Friday, October 8, 2010

For Those Who Follow....

I didn't fail to stick to my previous statement, I just did it somewhere else.

Basically I started a whole new site, because it provided a better format for what I was trying to do, and provided the flexibility I want to possibly change things up in the future.

So to visit the new home of "Makes My Life" just go ahead and follow the link below:


Hope you enjoy!

Friday, September 24, 2010

Never Too Late

MML #38: Deciding it's never too late to stick to a commitment.

Starting Monday, I will post something for every weekday. Be excited!

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Staying Home

MML #37: Staying at home for the evening watching movies with my mom.

Thursday, June 3, 2010

The Beauty of a Bath

MML #36: Taking a bath

Nothing will make you miss the sweet relaxation that comes from filling a tub to the brim with hot water and tons of bubbles and then sinking in and allowing all the tension to leave your body quite like living in a dorm. I've been home for three weeks now and I think I've only taken about three showers - the rest of them have been baths.

Bliss. Pure bliss.

Monday, May 3, 2010

Things Other People Love

MML #35: Finding out that someone else loves the same things I do.

So, I had two main inspirations that went into making this blog:

1) After hearing me say "that makes my life" all of the time, a friend suggested I make a blog of all of those things I say that about.

2) This blog. It's absolutely wonderful, and if you ever feel like checking out my tumblr (which I haven't updated much lately, but basically just consists of many random bits and pieces of my life over the past year) you'll see that I've reblogged many of her posts, because they just make me smile. So I thought it was about time to give some credit, since that blog is infinitely superior to mine.

Morning Rain

MML #34: The way morning smells, especially when it has rained the night before or is about to.

Seriously, I need to start waking up before ten more often. That smell makes me all kinds of happy.

Saturday, May 1, 2010

When Work is Good

MML #33: Doing work that I'm genuinely interested in.

It's a beautiful Saturday afternoon here in Virginia, and yesterday was equally wonderful. The sun is shining. The birds are chirping. Outside the window that I've positioned myself by, I can hear the peaceful splash of the fountain in the courtyard. All of it is letting me know that after one of the longest and coldest winters that I've experienced in my as of yet brief lifetime, Spring is finally here, and Summer is rapidly approaching. A week from tomorrow, my father and sister will arrive to visit, and two days later we will depart for the 23-hour drive home to Texas. Spring fever has officially taken over, and all of my instincts beg me to go lay outside in the sun, warm my skin, and maybe even take a nap or go for a canoe ride on the lake.

My instincts will have to wait, though, because this coming week marks the beginning of finals, and as every current or former college student knows, that means my time is not my own. Yesterday, today, and the next two days are dedicated to (as well as a series of smaller projects and assignments that make up my to-do list) completing an ten-page research essay for my Stardom and Hollywood Cinema class.

And I don't mind it one bit.

It's exactly the kind of assignment I love: specific in the requirements demanded of me and on a subject I'm interested in. The class itself is about examining the lives and roles of stars and the impact they have had in the past and continue to have on our culture, as well as the film industry. For our final project, we were asked to examine the lives of two specific actors/actresses of our choosing (of the same gender): one from the 20s-50s and one contemporary star. After providing basic biographical information, we are to research their roles in the media, do a critical analysis of one movie for each actor, and then apply the readings we have done over the course of the semester to the actors' careers.

I'm not sure how that sounds to everyone else, but I'm completely fascinated by the topic. I chose James Dean and Heath Ledger, and I'm taking a close look at many of their similarities: brief careers, dedication to the craft, peaceful childhood, major success after death. Amongst other things, I'm most enjoying the quotes I've found from both men, so I think that's what I'll end this with.

"To grasp the full significance of life is the actor's duty; to interpret it his problem; and to express it his dedication. Being an actor is the loneliest thing in the world. You are all alone with your concentration and imagination, and that's all you have. Being a good actor isn't easy. Being a man is even harder. I want to be both before I'm done." ~James Dean

"My parents left my soul and spirit untouched. They gave me nothing but confidence and love. And I think that’s all you need. As long as you’re surrounded by love, it gives you the confidence to do anything.” ~Heath Ledger

Monday, April 19, 2010

Funny Farewells

MML #32: Having a roommate who loves you so much that she willingly admits to missing your clothing.

