Wednesday, June 28, 2006

Scenes from the Center of the Universe

On my trip home this weekend it came to my attention that I may have offended some of my readers with my last post. This came to my attention because I found out that my mother told all of her friends, including our family physician who has known me since I was 5 years old and who is also a family friend to go ahead and have a look-see at her zany daughter's writing. These friends, who all live, work, and raise families in the greater Wichita area were less than amused with my harsh criticism of their town. I stand by my statements, but in deference to them and the respect I have for them, I will now give you a top ten list of the best things about Wichita, KS: (oh, and obviously the thing about the Pope and the gateway to Hell was an urban legend- it was however told to me by a practicing and devout Catholic, so you never know- I googled it, and apparently the exact gateway to hell was in a church in Stull, KS, which has since been torn down-good plan)
Top Ten Things I Like About Wichita Kansas (in no particular order):
  1. The cost of living is ridiculously low, so everything there is cheaper.
  2. Despite a population of close to 500,000, much like Cheers, everyone seems to know my name.
  3. My parents (and their pool membership, central AC, and well stocked fridge) live there.
  4. It is temperate most of the year, never too hot, never too cold.
  5. It's the kind of place where your family doctor not only agrees to see you on a saturday just to reassure you that the lump in your neck is not a) cancer b) a second head or c) a vestigal twin trying to escape, but she does so by coming out to breakfast with you and the parents and brings along a beautiful vase full of sunset roses for you birthday!
  6. Greasy, greasy mexican food.
  7. Most per capita restaurants of any city in the United States (I kid you not).
  8. Not everyone is blond, for god's sake (like in MN).
  9. People still talk about city politics like it matters.
  10. I'm still working on number 10!

Friday, June 23, 2006

Home, Home on the Range

So I will be incommunicado for a little while, ducklings, as tonight I am making the journey home. I'll be there until Tuesday, which is about the exact amount of time I am comfortable spending in the 'Ta (aka Wichita, KS, known as the Breadbasket of America, the Birthplace of Aviation, and most graphically, the Abortion Capital of the World, and hence home of the Summer of Mercy, in which insane people sent their children to lie under cars because that would logically precipitate the closing of the women's health clinic on Kellogg). I love my parents very much and actually miss them quite a bit, and wouldn't mind living closer, but I don't think I can live any closer geographically to the state of Kansas...

Little known fact: the Pope won't fly over the state because there is a known portal to hell above it. I kid you not. It sounds absurd, and it is absurd, because honestly, the Devil seems like a mover and a shaker that enjoys a good time, and none of those desires would be satisfied by a trip to Kansas. So maybe he uses that portal for a calming vacation? Or maybe it's the portal to the "nothing ever happens, Waiting for Godot" version of Hell...

Other fun statistics about Kansas:

  • It is scientifically proven to be flatter than a pancake. The terrain of your average cake of pan is hillier and more slopping than the entire average terrain of Kansas.
  • The state has not once, but twice voted to change the high school education standards to either not require the teaching of evolution or require the teaching of intelligent design.
  • In the 2004 election, only a single county in the state was blue. ONE.

I could go on, but it depresses me. The nice thing about going to Kansas is it allows me to re-aline my liberal principles, especially in regards to the Opinion Line on the daily Op-Ed page. It is an anonymous call in line that yields the most backwards, ignorant hateful opinions I have ever heard. It's like the highlight of my day. I promise to return with some doozies. Here are some that I found online today, for your amusement (my comments are in italics):


