dance battles and battle battles.
Even today, I still like to give myself a bit of time to be bored in each week. Although I haven’t done any peer-reviewed studies for scientific journals yet, I’m convinced that bored time adds to the quality and longevity of life (or at least it seems longer while you’re bored). That’s when I close my eyes and imagine I’m blind and have to navigate the perilous landscape of my house or when I’m pretending to be a ballerina in the bathroom. Bring on the boredom, I say. Because life is far too short to always be busily and purposefully occupied.
Essentially, cooked onions affect me in much the same way as a colonic irrigation would. I know, I know – people pay good money for colonic irrigations and I should be grateful I can get the same results much more cheaply. But the thing is, I don’t want my bowel cleansed! I just want to eat some delicious cooked onion without suffering for hours afterward. I’m not saying this food quirk has blighted my life or anything hyperbolically dramatic like that (but I’m sure you can read between the lines and understand that I’m inferring it quite strongly).
In other news, I’m not sure where I stand on turtlenecks. I really don’t like material around my neck too closely. The feeling is icky, like maybe a frail and arthritic octogenarian is trying to strangle me. On the other hand, they do keep necks warm in winter.
In honour of the day, here’s a list of the last five books I’ve read:
1. Strange Highways – a short story collection by the Koontzmeister. Very old, but I’ve always held a soft spot for the first story. Maybe I just like the idea of redemptive second chances and finding eyeballs in jars.
2. Northanger Abbey – ah, Henry Tilney is my favourite Jane Austen hero. Mr Darcy doesn’t hold a candle to Henry Tilney’s wit, warmth and wonderfulness.
3. Pirates Love Underpants – who knew that a children’s book could be so educational (or that pirates had a special affinity with underpants in all their permutations and styles).
4. Leap Year – a fun non-fiction tale of adjusting to a new place / culture whilst the central protagonist also improves herself and her outlook on life.
5. Past Due (Savannah Martin Mysteries) – currently re-reading the whole delightful fluffy series. Perfect for bedtime reading - amusing but not too taxing on the noggin.
I tried to curb it, but it was so ingrained that the word would just slip out sometimes before I could even stop myself (and when I did manage to stop myself, I was left feeling quite uneasy and uncomfortable). I also noticed that it wasn’t just me – women in general seem to say ‘sorry’ a lot. Why? I think it’s too easy to dismiss it as simply a lack of self-esteem or confidence. Social conditioning perhaps? Maybe, maybe not. Since becoming hyper-aware of my own use of the word, what I’ve noticed about myself is that often when I’m saying ‘sorry’ it’s more about acknowledging the other person, that they exist in front of me, that I see them in that moment. I go to walk on one side, the other person goes to walk on the same side – it’s no one’s fault, but if we’re both women there’s a fairly high chance we’ll apologise to each other. I’m not presumptive enough to try to speak for all womankind but I’ve come to the conclusion that, for me, saying sorry in situations like this is just a way of not being a douche nozzle. And I’m not sorry about that at all. Sorry.
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Cheers & (((((((((((HUGZZZZZZZZ)))))))))
Dave
aka
newmistakes
Miss you Babe
~kisses~
Dave
XOXO
I hope Jack is doing…
b