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Archive for September, 2006

Super freak

I have plans with Owen on Friday. No question about that, just some logistics to be resolved. I called him this afternoon because I wanted to run through them with someone, and given that Pele is out of town, Diego is in Mexico and I am out of the office, I didn’t have any way to diffuse my anxiety. Owen didn’t answer and I didn’t leave a message.

Fine.

I got home, vacuumed, read blogs, did some writing, ignored the cat. It was after 7pm and nothing. I knew it wasn’t meaningful. But I couldn’t wait. I sent him a text, “Plans?” Almost immediately, he called and said, “So, plans…” He was on his way to the metro, just leaving work.

He said, “So, I was thinking about Saturday night…have you ever been to [bar x]?”

I said, “Yes. As a matter of fact, that’s where I met you.”

“Oh.” I laughed. Then he described enthusiastically an event at the bar and suggested we go. All I could think was, “Is he canceling Friday night? Is this instead of Friday night?” I didn’t say that. Instead I said, “That sounds like fun.” And held my breath. He said, “I’d still like to do something on Friday, but I don’t think I can cook you dinner…it’s been a long week.” (The original plan was for him to cook me dinner. Aw. I’m sure it will happen sometime.)

Big sigh of relief. Not only was he confirming Friday but he was suggesting something else for Saturday. Two dates in one weekend! With someone I like! Planned in advance! It doesn’t get much better than that.

Every time I think this dating thing is getting easier, I prove myself wrong. I am, however, pleased that I don’t seem to have scared Owen away…yet.

Grateful for: calm.

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I’m back

Got home Tuesday afternoon after a decent flight. I was tired and sick–just a little head cold, but no fun. It took over an hour to get to my place from Dulles. What can you do?

I had to get up bright and early this morning to go to Rockville for a training. The timing is terrible but I was looking forward to finding some good Chinese food for lunch. But the side effect of this cold is that I have almost no appetite. I had coffee and yogurt for breakfast, a cup of chili for lunch and popcorn for dinner. And a few pieces of candy provided by the training facility. I’m so healthy! I’m sure I’ll get back to normal eating when I can taste again. Maybe I should add some fruit in there…they do provide some.

I will admit that my five days away were not completely without thoughts of a certain boy. I wish that weren’t the case. I really tried to be present during the trip. For the most part I was, but I’m in that impatient state of mind where I want to know what’s going to happen. And I want to know NOW. It’s hard to be patient and savor the moments but I am trying.

Of course, I was rather impatient to talk to Owen when I got back. We did talk and we confirmed plans for Friday night. Yay!

Given my tendency to rush, jump in with two feet, dive in head first, leap before I look, etc., it’s quite a trial to wait two weeks to see the guy I like. Poor me! Poor, poor me. When we talked he teased me about coming home with a hot Mexican guy who wanted a green card. Heh. Did he think I changed my mind? I was worrying that he’d changed his mind. Somehow it’s reassuring that we are worrying about the same thing, even in a lighthearted way. No, I didn’t really think he’d changed his mind, but I am trying not to get ahead of myself, to count my chickens, etc.

I have a headache. I need to get some sleep. It’s a long ride to Rockville in the morning.

Oh, oh! How could I forget? Yesterday, I got a text from David. I kid you not. I didn’t know it was him at first because I’d deleted his number from my phone. I actually googled the area code and that’s how I figured out it was him. The message should have tipped me off since he wished me a Happy New Year in Hebrew and then asked “How ve u been?” I was astonished. I didn’t know what to do. Ignore the message? Write back, “Fine, no thanks to you.” Or “I have a new boyfriend.” About half an hour later I wrote, “I’m good.” He didn’t respond, which seems about right.

Grateful for: a date.

Drop me a line.


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Last days in Mexico

The last days in Mexico City were good. More pictures here! Perhaps I took too many pictures?

Some observations:

Everyone drives. You hardly see anyone walking–except downtown on Sunday. Parking is a free-for-all. Cars park around corners and sometimes you can’t squeeze between them to cross the street. Crossing the street can be hair-raising.

Diego found a synagogue and we tried to go to services on Rosh Hashanah but were turned away. Of course they were sold out, which is normal on the High Holidays. Also, we didn’t have any ID, which the security guys wanted to see. Yes, security! But it’s not unheard of in the states either.

You get bread or tortillas (or both) with EVERY meal. For example, for my breakfast on the last day I had two eggs on a tortilla, beans, potatoes (pseudo hash browns) and a basket of four small rolls.

Everyone smokes. In restaurants, there are smoking and non-smoking sections. The less popular section is non-smoking. Just like the old days.

When eating out, plates are cleared quickly but you must ask for the check. Before paying, you can stay indefinitely.