Last night I was packing up my winter clothes and Emily exclaimed “goodbye!” to my sweatshirt.

Apparently it was just instinctive, but when I got her to explain she basically just said she realized she wouldn’t see it for several months and was sad.

Adorable? Yes

Creepy? Yeah, that too.

Lol. Good times.

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Birthday Fun

MML #31: Going out with friends for birthday celebrating!

It's Wednesday, known as being a crappy day of the week, and I've been feeling slightly ill all day. But I don't care, because tonight I'm going out with the girls to belatedly celebrate my birthday! (Which was two days ago.) We're going out to Olive Garden and I'm SUPER excited about having some delicious food and some chocolate dessert.

Yay for birthdays and friends!

Friday, March 26, 2010

Silliness

MML #30: Receiving emails from my future self.

This is totally legit. Really. My future self is awesome. (Though coincidentally sounds a lot like my roommate.)

"Dear past Vicki,

This is future you, sending you a message from, you guessed it, the future! Things are very different here in the future. You survived sophomore year, and went on to have lots of fun in Scotland with your bfff (best friend forever in the future) Emily. It was there that you met your soulmate, got married and had four kids, all before returning for Christmas break! It was quite the whirlwind romance, and our parents were quite surprised (as was Emily. She would have felt left out except the same thing happened to her after she found Hogwarts). Anyways, the reason I'm writing this is to give you a dire warning!!!! Prepare yourself, because I'm risking everything to break the space time continuum and bring you this very important message:

Log out of your email when you print something off in the computer lab!!!! I'm warning you now, because in the future someone sends you a very silly email pretending to be you from the future. Yeah, it could be bad. So please be more careful in the future, for both our sakes!

Lots of love,
Future Vicki

P.S. Try and make sure you don't murder Emily, even if it looks like she might leave you. It was really messy cleaning up her body and I don't want you having to go through the same thing.

P.P.S. The stupid chapel printer is broken, just for future reference. so if, say, Emily were to be printing stuff off, she'd have to go somewhere else."

Emily Dickinson

MML #29: Rediscovering how much I love Emily Dickinson poems.

Seriously. She was the original emo, and I love her for it. One of my friends is a music composition major, and this semester is working on a chorus piece based on literature. I passively mentioned Emily Dickinson in a conversation a month or two ago, and then over spring break I found out that he unknowingly picked my favorite poem for inspiration. Read it - it's awesome.


I should not dare to leave my friend,
Because—because if he should die
While I was gone, and I—too late—
Should reach the heart that wanted me;

If I should disappoint the eyes
That hunted, hunted so, to see,
And could not bear to shut until
They “noticed” me—they noticed me;

If I should stab the patient faith
So sure I ’d come—so sure I ’d come,
It listening, listening, went to sleep
Telling my tardy name,—

My heart would wish it broke before,
Since breaking then, since breaking then,
Were useless as next morning’s sun,
Where midnight frosts had lain!

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Junior Week

MML #28: When people dress up in silly costumes.

My school has a lot of awesome, occasionally silly traditions. One of my favorites is called "Junior Week," when each of the seniors picks a junior (secretly, without revealing their identity) and for one week assigns that junior a different costume to wear each day. At the end of the week, there's Junior Banquet, when the juniors put on their class rings for the first time and their secret senior is revealed. We have senior robes here, which are passed down to each class, and that's what the juniors work all week to receive. That's a whole other tradition that makes me smile.

Anyway, here are a few of today's favorite costumes:


Katelyn as the Queen of Hearts

Annie as Eeyore and Elizabeth as Jose Cuervo

Everyone from Up!

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Old Fashioned

MML #27: Gender Roles

(Note: This has been running through my head since a discussion I had with Annie last week. You can see more of that at #25.)

Alright, before any feminists start throwing things at me, let me give a little disclaimer: I am not the type of girl to constantly have a boyfriend or always need a man in her life. I attend a women's college, and I completely support any woman's right to have her own career and make more money than her husband, if she wishes. I also support any gay person's right to marry the person of their choosing.

Have I covered it all? No one will hate me now? Yay!