Press 1 for English. Press 2 for deportation. Here is the ignorance and hate I spoke of.
• • •
I admit that my dog gets out. He is a good dog, but he doesn't look like he is good, and I'm sorry for the people who have to encounter him. umm....ok? why did this get in the newspaper?
• • •
When Wichita has a thunderstorm, run the weather ticker across the screen and let people know what's going on. Don't come on television acting as if it's a major weather issue, such as a tornado. This is an ongoing issue with the citizens of Doo-Dah, whether or not the weathermen should break into a show to report on the weather. Now, to be fair to the writer of this comment, the weathermen in Wichita treat every storm as though it was the end of the world. It gets very dramatic, with our NBC affiliate weatherman, Dave "Armageddon" Freidman sending ridiculous messages to his wife through the camera, like "Honey, I won't be home tonight, tie the cat to the oven and lock the kids in the basement". This is all pretty unnecessary, because Kansas is really flat. REALLY flat. Which means you can pretty much see a storm rolling in for like, 6 hours. That's why when it gets to be "tornado season" up here, I just laugh and laugh. There is nothing like a Great Plains storm, where the sky turns green, the barometric pressure drops so fast you'd think you were in a horror movie, and you literally feel as though the contents of heaven are being flung upon you by an angry God. The storms up here are child's play in comparison. I once had a tornado warning happen while I was in my freshman dorm, which was essentially a large cement box that went 9 stories into the air. All the little weather lemmings went running down the stairs into the death trap that was the basement of the dorm, so about 2000 freshman in a n area designed to hold broken down cardboard boxes and the frozen food-type product that masqueraded as dinner. I took one look and the sky and said no way is there a tornado out there. Count me out of the clausterphobic dance party.

So enough about Kansas. It's like shooting fish in a barrel. Really dumb fish in a really boring barrell.

Thursday, June 22, 2006

The Rodeo

I, contrary to popular belief, can be talked into "country" pursuits when they masquerade as opportunities to engage in a healthy consumption of kitsch, americana, and white trash baiting. All of these desires were satisfied in spades by the wonder that is the Buffalo Rodeo, Buffalo,MN. What started out as a joke last year became an obsession this year. Last year, when my good friend Ali asked me if I wanted to attend a Rodeo in her neck o' the woods, I thought I had misheard her. I don't go places that smell like feces and only sell domestic beer. Not to mention the limiting footwear choices available to a rodeo attendee. BUT. I thought it would be a hoot, because as anyone who knows me well can tell you I find nothing quite as rewarding and soul soothing as making fun of the unfortunate dressers/hair/republicans/soccer moms of this world. A Rodeo promised untold heights of mulletdom, big ass ugly hats, shitkicking, Bush supporters, fried cheese curds, and if I was really, really lucky, zubaz. I was in!

The Rodeo last year did not disappoint, my friends. I was pointing and laughing from the word go. To my left was a Billy Ray Cyrus Mullet making out with a Pamela Anderson Boobs. To my right was a guy in shitkickers sans teeth ogling preteens in short-shorts. And dead straight ahead was a "beer" tent selling only Coors Light! I was in liberal-elitist-superiority-complex heaven! The evening of course began with a salute to our fearless leader and his cavalcade of atrocities. I personally feared for my safety and the safety of my companions during my pointed, post-colonial diatribe against the obligatory (and, let's face it, masterbatory) moment of "God loves the USA best of all" required at all events held outside the metro (I should clarify that I do support the military, my own father being a navy man. In fact, I have so much respect for the military that I'd rather not see them getting killed in some little man's grudge match waged because Papa Bear never loved him-Here's my deal with the Star-Spangled bullshit: There is a difference between patriotism and nationalism kids, and this is it: reasoned debate versus blind faith. Let us not forget that Nationalism put the N in Nazi. And these spectacles of Republican circle-jerking repulse me at the deepest level, because people are singing "Proud to be an American" while not taking the actual time to question and examine what it means to be an American, and what exactly we have to be proud of. It's such an adolescent statement to say "I'm proud to be an American, where at least I know I'm free." At least. And how free are we exactly, at this point in time? NSA wiretapping, Guantanamo detainees in their own personal version of Dante's Inferno.... I'm so in love with this country that it makes me weep in anger and frustration. In the words of Ralph Ellison:
Personally, I am too vindictively American, too full of hate for the hateful aspects of this country, and too possessed by the things I love here to be too long away.

Anyway, I digress....) So once we got through the terror of me possibly being torn to pieces by rabid Toby Keith-listening-Neo-Cons the fun really began. Once that first cowboy straddled his bucking bronco, banging out of the gate and whipping around like a life-size rag doll, I was hooked. These were hot men on big horses being thrown on to the ground with alarming force. It was both arousing and strangely cathartic, seeing grown men broken and bleeding, inches away from getting kicked in the head... I should mention that men were on my shit list at this moment in my life... but mostly I was impressed. These cowboys were real athletes in a way that makes baseball players look like the laziest bunch of motherfuckers to ever put on a jockstrap. This was a lot of violence for very little reward, and while some may call it barbaric, I found it much less barbaric than something like football. How much skill does it take to run up behind another guy and fall on him? Or boxing, where the main point is to knock your opponent around until they are quite literally retarded? Here, it's man against beast, and generally the beast wins. It's aggressive and adrenal and fast and close. It's like sex, but with horses.

um, that came out wrong.