My understanding of Spanish depends almost entirely on context.

Making out in public is completely socially acceptable.

Diego is the best host ever.

Grateful for: a good trip.

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Mexico City (day two)

At dinner Friday night, I was a disaster. We ate at a “typical” place with Mariachis playing in the background. The loud music, low lights and Spanish conversation conspired to almost completely silence me. I enjoyed the food and the company (Diego and his friend, Ana), but I could hardly form sentence. Keeping my eyes open was about the best I could do. The culprit is the altitude.

Funny


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Mexico City (day one)

I made the decision to visit Diego in Mexico City on the spur of the moment. He said, “You won’t come.” And I thought, “Why not?” I bought my ticket and here I am. Diego is probably my closest confident in the office. I talk to TR a lot but he’s like my big brother and there are just some things you won’t ever tell your brother. I feel close to both of them, but in different ways. Diego listens patiently to every detail of every story about every boy I’ve ever dated and I’m grateful to him for that. He also advises me on how to act and I even take his advice occasionally (though I think with less than spectacular results). He was one of the biggest cheerleaders for my abortive fling with David–and also one of the most angry when David turned out to be an ass.

While he’s been gone the last few weeks, I’ve kept him informed of my goings on via email. Not quite the same as walking down to his office for a chat or spending twice as much time in the gym as we should because I’m telling some impossibly long and detailed story, but it’s sufficed to keep us up-to-date with each other.

As my visit approached, Diego started making all kinds of plans for me. I decided not to resist. Hey, if he wants to play tour guide, who am I to complain? When I arrived last night, he met me at the airport and we took a cab back to his hotel/apartment. A nice, small, efficient place. I put my things down and we went to eat at 10:30pm. I was hungry but slightly dazed. It was great to see Diego. Over dinner, he asked about Owen and I got to spend the whole evening and some of this morning talking about him. I know it’s silly, but I do enjoy this type of conversation and I haven’t had such a long talk with anyone about Owen–not even Pele–because of conflicting schedules.

After a delicious and huge breakfast, Diego took me to his office (he’s here an exchange/fellowship type program) and introduced me to some of the folks he works with. My Spanish is adequate for saying hello and understanding most of what people say, but I didn’t get much beyond that. Then we went for more coffee and Diego pointed me in the direction of the National Archeological Museum and went back to work.

That was my assignment: visit the museum. I won’t go so far as to say I failed, but it wasn’t exactly my best work. It took about an hour to find the museum because I walked far a field. When I did find it, I didn’t last very long. Around 2pm I was hit with such a wave of exhaustion that I almost fell asleep on a bench outside one of the exhibits. If I weren’t too embarrassed, I would have taken a nap right then. Instead, I soldiered on through a few more rooms and decided to call it quits at 3pm.

Getting “home” was rather more successful (and rather closer than I’d imagined). I’ve been hanging out in the pleasant apartment, making good use of Diego’s laptop and not napping.

Hmm…since Diego is planning to keep me up late tonight (dinner at 9:30!) maybe I ought to work on that nap!

I’ve taken a few pics and you may see them here. I’ll be adding to the set all week.

Grateful for: Diego.

Drop me a line.


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Awkward

Remember Garret of the internet and rowing? Yesterday, I had occasion to walk from the metro to practice (instead of biking). I was walking along, when who pulls up to the sidewalk, but Garret. I took my headphones off and jumped into his car and he took me the last couple of blocks to practice. Our chatting was unremarkable.

After practice, he asked me if I would like a ride home and I said


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The ninth rower

I rowed for about two years at UNC (including two summers in Seattle). I quit in the middle of my fifth semester (that is another story!). The first year, I was in a novice class of 100 women. By the end of that semester, we were 70. By the end of the year, maybe 50 were left.

The second year, 30 or so of us returned and moved up to the varsity squad. We got to buy jackets. I wore mine constantly when I first got it.

By my fourth semester, we were down to nine rowers and one coxswain.

Nine is an awkward number.

The solution was to break the eight into fours and have one rower out of the fours and one rower out of the eight.

I always had a seat in the eight. The port who was out of the eight had a seat in our lightweight four. The lightweight four was our best boat because our lightweights were tall and strong. (The cut-off for lightweight women is 135lbs.)

I had a seat in the heavyweight four (two, not stroke), but sometimes the coach put a starboard rower (she had to switch sides) in my seat in the four because she was stronger than me. Even though I would have liked to row in both boats, I was satisfied with my seat in the eight.

We never talked about it, but I knew the woman who was out of the eight was not happy about it.

