Second annual Thank Your First Commenter Day

shut down

Neil Kramer knows that we are nothing without our commenters. And I know I am nothing without Neil Kramer, who is not only one of my more loyal commenters, but one of my most famous, if you count blogging as some kind of fame. And I do. Oh, boy, do I ever.

And so, on the eve of this year’s Thanksgiving holiday, I am participating in Neil’s second annual Thank Your First Commenter Day.

My great thanks this year go out to my pal, Heseon Park, journalist extraordinaire and fellow student in Sewing for Total Idiots at LACC, who commented almost exactly two years ago on my post about one of the last shows I was to act in, the 2004 iteration of Ken Roht’s annual “99¢ show.”

My great thanks almost went out to Mari, who left a comment on an earlier post about listmaking. But Mari didn’t leave her comment on my November 10th post until May of the following year. And in the blogosphere, timeliness is everything.

So I’ll trot off to Neil’s now, to leave my own timely comment on his timely post, lest what happened to Mari happen to me…

xxx
c

P.S. Happy Thanksgiving!

Photo by maxcady808 via Flickr, used under a Creative Commons license.

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Cheering the Hell Up, Day 21: All surface roads lead to Rome

Texas highway

Every two weeks or so, I head out to Encino to visit my shrink. She’s far away, but since it’s even harder to find a good shrink than a good boyfriend, I make the trip.

This entails two of my least favorite things: (1) driving and (2) driving on the freeway.

I can see how it used to be fun driving on the freeways, back when they were new and dinosaurs roamed the earth. But today’s freeways are hellish, overcrowded funnels of death, populated by angry, angry people hellbent on GETTING. THERE. NOW. Don’t believe me? You probably live somewhere like Manhattan, where cars are recognized as the superfluous nonsense they should be everyhwere.

Getting there is the lesser of two evils. I try to time it so I haven’t driven that much during the day. This way, I’m fresh for my freeway trip. Also, I’m usually kind of wound up on my way to therapy. After all, I’m in therapy; if I wasn’t wound up, I’d be blissing out in my apartment.

Finally—and this is key—going south to north, you’re going against traffic. Always. I know, it doesn’t make sense. And on the 405, the north/south freeway that runs up the coast of the L.A. metro area, this rule doesn’t apply. But on the 101, it is always worse going from north to south.

So I go south to north in my Speed Racer Bullet from Hell to see my shrink. We spend our 50 minutes together. Sometimes there’s a little crying; sometimes not. But generally, I leave more relaxed than I came. Things have sorted themselves out, I’ve been told I’m not crazy (adult children of alcoholics are constantly checking) and I go on my merry way.

Only I found things weren’t so merry when I had to get on the freeway and head south. In fact, they had usually grown exponentially less merry in the hour since I’d been there last. Which is a total bliss buzzkill. So one day, I just didn’t get on the freeway: I kept going and took a surface road.

Now, there’s another surface road that runs parallel to the 101/Ventura Freeway called Ventura Boulevard. If you saw American Graffiti, it’s that street. Only now, it’s crowded all the time, too. But this other surface road—the farther-away one—well, there are parts of it you could shoot a cannon down and not hit…too many people. And so I took this road, which led to another road, which got me home feeling relaxed, refreshed and only marginally more crazy than when I’d left the shrink.

I bring it up, this mundane thing of driving, not to say how clever I am but to say how easy it is to fall into a rut with one’s thinkings and doings. That road had always been there; it’s in plain sight of the turnoff to the freeway. But for five years, it never occurred to me that going a little farther might get me where I wanted to go more quickly, more easily and more comfortably than the regular way. Yet it does all of those things, plus (let’s face it) kept me more alert on the way than just traveling on autopilot.

That’s what I’ve tried to make these last three weeks about: looking at things differently, to see if maybe there isn’t a different way—better and faster, or maybe better and slower. I’m a creature of habit, I know, but my fear of change manifests itself in so many weird ways, it’s constantly startling me.

