OCD: Must….finish….watching…

Some may recall my obsessive compulsiveness about reading. This same obsessive compulsiveness seems to apply to TV shows that have multiple seasons available on netflix instant watch. Also, given the fact that this is my third blog installment on some sort of OCD-ness, I’m wondering if I have some serious issues I should discuss with a professional.

I stumbled across Party Down on netflix one of those nights that Jeff was out of the house, and I needed something mindless to waste my time on (or the more likely scenario: I was procrastinating on the stuff I really needed to do that night). I ended up watching “16 to Life,” which I also really enjoyed. Ratings for “16 to Life” aren’t all that great, apparently, but I enjoyed the quirky yet kind of real life story. I’d post a trailer, but it’s way too cheesy. I refuse.
But I digress. I started watching Party Down at some point last week, maybe Thursday or Friday…and by Sunday, I had managed to make it all the way through Season 2. I know, 2 season’s isn’t as epic an accomplishment as 7 or 8 seasons, but it’s not my fault: they only made two seasons!!!! It’s like Arrested Development only airing for 3 seasons, what the h-e-double-hockey-sticks?! Seriously, I don’t know how Two and a Half Men made it a bazillion times longer than either of these shows.
Jeff was seriously disappointed in me not waiting to watch the episodes with him, since we started watching it together, but it’s the same OCD that takes over when I start reading a good book: I just couldn’t focus on anything else until I knew I was done. Good thing, however, is that it’s still funny the second time around, so I’m totally ok with watching all the episodes over again with him.
But I digress again. Point is, if you’re into uncensored shows (no nudity, but definite foul language) with pretty great humor, you should watch it. It’s available on instant watch.
If you need some more convincing:
I’ll leave you with one last pre-show:
Seriously funny stuff. To me and Jeff, at least.

Haiti Stories: What Scratch?


Our drive from PaP to Leogane when we arrived was not as emotionally draining as it was the first time we went, but it was traffic heavy, as..I guess..it always is. Bumper to bumper…hot…bumpy roads…bodies and luggage smushed into a tiny car…watching people live their lives around you, as you sit and wait to crawl forward a few inches. Many times I thought we’d be better off walking…like in the opening scene of Office Space. But then the sun would hit me, and I would be thankful we at least had some shade.

At one point while we were sitting in traffic, it seemed as though the cars in front of us were finally gonna move forward a bit, so our driver got a little anxious and moved forward before the car in front of him did. The left front portion of our car hit the right back portion of the car in front of us…I guess to our left…it’s hard to tell when lanes don’t exist!
Abby and Adri and I looked at each other…”now what?” Our driver got out to survey the damage, the other driver got out to do the same. Meanwhile, everyone else was still waiting for traffic to move forward, so no disruption was caused by this inspection (in case you were freaking out about that). Both drivers took a look at their cars, didn’t even look at each other, and then got back in to their respective vehicles. It was literally less than five seconds.
There was no anger, no screaming, no talk about insurance coverage, no exchange of information, no insults. Nothing.
In my opinion, there was simply an understanding that “shit happens.” In Haiti, cars are cars. For the majority of Haitians, they are a mode of transportation, not a demonstration of how much you make a year, or how much money your parents have. The cars probably get more beat up by the potholes in the streets than any damage cars make to each other anyway.
Even though it was a five second interaction, I loved what it stood for (again, in my opinion…who knows what the reality is): as long as my car is fine, and I can still get these people to their destination where they will pay me, what’s a scratch on the car? The car still runs, my life goes on. At that moment I had to laugh at how different this interaction would have been in the US: can you imagine an Orange County soccer mom who just got her bumper gently tapped by someone else? Yeah, I’m speaking in generalizations here, but I feel like the concern would have been on the scratch, and not the greater picture: nothing really happened.
Unrelated car troubles on our way in. Unbeknownst to us at the time,
Kisa, Mikey B. and Diego were all in that pickup :)
While I’m at it, there was also that time in Haiti when we ate at MaSaJe for Adri’s birthday…and Mike’s pizza had mold on it. The fries were delicious though!

Things I want: phone case

Yep, another self serving blog section just got started. I’ve been meaning to write a list of stuff I’ve been wanting to get [myself] lately, then I thought, “hey, that’s why I have a blog.” Maybe you’ll realize you want one too, you just didn’t know it yet. Or maybe you’ll realize that despite Jeff’s greatest efforts, I still have terrible taste in many things.
I’m starting with the simple things. Like a case for my iPhone that I’ve been wanting for a while. I came across this one, and think it might do the trick:
It’s made from recycled paper, it holds your credit cards, and the logo on the back is an adorable turtle. What more could you ask for?
I found a not-so-great review, complaining about the visual design of it, but it was in regards to the iPhone 4…which is edgier (not as in a photo shoot “I wanna see ‘edgy’…’EDGIER!'” but literally, more edgy) than the 3G. Given the lack of any sort of visual design for the last two phone covers I’ve had, I think I’d be ok with this one.
I also found this review. My thoughts after reading it: do people get paid to write these reviews? If so, I want in. I promise I’ll put some thought into it.

