Thursday, January 29, 2009

Classical Instruments are the Coolest Instruments

It's true, just look:



What's cooler than Mario? What's cooler than the flute? What's cooler than a mustache? What's cooler than wearing all black and beat boxing?
ALL OF THEM TOGETHER!





Oh wow, I almost can't stand it. This is so cool. He has so many outfits! And who would think to use chopsticks on a cello?! I need to find out who edited this video.
There is a cat with a halo...





Ok I love Harry Potter. And I love classical instruments. And I looooove amateurs playing in public places. This video has IT ALL!! And the car horn at the end.




Doug!

This last one is not an instrument but I did find it by searching "cool classical music".




I loooooooooooove YouTube!

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Oh man, what a day

Unemployed update: I had a job interview today! It could have been the light at the end of my jobless tunnel but it turned out to be depressing enough to make me watch 2 1/2 hours of the learning channel (What Not To Wear and 17 Kids and Counting). Here's the story...
So about a week ago I applied and got an interview to be a "Waddler Teacher". This is cutesy daycare code for "1 year old watcher". I've nannyed before and 1 year olds are totally fun (learning to talk, walk, eat solid food- it's adorable) so I was moderately stoked.
My interview was at 10:30 today and I decided to leave myself some extra time to sit and read at the Starbucks across from the daycare. I tried their Vanilla Rooibos Tazo Tea Latte, which was pretty good but really sweet. Among the cast of characters at Starbucks were a Grandma who was unsure of how to order a hot sandwich ("Do I get it out of the case myself or do you get it for me?"), a mom with her two kids ("We're going to the pet store. No, not to get a new hamster, just a new hamster wheel. He's running free right now" and the little girl says, "Hamster hamster hamster hamster"), and a guy shout-talking into his cell phone about some kind of business stuff ("Yeah, dude, first you have to open the document and then you can edit the content! Totally, I know, it's crazy!"). It's safe to say that I made some SERIOUS progress in my book.
When it was time for my interview (actually 8 minutes early because I'm good like that) I walked across to the daycare, which has a hilarious name but I won't reveal it because that would be mean. The SECOND I went in the door I knew this was not a place I could be. I went down the stairs to a stuffy, crowded basement (basement means no windows). There was one huge room with about 50 kids in it from age 1 (my guys!) to about 6. But there were no walls between them! There were bookshelves dividing the screaming 1 year olds from the screaming 3 year olds. Guess what: bookshelves are not sound proof, especially when they are only 3 feet tall. Surprising, right?
The sullen goth teenager told me she would get "Sherie" for me (I made this name up, don't worry) and I heard Sherie shout-talk (another shout-talker?!) that she, "couldn't leave the classroom right now". Yes, the classroom partitioned off by half-walls of cubbies and bookshelves. Totally passive agressive and totally someone I want to be no where near, especially in a basement with a goth teen, screaming kids, and (coming soon, I'm sure) puke or poop. 
Sherie eventually met me in her office and before she could even sit down I told her that I wanted to come in person to tell her that I had taken another job and was sorry to waste her time. Total lie! But what else was I going to say?! And then she asked me, "Oh, where will you be working?" Uh oh...I made up something about a Childcare Center on Queen Anne and bolted. 
Bullet Dodged. Peace out daycare. Having no job is better than having you.

Sunday, January 25, 2009

I walked across Ballard the other day to get coffee and decided that if I took pictures of everything it would make it more of an adventure than just a walk. I was totally right! Here's some of the pictures and the stories that go with them:



This little guy was rummaging around in some bushes and I tried to go all "urban nature" on him and take is picture. For a while I just played hide and seek with him in the bush until he made a break for it and ran across a driveway. Bold move, lil fella. He is grey and so is the driveway. Pretty sweet...


FSA can suck it! I saw this truck drive by and it made me so mad. At my old job I was in charge of ordering supplies and we switched to FSA from Costco specifically for better service. I thought I hated Costco but that was until FSA entered the picture. Lame. They don't have office supplies, their compostable cups have a weird "earth design" on them, they sent us a box of frozen fried chicken instead of toilet paper...hate it. The best thing about FSA is Sandy Lott, the woman I talked to at least twice a week on the phone. The worst thing about FSA is everything else.


Look at this crane! Can you tell what it's lifting high into the air?! It's a little cart with wheels. Pretty cool. This crane is building condos (what a surprise, Seattle) and there was lots of neat stuff near the construction site. There was a conpactor (that thing with the wheel that smoothes out the asphalt) and a backhoe, and someone was down in the sewer doing something.


I pretended to be taking a picture of the espresso machine but REALLY I was taking a picture of this guy's long long long braid. The rest of his hair was short but this braid dangled playfully from behind his ear. I like how it curls at the end.


Free bread from Great Harvest! Just when I was getting hungry, too. I like putting lots of butter on top because the butter is also free and it makes it feel like more of a special treat. 


Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Start listening to Dashboard again

Our senior class motto was "Now is the time, no regrets" or, more popularly, "Now is tha time no freakin regrets." Maybe it's because of a new year (new year new you) or because I've had all this time on my hands with not much to do but think but either way I've been thinking about regrets the last few days. Ooh this could get dangerous!
I've heard a couple of people talk lately about how they don't regret anything. Every experience and choice has contributed to who they are and if they changed the past they would change the person they have become. Good for you guys! It seems like you're being really mature and growing up and everything. I, however, regret a lot.
Sure, I believe that every choice and experience has contributed to the person I am today.  But it's hard to separate the ways I've grown from the experiences and choices that caused them. Here's an example:
In 7th grade I had a Japanese exchange student named Mayu. She lived with us for about 2 weeks during the summer and everyday there was some fun activity we all did to show the students the city and all the pleasures of America (pleasures like the water park, mountain, the filming of a local morning tv show, not any dirty pleasures). It was great because some of my other friends had exchange students too so we all got to hang out and do these fun things with cute Japanese kids.
One of our activities was going to the zoo. Super fun, plus our zoo has a train (!) that goes around behind the exhibits, over to the rose garden, and back again. A few of us REALLY wanted to take the train but didn't plan well. As we were getting on the train (like a half hour ride) I knew that we would be at least 20 minutes late. But I was 13 and didn't think of anyone but myself and the zootrain so I got on anyway. This was before cell phones so my mom had no way of knowing where we were. We got back very late and very sheepish and in tons of trouble. I felt guilty about it for weeks.
I could say that this experience taught me about responsibility, time management, and thinking of others instead of the zootrain. That's all true. But I could have learned those lessons without making my mom think I was abducted, without causing all the exchange students to be late for their snack, and without getting a lecture on responsibility from my english teacher. I regret causing hurt and guilt and fear. I don't regret what I learned but I regret the way it all went down.
I can think of lots of things I regret lately. All of them have another side, the side where I learned something, but there are regrettable parts.
I regret ditching people at the last minute or backing out of fun plans. I've learned that I need to set reasonable boundaries and only commit to plans I can keep but I regret making people feel rejected or disappointed.
I regret using people to make myself feel less lonely. I've learned that I'm lonely and that things that feel good in the moment feel pretty awful later.
I regret letting some friendships go and working too hard on others. I've learned that good friends are good friends back to you.
I regret gossiping about people. I just regret this. 
Anyway, I was talking with some friends last night (while some crazies took "ObamaShots" at the bar) and one of them said that if you don't regret things you aren't learning or growing. If you are happy with all your decisions ever then you're probably not learning anything from the bad ones. Good call, girl.
Sorry this post is so emo. I should have started a livejournal. More fun later!
Annnnn

Monday, January 19, 2009

This is the first one

So...I started a blog. Up until now, actually including now, I've had mixed feelings about bloggers and blogs so I'm kind of surprised that I've joined the "blogoshphere" (what a gross, ridiculous word). But here's why: as the title of my blog suggests I am unemployed and it's FREAKING ME OUT! This gives me something to do and, hopefully, some kind of connection to other people. That's my disclaimer and my excuse and from now on I'll try to refrain from using the word "blog" because it's stupid. Blog blog blog thats it.
I thought not having a job would kind of be like summer vacation but so far it's not. With summer vacation you know exactly when it's going to end and what you're going to be doing afterward. But, so far, being unemployed is this interminable stretch of time in front of me. I don't know what's next or when it will come. Maybe this freaks me out so much because I need too much control in my life but I don't think so. I think I'm TOTALLY normal for being unnverved by the unknown. You would be too.
Here's some things I've been doing since leaving my job:
1. Go to a coffee shop every day. This give me a chance to leave the house, a reason to get dressed, usually a short walk, and coffee! Also I bring a book or crossword or The Stranger so I have something to do. And if the barista is nice I have someone to talk to.

2. Mess around with my hair. So far I've gotten bangs and touched up my color. Plus I've learned that my hair IS long enough to french braid (yay!) and I can look just as cute as Whitney on The City if I do one of those twisty things.

3. Make a to-do list. This kind of accomplishes a few goals because it helps me get organized, takes up at least 10 minutes, and then I can cross off things I do during the day and feel really productive. Here's a sample to-do list:
Call Rico, the insurance guy
Send that email
Go to Fred Meyer
Empty the dishwasher
Take a shower

It's good to put little tasks on to-do lists because you feel better when you can cross a lot of things off in one day.

4. Watch TV online. This one is dangerous because it can eat up most of the day and it accomplishes almost nothing. But so far I've watched every season of 30 Rock, re-watched the first season of Project Runway, caught up on Grey's Anatomy from this season (Denny again? Seriously.), and watched every webisode of Quarterlife, this weird online show about a 20something who blogs about her life. Hmm...
That's what I've done so far. It's been almost 2 weeks without a job and we'll see how much longer it lasts. Thanks for reading and feel free to comment if you want.

Annnnn