Bjorn To Be Your Baby

Stick caught me with another boy’s phone number today. I’m usually a bit more subtle about it, but I saw an old friend and after a few rounds of we-should-get-together he wrote his number on the back of my hand.

“I ran into Bjorn at John and Allison’s…” I began, wondering if it might be easier to make up a quick cover story about being ambidextrous and double-jointed.

“Was it Trek night? Was he one of the Bjorg?”

“No, he’s an English teacher,” (Note that he used red pen for my hand)

“I hope his classes aren’t bjoring,”

“I don’t think — ”

“Was he bjorn to be wild?”

And so, on the walk from the campus center to my Chaucer class, Stick sang a medley of every eighties tune that could conceivably have bjorn in it. I havelearned my lesson, though. I promise never to get caught with a boy’s number ever again, because I don’t think I can make it through another class with “Bjorn to be your baby” stuck in my head.

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Why I Love Kristine

Before I lived with Kristine, I would never have watched Pokémon, and if I did, I wouldn’t know that Charizard is a fire Pokémon or that he’s another step on the Charmander evolutionary track.

I would never have rooted for the snakes in a horror movie. I would definately never have said “Don’t worry, he’s not poisonous,” to the terrified heroine. Pre-Kristine, I’d never done homework with a snake around my ankles, or wondered if we should let the snake loose to catch the unseen-but-noisy house mouse. And I’d still associate the sound of crickets chirping with emptiness, not dinner call for the reptile buffet.

I realized how much I love Kristine when I was away for a week. As Stick and I explored Raleigh, I kept noticing things Kristine would like. Sometimes these things were roadkill, but hey, I know what she’d like best.

Edit: Before Kristine, I would never have said “Peeing on you is just his way of showing you he loves you.”

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Squeaky & the GREs

So I drove to East Longmeadow to take my GREs. I left at 8:30, with my Gatorade, MapQuest directions and one hour of extra time to get lost. This isn’t actually a criticism of MapQuest as much as my driving skills.

There is no gentle way to say it. I’m not a good driver. Often it takes so much mental energy for me to keep the car moving in a straight line at a constant speed that I miss my exit. Stick, being the Best Boyfriend Ever, has learned not to talk to me when I’m backing out of a parking space. (He has also learned that anything I agree to while changing lanes won’t hold up in court)

So I pre-missed my exit on the way down. Pre-missing is when I accidentally get off at an exit before the intended one. It won’t show up in a GRE vocab book, but it comes up often in my explanations of why I’m late again. I used up most of my extra hour on a scenic tour of lovely downtown Springfield.

Another driving vocabulary word is the transitive verb “Mapquest”. Usage: When I got lost, I called my roommate Chris to MapQuest me home. This means that I called home, gave my current street address and made Chris get on MapQuest to direct me.

Eric’s love of technology is adding the noun and the verb “GPS” to my driving lexicon. Usage: Eric could have GPSed his way there, if he’d remembered to bring his GPS with him.

Anyway, I finally made it to the testing site, I parked Squeaky and ran in, with almost ten minutes to spare. Although none of these words came up on my exam, I did all right on my GREs. Poor Squeaky wasn’t so lucky with his test. He failed inspection, and he needs a new catalytic converter before the end of next month.

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Testing My Character

Tomorrow I’m taking the GREs. The best part about being a terrible driver is that I’m more worried about the drive to East Longmeadow than the actual exam.

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Talent Search and Replace

Have you heard of American Idol? It’s a talent search TV show. Basically, there are a bunch of musical contestants who perform a song and then are critiqued by the judges. The judging board consists of a Mean Guy and a Sweet Washed-Up Pop Star, but I’m not sure what the judges actually judge, since each week the audience calls in and votes for their favorite. While we’re on the subject, what exactly are Simon’s credentials? Because I can be just that snarky and I’m looking for a job.

Anyway, before each song the contestant says, “Hi, I’m Name$, and I’m singing Title$ tonight. I picked it because I can have fun with it! I’m just going to get up there and have fun with my song!”

Then they sing. Most of them are quite good, you’d have to be really drunk to sing after them in a kareoke bar. They’d get the solo in church choir, too; and in chorus, you could stand next to them to get back on pitch. After each song, the Mean Guy says some witty variation on “Did you know that you suck? Because you suck,” and the camera cuts to the kid’s mom looked pissed and then Sweet Washed-Up Pop Star says something along the lines of “You really gave it your all!” And then the next person sings.

Anyway, people from the audience call in and vote for which contestant they like best, and whoever has the fewest votes gets booted in next week’s show. Before they go home, they cry, because they didn’t come to the show to get up there and have fun, they came to win. Duh. The judges are either nasty (Simon) or sweet (Paula) about it, and then we cut over to the kid’s mom who’s also crying. Then the remaining contestants do it again, until there’s only one person left and they win. I think they win money.

However, there’s a play-at-home version of this show. At the beginning of the show, you have to guess who’s getting the boot each time. I picked Constantine to win because he has a nice classical name (I also bet on Villanova winning the basketball tournament so maybe that’s not the best means of choosing a winner).

