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Saturday, September 24, 2011

Rain

I love rain. When I was a kid, I loved rain so much I couldn't understand why adults didn't like it, why they complained so bitterly as if the clouds descended upon them and them alone in some spiteful natural vengeance against their hair styling beauty products or high fashion name brands. I guess I kind of kept it in my head that I wouldn't turn into one of those adults, but even so for the last many rainfalls I've not been pleased because it means I have to walk to the bus stop and work when it's a sheeting downpour. My shoes always tend to be the biggest sponges on Earth, and so now when I see rain, I think of how soggy my toes are going to be for the day, or how under the weather the weather will make me.

But, when it comes down to the thing itself, I still love rain.

This morning in particular is the perfect kind of rainy. The window in my kitchen is open and the contrast of how stale it is inside to how fresh it is out there is overwhelming. I can't even say what it smells like. It smells like home, I guess. All the different smells of soil and plants and bark and flowers and nature just mingle to create this fresh, North East Canadian scent.

When I was in Wollongong, the rain was really different, but equally wonderful. In winter it was a bit different, but my first encounters with rain in their autumn was a rainfall so polite you couldn't feel it or even see it unless you looked at a puddle and saw the water drops. It was like the cloud just hung there and the condensation appeared from mid air all around you. I know exactly what it smelled like there though: eucalyptus. You can't really smell the eucalyptus unless it's raining. It's the most wonderfully refreshing aroma that no bath salt or hand cream can replicate.

But if I were to compare Wollongong rain to Chambly rain and have to choose a preference, I think I would still go with Chambly rain. Canada might be boring on the visual and aural levels, but it's definitely got the olfactory (and gustatory, but in completely unrelated matters) down. If I weren't so worried about getting sick right now, I would go roll around in the grass like I did when I was five and look into the pure white sky to try and see the raindrops before they fall. Alas, I'm stuck inside doing homework.

I knew I should have gotten rid of those spiders in my windows...

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Herbert

For some time I've been wanting something living in my room of the horticultural kind, and the other day I found just what I was looking for. I had to go to the Mount Royal area to meet with the graphic designer of the manuscript I'm editing, and they have a really lovely farmer's market just outside the metro. Aside from selling the anticipated assortment of farm-related produce, they have branched out to include exotic plants such as living stones and cacti. I must say, whenever I pass by this market in summer, I always admire their spiny collection of mini cacti because they're all just so damn cute. I never got any though because, well, I either didn't have any money or I didn't like any of them enough or I just couldn't carry around a cactus with me for the rest of the day. In this instance, I had only enough money for lunch/dinner, and I wouldn't be getting home until 9pm, meaning I'd be starving and carrying around a plant that wouldn't hesitate to stab me for the next 8 hours. But I don't know, I saw this cactus and fell in love. I bought it and have no regrets (although I'm still nursing a couple of tender puncture wounds on my hands).


His name is Herbert.

Tea, Toast, and Trees

So I'm sitting in my kitchen, editing a manuscript while drinking chai tea (so delicious) and gnawing on a piece of overly crisp Vegemite toast, and suddenly realize there's some really annoying chainsaw noises coming from outside. I look around to figure out who's being obnoxious in the early hours of the day and suddenly realize there's a guy right outside my window trimming the maple tree. All I can say is thank God I decided to put on some clothes after my shower.

Also I'm in the process of writing about the Comic Con. It deserved a proper post and so I've been trying to finish it. But yeah. Just found out that the book I thought only needed to be edited for the 12th of October actually needs to be done by the 26th of September, aka Monday. *Turn on kamikaze editor mode!!!*

Saturday, September 17, 2011

The Whipped Cream Bed

At work today I was trying desperately to put some lost books back to their rightful homes in the interior design section - and failing miserably. That section is a lost cause (along with Photography, Hobbies and Crafts, Fashion, Kids, Business....essentially all that is not straightforward fiction). But anyways I'm not here to whinge about poor organization at the corporate level: I'm here because I need to share my absolute admiration for all that is interior design and home improvement.