Okay, so that said, I kind of adore gender roles when it comes to marriage. Not to say that I think that a wife exists to do her husband's bidding, or that I think something as complicated and difficult about the ultimate commitment that is marriage can be simplified down to gender roles.

But I'm a stereotypical wife in the making. I've pretty much been that way since I was born.

Examples:
I enjoy cooking and baking, and setting out a nice dining table with food. I like hosting parties. I don't like cleaning, but when it needs to be done I'm really good at it, as well as organizing. I know how to do basic knitting, crocheting, and sewing; and I've known how to tie a man's tie for him since I was about seven years old. I'm crafty, and I love tutoring kids and helping them with their homework. I'm good at keeping up with birthday cards and I can write an awesome thank you note. I also love decorating my house for the holidays. As far as stereotypical wifely duties go, I've kind of got it covered.

So is it completely terrible that I find myself having stereotypical expectations of men? Or at least ones that I'm interested in? For instance, I know my basic way around a car (checking oil, air conditioning fluid, changing a battery, etc.) but if something ever went wrong I could definitely get taken advantage of by a mechanic. I've never mowed a lawn in my entire life, unless you count the one or two times my grandfather let me use his ride-along mower, which I will admit was completely fun. I can change a lightbulb, but I don't know anything about plumbing and I can't (/won't) snake a drain. Cooking food on the grill terrifies me, and though I know I to start a fire, I shy away from that one two. And I cannot for the life of me kill a bug, let alone any other kind of house pest.

My point? I support women's rights. I'm glad I get to vote. And I'm slightly envious of any mechanically skilled, lawn-mowing, bug-killing woman. So I'm tired of feminist women telling me that I'm ridiculous just because I'm a little more traditional than they might be. I mean, traditions exist for a reason.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Shared Suffering

MML #26: "How to Become a Writer Or, Have You Earned This Cliche?" by Lorrie Moore

This is from a collection of Lorrie Moore's short stories entitled "Self Help" and rather than bog you down with precisely why I thought this short story was awesome, I'm just going to type up every single quote that made me happy. (Annie already heard most of these because I kept reading them aloud to her while we were at the White Hart Café yesterday.)

"First, try to be something, anything, else. A movie star/astronaut. A movie star/missionary. A movie star/kindergarten teacher. President of the World. Fail miserably. It is best if you fail at an early age - say 14. Early, critical disillusionment is necessary so that at 15 you can write long haiku sequences about thwarted desire."

"Apply to college as a child psychology major."

"Decide that you like college life. In your dorm you meet many nice people. some are smarter than you. And some, you notice, are dumber than you. You will continue, unfortunately, to view the world in exactly these terms for the rest of your life."

"Decide that perhaps you should stick to comedies. Start dating someone who is funny, someone who has what in high school you called a 'really great sense of humor' and what your creative writing class calls 'self-contempt giving rise to comic form.'"

"You spend too much time slouched and demoralized. Your boyfriend suggests bicycling. Your roommate suggests a new boyfriend. You are said to be self-mutilating and losing weight, but you continue writing. The only happiness you have is writing something new, in the middle of the night, armpits damp, heart pounding, something no one has yet seen. You have only those brief, fragile, untested moments of exhilaration when you know: you are a genius."

"Insist that you are not very interested in any one subject at all, that you are interested in he music of language, that you are interested in - in - syllables, because they are the atoms of poetry, the cells of the mind, the breath of the soul. Begin to feel woozy. Stare into your plastic wine cup."

"Begin to wonder what you do write about. Or if you have anything to say. Or if there even is such a thing as a thing to say. Limit these thoughts to no more than 10 minutes a day, like sit-ups, they can make you thin."

"You will read somewhere that all writing has to do with one's genitals. Don't dwell on this. It will make you nervous."

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Quotabiity

MML #25: Saying something that makes no sense or is totally random, and only noticing because a friend is around to point it out.

This happens to me a lot, unsurprisingly. It kind of makes me wonder how many weird things I say when I don't have a friend around to point out how little sense I'm making.

Obligatory question: "Vicki, does this mean you talk to yourself?"

