megfowler.com

March 20, 2007

shaken, not stirred.

Filed under: stuff — meg @ 8:59 am

My mind is all a-boggle today.

And while that’s nothing terribly new, I think I can tie this particular boggle to huge doses of cough suppressant and decongestant leaving my system. I’m weaning myself off of all of it, after being pretty much high for almost a week. I’d like to see how my body is doing… really.

I am feeling better, although the death rattle cough remains, and I’ve used my weight in Kleenex (do you know how HARD that is?)

Mostly I’m just happy that I no longer have to drag my head behind me like a ball and chain.

But I DO need some entertaining.

Everyone’s been pretty quiet out there for the past little while, which is easy to blame on Spring Break and SAD sufferers and winter malaise and our natural tendency to observe without engaging online. I do it, too.

Sometimes I can only think of really stupid things to say, and that doesn’t seem worth adding to anyone’s comment boxes (although the Benylin did rob me of some judgment last week, to be sure.)

I feel chatty today, though. I’d love to find out what everyone’s up to, what everyone’s thinking about.

Sooooo….

1. How are you? And I mean really, not in a two-word answer sense.
2. If you have a blog, have you been posting much this winter? Why or why not?
3. What are the last five things that made you happy?
4. What are the last five things that irritated you?
5. If you could ask me any question in the world (about me or anything else), what would it be?

March 19, 2007

list monday: 10 things I would be in rehab for, if they offered rehabilitation programs for these things.

Filed under: stuff — meg @ 1:27 pm

1. Excessive hand-talking.
2. Obsessive measurement of the distance between two places with Google Maps (”I wonder how far Memphis is from St. Lous!”)
3. Learning the end of the book or movie first.
4. Overuse of lemon in cooking.
5. Overchecking of door locks.
6. Compulsive blogging.
7. Rampant listmaking.
8. The need to see if EVERYTHING has a page on Wikipedia.
9. Texting.
10. Arguing with men.

And you?

list monday: 10 talents/states I would steal from other people.

Filed under: stuff — meg @ 11:06 am

1. I’d write like David Sedaris.
2. I’d sing like Jennifer Hudson (holy cow!)
3. I’d talk like Lauren Hutton or Shohreh Aghdashloo.
4. I’d cook like Curtis Stone or Jacques Pepin.
5. I’d also write like Flannery O’Connor
6. I’d dress like Reese Witherspoon (at premieres as of late) and off-duty like Gwyneth Paltrow.
7. I’d take pictures like Jeremy Cowart.
8. I’d direct movies like Steven Soderbergh.
9. I’d act like Kate Winslet.
10.I’d play piano like Vladmir Horowitz.

Who would you steal from?

list monday: the 10 best things I ever ate that probably had too many calories.

Filed under: stuff — meg @ 8:55 am

I like many healthy things. In fact, I like more healthy things than NOT healthy things. And I’m not saying the following things aren’t healthy. But they probably won’t contribute to size two aspirations.

1. Lamb souvlaki from a now-closed restaurant on Denman in Vancouver — just this gorgeous thing in a foil envelope that was like heaven in your mouth. It was HUGE. And LEMONY. And dripping with tzatziki.

2. Salmon sashimi at Kamei Royale on Alberni. Which is not fattening unless you have TWO ORDERS ALL TO YOURSELF.

3. My first Krispy Kreme from the Konveyor Belt in Mount Vernon, WA. I know people slam the hell out of these things, and I’m not a glazed donut person, but FOR THE LOVE. It WAS SUGAR STRAIGHT TO THE HEART. And my arteries. But I only ate the one. Back off.

4. My mom’s French onion soup is amazing. She showed me how to make it, and mine is totally fine, but there’s something about the Mom that makes it taste better. And with the bread? And the two kinds of cheese? All melty? Ohhh.

5. The “everything sandwich” from a place I forget the name of, Hub Mall, University of Alberta. My friend’s brother worked there, and it was like OH SANDWICH. He would give me one for free most weeks, which may be part of the love, but it was the perfect combination of all these Italian meats and cheeses and oil and vinegar and OHHHH. I haven’t had one in 12 years, but still I remember. And I’m not even really a sandwich person.

6. The fish and chips from Morris’ Fireside in Cannon Beach, OR, the last time I was there with Catherine in September. The fish was like butter. Which sounds gross, but honestly. Best Fish and Chips EVER.

7. The garlic fries at Safeco Stadium are AWESOME. Enough said. My friend made me chew an entire pack of gum in the car on the way home.

8. My first ever mouthful of Ben and Jerry’s Vermonty Python ice cream changed my life.

9. The lemon tart at this place right next to a Peet’s in San Diego was AMAZING. I wish I could remember the damn name of the cafe. But the tart! Just lemon. And tart. AWESOME.