Our Battle Cry

(Written by Dalila Maria Godoy Zamora; translated and published with permission)

Our Battle Cry

The wall is blue and the spray paint black. The blue wall belongs to one of those houses easily recognized in the Historical Center of the city of Guatemala. An old house, doomed to be forgotten, to the wearing down of the paint, to the fetid smells that can scare away the curious that for any reason wanted to know its story. I saw it three weeks ago and it wasn’t until today that I took a picture of that phrase that frames the entrance. The phrase doesn’t talk about past loves or threats, it doesn’t talk about political propaganda and it also doesn’t talk about messages between the gangs. Some passerby, one of those adventurous ones that walks on foot and with a backpack probably wanted to launch battle cry. One of those cries that we Guatemalans have stuck in our throat, a magnificent replica of those that we cry at the moment of birth, maybe because we know ourselves to be Guatemalan.


We know ourselves Guatemalan and even though every person cries at birth, independently of the place of birth, I’m sure that we understand from the maternal womb that living here is not easy, we understood that the books of our history cry blood. The majority of us know that at some moment in life we will also have to grab a weapon at any cost and with such weapon, a cry to war. I don’t mean those weapons devoted to lead and smelling of gunpowder. We cry because we have more sophisticated weapons: those that exude blue ink, black or green (such as Neruda’s admirers), we cry because our weapon is our voice, our drawings or perhaps our guitar. We cry because we know that we’ll have to take them up and we will be persecuted. Better that way, we’ll know we’ve done things right.


There are some illiterate, others like myself that aren’t good for anything beyond making a sketch that can be confused for a tree, but the truth is that each of us have a weapon, that can be your smile, your hope, your own integrity, your punctuality at work, your constancy for investigating, your eagerness to shine your clients shoes well, or who knows, to make him happy.


My uncle Epaminondas, inexhaustible fountain of my daily inspiration, stressed that it’s possible to be the best in what you do without losing the path of what is right. He achieved it. I dare someone to refute that. If he did it, why not you? Why not me? If being one of the good guys is difficult because it brings along with it beautiful sleepy nights and a smile on the recumbent body. That smile that indicates that death has been cheated to enter into immortality. That’s how the good ones are, immortal…and in many instances, anonymous.


Why do we Guatemalans cry? What intuition did we have at birth? If we know ourselves loved by greats, we know ourselves owners of an exquisite millennial history, we know ourselves owners of a luxurious gastronomy, owners of a great part of the color green in America, owners of colors.


We cry at birth because we know that we have to share this land with those who did not deserve to even see the blue of our flag, we cry because we know that not everyone who leaves their house today will come back and maybe we ask ourselves if he or she had an opportunity to say goodbye in their own way and to feel loved in the middle of a country that has cancer, of a country that seems to hate. We cry because a lot of us have family members who have been killed for political motives, because we have family members who have been kidnapped, because we have had threats of death even over our heads, because even without opening our eyes we have read the history and its only ten years of glory. We cry and starting there we are revolutionaries, starting there we have in our throat and in our chest the battle cry.


We cry because we are part of that rare race, of survivors.


And who said crying was bad? If it revitalizes, if it gives peace…we cry at birth because we feel like it, because that’s how we Guatemalans like to be. And afterwards we draw a smile, we adjust our backpack, and we go ahead, as if nothing had happened. And we smile and on the inside we cry because it seems like we live in a permanent state of mourning. That’s how the history is, that’s how Hemingway said it in the prologue to “For Whom the Bell Tolls,” we are part of an everything and any event that happens affects us, a part of us dies daily for every innocent who’s blood spills or spills a tear for a violent act. The bells toll for us…also.


Guatemala hurts….it hurts too much.


The passerby in question had a can of spray paint as his best weapon and wrote:


“THE PEOPLE HAVE TO WAKE UP”


Like a continuation of an August Monterroso story and like a hope of no longer seeing dinosaurs as a tradition I thought that the phrase was well accommodated for its appropriateness and for its happiness. It is well accommodated especially now, when the most dignified representative of politics and of the left in Guatemala dies: Mr. Alsonso Bauer Paiz; it is well accommodated because in my country they have murdered a poet whose best weapon was his guitar: Facundo Cabral; it is well accommodated because there is an average of twenty murders a day and I can’t be alien to it and it is well accommodated because my heart is torn, inevitably, knowing that since a few days ago a person with whom a grew up can’t hug her sister because this country keeps putting up with kidnappings, keeps putting up with people disappearing while things are accommodated and they rinse themselves in their tears.


