Sunday, February 22, 2015

February


12 Books
February’s book was House of Sand and Fog by Andre Dubus III. It’s the story of an Iranian man living in the U.S. who buys a house at an auction, only later to find out that the house was wrongly seized from its original owner. The book chronicles the interactions between the Iranian man, the original owner of the house, and her married lover. Overall, I give this book a 7. I was interested to see what happened to the characters, and I rather enjoyed the narrative style of the writing. But the story felt slightly exaggerated, as if the author was trying to make sure there was enough to discuss at a book club. Plus, like January’s book, the ending was wretchedly depressing.

12 Recipes
This month I made southwestern meatloaf. It didn’t look all that appetizing when it first came out of the oven, but looked nice on a sandwich. I’ve eaten it without bread with a little lettuce, tomato, and sour cream too.  It gets a 6 out of 10 for flavor, but a 10 out of 10 for easiness. It’s definitely something I’d make again as an alternative to my usual lineup of quick dinners of pasta, pot roast, and baked chicken.



12 Blog Posts
Click here to read about my weekly trivia escapades.

12 Ways to Meet People
This month I went to the 5-year anniversary party for an organization called New Life for Old Bags. They flatten, cut, and loop old plastic bags into “plarn” that is then crocheted into sleeping mats for the homeless. I made an effort to talk to some new people there. The crowd was, unsurprisingly, made up of mostly middle-aged to older women, but I still enjoyed talking to them all. And I very much enjoy making the mats! Here is a picture of my latest one.



12 Small Steps Forward in my Career
This month I agreed to act as the lead author on an article my team is submitting to an annual publication by the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics. There is no guarantee it will be accepted, of course, but if it is selected for the book, it will be great to have my name on a published work.

12 Fun Events in Chicagoland
My sister and I went to Medieval Times in Schaumberg. This is a bit of a cheat because we went on January 30, but I’m counting it for February anyway, since it’s a short month. We had the BEST time. Our green knight did not win, but he did slap the red knight right off his horse using a gauntlet, so he’s a winner in my book.



12 Crafts and Creations
For six weeks in January into February, I took a glass mosaics class at the Chicago Mosaic School. We did one stained glass project and one smalti project. Mine are shown here. I particularly like the stained glass birdie, though I am happy with how they both turned out.



12 Pretty Things for My Apartment
I bought this super pretty butterfly LED light for my window.


12 Things that Help Me Feel Good about My Appearance
Despite the fact that my eyebrows are super light and not noticeable by anyone but me, I’ve wanted for a while to get them waxed. I just felt like they looked messy. So, with the help of a friend, I got that done this month. Unsurprisingly, no one noticed. Even I can’t really tell the difference between the before and after photos below. But the point is, I did it, and it made me feel better to have done so. Plus, I also got a no-chip pedicure.


12 Grown-Up Things
My grown-up thing for this month was filing my taxes. Granted, this is something I’ve been doing for many years now, but I am counting it anyway. It’s an annoying, soul-sucking experience worthy of recognition of some sort.

Saturday, February 21, 2015

Trivia


There is a bar about three blocks from my apartment building. For the purposes of this blog post, I’ll call it…. Johnny Blue’s. It’s a sports bar, and therefore not really my scene. Yet when I walk in on a Wednesday night, the hostess looks at me, flicks her head toward the back, and says, “They’re back there.” Yes, I have become a regular at a sports bar. However, it’s not because I have any interest whatsoever in sports. It’s because Wednesday night is trivia night at Johnny Blue’s.

A number of things might suggest that I am good at winning trivia contests. I’ve always been an academic achiever, and at the risk of sounding conceited, I’ll say that the term “smart” has oft been applied to me over the course of my life. My team and I have been going to trivia night almost every week for about a year, which may also suggest that we have some level of success to bring us back.

But the truth is, we seldom win. I, personally, am definitely not a big asset. I know nothing about sports and only a tiny sliver of stuff about popular music. World history? Geography? Anything beyond basic science? Forget it! (I can throw down in categories about musicals, Harry Potter, and math, but wouldn’t you know it? Those categories don’t come up very often.) It doesn’t help that we’re not a particularly well-rounded team, either. Mostly, we have the same interests and strengths. We also have a really bad habit of building up a decent score and then blowing everything on the final question. We did win last week, but that was only because no one got the final question right and we bet the fewest points. Success through failure, as it were.