ANYWAY. After the Rodeo itself was over, came the hootenanny... it may have been a hoedown, I was unclear as to the distinction. There was a live country band, dancing, and of course, more "beer". I would have been satisfied with just the athleticism and majesty that was the rodeo, but observing the redneck in his natural habitat, in a mating ritual was no less than fan-fucking-tastic. I didn't last long at the hootenanny- i think I was emotionally drained from all the laughing.

This year, however, I vowed it would be different.

I came prepared to embrace the white trash, the swillish beer, the mullets and most of all, the hootenanny. Unfortunately, we arrived too late to participate in the Bush-a-Palooza.... I think Ali did that on purpose. It was rainy this year, but the beer was as cold, the clothes as loud and garrish, and the spectacle of man on horse satisfying in just as many ways as before. But the hootenanny, friends, was where the fun really began. First of all, there were a bunch of army guys at the dance who had a night off. There was some disturbing wedding ring removing from one of our nation's finest, but other wise this bunch was out to party, and very focused on accomplishing that mission. There was one female soldier in the bunch that just kept getting asked to dance by this old guy... i think it was a fetish. There was a drunk middle-aged woman in stonewashed jeans and a bad perm (she was like the anti-milf) that literally got tossed from soldier to soldier in a desperate attempt to keep from dancing with her. The woman would not give up, she was like a drunk, dancing Terminator, and any man in uniform was her Sarah Conner. It was pathetic in that really really funny way...don't judge me, you know you would have laughed. The band played country favorites and a little bit of Johnny Cash, and I danced like I hadn't danced in years. There is nothing more freeing than dancing in the middle of a group of people who you know for a fact you will never, ever see again. After the hootenanny died down, we went onto another bar where I saw a cute, goofy looking guy sitting to the side, clearly enjoying himself in the way that people that think their current activity is completely ridiculous and contrary to their typical activity tend to enjoy themselves. It was clear that he was not a saturday night bar-hopper, but found it fun and funny to participate as a guest star. We were on opposite sides of the bar, so there was no convenient way to flirt with him, so I chose the direct approach (big surprise). At the end of the night when they brought the lights up I took a business card, wrote my cell number on the back, walked over to him and said, "Hi, I'm Hala, you seem interesting. If I seem interesting, give me a call. "

10 minutes later, my phone rings.

In which it occurs to our heroine that the last post was rather vapid and this title conceit is getting a bit old...

So it does occur to me that the last post was rather vapid, whiny, and "My Super-Sweet 16"-esq. So I will follow it up with a treatise on American Consumerism (capital C... get it, capital? Like as in money...hehehehehhrmmm....). The thing is that I, like many of us I imagine, fight a daily war between what I need, what I want, and what I am told I need to want. Our society is based on material desire, our advertisements are built on the assumption that we are in and of ourselves not enough. So why should I want celebrity skincare for my birthday instead of something I actually need, like clean clothes and a legally registered vehicle (ok, bad example, Kiehl's is actually a great product and I do need to wash my face and feel good about my healthy, dewy skin)? The fact of the matter is that those things would make my life easier, but not necessarily any happier, and we are taught that happiness is the lynchpin of "goodness". The vapid stuff would make my life happier (supposedly, and for an undetermined length of time), but at the same time not at all contribute to it's ease, as I would still have to get my car tags renewed etc....

I'm not sure why I am complaining about this at all, as these are the inconveniences that make up adulthood. I guess the answer is that I don't really want to be an adult yet, which is why for my birthday, I am going home to see my parents. Part of this was pouting because 2 of my best friends were going to be out of the country, part of it was a preemptive strike against the possible lameness of not having any plans. Of course, now that I've told people that I am going out of town, they are all like "Awww, we could have taken you out". I always do this! I always assume that no one will plan anything for my birthday and then make my own way lamer plans just to avoid feeling like a loser. I don't trust people enough to give them the opportunity to surprise me, which really, is a metaphor for my whole life... more on that later. But when I am honest with myself it was mostly a very real desire to be taken care of for a weekend. No one spoils and pampers quite like your parents when you haven't been home for literally 6 months.