Well, vague person I created for the sake of answering a question that in reality wasn't asked and therefore meaning I don't actually have to own up to this fact: Yes, that's exactly what this means. Some people are capable of thinking thoughts in their head. I don't understand how to do this, so I think my thoughts out loud or on paper. But enough about that.

So I was walking with Annie to her room today and we were talking about how the elevator in her building has been broken for a long time now. Since we both live on the third floor of our respective dorms, I can imagine how bothersome that would get, but then I decided it was important to add:

"Though, some days I'll start at the basement and go up the three flights of stairs just for a little bit of exercise because I feel like I've eaten like a whore."

I continued talking until I noticed Annie looking at me like I was insane. Then, after exchanging a glance that said, "Yes, I did just say 'eat like a whore' and no, I don't have a clue what that means" we both promptly burst into a fit a giggles. Good times.

My other quote of the day took place a few hours later when I was telling Annie about how I never expected to buy a car without a man present (like I did this past Fall), because I figured that I would always have my dad or a husband or a brother-in-law or a friend to offer me expert car opinions. Then, after realizing that many men from our generation actually know little more about cars than we do, we started discussing the injustice of it all. Warning: the conversation got extremely sexist from this point on. I honestly don't care.

So my/our rant went something like this:

"We know how to cook. We knit. We have sewing skills. We work as event coordinators, so that means we can throw a successful dinner party. We've tutored and babysat, so we have some experience with children. We're even business minors and can manage a budget. Is it so much to ask that they know how cars work?"

And I, getting very worked up in my standard Vicki-fashion, decided it was great idea to yell, right outside the library and in the middle of campus so plenty of people could hear me, "I mean, I SCRAPBOOK!"

*pause for more blushing and giggling*

That was my day.

Monday, March 8, 2010

Freud

MML #24: When my roommate follows my advice.

I realize this is my second post in a row about Emily, but this amused me way too much to ignore. Emily was struggling with writing an essay about Freud, and so I told her to take ten minutes and vent her frustration into a Microsoft Word document before going back to working. This was the result (inappropriate language warning):

"Dear Freud,
You are a ridiculous man who obviously does not know what he’s talking about. If sex is an instinct it should be simple, not complicated by a thousand different metaphors. Why can’t you be clear? Then I could form a cogent argument against you, but instead you keep slipping between my fingers you dirty bastard. I think I know what to say to you and then you come up with a sentence strong enough to counter my objections but ambiguous enough that I can’t base any of my arguments off of it. You oily sonofabitch. This rant isn’t working Vicki. I just keep thinking of insults in fact it’s very difficult to keep curse words out of these sentences. Ok not even gonna try. FUCK SHIT DAMNIT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! this paper is the only thing standing between me and fucking break and it refuses to budge. I’ve reread an entire book and taken 20 pages of notes and then written a cogent outline~!!!!hqwjekgfbskbgkldrah

Jfsdlakgbkjrqegbkh
Gbdsrbsagh;wqegbghgjbdsfklbagjbagkhlad FUCK!!!!!!!!!!!"

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Emails

MML #23: When my roommate sends me an email. While I'm in the room.

Emily is working on two essays for a scholarship, so she sent this to me, her mom, and stepdad earlier:

"Hi everyone!

So these are the rough drafts of my essays for the honors scholarship. I must emphasize the word rough, especially in the case of essay b (I think it comes across as a little bitter at times, but let me know). Anyways, it'd be awesome if you could look them over for grammar and content, and get them back to me ASAP. I love all of you and I miss you (but not you Vicki, you're sitting like five feet away from me)

Thanks,
Shlembernia (Emily to you Vicki)"

This made me happy.

Monday, March 1, 2010

Mike Lombardo

MML #22: Listening to Mike Lombardo on my iPod.

He's awesome. The song I'm listening to is "Hey Molly" which you can listen to at the link I'll put below. I also just bought his album Fordham Sessions. Mike Lombardo is a recent grad of Berklee School of Music, and is awesome enough to put all of his music online so you can listen to it as often as you like for free. Only one of his albums (Fordham Sessions, which has my favorite song "Teach Me to Fly") has a set price - a reasonable ten dollars - and then rest are "name your price" with no minimum, so if you want you can even download most of his music for free, though my suggestion would be to give a little and support a young artist.