I also had a pretty good idea why I kept my seat. I had a talk with one of the coaches during spring training that year (a week at a rundown “resort” motel in Cocoa Beach, FL on the Intercostal Waterway). I was expressing some doubts about my place on the team. I said, “Why am I still here?”

He said, “Because you’re tough.”

I’d never thought of myself that way. During my time on crew, I’d become strong. Dealing with the physical exhaustion, especially during the first year was daunting. Crew was the sport people chose because it was the hardest thing you could do at the club level. I had no idea what I was getting myself into. I had no experience at all in competitive sports (except 8th grade basketball and 4th grade summer softball).

But the mental part might have been harder. I was almost completely shut out of the team’s social life. I wasn’t despised or ridiculed, I was just not considered. I had my own, independent social life so I wasn’t lonely. And, for much of the first year, I dated a guy on the men’s team. Yet most of the women formed close friendships with their teammates and I never did. (I was friends with two women during the first year: Pam and Kathleen. Pam quit at the end of the first semester. Kathleen quit after the first year.)

My coach also said, “You have be an example to the team.”

“Me? How’s that?”

“Yes, you are a leader. By always being there, you are an example.”

I don’t know if I was a leader, but by my second year—just by the fact that I returned—I gained some respect from my teammates. By then, they all knew that I’d never done competitive sports and they respected that I’d stuck with it for so long. That I didn’t complain. That I was always there. That I’d grown stronger—they noticed a physical change in me. They knew I was busy, that grad school was harder than undergrad (heh), but there I was.

And the ninth rower? She was a slacker and everyone knew it.

Once she showed up late for practice eating an ice cream cone. She rolled up in her boyfriend’s fancy red sports car and sauntered down the road to the dock—eating an ICE CREAM CONE. This was wrong on two levels. One, we were on this “don’t eat too much dairy” kick. In particular, dairy two hours before practice was a big no-no.

More importantly, though, she was late to practice and she had stopped ON THE WAY to practice to buy an ice cream cone while the rest of us were waiting.

We said, “Where were you? We’re ready to go.”

“Oh, sorry.” Her apology was about as sincere as her rush to get to the dock.

While most of the others had been friends with her, she alienated everyone with the ice cream business and the incredibly obnoxious, rich boyfriend who rowed in high school (but mysteriously never joined the men’s crew at UNC) where “it was so much more intense than Chapel Hill.” Well, you know what you can do with your elite Northeastern boarding school crew? I think you know. What an ass.

At one regatta that spring (post ice cream incident), our coach didn’t show. Some of the women wanted to change the line-ups for the fours—which would put me out of the boat. Someone pointed out, “Dave [the coach] gave us these line ups. We shouldn’t change them.” She was ignored and the others decided to vote. They voted to place the starboard rower in my seat. No one looked me in the eye. I was furious. I didn’t say anything.

Later on the same day, perhaps emboldened by the voting, Jessica said, “I don’t know why I’m not in the eight. Why did Dave do that?” I said nothing. I looked at her and thought, “Fuck you too.” No one else said a word.

On the ride home, I was feeling bad. I felt guilty because Jessica was stronger than me—her erg times were better—and maybe she should have been in the eight. The girls in the car said, “Look, we know why you’re in the boat. NO ONE has a problem with that. You work hard. She doesn’t. You put in the time and we can see how far you’ve come. You deserve that seat.”

And that was that. We never spoke of it again.

I’ve always been grateful for that my hard work, my effort, meant more to my teammates than having a potentially stronger rower in the boat. They didn’t want to deny me—and they didn’t resent me—even though it might have cost them some wins. Is it common to find teammates like that? I doubt it. I was very lucky to find out how they felt. I still miss that group sometimes.

Grateful for: my old teammates.

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So tired

I’m exhausted. So tired that I skipped rowing tonight. Why am I so tired? I’m not sure. Not sleeping great doesn’t help. Monday’s practice was particularly hard. Oh, and I was stroke! For the first time in a million years. Well, not that long. I stroked a few months ago and it was a disaster. This time we were in a four and it wasn’t too bad. About halfway through the practice, I said to the cox, “I used to stroke a four.” Which is true–I even wrote about it a couple of days ago. But I sort of forget that I have been stroke. Weird.

I ended up at stroke because we had just enough people for a four. Two ports and two starboards (and a fifth person to cox). The other port is this HUGE guy and, well, you just wouldn’t have him stroke. He is not a technique rower! (He also happens to be awfully nice, but that’s neither here nor there.) The coach was late and she looked at me and said, “Ok, you stroke.” She loves me. Not.

Today, I went to an all day training session and it killed me with extreme boredom. I was almost literally falling asleep. I got home in time to change and hop on my bike to go to practice, but instead I collapsed. Maybe I’m coming down with something. Or maybe I’m just tired.

