Yesterday in quotes Tuesday, Jun 23 2009 

Beth: I’m practicing first on my second ball.

Me: Dirty.

She was talking about her first attempts at knitting. Or so she says

* * * * *

Ski Guys calls, and as soon as I pick up.

Ski Guy: Are you making fun of my blog?

Me: No! Of course not! I adore your blog. *pause* I’m making fun of you.

*pause*

Ski Guy: Okay.

* * * * *

BF and I are meeting H and J for lunch. H arrives wearing a flowery dress. Like, really flowery. BF stands up to greet her. (Note! BF and H get along really well.)

BF: [H], you look… *he takes a closer, longer look* … like a flower shop threw up on you.

H *turns to me, faking indignation and sarcasm*: He’s a keeper.

Me *laughing hysterically*: And correct!

It wasn’t a good dress.

The difference in compliments Sunday, Jun 21 2009 

You’d think that compliment’s a compliment, and they’re all pretty much the same, and all are nice to hear. Well, they are all nice to hear, but there are differences in them. Let’s see…

First, there’s the compulsory compliments. The “oh, you look lovely! Have you had your hair done?” ones, where you’re not really sure if they’re just saying that for the sake of saying something, or if they really do like your hair/dress/earrings. These compliments aren’t really compliments at all, but general social niceties that are required in normal interaction between people. And everyone knows the rules. You’re supposed to give, and receive, them like you mean them. Only, you’re also allowed to be mean with them. Now that’s a skill. Not the obviously mean ones, everyone can do those! But the ones that sounds like a compliment, look like a compliment, even feel like a compliment, except for that little voice in your head that goes “what did she really mean by that?” But as far as we’re not considering the mean version of this compliment, the compulsory compliment is a nice, if empty thing to hear.

Then there’s the “family compliments”. These are nice, make you feel better, until you realise these people are required to say you look nice etc. because they love you. They don’t want to hurt your feelings, so they lie. Or alternatively, they really do think that everything you do, including that unfortunate Flashdance-phase you underwent, is wonderful and an amazing idea. The family compliments usually come from mothers, boyfriends, husbands and other people like that who have an emotional (and sometimes physical) reason to be nice. Nonetheless, it is always nice to hear your new dress looks good on you, truth or not.

Third group of compliments are the ones with a hidden agenda. These are used to flatter you when the one passing them out is really just trying to get something out of you. “You’re so good with organizing like that, I wish I was more like you” is designed to make you take responsibility of whatever function needs to be directed, and taking the responsibility off the shoulders of the person saying that. Even your close friends use these: “That bag is so beautiful! I wish I had your wardrobe.” And before long, you’re either loaning, or even giving, the item in question to your friend.

Of course, there are sincere compliments, too! You’re boyfriend really does think you look beautiful as you meet him for dinner. Your friends love your new hairdo. You really did well in the tennis court this afternoon. These are always compliments one loves to hear. They make you feel all warm and fuzzy and sparkling. Only, once you’ve been in the receiving end of the not-so-nice types of compliments for a rather long time, you start to question these. Are they saying that ’cause they know you? Does your husband think you look beautiful in this outfit because he thinks you look pretty in everything, including that time you wore your grandmothers old straw hat and a pair of denim overalls for some garden work and he said you looked really cute? Are you getting complements for your tennis game, not because it’s actually any good, but because you just don’t suck anymore? Why are they complimenting me?

That’s why my favourite compliments are the Stranger Compliments, or the No-Strings-Attached compliments. When someone who has no idea who I am, and what I can and cannot do, pays me a compliment, I know it’s real. Okay, it can be really shallow, like a long look at my ass. But I’m not judging that as a compliment to my intellect (as which it would be lousy) but as a compliment to the way my ass looks in my snappy little pencil skirt. And that lets me know it looks good. Thank you, sir, now wipe that drool off your chin.

What got me thinking of all this? As of late I’ve started to anonymously comment on Ski Guy’s blog. Okay, he knows it’s me, after all, he caught one of my jokes. But no one else does. And I was just complimented with a comment that I “have some funny comments”. Now, from a complete stranger, that’s a big thing. It made me feel all warm and fuzzy, ’cause I know he (or she, I don’t know) said it purely based on my comments on Ski Guy’s blog. Nothing else. So, I was considered funny. That’s really nice to hear.

Books, at last! Saturday, Jun 20 2009 

I’m finally getting around to updating my book lists and challenges. I’ve been in a reading funk for quite some time now, and am only just getting back into the rhythm. So… stay tuned!