Here's the link, go listen!

Sunday, February 28, 2010

When You Believe

MML #21: When I'm sitting in a cafe or am shopping and the perfect song plays over the speakers.

The current song of the moment is a cover of "When You Believe" and is one of my favorite songs from the movie "The Prince of Egypt" which I've been wanting to watch for a couple of weeks now. Plus it's a Sunday, and I've been hooked on every Christian song I possess as of late. Lent has that effect on me. : )

Which reminds me, how AWESOME is it that Barnes and Noble is playing Christian music on a Sunday? I mean, it's quiet so I don't think it would bother any non-Christians, but it's nice. Yay for going to a bookstore less than a mile away from a Christian campus.

Dexter

MML #20: Dexter

I don't really have a long or interesting blog post about this, but I finally got around to watching the last three episodes of season four of Dexter, which airs on Showtime (meaning I had to watch it alternately on the internet or at Emily's house). I'm not going to spoil any plots points, but all I have to say is that I never thought I could watch a show that would cause me to actually root for the serial killer, but that's exactly what has happened. I suppose I can reconcile my moral compass in the same way Dexter does: he only kills killers.

For those of you with Netflix, the first two seasons are available for watching instantly. I'm constantly impressed with how great both the writing and acting is, and am always pleasantly surprised by the new and interesting ways the show keeps viewers hooked each season. Put it on your list, it's definitely worth watching.

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Ukulele

MML #19: Having Gina serenade me with some Damien Rice on ukulele.

And she's in France right now! Modern technology is amazing. I think I'm really going to appreciate iChat and Skype this fall when I'm abroad in Scotland.

Tiny Chicken Disease

MML #18: Being able to identify separate phases of sickness.

Is it starting to sound like I enjoy being sick? I don't. But I do admit that once I accepted that I couldn't really accomplish anything while sick, my stress levels went down significantly. Of course, they'll be abnormally high in a day or two to make up for it, but I'll worry about that then.

All I'm saying is that I like that, despite being sick for several days, at least there is a certain amount of progress that can be found. And if there is progress that means it will be over soon, right?

Also, I appreciate that thanks to Hank Green I now have a great metaphor for my illness: tiny chickens. It's a reference from one of there first videos, which you can watch here, if you like.

Pre-sickness Evening: Very tired. Headache. Welcome to college, what else is new? Apparently this is when the tiny chickens invaded my brain.
Sick Day #1: Woke up dehydrated, then realized throat hurt. Head began to actually throb. I suspect that this is when the tiny chicken eggs were laid in my brain.
Sick Day #2: Coughing. Tiny chicken eggs hatched, thus, the runny nose.
Sick Day #3: Today. Cough mostly gone, but excessive sneezing. I'm assuming this is my body's natural response to the tiny chickens, attempting to expel them from my brain.

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Sick Days

MML #17: Having people to talk to when I'm sick.

I know this seems kind of silly, and obviously I hate being sick, but despite the fact that since the minute I woke up this morning I've been able to little more than sit in a chair, cough, and breathe abnormally loudly, today hasn't been so horrible. I took the day to try and recuperate so that I can face the rest of what looks like to be a very heavy week, and in the meantime caught up with a few tv shows as well as my parents and a few friends I hadn't talked to in awhile. It was nice. You know, aside from the annoying head cold.

Being sick sucks, and I remember how miserable I was the first time I got sick away from home, without my mother there to take care of me. But there's something empowering about realizing that I can handle being sick all by myself, and something comforting about discovering that I really don't have to.

Friday, February 19, 2010

Barnes and Noble

MML #16: Going with a friend to Barnes and Noble and sitting in the café for hours, reading, writing, chatting, and getting some work done.

(NOTE: Reading, writing, and getting work done are all optional.)

And I got to do it twice this week!

I go to school in the middle of rural Virginia, so let's just face facts: there isn't a ton to do out here. Our campus is small and cut off from the surrounding area, endearingly and appropriately called "The Pink Bubble" by its inhabitants. My sister calls it "Beauxbatons" because it is pretty and small, in the middle of the mountains, has a lake, horseback riding is really big here, and it's an all-girls school. Of course, as any true Harry Potter fan knows, Beauxbatons is not actually an all-girls school in the books, only the movies.

