Saturday, October 27, 2007

My New Job V + Inspirational Blog

InspirationSome more quotes from work:

“My boyfriend doesn’t want to stay at my mother’s house because she won’t let us sleep in the same room. I don’t know what’s wrong with him. Maybe he’s got ADHD or something.”

“He said he was going to stay at a hotel. I told him, ‘You can sleep in the car, I don’t care. You can sleep at my uncle house; he’s a faggy.’”

Answering the question, “Are you going to try to lower it?” she answers, “Hell, no. I’m gonna higher it.”

A printed sign next to the fridge: “Please reframe from placing any lunch bags in the refrigerator.”

For bonus points, what did he mean? I’m asking a guy if he has any source of income and he says, “A lead suitcase.”

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Inspirational Blogger AwardIn other news, A while ago Jill gave me this fun award thingy. Sorry it took me such a long time to do it, Jill, and thank you.

As usual, if you're tagged, feel free to ignore this. In fact, don't think of this as a tag, but as a thank you, and just know you can do the same to thank others. That's all.

So, who inspired me recently?

  • Ajooja's writing is always honest. Add to that the beautiful, simple design and you get a blog you can't help admiring.
  • Shelli loves the world of blogging. She relies on her blogging friends when she's depressed and she's happiest when she gets to share moments of happiness. Again, an inspiration to anyone who treats a sidebar link as a living person and a friend.
  • Mr. Fab gives two reasons for inspiration. Actually, three: 1. No matter how popular his blog is, he keeps looking for more blogs to visit and comment on. 2. He shows that you can't just write about your favorite toothpaste and hope for the best--each of his post has something new and original. Having a good, successful blog requires effort. Damn. 3. Yes, he's a very funny man. Let me quote: "Number of fire ants I can insert into the hole in my penis before I realize I have made a horrible mistake? One."--Don't know about you, but I'm a better person for knowing that.

Sunday, October 21, 2007

One Day I Cried

One Day I CriedI wanted to write another one, this time a dedicated post about what I feel about circumcision, but even after reading this incredible article, I know we'll have to do it. I've talked to people at work, some of them had to do it later in life, whether for medical reasons or because at the age of 27, they were sick of being called Russell. I understand why some people think it's a horrible thing. I understand it all. But at least after talking to other people I know I'm not doing it for some random religious idea, but because I've come to believe it's the right thing to do for Jr.

And if he comes later in life to resent the choices I've made for him, and if later in life he comes to see this as the first of many betrayals, then all I can do is apologize in advance and reiterate my promise to always do what I think is right for him. There's no manual to life but the worst you can do is fail, which isn't a big deal, after all. Now, parenting--that's a different issue. He will trust me to take care of him, to guide him, to teach him, to love him, and to know him as the individual he will become, and failure is not an option.

So with that, I thought it was the right time to reprint this essay I wrote a few years ago. If you've read this far then I know you'll enjoy it because I used to be a better writer then.



One Day I Cried


One day I was playing with a girl from my class. Her name was Meital, and I liked her. This piece is not about her. It's also not about her father, who grabbed me by my ten-year-old neck and lifted me up, moved me around, carried me an inch off the wall, warned me never to come near Meital again, and dropped me on the ground. The piece is about my father, who ten minutes later told Meital's father that if he ever came near me again he would kill him. Meital's father started explaining what had happened, but my father told him to shut up, and that the conversation was over.

It's the same guy who laughed when I burnt my finger and screamed when I was four-years-old. I'm still scared of fire. The same guy that embarrassed me for years because he insisted on wearing a stupid furry hat when he started going bald. The other kids used to call me "The Russian." The same guy who told me every night to brush my teeth, until one night I asked him to say "Good night" once in a while instead of "Brush your teeth," and he smiled and said, "Good night." Then, when I walked to my bedroom, he shouted, "And brush your teeth," and laughed.

One day, in the car, he told me a story. A fairy tale, perhaps. A young Prince was having a ball in the palace. While he was standing by the door, welcoming his guests, he accidentally farted. Yes, farted. Everyone started whispering: "Did you hear that? Who...? You think...?" After all, the future of the country was at stake. Suddenly, a poor young woman, one of the Prince's maids, approached the group of distinguished guests, lifted her head, and said, "I was the one who farted. It was I." Naturally, the Prince was so moved by this gesture, that he married the woman the next day, and they lived happily ever after.

In my father's tale, the Prince married the maid because she said she farted. I mean, this guy doesn't make any sense.

One day we were watching television, and he said the conductor in a weekend talk-show orchestra used to be with him in the army. Then, every Friday, the family would sit in front of the television at 8 pm, and every time David Kriboshe's face appeared on the screen, my father would say he was with him in the army. I thought it was sad that people saw themselves in the context of others, and I thought I wouldn't be like my father when I grew up. I would be somebody. I would be the reference point.

When I'm a father, I thought, I would hug my son every night and tell him how much I loved him; and I would never hit him; and I wouldn't spend family meals alone in front of the television; and I would always know how old my son was, and who his teachers were; and I would never wear silly hats to embarrass him; and I would set a good example.

And one day I got home from the army and cried because my friend died from a landmine in Lebanon. My father took the backpack off my shoulder, put it away in my room, and asked me to follow him to the car. We drove to Jaffa and sat on a bench in the old city, overlooking the peaceful skyline of Tel Aviv. We sat there, and I cried, and he hugged me and cried, too, because his son was suffering, and he couldn't handle this first experience of watching his son carrying so much pain. And I realized nothing was his fault, because he didn't know better; because there was probably a moral in that story, and she was now a princess; and he was just worried about my teeth, because the dentist took away his when he was twenty; and I could see the helplessness in his sad eyes, and I realized he was crying in my arms just like I was crying in his.