Well I don’t want to anymore, I don’t want to accommodate myself…


To Mr. Alfonso Bauer I would like to ask him, teacher where are your apprentices? Where are we or what has us distracted from beginning to demand what we really deserve? When will this farce end that consists in granting the presidential seat to the loser from four years ago? Where are we the grandchildren of that revolution? We are sick and tired, it’s true…


To Mr. Constitutional President of the Republic of Guatemala, I want to wish you a life that is long enough to pay the debt you have pending with us. That your life is long enough to pay for each one of the tears that have been shed in Guatemala in the last four years for acts of violence…may your life be long enough. I would like to call you out on the fact that Cristina Siekavizza is not with her family, that maybe a man named Carlos or another named Pedro will die today…maybe they’ll die because a bullet crossed their destiny while they were walking to hug someone they love and who loves them. And I would like him to pay, each of those tears.


We have a lot of battle cries, the Guatemalans, and we have a lot worth fighting for…to the sound of the ballads, of the marimba or to the rhythm of those songs that perhaps we hum when we’re bored.

I grew up in an educational institution in which it was eliminated – to the good fortune of all of us that have passed through –from our vocabulary the word “impossible” and because of that I still believe that regardless of everything, that the nine letters that compose the name of my country can still highlight with dignity in mid flight of that bird of green plumage that represents us and that maybe now lies in some forest…and bleeds.


(My apologies to the author if anything was lost in translation, hope I’ve done her writing an ounce of justice.)

Accountability Updates

I think I’ve done a little better at making slightly smarter decisions when it comes to what I’m eating, at least much better than I was in the weeks preceding my last update. I knew our 4th of July BBQ’s would be filled with hot dogs, chips, dips, etc., so I took broccoli over to Erika’s & Julian’s house and fixed that up as a side dish, and bought a fruit platter instead of chips and salsa (thank goodness Erika and Julian already had chips and salsa there though…). Honestly, eating that broccoli was super delicious. I had also brought some sweet potatoes (or maybe they were yams…I’m still not sure) for us to fix, and to my overly-exaggerated disappointment (Jeff, thank you for putting up with my dramatic antics), that didn’t quite work out.

My 4th of July downfall: Albertson’s chocolate chip cookies. Law-school-extern-buddy-turned-friend-turned-coworker-turned-friend, Rama, told me they were the best. And indeed, in the words of Nacho Libre, they are the beeeeest. And so is mint chocolate chip ice cream. Anyhow, I had three too many chocolate chips cookies on the 4th.

BUT, I did go on a nice long walk on Sunday morning, and did a full yoga session on Monday. That evens out, right?

Tuesday night Jeff and I made a conscious effort to go on a little walk around The Lab and The Camp before Suman’s show, and today I rediscovered how delicious super fresh salads are. I think I’m jumping back on to the healthy band wagon…

TBM Update

It seems that a couple of you rather enjoy my references to TBM (yes, I’m looking at you Annie & Shirley), so I thought I’d share a little anecdote with you.

TBM rolled in to the office today a little before 10am (he had an appointment with someone in our office at 10am, otherwise I wonder if he would’ve come in at all).

He called me into the office, and as I walked in he threw a Target bag on his desk and said “I don’t have time for this…separate all the house stuff from the medical stuff…” then resumed looking through his desk for whatever piece of paper he had misplaced in the 30 seconds since he’d been in his office.

What I expected to see: at least three months worth of unopened personal correspondence for all his bills and what not. He hasn’t had me do that since March or April, so I figured he had finally gotten around to emptying his car and brought it all into the office.

But no.

This is what I found when I dumped the contents onto my desk:

Please take note that although I am writing a semi-bitter and not enchanting blog about TBM, I have been courteous enough to edit out the credit card information from one of his receipts (I hope I did that right…). Yep, crumpled receipts. See, TBM is remodeling the house he just bought, and doing a lot of the stuff himself and overseeing contractors and what not, so there are dozens upon dozens of receipts from Lowes, Home Depot, and a bunch of random contractors. I was really tempted to add up all the totals, but thought it was just be depressing, so I restrained myself. I did separate them neatly, at which point I asked what he wanted done with them.

“Just make a file for them.”

I asked where he wanted the miscellaneous receipts that had nothing to do with his construction, since the whole point was to separate stuff out….

“Just put them in the same file.”

Done and done.

Re-visiting our Beginnings

Last night, our friend Suman had a show in Costa Mesa. It was at the same bar where Jeff and I hung out for the first time. We had finished our second shift closing at Starbucks, and Brookie and I had made plans to go hear a friends band play at Detroit Bar. We invited Jeff and he agreed to go with us. I later found out that was the night that Sarah was having her birthday party, and I think it took her a while to forgive me for stealing Jeff from her that night. But months later…we were besties :)

So we got to revisit Detroit Bar last night. Almost five years after Jeff placed his arm around me for the first time. Suman, also known as Rocom, put on a great show. Here’s my favorite so far (keep in mind that live is [usually] always better) (also, warning: explicit language to follow):
Both Jeff and Suman have a little art show tonight, which I’m very excited for. Hopefully I’ll have some stories and/or pictures to report later this week.