So, it’s not the winnings that keep us coming back. So what does? It isn’t really about the trivia, folks – at least not for me. I keep coming back because it’s so. Freaking. Funny. I don’t think there’s anything that makes me laugh more than a trivia night with my team.

To give you a sense of what trivia night is like with my friends, I present to you the following eight scenes from our table at Johnny Blue’s. To protect the innocent, I will not attribute any utterances to specific team members except when I occasionally admit I was the one saying stupid things. The others know who they are.

Scene 1:
We have just been asked, “Three movies on which Robin Williams is credited have earned more than $200 million at the domestic box office alone. Name two of them.”

Aladdin. Definitely. But what else?”
Good Will Hunting?
“No, that’s too obscene. It’s probably stuff that’s more family friendly. That way anyone goes to see it and it earns more.”
“That makes sense. What about Night at the Museum?”
Me: “No, that’s can’t be it.”
Them: “Why?”
Me: “That is a stupid movie. It can’t be that popular.”
Them: “I really think it is.”
(I concede and turn in Aladdin and Night at the Museum. They turn out to be correct answers, along with Mrs. Doubtfire.)
Them: “See?”
Me: “Yeah, yeah. I forgot that America is stupid.”

Scene 2:
We have just been asked, “In what east coast city was Bell Telephone Company founded?”

“I have no idea. What are some east coast cities? Boston?”
“Yeah. What else? Philadelphia?”
“I don’t really think of that as an east coast city.”
“Didn’t it become Bell Atlantic? What about Atlantic City?”
“Or Atlanta?”
“Again, not really an east coast city.”
“Right. OK, but I still think Philadelphia.”
“I’m just not convinced that’s east coast. Jersey’s in the way, right?”
“Oh! Jersey! Is it Jersey?”
“Ok, Jersey is not even a city. I guess I’ll settle for answering Philadelphia.”
(The correct answer is Boston. First instincts: never trusted, almost always right.)

Scene 3:
We have just been asked, “What artist sang Mambo #5?”

We knew the answer to this one was Lou Bega, so we used the deliberation time to draw all the women named in the song on our answer sheet in hopes of getting a bonus point. Not only did we get one, but we were featured on the host’s facebook page as the drawing of the week! Holla!

Scene 4:
We have just been asked to look at a series of photos and tell whether each of the men pictured had ever been the President of the United States.

“These are all old white men. Who can tell the difference? Sure, I guess this one is President Oatmeal.”

Scene 5:
(This one did not take place at Johnny Blue’s – it was too long ago – but it did include some of my current team members and it’s too funny to leave out.) We have just been asked, “What is the common street name of the drug psilocybin?”

“Um, I have no idea. Which one is smack?”
“I thought that was cocaine. Wait, are crack and smack the same?”
“What about X? Isn’t there an X?”
“Yeah, but there’s also like C and D, right?”
“Oh, yeah. I think they sing about those in RENT. Let’s think about RENT lyrics.”
(The correct answer, by the way, is mushrooms. And no, we did not get that right.)

Scene 6:
We have just been asked, “Damascus is the capital of what Middle Eastern country?”

“Jordan. I think it’s Jordan.”
“Yeah, me too. That’s what I was thinking.”
“Wait, what if it’s Syria? Could it be Syria?”
“Nah, if it were in Syria we would be hearing about it on the news and know for sure.”
“Yeah, that’s true. Ok, let’s go with Jordan.”
Host: “Damascus is the capital of Syria.”
Us: “Oh. Maybe we should start watching the news.”

Scene 7:
We have just been asked to guess the names of bands based on rebuses. One of the rebuses shows hands counting 1, 2, 3, 4 and a set of black birds.

“NUMBER BIRDS!”
(short silence)
“Um, I think it’s Counting Crows. Is Number Birds a band?”
“No. No. Sorry, I just got excited.”

Scene 8:
We have just been asked, “What author published The Cuckoo’s Calling under the pen name Robert Galbraith?”

(We have no idea and so start thinking about what we could submit as a funny incorrect answer that might get us a bonus point.)
“How about Shakespeare?”
“Or Justin Bieber. Justin Bieber is always funny.”
“Agatha Christie.”
“How about J.K. Rowling?”
“Ha! Yes! J.K. Rowling! Harry Potter is the answer to everything!”
(We turn in J.K. Rowling.)
Host: “The correct answer is J.K. Rowling.”
Us: “Ha ha. Nice try.”
Host: “Really.”
Us: “Oh.” (pause) “Best backfired attempt to be funny EVER!”


