Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Yes We Can #3

The instructions are as follows:


1. Submerge your Chia in water for 1 hour.




I didn't expect this step for some reason. But it gave me a little pleasure to think that if I submerged my Obama, and I forgot about it for days, it would crumble into clay dust in the bucket.








The bucket was swiped from the kitchen. It was a relief no one noticed me walking to my office with a bucket of water. Explaining would have only increased my feelings of guilt for spending work time on this project.





This is my favorite picture so far:










He looks so peaceful, submerged in the bucket.




2. In a separate container, mix 2 teaspoons of Chia Seeds and 1/4 cup of water. Allow to sit for 1 hour, stirruing mixture occasionally to moisten the seeds. The seeds will form a gel-like paste which will help seeds adhere to your Chia Obama.





Also, I thought I'd wash yesterday's breakfast dish. Oatmeal.




After an hour, the Obama head looked basically the same, but the seeds were positively gelatenous. As per usual, I did not really read the directions thoroughly, so I did not mix the seed goo during the soaking hour. I think it'll be fine.



3. Fill Chia Obama with water and place in drip tray provided. Apply seed mixture to the grooved surfaces of your Chia, using your fingers, or a small knife or spoon. Take care not to clump seeds. You may not use all of the seed mixture.



I was toying with different ideas regarding a Chia goatee or Chia 'stache. In the end, I went with Chia ear-hair as it was the option in which I had the most confidence. Keep your fingers crossed.




The seed smearing process was a bit messier than I had anticipated. And because it was so gooey, I felt more like I was inseminating Chia Obama rather than sowing seeds on his head. The seed goo was not super easy to handle, but I was pleased by how it adhered to the terraces in Obama's head.




And now we wait...

Yes We Can #2

The contents of the Chia box are simple. A plastic tray, chia seeds, minimal instructions, and of course, the clay statue.




Here are some close-ups of my statue:


















He looks Barack-ish. Not too far off. If you can't see, under his name it says, "44th President, USA".

























I like the "Yes We Can" on either side. Inspiration!


The back of his head is interesting. It looks like terrace agriculture.

Yes We Can #1

I've never received a Chia Pet as a gift before. I've always wondered whether I'd enjoy one, but of course, I don't believe one should buy a chia pet for oneself.


This year was my year. A friend got my name in a Secret Santa, and she was the one to gift me with this flaural responsibility. Not only is it a Chia Pet, it is a Chia OBAMA. I'm honored. To maximize enjoyment, I thought I'd share the experience via this blog that no one reads. Photos included.


While travelling home from Topeka, KS, I decided not to pack my Chia Obama in my suitcase. Instead, I took it as a carry on. When going through security at the Kansas City, MO airport, the X-ray security lady asked, "Who is the statue of?" I couldn't conceive she was speaking to me until I remembered what was in my bag. "Oh, that's a Chia Obama," I replied. "Yeah, I thought those were a joke at first." "Me too, until I got one for myself," and with that, I felt my sense of connection to Chia Obama blooming like the sprouts soon to be growing from his head.

Not sure if you can tell, but at the bottom of the box it says, "Chia Obama 'Determined'". This begs the question, "What other Chia Obamas are available?" Chia Obama "Goofy"? Chia Obama "Bummed"? I'll save that google for later.

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Are you a TIGER?


Most of the time I love crazy people.


Last night I stopped at Cafe Abir for a cappuccino on my way to tutoring (I tutor a 16 year old girl every Wednesday). I've been going there for 11 years now, on and off. For the entire time, a man has been working there who, as the years go by, has slipped deeper and deeper into annoying insanity. Cafe Abir is connected to a sushi restaurant and a sake store. Since the sake store opened, I believe he's been annexed to that area for its lack of customers. Yesterday, however, he was in the actual cafe.


He's a tiny man, with an English accent worn smooth by too much time in the States. A few years ago, he dedicated himself to growing out the wiry halo of hair remaining on his head. A miserable pony tail has since sprouted from the base of his skull. It's the kind I fantasize cutting off with a clean snip. Lucky for the world of male pony tails, you can't just cut one off in the clean snip and slink away into the shadows unnoticed. You really have to work to cut one off. I've seen it done on What Not To Wear, and noted it in the "Things I can't do" section of my brain.