Monday, October 15, 2007

What I Think About When I Lie On the Floor, Getting Ready to Do Just One More Sit Up In Order to Get Rid of My Sympathy Belly

One more situp

  • My fan looks like a Muppet.
  • I could spend the rest of my life watching Beauty and the Geek.
  • Man, that Pushing Daisies show is good.
  • My back hurts.
  • I'm a bit dizzy. Been taking these crazy pills ever since my once-a-decade day of exercise. I think I'd have been safer if I started smoking again. Apparently I tore a ligament in my left leg, whatever that means.
  • A little anecdote: The first day I took these pills, I woke up in the middle of the night in panic because I thought I owed two-thousands Dollars in rent. I calmed myself down after a few minutes because I don't owe rent, and then I thought that maybe I woke up as someone else, and I panicked again.
  • Never had a massage. I want a massage.

You can do it
  • I could lie here all day, looking at the Muppet.
  • I wish I didn't drink Coke and didn't eat Nestle products, but then I might as well cut my dick off.
  • Speaking of cutting one's dick off, I'm not excited about the circumcision thing. I saw a picture in one of the classes we're taking... Man... It's bloody and scabby... But we'll do it anyway. For me, at least, even a scabby one is less weird than a non-circumcised one.
  • One day I'll be old and that will be sad. Maybe I should spend my time doing fun things instead of lying here looking at the ceiling fan?
  • In 2001, I was a mover in New York for a few months, and my body looked like an upside down triangle. If you put my old body on top of my new body you get the Star of David.
  • Here's a good moving-related trivia question: What did people get rid of when they moved? What's the one thing that stood out most of all? It's pretty interesting, I think. Anyway, the answer is treadmills.
  • I'm hungry.

Tuesday, October 09, 2007

A Tag--Two Months Late

Geek Train
Because I'm a douche, it takes me two months to do a tag, and when I do it, the tagger is on a break. Never mind. It's the thought that counts. And anyway, it's always good to send some love to some of my latest links.

—— START COPYING HERE ——


Geek Train - All Aboard!
Write a short paragraph at the beginning of your post and linkback to the blog(s) that put you on the list in the paragraph. You MUST do this. No-one plans on getting slapped for duplicate content any time soon, do they?


Next, copy the list of originals below COMPLETELY and add it to your own blog. If you’d like a different keyword for your blog then change it, when you do your post, and it should pass to most blogs with that keyword, provided the train keeps on spreading.


Take the adds from the blog that added you and place them in the “Originals” list.
Add at least three new favourite blogs of yours to keep the train going, e-mail the blog owners (or comment on one of their posts) and insist that they post.


The Originals:


(The kick-ass) Nate Whitehill

(The original) 13-Year Old Blogger

(The money-making) Affiliate Marketing guide

(The crafty two at) TechRave

(The AdSense ‘dude’) Michael Cheney

(The overclocker) Shawn Knight

(The incredible) Chris Hooley

(The rhetorical) Michael Kwan

(The talented) Leo Chiang

(The root of all evil) John Chow

(The business dude) Josh Mullineaux

(The brilliant) Shoemoney

(The absurdly loud) Ed Lau

(The mastermind) Jon Waraas

(The yaketty) Stephen Fung

(The wickedly cool) Everton Blair

(The uber blogger) Ms Danielle

(The enterprising) Matt Coddington

(The career minded) Jane May

(The legendary) Gary Lee

(The nifty) Dosh Dosh

(The ambitious) Jeff Kee

(The Down Low) Shawn Low

(The Reviewer) Thomas De Maesschalk

(The Post Whore) Derrich

(The Bitchy Mogul) Bob Buskirk

(The Anti-Social) Matt Propst

(The Hawk) Gregg Hawkins

(The Carpenter) HMTKSteve

(The Mysterious aka “Q”) Ms. Q

(The Rebel) Cedric Ang

(The Oreo) Urban Thought

(The Peogles Guy) Christian

(The Optimist) The Junkys Wife

(The Writer) UNLOADED

(The Eclectic One) Mixed Episodes

(The Pontificating One) My Travels, Travails and Thoughts

(The Crazy Israeli) People in the Sun

My adds (I hope you do this but feel free to ignore it. I know some people feel tags are fun while others think it's the worst thing since The Bionic Woman remake):

(The Teacher We All Wish We Had) Twipply Skwood

(The Family Man) All That Comes With It

(The Real Christian) Let Me Go On and On!

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This link train is the brainchild of David Wilkinson, hyper, money-making kid, and kick-ass blog designer Nate Whitehill.


—— END COPYING HERE ——

Wednesday, October 03, 2007

I Want a Blogjob

In search of a good blogjob
Anyway, they moved me from evening to morning shift, which has some advantages, one if which is that finally I get to be home on Sunday nights, stopping the friends who come over from playing Trivial Pursuit. Speaking of feeling stupid and inadequate (the only thing I do in TP is roll the dice. Never answered a question), we have all these pregnancy classes coming soon. I protested being dragged to breastfeeding class but Honey insisted.

What was I talking about?

If I survive being surrounded by all these boobies, it’s probably time I started looking for a new job. With the crazy cost of daycare we’ve decided the best thing will be for me to stay home. At least for a while.

I looked around a bit and saw some job notices for freelance writers. I’m going to start applying soon, but I'm not very optimistic. I find it hard to believe I would be able to stand out. Most of these notices look for someone who specializes in particular stuff. Not much demand for someone interested in nothing and everything and all that's in between.

I’ll keep looking, but if you see a good writing job anywhere feel free to put in a good word for me. I have a BA in creative writing, and I already stand out from that crowd because I’ve never used the phrase “nodded vigorously.”

Wish me luck.

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