In which our heroine decides that her dry cleaning is an excellent Birthday Present...

So, I have reached the point in my day where my mind begins to wander, and it wanders, of course, to deficiencies in my life, sometimes emotional, mostly material. Today's topic is the sad fact that the things I want for my birthday are grocieries and to be able to pick up my dry cleaning, which has been languishing away at White Way Cleaners for going on 2 weeks. I usually do dry cleaning once a year, but at a wedding I spilled god knows what all over my favorite green dress (those of you who were at my b-day last year: that green dress) and so wanted to get it taken care of right away. Along with this I brought like 4 comforters or duvet covers that my cat had so sweetly vomited all over, oh, decades ago. I had kept them locked up, thinking that eventually I would come up with the money to have them all laundered, and then in a fit of "I'm a grown up, dammit, I shouldn't have to wait to have clean linens", I just took the whole mess into the cleaners. Thankfully they did not demand payment up front, as I had about -$36.17 at the moment of delivery. So, this years birthday list is thus:

1. Cash Money
2. License Tag Renewal
3. New Cell Phone (as mine is freaking out... this may or may not have something to do with the fact that I took an unhinged paperclip and tried to clean out all the gunk from underneath the key pad, thereby poking out electrodes and nearly electricuting myself... we may never know.. plus, the paint is peeling, how is that even possible- who paints a cell phone?)
4. Medical bills (Health Partners is the devil... who does not wear prada, but orthopedic loafers and double charges me for the priviledge of waiting an hour to be told I am a hypocondriac)
5. A Pony

Pathetic! Remember the days when we wished for tiara's and autographed NKOTB tapes? Transformers and My Little Ponies? A new car or a pool party? Beer? Now I'm hoping for enough cash to pay a parking ticket. Boo. Boooooo!

What I really really want is a bunch of Kiehl's skin care, because it makes my skin look AMAZING. But I don't need it. I can continue washing my face with a rock, like they did in olden times.

Wednesday, June 21, 2006

In which our heroine opens up the floor...

So, now that I've officially announced my blog to the people I know, I guess I'm committed. What I'm really looking for is ideas, connections, ways to take the thoughts swirling around in my head and make some tangible art/meaning out of them, with a little help from my friends. So please, whatever you think this blog should be, it can be. Tell me what you're looking for.... (that goes for strangers too....)

Primal Penguin Rage (aka Rage Against the Penguin Machine)

A Neurotic Little Penguin Approaches Her Golden Birthday....

I will be 24 on the 24th of June, folks. The big 2-4. Quarterlife. How did this happen? As any good student of the Post-Modern would do, I have decided to channel my neurotic energies into a blog. For the purposes of this post that should read: avoid work by typing quickly and appearing to be hard at it. As I look back on my short tenure in life, I am bewildered, which is apparently a popular state to be in. Since my friends have all grown weary of my obsessive and insistent dissection of the minutiae of my life, it seems I have nowhere to spew my addled ramblings but on the good citzens of cyberspace. So here is where I shall unload it all, my disappointment with dating and all things boy, my disillusionment with the "career" opportunities for myself and the other geniuses I have managed to befriend, and my utter disgust with the political and social climate of the American Experiment at this juncture.

This blog is not for the faint of heart. Abandon all hope, ye who continue reading....

So on monday night I went to Cash-a-Roake. For those of you in the Sin Cities (aka Minneapolis/St. Paul) this was held at Lee's Liquor Lounge, between downtown and north Minneapolis. It is a dive in the truest, most blessedly dingy sense of the word, with 3 dollar drinks and bad, brown paneling. Anyway, Cash-a-Roake is a live band playing only Johnny Cash songs which you can sing along with. Was there ever a better idea ever? I went alone (I literally called every single human being I know and couldn't get a single one of them to even pick up the damn phone), but the thing about something like Cash-a-Roake is that you have to work to not make new friends... or if not friends, at least drinking buddies. And really, is there an important distinction? I think not. Cash-a-Roake occurs every monday, and I do believe you'll be able to find me there, drinking my $4 whiskey and soda, singing along with the Man in Black.