I know these scenes are not nearly as funny to everyone else (except maybe my teammates) as they are to me. Writing them down does not do them justice, even for me. But still, I’m glad I took the time to write some of them down, because they are absolutely, without a doubt, some of my favorite memories.

When I first moved to Chicago, I came kind of kicking and screaming. The idea of living in a big city, not knowing anyone, scared me. However, once I settled in to life here, I started to have some hopes for my future that living in the city made possible. In particular, I hoped one day I’d have a group of friends that I would meet for mimosa brunches and fancy drinks at bars, a la Sex and the City. I understand now that I’ll probably never have the means to be quite so fancy as Carrie and the gang, but every time the Johnny Blue’s hostess cocks her head and says, “They’re back there,” I know I’ve gotten the most important parts of what I was really searching for. I have friends that meet me out once a week to laugh, commiserate, and just generally enjoy each other’s company.

As I said in my last post, I’m not so thrilled to still be stuck in this place in my life. I want to move forward, or at least feel like it’s possible to move forward some day. But however long this part of my life lasts, and I’ll always remember trivia nights as the diamonds in one of my roughest patches. I’ll always be grateful to my teammates, who are the Samantha, Charlotte, and Miranda to my Carrie and have made one of my silly 22-year-old dreams a reality.

Thanks, girls. See you Wednesday.

Sunday, February 1, 2015

January


12 Books
January’s book was One Thousand White Women by Jim Fergus. It tells the story of May Dodd, one of the women who volunteered to help fulfill a fictional treaty between president Grant and the chief of the Cheyenne that outlined a trade of one thousand white women for one thousand horses. The white women were to marry Cheyenne men and bear their children to help them assimilate into a white society. The premise was interesting, and I was invested enough in the story to see it through to the end. However, this book won’t make my favorites list. I found a lot of the characters to be overly stereotyped and the ending to be wretchedly depressing and abrupt.

12 Recipes
This month I made spinach and squash lasagna. The end result was, shall we say, rough around the edges. The noodles stuck together and the sauce was too thin, but in the end, it was edible and really rather tasty. I will take it as my first try.



12 Blog Posts
Click here to read an explanation of why I started this project and why I chose the categories I did. It’s my first post in a long time, and not my best work, but I thought was important to post it anyway.

12 Ways to Meet People
This month, I went to a talk sponsored by the Illinois Science Council, an organization dedicated to putting on events for lay people interested in science. There are many organizations that do such things for the arts (so explained the organizer), but very few for science. The talk was about how physical movement contributes to learning. It was interesting and a broad mix of people. I hope to go to more such events in the coming year. In particular, they have one coming up on the chemistry of spirits (as in alcohol, not ghosts).

12 Small Steps Forward in my Career
In January I made some efforts to find out about new projects that are starting at my workplace. I went to a planning meeting about some new grants I feel that I could contribute to developing and writing. I’m hoping this leads to new opportunities that build on other work I’ve done in the past.

12 Fun Events in Chicagoland
On January 25, the day before my birthday, 10 friends and I completed a room escape adventure! We were locked in a room with a zombie and had to solve puzzles to get out. We did a similar room last year, and did not escape, but this year we got out with 16 minutes to spare! It was great fun.



12 Crafts and Creations
This month, I made these fun flip mittens for my dear friend, Shannon. They feature a flippy thumb for easy texting, fleece lining for warm fingers, and a pretty flower decoration that doubles as a button hole to hold the finger flippy part back! I’m particularly proud of these because I designed the flower decoration myself, with no pattern, and more importantly because Shannon liked them.




12 Pretty Things for My Apartment
Here are my new, brightly colored shower curtain and towels!



12 Things that Help Me Feel Good about My Appearance
My generous friend Alicia gave me a prepaid haircut for a Christmas and birthday gift! I got it cut the weekend of my birthday. Here’s a photo of my new look. I also pre-paid my next four appointments in an effort to make sure I keep up on my haircuts.



12 Grown-Up Things
I spent several hours one afternoon getting a handle on my retirement savings. I won’t pretend to understand everything, but at least now I know what accounts I have, what I and my employer contribute to them, which investment companies hold the accounts, and roughly what I can expect to have at retirement if I continue to make the same contributions until age 65. In a few years, once my student loans are paid off, I can go to a financial planner to rethink my investments, but for now I am satisfied.