Anyway, the weather has been particularly bad lately (not to say I don't like snow, but I dislike not being able to drive off campus due to ice-covered roads), so I haven't done this as much as I like, but one of my favorite weekly rituals is grabbing a friend and chilling out at Barnes and Noble for an afternoon or evening. This probably isn't terribly surprising, seeing as I'm an English and Creative Writing major who loves coffee, books, and talking. Me and a friend (Annie on Wednesday and Emily today) hop in the car and get off campus, bringing enough work to do so that we feel less guilty, but for the most part we just get sucked into a series of random discussions, ranging in their levels of depth and seriousness. Topics this week have included: death, gossip, teachers, dreams, and lies we plan to tell our children.

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Roommate Bonding

MML #15: Realizing that my foot is the same length as my roommate's leg.

So, after hanging up with a friend over video chat, Emily and I were unusually awake for it being one in the morning. For whatever reason, I pondered out loud whether or not my foot would be the same length as Emily's calf, since she's barely five feet tall, and at five foot nine, I have fairly large feet.

We figured the only way to determine this was, rather than simply measure my foot and then her calf and compare the measurements, to place my foot up against her leg. I should mention that Emily was already laying on the top bunk. Again, instead of having Emily get down, we figured I should just try to lift my foot over five feet in the air.

Just in case anyone is wondering: No. I am not that flexible.

Finally I sat in a chair and she hug her leg down and we determined that yes, my foot is the same length as her calf. I wanted to post this funny fact as my facebook status, but Emily argued because people already think we are weird roommates. Her words were, "Without context, why would your foot ever be pressed up against my leg?"

Giggles ensued. So I posted it here, since I'm pretty sure no one at school reads this.

Figure Skating

MML #14: Watching figure skating on television.

I suppose I could have said live, but I've only ever seen it on television, so that's all that really makes my life. My mom and sister and I used to love watching figure skating when I was a little kid. I remember I used to know the names of all the major US skaters, and in the winter we would watch competitions and exhibition performances all the time. For whatever reason that little family tradition (along with a lot of traditions, sadly) never really followed us to Texas, perhaps because the southern states are less prone to broadcast figure skating competitions. Watching the Olympics, however, I can't believe that I managed to forget how much I love watching this sport. The best people make it look so easy that for a second you forget that most of us can barely skate forward on ice.

Monday, February 15, 2010

Miss Pettigrew

MML #13: Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day

"A good, solid man. You would call him dull, no doubt, but he smiled whenever he saw me and we could've built a life on that."
~*~
Joe: Forgive the intrusion. I'm glad to see you're safe.
Guinevere: Oh yes, quite safe.
Joe: Am I right in thinking you're no longer employed, Miss Pettigrew?
Guinevere: Quite correct.
Joe: So you're free?
Guinevere: Quite free. Might you be looking for a social secretary?
Joe: No, absolutely not.
Guinevere: Oh.
Joe: I'm looking for you.
Guinevere: Me?
Joe: I've been looking for you all night, and I believe, all of my life. If you'll have me.
[
Miss Pettigrew is stunned in silence]
Joe: A nod of the head will do me fine.
[
Miss Pettigrew nods]
Joe: And I am, at a stroke, the happiest man in London.
~*~
"Not everything comes along just when we want it. There are times when decisions just have to be made, or you certainly will miss out."
~*~
"I am not an expert on love, I am an expert on the lack of love, Delysia, and that is a fate from which I wish most fervently to save you."
~*~
[after Delysia has refused to sing]
Michael: She said no.
Nick: What, and she does what you say?
Michael: Never once, as a matter of fact, but that's not the point.
~*~
"I'm done with it. I'm going back to gentlemen's hosiery. You know where you are with an honest pair of socks."

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Valentine's Day

MML #12: Valentine's Day

Valentine's Day. Single's Awareness Day. Hallmark Heart Day.

Call it whatever you want, but I have officially decided that, despite the fact that I have never been anything but single on this day (or any other day for that matter), I love Valentine's Day. And why shouldn't I?