I can't say that in my life I've ever had a chance to design my own space. When I was 12, my sister and I were finally given our own respective rooms, and this was a momentous occasion. But even though I got to choose the colours of my walls and how it was set up, none of the furniture was my choice and there were some pieces that I had no choice about not having in there to begin with. The extent of my decorating muscle being exercised was me choosing what Green Day posters I wanted where and how many different funky stickers I could put on my mirror while still being able to see my reflection. For seven years my room barely changed, except once in arrangement, until I peaced out to Australia.

In Aussie-land, I had my first taste of an empty room and no history of physical objects to burden and clutter. Granted, it was a room minus a personality - a standard college dorm - but that was all the more exciting. I bought posters in a frenzy to mark it as my territory and revelled in the clean, empty space that was not more than I could manage. It had everything I needed and everything served a purpose. It was a room that felt energizing when my room at home had always felt claustrophobic and like a timeless void that sucked up the majority of my life with sleep, Facebook, and literally sitting and staring and doing fuck all.

Within the first three weeks of my being away, I skyped my sister and told her she could have my room. She'd been wanting to swap for a really long time by this point, me having the bigger room, and her having the childhood bedroom with the colours and designs her nine-year-old self had thought were the epitome of appeal. I don't think she believed me at first, but I told her I couldn't go back to my life at home so changed and then go to sleep staring at the same ceiling I'd stared at through all my teenage angst. So she informed my mother and a month later they set out boxing my things and repainting (at long-overdue last).

That being said, I never decided what my new room would look like. The most my mother conferred with me on the subject was choosing what colour she was going to paint it. She'd wanted green, which I was vehemently against as my old room had been green too. We settled on blue. The first time I saw the exact colour and the way they'd set it up was the night I arrived home five months later.

I must say I genuinely liked it - and like it still. The walls are rag-rolled blue, almost turquoise, the colour of a blue glacier or what you'd imagine tropical wind looked like. It's got a whole white/blue/natural-honey-wood-brown combo going on that I very much like and really didn't expect to work so well together, but it looks good. I'm happy with it. But I still didn't design it, aside from putting up the posters I carefully rolled and toted back home from Oz.

So anyway, back to how this all came about, I was looking in the interior design section and falling in love. I genuinely never thought much about designing my own space before browsing this section at work. It was just something that never factored into my life and I assumed in a lot of ways that it was an indulgence and a perk of being rich, that it was sheer luxury to be comfortable in your own home. My parents, despite their irate responses that they carefully decided how to decorate the house (23 years ago, might I add, and 23 years of not changing an inch), never really gave a crap how it looked. My mom fancies the cluttered look of cozy-lived-in-cottage, and my dad....well, I don't think he's seen the house since 23 years. So seeing these photographs of people who adore and take pride and joy in how their homes look was a novelty and a heartstopping wonder. It was that moment of obviousness when you're holding a pen and wondering where your pen went and then are delighted to see it already in your fingertips.

I must say that my favourite books were those on tropical homes. Holy bejeezus, I want to live in the tropics. My ideal home for the longest time was living in modern loft that's one big space with an open staircase and giant, single-paned panels of windows spanning the entire wall. But Living in a home with trees around it too, or on a mountain overlooking ocean and jungle with a pool and a deck would be glorious as well. So long as it's open, empty, made of glass and bright bright bright then I will be happy.

Most importantly, however, was that I've finally decided what kind of bed I'd want. My sister just got one for her new room and it's so wonderful - while, wrought iron-style headboard, so soft I literally fall asleep on it as soon as I lie down, and with so many pillows it's like being a nestling of a pillow-laying bird. And the funny thing is, before I saw it, it was exactly what I thought I wanted. Something about seeing it though made me not see myself in that kind of bed. It wasn't, isn't, right for me. When my sister asked me what I'd get for a bed if I were to buy any one I wanted, I couldn't really answer her. In the back of my mind, I've been thinking about it for weeks. Then, flipping through a random book I'd picked up in the section, there it was. Wonderful, fluffy, white, and like it's made out of whipped cream. No bedposts, and flat on the ground with no space underneath - just flowing white linen and duvets spilling over the edges. I can't even find a picture of what it looks like online to post here. But just trust me in that it was my perfect bed.