10. I ate a croissant at La Panier (or was it Le?) in Pike Place Market in Seattle that literally broke into a thousand happy pieces in my mouth. I felt like I’d just munched on a sunbeam. Which sounds really weird.

Give us some of your best tastes and recommendations… and don’t spare the calories.

list monday: 10 places I want to go that I haven’t been.

Filed under: stuff — meg @ 7:49 am

1. Belfast
2. Prague
3. Austin
4. New York
5. Savannah
6. London
7. Santorini
8. Havana
9. Toronto
10. Washington, DC

Where are you longing to go? What cities remain unexplored? And how many of my unexplored places have you seen?

list monday: 10 movies I haven’t seen that everyone else has, apparently.

Filed under: stuff — meg @ 7:36 am

1. Forrest Gump
2. Shrek
3. Saving Private Ryan
4. The Passion of the Christ
5. Shakespeare in Love
6. Crash
7. Dumb and Dumber
8. All the Star Wars prequels
9. Castaway (the third Tom Hanks vehicle on the list… )
10. The second two Matrix movies

What haven’t you seen that people go on and on about? “What? You haven’t seen that yet?”

March 18, 2007

this post brought to you by Benylin, available in a variety of formulations, one of which will be ideal for your family’s unique cough and cold symptoms.

Filed under: stuff — meg @ 2:15 pm

Last night, as I lay in bed, I heard two hooligans in the back alley.

This isn’t unusual, since there are some young people living in the houses around us with their parents.

And by young people, I mean people in their early twenties who throw parties when the homeowners go away and have overly-loud conversations in their backyards about things most people get over in the tenth grade.

These two particular hooligans seemed lost.

I think they’d become disengaged from a shindig at the big blue house further up the alley, and now they were just wandering the streets looking for wine coolers or trouble or warm beds.

Whichever they found first.

My home contained the latter, but I was in it. And since I didn’t want either of the hooligans to join me under my duvet, I kept an ear out to make sure they stayed back the carport, endlessly setting off the motion-sensor lights.

Which was, of course, another tip-off for Dectective Meg.

They stood there for a really long time.

I couldn’t figure out what they were talking about, despite the fact that THEY WERE COMMUNICATING AT AN EXTRAORDINARY VOLUME. They seemed to have mastered the rare art of mumbling loudly.

Then I heard glass break, so I rolled my eyes and climbed up on my bed to peer through the window at them. I moved the curtain to the side just enough that I could see without them knowing I was watching.

They continued to stand there and say random things for another five minutes while I squinted through the little gap, and then it happened.

I was struck with a COUGH.

Now, y’all haven’t been around to hear what the COUGHING sounds like, so I don’t blame you for shrugging just then like, “So what? Put your hand over your mouth and keep watching, Columbo!”

You don’t understand.

To compare this COUGH to the coughs that normal people cough would be like comparing a ringtone to a Battle of the Bands.

This COUGH is in charge. And it comes without warning.

So I didn’t even have time to duck.

HACKHACKHACKrattlerattlerattlerattlethroatclear.

I held my breath. They stopped talking and looked around.

Then one of them spoke his first coherent sentence of the night:

“What the f*** was THAT?”

“Shit,” the other one replied.

And like magic, they moved back into the night (or just further down the alley.)

Suddenly, all my frustration at being deathly ill for a WEEK AND A HALF dissipated in a rush of safety and well-being.

Yeah, right.

***

When my beloved friend Catherine moved to Vancouver, she was forced to make a sacrifice.

Because she was planning to move in with me, and I was then (as now) living in a pet-free dwelling, she would have to send her cat, Henry, to live with relatives in Mission, about an hour away.

The relatives are very nice, so we know Henry is okay. But I know Catherine misses Henry sometimes.

So yesterday, she went off to Mission for a visit (to both cat and family.)

While she was there, she and her aunt were discussing how random and ridiculous statements seem to come up in our conversations more often than they do for most people.

Sometimes they are mis-hearings, sometimes misunderstandings. And sometimes they’re just really odd things we totally meant to say.

We then overuse these phrases until everyone wants to punch us.

For example, the other night, I told Catherine if she continued to do something, I would never speak to her again (I was, of course, kidding.)

Since this didn’t seem to bother her at all, I decided to up the pathos a little: “Can you imagine how horrible it would be to live with someone you weren’t speaking to? You’d just see one another in the hallway and not say a word. Passing like ships in the night.”

Catherine was silent for a moment.

“Doesn’t that sound terrible?” I prompted. More silence.

Then finally: “Why would you want me to pass you chips in the night?”

We have used these words on a regular basis ever since.

It’s just how we roll.

