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I'm a student from Australia who used to have a lot of time on her hands but doesn't have that much anymore. Now she has other stuff on her hands.

Monday, November 25, 2013

You're a Sucky Person

I received this amazing email the other day:



Let's start off with the obvious...

I wrote a fanfiction called Forbidden to Forget. But I didn't just "write a fanfiction called Forbidden to Forget." I wrote at least seven chapters of a fanfiction called Forbidden to Forget with the seventh chapter called Te Amo.

But I didn't just write at least seven chapters of a fanfiction called Forbidden to Forget. I wrote at least seven chapters of a fanfiction called Forbidden to Forget based on the characters of The Mediator by Meg Cabot. Maybe you could have guessed that. "Te amo" being the words I so desperately wanted to hear a Jesse de Silva lookalike whispering into my ear as I lay awake in my prepubescent (I was a late bloomer) bed late at night.

Lizette Ray, as much as your cruel words hurt me, I cannot blame you. I think we can all agree that a Mediator fanfiction called Forbidden to Forget is going to be really, really bad. But props to you, Lizette Ray, for presumably reading seven chapters of my sucky fanfiction. I hope you enjoyed every one of those sucky chapters and sucked them bone dry.

So, if you can be bothered to, you can even hunt down my really sucky fanfiction from the details in the above email. I didn't just write sucky Mediator fanfiction. I also wrote sucky Twilight fanfiction. But The Mediator was my home.

I'm reading a book called Fangirls by Rainbow Rowell at the moment. Its suckitude on a scale of one to 10 is approximately a negative five. It is really good. You would all like it. I now want to move to Nebraska.

J

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Ultimate Thick, Creamy Milk Shake (Brings All the Boys to the Yard)

Oh shit, I think I'm in love with this boy/man:



I would advise Little Mishelle to "get on it" but I shotgun him.

J

Pillsbury Cookie Ice Cream Cake

This is so stupid:



Like, just get a bowl of ice cream and eat it with a cookie (or seven). And how shoddily produced is this video? The ice cream is clearly not set properly when he's serving up the cake. Why was the ice cream originally in glasses when he was assembling the cake? Why wouldn't you just scoop it directly from the tub? So many questions and no answers. Just like my life.

That being said, this is definitely on my 21st birthday radar: http://smittenkitchen.com/blog/2013/07/hot-fudge-sundae-cake/ Love a bit of smitten in my life.

J

My Muffin Top Is All That

Holy shit. Taylor Swift totally got a boob job but I don't even care because her body is banging:


Oh, to be skinny, tall, blonde and bodacious. 

In other news, I made these the other day:


Blueberry walnut muffins. Look at the back right one. Have you ever seen a muffin rise so preposterously? I think I'm in love with it. It has since been eaten.

And then I ate this on Friday:


Brioche toast, bacon, mushroom fucking medley, fried eggs, fig chutney thing. The mushrooms. Dear God, the mushrooms. 

Also, this post is filling me with glee right now: http://ohnotheydidnt.livejournal.com/83630428.html#cutid1

Well, this post has been satisfyingly filled with a medley (apparently, my new favourite word) of food and figure related things. Feel free to return to your weekend.

J

Baker Bakes Bread

Fucking awesome short film:



J

No Bueno

My manager brought her stepdaughter into work yesterday. The little girl was eight years old and wanted to "help" at POS. At first, I was delighted. Because I get very lonely up there as am often the only person working the registers. But then I slowly began to realize how utterly dreadful it is too work with a very cute but irritating child.

You know the child who tells you off for stuff?
"Ooh, I'm going to tell on you!" she says. I want to tell her to shut the duck up. Instead, I laugh because there are customers around who might frown on my choice of words.

She grabbed a stool and stood at my register wanting to "help." She got in my way, kept wanting to count all the notes while I was trying to serve customers from the same register, kept putting coins in the wrong spots and then the worst.

Kept pulling my hair.

Normally, this wouldn't phase me too much. Except I saw this little devil eat a sausage sizzle earlier in the day. And I'm pretty sure she did not wash her hands after as I could smell the telltale smokiness of a well cooked sausage on both her breath and skin.

I was quite appalled and kept trying to pry her off me. It was impossible. Customers were laughing at my attempts. I was frustrated. Thank God she ran off at some point to annoy another person.

I am beginning to suspect that children and I may... not get along well.

J

Saturday, November 23, 2013

The Last Time

We hugged goodbye. I found out he got facebook a few months back and forced him to add me. I smiled all the way home in the car like a lunatic.