The desperation I feel for having a real bed cannot even be described. To contextualize: I'm sleeping in the same bed I was sleeping in from when I moved out of my crib. My hands and feet fall off the ends when I stretch out. This bed was also the bed that my uncle slept in, and the one that my mother slept in before that. It is supported by tired metal slats and cardboard. It has no mattress. It is made marginally soft and sleepable by a futon. It gives me horrendous back problems because the middle sags and curves down, and I always wake up groggy and with pains in my neck. It's massively saddening that I'm going to be in this bed for the next two years until I escape from here and head back to Australia. But at least I know what I'm looking for so when I finally invest, I at least can know that it's what I've always dreamt of having. Even if those dreams are a little belated in the formation.

Anyways in other news:

Headline: Comic con is tomorrow!

Headline contenders: I got asked out to coffee at work today, and I also lost my wallet (major bummer).

Recent events: I dressed up at Saladfingers for my dear friend's 20th birthday party, which was an "Internet" theme.

Arts and Entertainment: The Fountainhead is blowing my mind, and I really am praying that the ending will be equally as impressive as the book thus far.

Food: I had a smashing breakfast, after waking up with a happily non-hungover head, of sunny side up eggs, sausage and heaps of marvellous Québec bacon.

Weather: A balmy 12 degrees, considering it's nighttime. Beautiful 3/4 yellow moon tonight, partially under cloud cover.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Hipster Watch I

This kid in my class carries around a glass mason jar for a water bottle.


Can. Lit. Begone!

After much debating, I've decided to drop my Canadian Lit class. It's rather bittersweet - on the pros side of the argument, it's a great teacher, I'd be able to graduate this year instead of taking an extra semester (maybe), and we're studying Scott Pilgrim. But honestly, it's at 10:15 am. Which for most normal people is absolutely fine, but I need to catch an 8 am bus to get there in time and I only get home at a quarter past nine the night before because I have late classes. I am not a morning person. The earliest I can get up without it affecting me, even if I get a solid 8 hours of sleep, is 8 am. Any earlier and I'm not a happy camper. So this, paired with the fact that I'd have a 5 hour break on Tuesdays and Thursdays and absolutely no time to do homework at all by adding a fifth class onto my course load alongside my part time job and internship, made me decide that I'm better off dropping it. As my mother said to me last night when I was whinging about how hard my life is, "If you were to die in five years what would you be doing?" Of course I said I'd drop out and travel and party it up with all the alcohol I could find, but she made a good point. I don't want to stress myself out for no reason. I'll be here for two more years no matter what, so I might as well fill out my time with taking classes this time next year instead of letting my brain rot. It's my last few classes for my BA, I'd rather enjoy them and give my usual 100%. Still, I have the terrible gnawing feeling I might regret this...

In other news:

Headline: Not getting enough sleep makes me so damned unhappy and grumpy. Mental note: sleep.

Upcoming events: Comic con is on Sunday and my internship is giving my friend and I free tickets if we hand out flyers!

Arts and Entertainment: Stars of Track and Field are amazing.

Food: My camera is broken, otherwise I'd have uploaded a picture of the amazing bacon-brie-potato omelette I made for breakfast.

Weather: It's getting colder after that major thunderstorm we had. And now it's doing that thing where it's pissing light rain all day and the clouds hang so low and thick the sky has before entirely white. Balls.

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Mornings

I think what it boils down to, in the purest most tangible form, is earl grey tea and practicing how to speak Middle English first thing in the morning to wake yourself up. And by "it", I mean being an English Major. Nothing screams "Lit Dork!" like steaming water mixed with dried leaf flakes and learning the archaic roots of your own language.

In other news, I've discovered I can actually graduate on time and that makes me unspeakably happy (not to be paradoxical to the above professions of adoration for my degree or anything). In all likelihood it will take two years - one and a half, stretching it - before I can get back to Australia to work for a year, and then I can head to grad school after saving some moolah for ze tuition, etc. So I should probably enjoy these last two semesters of uni. Which I probably will, if I don't go crazy from my job and internship...

And now off to school for the day to learn things!