I think the lesson of these past three weeks is that it’s as easy to change a habit as it is to fall into one. If I think about it, giving up exercising or eating right or whatever else probably takes three weeks, too; it’s just less noticeable since the downhill changes seem to require less effort than the uphill ones.

So I will blog. Maybe jog. (Will I do it on a log? Will I do it in a bog?) The work will never be done, and I’m maybe getting a little okay with that. Maybe not. There’s always a chance to change it up tomorrow.

Or, if I turn left, right now…

xxx
c

Photo by CoreBurn via Flickr, used under a Creative Commons license.

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Cheering the Hell Up, Day 20: Perspective

perspective

This was supposed to be a post about stolen kisses and how much better they can make us feel than the regularly available kind. As usual, it was compelling, beautifully written, and of the utmost importance to humanity.

Until I tried to save it and found that my host’s servers were down.

Again.

And I hadn’t saved my brilliant musings in a text file.

Again.

And, because I’ve been a little scared/lonely/whatever the past couple of days (not enough kisses?), I took it in the kind of stride you’d expect: I broke down in tears of frustration.

Then I went off to make myself some yogurt. And coffee. And eggs.

And somewhere during my kitchen putterings or the long walk back to my desk, it occurred to me how unbelievably lucky I was to be in my apartment on a Thursday morning at 11am, making coffee and eggs and yogurt. That if the worst thing to happen to me today was lousy hosting service, not only was that not too bad, but that I had control over how bad I felt it to be.

So I sat down with my coffee and eggs and wrote about this, instead.

How does that make me feel?

Even better than stolen kisses.

But I’m backing this up in a text file, just in case…

xxx
c

Photo by S@Z via Flickr, used under a Creative Commons license

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Cheering the Hell Up, Day 19: Clean your sink, change your view

kitchensink

Maybe you’re bored. Maybe you’re uninspired. Maybe you have Crohn’s disease and you’ve gone too long between infusions of chopped liver and you’ve let your iron count dip too low.

Whatever your reason, when you find yourself feeling…off, there is a (relatively) quick, cheap and easy way to fix it:

Do the dishes. All of them. By hand. Then scrub out the sink. Rinse. Repeat as necessary.

Yes, Colleen of the Past has already talked about this. (See item #47, or just go directly to FlyLady.com—she knows what’s what.)

Colleen of the Present, however, constantly needs reminding of how simply one can change direction…

xxx
c

Photo by chacabuco via Flickr, used under a Creative Commons license.

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Cheering the Hell Up, Day 18: Laundry Day!

laundry

Once a week I get to pretend
I’m a guest at the Four Seasons
where they give you nice, clean, soft sheets
freshly-laundered, every day.

Every Tuesday
(or Wednesday/Thursday/Friday/Monday, depending)
I get to corral all of those musty towels
and stinky socks
and jeans that could walk themselves to the hamper
and with soap and quarters and mechano-magic
turn them into puffballs of clean-smelling goodness
so that every Wednesday
(or Thursday/Friday/Monday/Tuesday, depending)
I feel better reaching for a kitchen towel
I feel happier slipping on my favorite pair of underwear
I feel rich surveying the multiplicity of choice
that is my t-shirt drawer.

But the best thing
of all about Laundry Day
is Laundry Night
when,
after a long, hot bath
or a long, hot shower (depending),
I turn off the lights
and turn on the ceiling fan
and crawl into a bed fitted with clean, soft sheets
just like you get
at the Four Seasons.

Some people might think
it’s better at a hotel
when someone else does the washing
and the folding
and the making of the bed.

I say it’s probably better
to do it yourself.

You appreciate that bed more
when you’re pretending to be
a Four Seasons maid
than a Four Seasons guest.

Most of the time, anyway…

xxx
c

Photo by Sir Mildred Pierce via Flickr, used under a Creative Commons license.

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