When I walked up to the counter, he was being verbose and loud with a couple he clearly knew from previous orders. Every sentence was accompanied by big sweeping motions of his arms and hands. His accent was heavier and more Renn Faire-ish. Actually, he was speaking his own brand of Ye Olde English. You probably know, Renn Faire people confuse and embarrass me. I try to avoid them. He also sounded a little like Stewie from Family Guy, now that I think of it.


While he was taking his time writing on a paper cup to be used for the couple's order, they walked away. He turned to me and said, "What do you want, WOMAN?" I could have played along. It was my choice, at that point. But screw that. I suddenly found myself in shanking mode.


"Ah, I'll have a large non fat cappucino," said with death lasers coming out of my eyes.


"OH! You're a TIGER! GRRR!! Are you a TIGER?? Is that your BIRTH year??" he asked while making one of those cat scratching motions WAY too close to my boobs. He was referring to the Detroit Tigers hoodie I was wearing. Goddamn it, why don't I carry mace?


"Are you actually ready to take my order?"


"No, not really." And he continued to write on the cup from the last order. I swear to god he was holding it up like Hamlet holding up Yorick's skull.


"Well, why don't you let me know when you're ready." He was visibly disappointed I didn't want to play his little game and that I was starting to be a bitch about it. What I really wanted was to be anonymous-coffee-orderer so that I could get to tutoring on time.


"Are you having a bad DAY?" he asked in Renn Faire voice. I really hate when people piss me off, then blame my day for it. My day was just fine. There was nothing wrong with my day.


"No, my day was great. You're just driving me nuts." He was almost speechless. But not quite. At that point he went into mock-employee mode asking me what I wanted and being snidely courteous about everything in his hammed up accent. His face needed punching.


He returned my change, and I walked away. "You're welcome!" I was just so glad to be away from him, I could not care. I waited for my cappuccino for 10 minutes while he made a big deal of making the couple's drink first, then taking his sweet time to make mine. I knew my cappuccino was going to suck, and I considered just walking away from the money I'd spent to save myself the stress of standing there waiting. Instead I used my phone as a life line and texted a couple people. Eventually, he called my drink, I grabbed it and turned, in the same manner, away from him and got another "You're welcome!" Again, I could not have cared less. I just wanted away from the madness.


The cappuccino truly sucked. I drank every drop.

Friday, October 2, 2009

Me as a kid #3

When I was almost 6, we moved in to our house on Gardendale. The first night we spent in the house, I was playing in my room by myself and discovered there was a chain lock. I'd never had such privacy in my entire life and was thrilled I could keep people out whenever I so chose. Yes, I was five years old.

For novelty's sake, I locked the door and continued playing. When I decided it was time to rejoin my family, I climbed up on a chair to slip the chain from the lock. It wouldn't budge. Since birth, I've been a quick-to-panic type person. My fight or flight mode is on constant overdrive, which caused me to start yanking on the chain and yelling bloody murder. Everyone immediately come to my rescue, because I'll need you all. Or else I'll have to live in here for forever.

Through the opening the chainlock affords, I can see my mom's face first, then my dad, and my Uncle Jack. My grandma and grandpa were probably there too. There were a lot of faces on the other side of the door crack. Uncle Jack tried to get at the lock with a knife (the men in my family always have knives on them). Someone tried to reach their hand in. Ultimately, they had to calm me down, get me to shut the door (no easy feat when all I wanted to be was with the faces on the other side of the door), and explain that I must press the chain lock down and then over. When the door finally swung open, it seemed like a lot of panic for nothing.

HOWEVER

From that time on, I had weird uncomfortable fantasies about being trapped in my room for... forever. Sometimes I would imagine an evil man keeping me there, but most of the time I imagined the world had exploded, and my room was the last vestige of human existence floating in space. But I was always trapped for extended periods of time. I just assumed the duct work in that house to be space travel worthy.