You also critique the looks, personality and fashion sense of the contestants. My jeans, a sweater, a ponytail and 20 lbs of jewelry, entitled me to the role of fashion critic.

Then there’s a charades aspect. If at any point during the week, the play-at-home contestant cannot remember the name of the Idol contestant, the play-at-home contestant must impersonate that singer.

“You know who I mean, he’s got his hair all messy like this?”
“Does she stand like this?”

So that’s the short explanation for those of you who don’t know what it is. Actually, if you don’t know what it is, you probably have a life a lot like mine. I don’t recognize you, of course, it’s kind of dark under our rock.

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Southern Hospitality

On the first day of our trip in Raleigh, I noticed how relaxed and calm everyone is. When you go into a shop, the cashier will give you a cheery dissertation on the weather, the basketball game and the latest highway smash-up; When I respond, this is followed by “And how do y’all like the area?” At first, I’m a bit nonplussed (it’s such a far cry from the Massachusetts counter service of “NEXT!”), but soon I come back with an all-purpose response:

Sure is nice/sunny/warm/rainy. From Jersey, but we met in Massachusetts. Yeah, for college. Oh your cousin/brother-in-law/neighbor went to UMass? That’s awesome. Yeah, we might move down here but not for a few years. His folks live in Raleigh. No, we’re not married yet. No, no kids. Thanks, you have a good day too.

It’s very friendly and cheerful. Of course, this is slightly less cute when I’m in line to buy tampons and Advil.

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Symbolism

Once there was a girl named Meg who drove a rusty blue shoebox named Squeaky. Her boyfriend Stick, on the other hand, drove a pretty ultramarine Cougar. (And Cougar is the model, not it’s name) He’d bought it new, and it would need to drive a hundred thousand miles to catch up to what it said on Squeaky’s odometer.

However, the Massachussetts weather and winter potholes had done a number on the poor Cougar, and it had spent quite a bit of time in the green lot, and was scheduled for some automobile surgery. So Meg would drive Squeaky and pick up Stick. Sometimes when it was snowy or rainy, she’d give the key to Stick and he would drive. This went on for a few months.

“I need to make this key copied,” I said. I handed Squeaky’s key over to the handware store guy. This moment is fraught with relationship symbolism. My key, getting copied for Stick! It’s sign of the stabilty and trust, etc., etc. It’s a huge relationship step.

I was going to continue my giving-Stick-a-key-to-my-soul montage, but at this point, the weird Aubuchons guy shows up and starts to give me the crazy eye and a lecture on mesh screens…

Anyway, Eric has the other copy of Squeaky’s key, and I have a key to the Dropship (that’s Eric’s new car, since I crashed the Jellybean). But Eric’s been working in Sterling for a while, so he’s been a little too far away for either of us to do designed-driver duty or locked-out rescue for the other. This s heavy with it’s own copied-key symbolism.

The morning after I gave Stick the key, I’m leaving for work when I realize I can’t get my key into the lock! Well, I can get it in, but I can’t turn it, and I can’t get into the car! This is where my trust symbolism ends… with me locked out of my car and late for work. I decide to leave my car illegally parked and rely on Marcus’ parking services connections to keep me from getting towed, and I hightail it to the store. I call Stick after work.

“Hey, baby, I’m taking my car to the garage,” he says. “What’re you doing?”

“No!”

“Why? I thought you didn’t like to drive, and now I can get my car fixed and — “

“The key I gave you was the original, and I have the copy, and the copy doesn’t work!”

Stick and his Cougar are at the parking lot next to Squeaky when I get there. Stick does not say anything dumb like “Are you sure your key doesn’t work?” or “Did you turn it both ways?” He hands me his key, totally unaware of the symbolic tragedy of trust, and my deep sense of foreboding.

I remind myself that maybe the key can be some kind of ironic avant-garde anti-foreshadowing, and go to the hardware store with my defective key. This is not a symbol of my failure as a girlfriend I tell myself, and then show the key-cutting guy my defective key.

“Oh, this is easy to fix,” he says, “Right core, right cut, I just need to take off the rough edges,”

Yeah. I knew that.

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Hugo Is Famous

My friend Hugo is quoted in the Daily Collegian article about Brazilian Night. When he said “it didn’t matter if you knew how to samba or not, everyone was just having a good time”, I think he was specifically referring to Stick and me. Anyway, I’m really glad Hugo invited me, it was a fun night even though my dancing skills left something to be desired.

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Minute Humor

Kristine got a cute little red-bellied newt! Like a good roommate, I devoted a lot of time and attention to naming her new pet, even though I don’t like him as much as I like Yucatan.

“How about Gingrinch?” Stick suggested.

“No way,” I told him, not mentioning that that has to be the second oldest gag in the herpetology jokebook. “Kristine names all of her critters after places,”

“What about Newton the newt? Or Beirut the newt?”

“I’m going to call him Tiny,” Kristine said.

“Tiny? Why?” I asked, walking into the oldest joke in the bio-geek book.

“Because he’s my newt.”

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Andromeda

Eric has a pet mouse named Andromeda. Eric thinks she’s named after the ship’s AI on the Sci-Fi show, but I actually named her that because she was rescued from becoming food for Kristine’s snake.


Walter, the cuddly snake

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