I ate a little but I’m still hungry. I wish I had some food in the house, but I’m too lazy to go to the store. Could someone bring me some food? Sigh.

On the dating front, there’s not much to report. I won’t see Owen for a while. He is working crazy long hours, so mid-week is difficult. Starting Thursday, I’m out of town for about five days. We have a date set for the weekend I get back. I’m not thrilled about waiting two weeks to see him again, but what can you do? I’m not feeling anxious. I like him a lot and I want to see him and I know I will see him. Plenty of time to be crazy later on when there’s actually something to worry about.

Now, I’m off to do some more relaxing.

Grateful for: relaxing.

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No time

Work=busy

Rowing=hard

Me=tired

Back to regular posting in a couple of days!

Grateful for: being occupied.

Drop me a line.


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Good taste

The date with Owen was great. We get along well. I laugh, he laughs, he gives me a hard time (ok, I could use a little less of that), and it’s very comfortable and only slightly nerve wracking.

The only thing that makes me nervous is the lack of red flags. I guess I’ve gotten used to big, looming problems. You’re not married? Republican? Alcoholic? Deeply emotionally scarred? Whatever will we talk about?

Not only is Owen not a Republican, he’s as left-wing as I am. How delightful! I can’t remember the last time I dated someone with similar politics. It’s refreshing.

A couple of weeks ago, I was saying to TR (my good work friend), “I think I like the Republican thing. That way you have something to fight about that’s not personal.”

I was half expecting to only ever date Republicans again. I suppose that would be fine. But you know what’s even better? dating someone who will never say, “You’re a socialist? That’s the stupidest possible thing you could say. It’s never worked.” And not having to explain that socialism doesn’t equal Soviet-style totalitarianism and that you actually do see the need for a market, but there really is no free market anywhere (hello, regulations) and what you want is universal, not means-tested, benefits and radical reform. Sigh.

The date started with dinner. We both ate very little. I was nervous. Not crazy, out of my mind nervous, but nervous enough to not eat a full meal.

After dinner, we tried to decide what to do. Movies had been mentioned, but there was no set plan. Also, the show times were inconvenient. We went to the nearby theater and there was one acceptable thing showing at 9pm. He said, “I will see it…it’s just a question of whether we see it together.”

“Ok. I’ve heard it’s funny, but I’m not sure I want to see it.”

We stood in the middle of the lobby, not deciding. I said, “Let’s stand over here…” and we moved to the side. He said, “I’m not very good at this.”

“Apparently, neither am I.” Finally, I said, “Let’s see it. It will be good.”

“Are you sure?”

“Yes, I’m sure.”

And it was good. The movie was funny. He loved it, I liked it.

Owen asked what kinds of movies I liked. “Old movies. I mean, I like anything good, but my favorites are old movies–like from the ’40s.”

He started to quiz me about old movies. He’d name a movie, for example, “The Awful Truth?” And I’d respond, “Irene Dunne, Cary Grant…Franchot Tone? I’m not sure.” (Actually, it wasn’t Franchot Tone, the second lead was Ralph Bellamy.)

Or, “The Maltese Falcon?”

“Are you kidding? Too easy! Humphrey Bogart, Sydney Greenstreet…”

“Peter Lorre…”

“Mary Astor, and John Huston directing. Oh, and Elijah Cook.”

He said, “This is fun.”

I said, “Have you seen The Thin Man?’

“I love The Thin Man. I watched a whole bunch of the series with my aunt.”

I thought, you love The Thin Man? Who are you? Then I asked, “What about Born Yesterday? Have you seen that?”

“Yes! It’s great. It’s the one where she becomes a smarty at the end, right? Gregory Peck and…”

“No, no, no. Not Gregory Peck.”

“No?”

“William Holden.”

“Oh. Did I lose major points for that?”

“Um, no. The fact that you’ve even seen it is…astonishing.”

I’ve always said that tastes are not that significant. Owen and I had another conversation about music (similar tastes again, big surprise) and I said, “I don’t think it means that much.”

“Oh, it can tell you a lot about someone, what kind of music they like.”

“What? What can it tell you? That they like music. Some people don’t…”

“Those people have no souls.”

I don’t want to read too much into our similar tastes in movies and music. Similar humor. Similar politics. But it is nice. There’s enough different to make it interesting, but enough alike to not worry about being offended.

Pele said, “Tastes in contemporary things are pretty meaningless. But, old movies–that’s something that you’ve had in your life for a long time. It does mean something.”

I’m inclined to agree. I’m also inclined not to read too much into it. I’ll just enjoy the ride. And relax.

Grateful for: the ride.

Drop me a line.


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