What was my main concern? FOOD. Yes, the longest love affair of my life has been with food. And weird fantasy world part of my brain is not exempt. Oddly, my fear of going without food did not manifest itself with actual food. My preparation for the inevitability of being the last human survivor in the universe was to bring glasses of different things into my room and hoard them. Mainly I'm talking milk and orange juice. Have you ever lived in a room with rotting milk or orange juice? I'm not sure how I did. It got to the point where I knew how long a glass had been in my room by its state of decay. A regular scientist.

My theory was simple. Although the concoctions were foul, the solids which formed could serve as nutritious food, while the "water" that had separated from the solid could serve my hydration needs. I was able to kill two birds with one putrid stone.

Eventually, the glasses became so frought with decay, I knew I couldn't stomach them even in the event of annihilation. I'd rather starve than consume what was in the glass. Or my mother would notice that the majority of the McDonald's glasses were missing and insist I retrieve any I may have from my room (eventual space pod). She must have noticed the mold because I recall always having to wash them myself. After I scrubbed the mold from the Ronald and the Hamburgler glasses, I could feel free to start my hoarding cycle all over again. Except the next time, I'd go with Grimace.

Friday, September 18, 2009

Me as a kid, 1&2

I think we all need a blog where we remember the crazy things about our own childhood. I'm going to start digging around in my brain.

1. I had a good sized room when I was a kid. It had a big closet with the double sliding doors. When I was around 11 years old, the inspiration to maximize my space came to me. Naturally, the best way to do that was to sleep in the closet. It was basically the size of a twin bed in width, and the length would more than accomodate me. For bedding I laid a couple of sleeping bags on the floor. It must have been spring because the weather was decent, but I remember my mom waking me up in the closet for school. I recall having visions of building some sort of sleeping loft in there. While my mother didn't mind where I slept, so long as it was in my own room, I don't think she bought into the building aspect of it. My forte was ideas, not necessarily execution, so the loft part fell by the way side.
Also, I had a thing with outer space when I was a kid. Sleeping in a closet felt like a tight space, and tight spaces felt like rocket ships? Pretty sure that's how it went.

After a few weeks, sleeping in the closet shed its novelty. It just wasn't practical. I was an 11 year old with a double bed and a large room. Where I come from, that's nothing to sneeze at. The sleeping bags were wearing thin, and my young back started to ache. Experiment abandoned.

2. Speaking of outer space. I had a ton of junk jewelry. Stuff no one wanted and tossed my way. While I did it every once in a while, I wasn't a big player of dress-up, so a large collection of tacky bobbles just wasn't necessary. One day I got bored and cut the necklaces up. I kept all the beads. Flashy sparkly chunky beads. When I was on my own in my room, which was often, I'd pretend my room was floating in space and the beads were actually space food. A friend spent the night once and I tried to introduce this fantasy game to her. She really couldn't fathom the excitement space travel had to offer, let alone the thrill of eating food you'd never eat on Earth. After that, I stuck to playing space room on my own.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

technology is a wonderful terrible thing

This is a copy of an email I wrote today to someone on a dating site. I think it'll make sense without much backstory. but for those of you who don't know, "winking" is the chicken way to get someone's attention on a dating site. the recipient gets a notice that someone has winked at them along with a link to the winkers profile, without any personal message from the winker. Very low risk for the winker.

so, I remember emailing/talking with you a bit at the end of 2007. we never ended up meeting, though. then about a month ago (maybe as much as 6 weeks) you winked at me. which i thought was odd. but not a big deal. all's fair in love and everything else I guess.

here's the interesting part. for some bizarre reason you showed up on my facebook list of people i may know. I clicked on your profile, then looked at your pictures. it became really clear
that, at least for the last few months, you've been in a relationship with someone. then I clicked on her profile (i chose not to resist). she says she's in a relationship with you.

here's the upshot: technology is a wonderful terrible thing. it's easy to find out who someone really is, even if it's by accident. so if you're messing around on this site, you should know you can easily be found out on another.

I'm not here to judge you. Your biz is your own. I'm just sayin...

highlight of my day.