Our 31 Bits House Party


The Cause

31 Bits.
I was going to post a link to my 31 Bits Charity of the Month post, and just realized I never did one, I only featured them in my holiday gift guide. I’m appalled, to be honest. Expect them for July’s Charity of the Month :) Meanwhile, you can check out the amazing work this charity is doing here.
The Food
I bought these straight from the farm. Probably the sweetest strawberries I’ve ever had.
I made an improved version of the strawberry dessert with some recommendations from Jeff: I put them in plastic martini cups, and topped them with a whole strawberry with a toothpick through it. No picture, but imagine it. It was glorious.


I had too much cake though, and not enough martini cups, so the last layer of cake stayed a cake. Improvisation. Not half bad, huh? We were going to have a birthday girl in attendance, so it was actually quite perfect.

This is perhaps the coolest coffee table I’ve ever seen. Abby painted it with this chalk board stuff, so you can literally write on it with chalk, and wipe it off. And you can use it to let people know what cheese is what. GENIUS!

Self explanatory.

Johnny’s spinach and artichoke dip, with fresh wheat french bread, yum!

Spinach and strawberry salad with balsamic vinaigrette, and almonds.
The Jewelry









The People


The Host and Hostess




Family coming out to support :)


Taking orders!


Picking and choosing…such a difficult task



<3


These two. Thanks for being incredibly awesome and supportive!


Seriously. This has to be the new face of 31 Bits!


Absolutely LOVE this picture of Rebeca and her 31 Bits piece

Thank you so much to everyone who came out to support 31 Bits and the amazing work they’re doing, you guys are amazing.

A special thanks to the Hubby for playing photographer for the day

Thing’s I’m gonna miss


Our lease is up August 14th. We moved in to our apartment in April of 2008. Just the thought of moving is exhausting. We’ve packed so much shit into this tiny space in the last three years. Most of it is stuff that we don’t really need, but I can’t get rid of. Jeff might call me a hoarder. He may or may not be right. It’s something I’ll have to come to terms with next month.
For now, it’s been aggravating just looking for a new place. We went apartment searching a couple weeks ago, wanting to feel a little less stressed about the uncertainty of where we will be in a month or so. It was a waste of time. Apparently looking for an apartment more than 30 days in advance of when you will be moving in is “too early.” Apartment companies usually require a 30 day notice from their current tenants, so anytime before that, they don’t know what will be available in 30 days. The logic makes sense, it just sucks for people like Jeff and I who would like to plan a little further in advance.
Either way, we’re preparing to move. Aside from the packing, and the moving, and the finding a new place, I’m really nervous about the emotional toll leaving this apartment is going to have on me. It’s the first place Jeff and I have shared. It has so many memories: good times and difficult times. It’s seen us through Jeff’s unemployment, me studying for the bar exam, my unemployment, visits from Guatemalan and Arizonian friends, and more friendly gatherings than we could ever count. Aside from the upstairs neighbors who keep themselves busy late into the night every now and then, and some of the children that run up and down the hallway at 11 p.m., we don’t have many complaints. It’s been near perfect. We’ve got a garage for storage (which is problematic now that we have to empty it), a washer and dryer, and a close to perfect parking availability for visitors. (“So why are you moving?” Because they raised our rent over $100 a month, and paying $1510 for a one bedroom apartment is where we draw the line, even if it is Orange County.)
I’m gonna miss our brightly painted living room.
Our bookshelves are transferable to wherever we move to next. But this is still going to be the first apartment we had them in.
To be quite honest, neither Jeff nor myself are huge fans of our bedroom. We still don’t own a headboard, and the rest of the furniture we have are mismatched hand me downs, most of which I don’t even really like. I’m excited to see what we do differently with our bedroom in our next home.
This dinning room has seen two, if not three, years of gingerbread house making. And it was the first wall that held pictures of many of our dear friends. I’m excited to expand on that wall.
I’m really going to miss the white cupboards of our kitchen.
Psych! (yep, that just happened)
This kitchen was somehow able to prepare a Friendsgiving dinner for almost twenty people. I still don’t know how that happened.
It’s also the kitchen where Jeff and I fixed our first meals together. We’ve pretty much learned all the things we’re going to cook for our children, regularly, on a rotating basis, in this kitchen.
And our wall…
I’m gonna miss our wall.
Again, we can replicate this in our next home, but it won’t be THIS wall. You know what I’m not gonna miss? A TV that people at a garage sale won’t even take for free…and that’s a fact.
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