Every year single people dread this holiday, and even some of us who are fortunate enough to have a significant other dread it as well, because there seems to be this idea of pressure related to this holiday. But I have decided no more. Valentine's Day is about love, pure and simple. And love - if not romance - is something that I have a great abundance of in my life. I have several very close and good friends, as well as a large extended family that I adore, spread out all over the country and the globe.

No. Love is not something I long for. It is something I already have, and something I choose to give. And as for romance... I'm going to keep my eyes open and trust that God has a plan for me (and hopefully will fill me in on it soon, haha).

Everyone have a great day!

Inside Jokes

MML #11: Thomas Freiseis having a life.

I hate to spam my blog with things other people won't understand, but I promised to put this here.

On a completely related note, I've been having a blast hanging out in Richmond this weekend with Emily (aka Best Roommate Ever) and her family and friends. I'm also starting to get really excited about going to Scotland next fall, which is getting increasingly more real and likely by the day.

My next four weekends:
1) Party and VMI A Capella group on campus.
2) Emily's play performance and Creative Writing Conference
3) Winter Mixer (aka BOYS!)
4) TEXAS! : )

I'm pretty excited.

P.S. MML #11.2: Being at the "hugging level" with a new friend and having them announce it. Lol.

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Weight Loss

MML #10: Realizing that deciding to eat healthier really was worth it.


Those two pictures are almost exactly a year apart. : )


Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Life in Literature

MML #9: Reading something in a story that you completely relate to and understand.

And it's a little crazy, because for a second you can't believe that someone has shared the exact same thoughts as you. It's like when you are meeting a person for the first time and you're realizing that they are your brain twin (but that's a topic for another time).

We've just finished reading Alice Munro's collection of short stories entitled Too Much Happiness and I have absolutely loved it. There were two particular passages that I read and thought "I totally get that!" and I adore that feeling and aspire to pass that same thing on to readers as well one day.

The first one was from the story called "Some Women":

“I began to understand that there were certain talkers – certain girls – whom people liked to listen to, not because of what they, the girls, had to say, but because of the delight they took in saying it. A delight in themselves, a shine on their faces, a conviction that whatever they were telling about was remarkable and that they themselves could not help but give pleasure.”

My eyes almost fell out of my skull when I read this, simply with the pure shock that I felt as if I had never read something so true in my life. In less than a hundred words Alice Munro took something that I have found myself never quite able to explain: that I love talking. That I always have something to say about the smallest and silliest things because sometimes those are the things I find most entertaining. And if I am entertained by those things, surely my friends would be as well, right?

It is funny that this story has come up now, since any of my friends will tell you that over the past week I’ve been obsessing a little bit about the fact that I talk too much. I’ve been pestering them to make sure that I don’t annoy them. Basically, I’ve been talking too much about the fact that I talk too much.

The second one was from the novella "Too Much Happiness":

(Background information: This is a story based on Sophia Kovalevsky, the first female mathematics professor in Europe from the end of the 19th century. Maksim is a fairly harsh and unyielding man that she loves and hopes to marry.)

"She is thinking of Maksim. Would Maksim ever in his life board such a train as this? She imagines her head lying comfortably on his broad shoulder - though the truth is he would not care for that, in public. His coat of rich expensive cloth, its smell of money and comfort. Good things he believes he has a right to expect and a duty to maintain, even though he is a Liberal unwelcome in his own country. That marvelous assurance he has, that her father had, you can feel it when you are a little girl snuggled up in their arms and you want it all your life. More delightful of course if they love you, but comforting even if it is only a kind of ancient noble past that they have made, a bond that has been signed, necessarily even if not enthusiastically, for your protection."

The image of the girl snuggled up in her father's arms is really what got to me most. Remembering how my favorite place in the world as a small child was my dad's lap, and recalling that even then I knew that one day I would grow too big to fit in his arms, and I dreaded that a day like that would ever come. And then realizing that there is such a truth to the fact that somewhere inside all women, whether we are clueless nineteen-year-olds in the 21st century or brilliant mathematicians from the 19th century, there is a weakness. No matter how successful we are or independent we make ourselves, there is something inside of us that desires men, desires partnership, desires protection, and we value all of that so much that we will sacrifice - or at the very least pause to consider sacrificing - everything else in the name of getting back that thing we all had has little girls.