Too late Sunday, Jun 14 2009 

Whenever something happens, something bad and terrible and dangerous, people get scared. That’s a given, and perfectly natural. And we start to avoid the thing that went wrong. When the planes hit the Twin Towers people started to avoid flying. When someone gets kidnapped, more security measures are put in place for people in similar circumstance as the victim, even people completely unrelated to the issue. When a friend heard her plane for her flight was supposed to be Airbus, she rescheduled, because of the plane that dropped to the Atlantic Ocean.*

Maybe I’m weird, maybe I’m naive, maybe I’m lots of things, but whenever people do these things, I think “too late!” the bad thing already happened, you’re safety measured won’t help anymore. The way I see it, these kinds of bad things are largely individual cases. The fact that the planes were flown into the WTC doesn’t mean another one will be hijacked tomorrow, so you’re perfectly okay to fly to your conference.

That’s not to say we should check the safety measures that are in place. And I do believe everything should be done to minimize the risk. But when something bad happens because of one or more lunatics, your precautions are in vane and too late. It’s not a recurring phenomena. It’s a one-off thing! So what’s the point?

DD wants to put me under closer protection. Like, ‘personal protection’. Because of recent events. I don’t see the point in that. I’m perfectly safe. The shit hit the fan, didn’t hit me, and now it’s over. So why bother anymore?

 

* Okay, maybe that example doesn’t belong there, as there has been some trouble with the Airbus planes. But are there anymore than usual (apart from the crash)? Or are they just making headlines because of the one that crashed?

Good news, at last Saturday, Jun 13 2009 

We received some amazingly good news earlier today. My friend who’s been missing, has now been found, and she’s okay. I don’t want to go into details of the case, or discuss it any further. However, as I mentioned it here earlier, I wanted to share the good news. She’s home, and she’s good.

We couldn’t be happier.

Payback’s a … Thursday, Jun 11 2009 

I am most probably the worst reply-er to email. I’m horrible. Takes me forever. And that’s the only way to hear from me, as everyone knows I’m terrible at keeping in touch. I call, text occasionally, but unless I make arrangements with you, forget it. I don’t forget people, or ignore them on purpose. I just “store stories”. I think of something I need to say to you, think “oh, I’m not going to email about that alone, as I need to write about that other thing too” but then I don’t have the time to go through both the stories at the moment so I postpone the entire email until “I have a better moment”. Which is, well, ‘better moment’ doesn’t exist. We all know that.

Unless you have this lovely calendar from See Jane Work, where ‘Someday’ actually exists! How cool is that? But that’s beside the point.

Well, now I’m getting a taste of my own medicine. I’m anxiously waiting for a reply from my “My School Looks Like An Alien Ship On Google Earth” -friend as well as Ski Guy. How come people aren’t at their computers, just waiting to reply to me when I email them?? Are you trying to tell me they have a life?? How rude.

I now solemnly swear to do everything within my power to fix my abhorrent emailing habits. I promise. Pinkie-swear.

p.s. Yes, you saw correctly. As of now, Ski Guy has his own category.

Nonsatiation Thursday, Jun 4 2009 

The modern micro economic theory and the theory of consumer choice builds on the concept of local nonsatiation. The idea that no matter how much we have, no matter which of our preferences are fulfilled, there is always at least on bundle of goods, material or immaterial, that we will prefer to the current one.

I got an internship I applied for. I know, I should look for a real job, a paid job, but what with the current economic situation and the fact that I’m an economics major, internship is good.

Only, I don’t want it anymore.

Once I got it, I was like “nah, not so interesting”. It’s not enough. If it was this easy to get the internship, I should go after something more challenging. I mean, I could get something else, too. This is no longer enough.

I wonder if the internship has an NHL clause. Maybe I should ask for one.

There are things money can’t buy Tuesday, Jun 2 2009 

I’ve always been a strong defender of the idea that if you think money can’t buy you happiness, you just don’t know where to shop. But there are things money can’t buy. Things no amount of shoes or new purses or jewellery can’t fix. And wrongs all the wealth in the world can’t make right.

The other day I tried my very best to pry a word out of heart-broken BF. Watching his dreams crumble is something I never ever want to see, yet I know that it’s going to happen again and again because of who he is, and how he lives. I threw everything I had to him: the funny ii, the kind ii, the crazy ii, the nice ii, the loving ii… nothing got a reaction out of him. I couldn’t reach him.

I couldn’t buy a skirt and make him stop hurting. I could ask DD for the plane and be near him, but I couldn’t fix things for him. I couldn’t buy him happiness.

Yesterday I stood in a store holding a thousand-dollar straw hat in my hand and listened to my friend on the phone telling me that one of our mutual friends had gone missing. Like seriously missing. Noone’s heard of her since last Tuesday night. And we want her back, no matter what the cost.

But we can’t solve this by money. We can hire the best detectives, use every connection we have to press for more police involvement, pay for all the public announcements we want, offer a considerable award for any leads. But all we really can do is pray. Not pay.

I want my friend back. I want BF to smile again.

I want my friend back.