Anyhow, after laughing about this for a moment and probably feeling a bit sorry for us, Catherine’s aunt told her own story.

First, a little background: her relatives, in addition to Henry the Cat, have a dog named Roxy.

Roxy is a very cute puppy, but she tends to be a little confused about how to assert her Alpha Dog dominance over a cat who could not care less about power dynamics.

So, every now and then, she, uh… gets a little amorous with Henry.

At those moments, Henry just gets a far-off expression like he’s trying to think about Hello Kitty until Catherine’s family notices what Roxy’s up to and shoos her off.

It’s a bit embarrassing for everyone concerned. They were actually fairly horrified at first.

But just as with Paris Hilton and Survivor, they’ve become somewhat jaded to the spectacle now.

That’s why, the other day, when the dog put the moves on Henry once again, her aunt’s only retort from across the room was, “Come on, Roxy. Anyone can hump a cat.”

I say use it until someone trademarks it.

March 16, 2007

another reason to buy a mac.

Filed under: stuff — meg @ 7:44 am

Awwww.

10 things I would really, really like right this second.

Filed under: stuff — meg @ 7:41 am

1. Four hours more sleep.
2. A giant omelet (omelette? I think it doesn’t matter. I prefer “omelet” because it’s such a cute little word) with lots of aged cheddar and spinach and peppers and shallots. Mmmm.
3. A giant cafe au lait with a tiny bit of honey and a sprinkle of cinnamon and nutmeg on top.
4. A big ol’ fluffy pair of slippers to pad around the office in, indulging my need for comfort.
5. NO MORE RAIN. But that’s fairly standard.
6. A manicure/pedicure from Spa Utopia and twenty minutes in the eucalyptus steam room (which would actually help some other things.) I have no idea why I’m such a girl.
7. A new pair of sneakers that I could wear with jeans without feeling like Debbie Gibson.
8. To stop coughing. Thanks. Now. How about now? Maybe now?
9. A swim. In a nice warm pool. With lots of chlorine. So I feel super squeaky clean and slightly bleached.
10. My own kumquat tree. Right next to my desk.

March 15, 2007

evidence of infection.

Filed under: stuff — meg @ 11:15 am

I kill plants. Without fail. Even salad wilts a little when I’m around. And I just bought two more for the window behind my desk at work: a philodendron named Lola, and a baby jasmine named Mary Catherine.

I’m hoping that naming them increases their will to live.

Or at least gives me something to call them at their funeral in about a week.

My website is the #2 hit on Google.com for “ben affleck tighty whities.” I’m going for the top spot, but I’m not totally sure what that involves.

I think I would have fun being an exhibit at Sea World. I enjoy swimming and sunning, I love eating raw fish, and I definitely don’t care if people stare at me.

The only thing I’m worried about is one of the trainers trying to hop on my back.

I once received a phone call from a friend who needed some help with editing a paragraph in a project. He didn’t have internet access, though, so he couldn’t email it to me.

He asked if he could fax it, so I could then critique it and fax it back to him. I did, in fact, have access to a fax machine at the office — despite the fact that I feel they’re on the same technology plane as boxed chardonnay — so I agreed to do it when I had some time.

He said this would be fine. After all, he knew I was busy.

Five minutes later, the fax came through. The paragraph was a complete nightmare. I didn’t have time to drill into it right then, so I decided I’d work on it after lunch when my blood sugar was higher. He phoned five minutes later.

“Did you send it back?”

“No, I haven’t done it yet.”

“When are you going to do it?”

“Well, after lunch. You said I could do it when I had time.”

“Oh… really? After lunch? Really?”

“Yeah… are you in a hurry now?”

“I’d just like to get it done. It’s weighing on me.”

“Okay, okay. I’ll do it right now.”

So I dug into the feeble text, trying to wrest coherent sentences from the comma-less mess. Five minutes later, he phoned.

“Hey! Done yet?”

“No! You just called me five minutes ago!”

“Well, it’s not like it was a LONG paragraph.”

“No, you’re right. It’s just really BAD.”

“It’s not that bad… it just needs a bit of tweaking!”

“A bit of tweaking? I wasn’t even sure it was in English!”

“Okay, you don’t have to be mean about it.”

“Then stop harassing me!”

I hung up the phone, and got back to work. I couldn’t really figure out what the paragraph was trying to say, but at least the grammar was approaching a solid state. The content was HIS issue. Then the phone rang.

“Did you send it?”

“Holy cow.”

“Meg, I want to get out of here soon. I don’t want to be stuck sitting by the fax machine.” At this point, I was about ready to rip his face off through the phone.

“I’ll send it in five minutes. You just stand right there, ok?”

The paragraph had sixty-two words.

I sent them one per page.

The phone started to ring almost immediately.

I didn’t answer it.

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