Endings

MML #8: When things are over.

Especially when it's something you've been expecting to be over for a long time. Like graduating high school. And for a second you're a little thrown off because as much as you've been waiting for whatever it is to be over or anticipating the ending, you can't actually predict what will happen next. So then you're in limbo for a little bit while you let go of the thing that is over and grab on to something that is new, which sounds scary, but mostly it's nice. It's a bit of a relief.

Because, really, who wants to stay in high school forever?

(P.S. Sorry I've been MIA. I plan to fix that!)

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

International Calls

MML #7: When you get to talk to a friend who is currently in another country because modern technology is amazing.

Her name is Gina. She is awesome.

She was trying to surprise my roommate, Emily, but I couldn't get Emily to get off her butt to answer the phone. So Gina and I pretended that Gina was Emily's friend Thomas. Emily was very confused.

Quote by Gina:

"Pretend I'm a boy. I, uh...like nachos. And action movies. Yeah."

Monday, February 1, 2010

No Classes

MML #6: Waking up on Monday to realize you have been given an unexpected three-day weekend.

So we had some snowfall Friday night and most of Saturday. And that's a bit of an understatement, because we had over a foot of snow. My childhood was spent in Illinois and I spend at least one week every winter in Wisconsin, so no: snow is not that unfamiliar to me even if I have lived in Texas for ten years and here in Virginia we tend to have very mild winters. But it's been a LONG time since I was able to put on a coat, gloves, a hat, and boots and just enjoy walking on fluffy snow, generally feeling like I was trapped in the most amazing snow globe ever. (Background on me: I collected snow globes as a kid. I don't make this statement lightly.) I went sledding with some friends and completely wiped out while sharing a tube with a friend, and as I was flung through the air and rolling around in the snow before finally coming a halt face-down in white, I couldn't help giggling with the kind of overwhelming joy that only comes from pleasing your inner child. My hat hat flown off and was completely soaked, snow had gotten through the crevices of my clothes and adhered to my skin, and within seconds my hair was frozen in chunks by all of the snow in it. And I just didn't care.

The rest of the weekend was spent keeping warm inside and watching movies and appreciating all the white as I slipped from one building to the other any time I had to go outside. Last night I found out that my morning class today would be cancelled, and then after sleeping in this morning I went to get lunch with my roommate, where a friend informed me that my teacher for my afternoon class has cancelled all of her classes for the week.

*Pause for time to step away from laptop and rejoice in the form of a happy dance*

So I unexpectedly have more free time than expected. The only downside is that my poor little car is still buried under a foot of snow, so I can't go into town and sit in Barnes and Noble and drink some coffee while browsing for a good book, which is what I would absolutely love to do right about now.

Cereal

MML #5: Eating cereal for dinner. Or lunch. Or ever.

It sounds like a joke, but I'm completely serious. Cereal is so undervalued, at least by me. Perhaps the rest of the world has loved cereal with great abundance all of this time, and I simply missed the memo. Who knows. All I am saying is cereal is awesome, and it solves so many of the eating dilemmas I face as a college student:

Nothing good to eat for dinner? Frosted Flakes. When you overfill your bowl because you can't properly work the dispenser (...because I've heard this happens to some people *cough*) just nibble at the surplus while chatting with your friends. No spoon necessary. Just when the consistency is getting a little repetitive, the bowl should be empty enough to add milk. At this point I suggest using a spoon.

No time to go to the cafeteria for lunch? Frosted Mini Wheats. Eat them out of the box. They're tasty and have tons of fiber, so you'll know when you're full and you won't be hungry again until dinner.

Late-night studying fuel? Multi-grain cheerios. Fill up a small ziplock bag and munch until thoughts begin running through your head again.

Filling and not fattening dessert/snack? Cheerios, frozen light cool whip, frozen berries. Mix and enjoy.

The best part of it all? Cereal is cheap, if you consider how many servings you get per box. And it's so tasty that you will consume it well before it ever comes close to its expiration date. (That said my school is convinced that you can mix any almost-expired cereal with melted marshmallows and turn it into yummy dessert bars. I can't say they're wrong.)