We had a moment as he was about to leave. R, my manager, another girl and I were standing in a circle, talking and saying goodbye to R. The girl and my manager was kind of having their own conversation at one point. R looked over me and smiled and I just smiled back at him. We held eye contact for too long, just smiling, and it was magical.

I don't hug people. Not unless they're a girl friend I've known for an extended period of time. But I hugged R. He hugged me back. And it wasn't one of those half-assed hugs either. He really hugged me back quite hard.

One of our breaks overlapped. I only had 15 minutes and had to go back. We talked about our respective holidays and just had a jolly time, joking around.
"Stay!" he said as I got up to leave.
"Why?" I said.
"Stay and talk to me," he said. I stifled a whimper. And then I stayed.

I would for R. I will miss him dearly.

J

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Orchard House

I could never look at Kirsten Dunst in the same way after watching her in Little Women. Is it bad that I secretly wanted Amy to drown in that icy pond?

J

My Ideal Man

My ideal man is Julian from The Famous Five. He is dreamy.

J

Monday, November 18, 2013

Little Women

I think Little Women may very well have edged its way up into my top five favourite books of all time. As with many books, I half-assedly read it in my early adolescent days and never really understood it. But, reading it now again, I am so moved by all the messages in it.

Maybe it's because I've been overdosing on chick lit over the last few months, but the lack of romantic feels in Little Women is so refreshing. Instead, there are messages of the importance of family, self-respect, morals, ethics, helping others. I mean, this book should really be the bible instead of... our current bible.

J

Friday, November 15, 2013

How I Live Now

My friends, feast your eyes and ears:



This looks pretty fucking fantastic. Love a bit of Saiorse in my life.

J

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Work That Body

Oh, wow. Steve, I nearly forgot how much I love you:



Triple yes.

J

A Thousand Yes'

This may very well be the greatest idea in the history of ideas: http://smittenkitchen.com/blog/2013/10/frico-grilled-cheese-sandwiches/

Yes, a thousand yes' (said Rosamund Pike's Jane Bennett in response to a Very Bingley Proposal). Yes, I will always love the crispy cheesy bits that escape the confines of those two slices of bread and meet the sandwich toaster with a delightful sizzle. Yes, it makes cleaning a bitch but, my God, I would bury myself in those crispy cheesy bits then eat my way to freedom. It somehow feels guilt-inducing to eat those crispy cheesy bits but it's just the normal cheese bit extra toasted. Embrace the crisp.

Now, go get crispy.

J

Let the Chips F-f-f-f-fall Where They May

Perhaps the smartest thing Amanda Bynes has ever said. Complete with vomiting gesture (you know what I speak of) as if to say, "Here are my chips, I let them fall." Laura Ramsey, in her infinite wisdom, promises to grab her One Twu Luv, Sebastian Hastings, and kiss him something crazy in response.

Well, it seems we have reached the last day of my 2013 exam period. It could very well also be my last med exam ever as, at this moment, I am leaning towards leaving. To put it in writing is kind of horrific and scary. I'm not 100% certain I want to leave but I am close to 75%. Right at this moment. That being said, I have kind of a volatile relationship with decision making and who knows where I'll be tomorrow or the day after or next semester.

Every time I think about leaving, not having to do med next year, not having to face that, I feel lighter. I feel freer (free-er?). I feel excited. It's ridiculous.

Is med my biggest regret? I think it might be (not that I have done much to regret thus far in my cloistered nun-like life). I think about what I might have done instead and where I would be now. Would I be happier or would I be just as unhappy with whatever degree I had decided to pursue? In the end, I am glad that I pursued med. What's that I say about life experiences? That's right; every life experience is a good one. Wait, I've never said that in my life but sometimes I think it. Sure, there may be exceptions to that rule (eg: getting raped, losing a loved one) but for those less devastating ones, I think life experiences are good.

Life truly is too short to do what you do not enjoy. My dad wants me to pursue med because it was his dream when he was younger and he never had the opportunity. Maybe this is the saddest thing for me because I know he would have been the Best Doctor Ever and I know that he would have actually enjoyed it. He would have loved it. Alas, he is an accountant (well, he's a retired accountant, I suppose) and, in the last few years, has hated his job hugely. I want him to understand that this may be what med is for me. People who do med are meant to love it, are meant to live it, are meant to get excited about sitting in on surgeries and lancing pustules (I actually do like looking at the gross skin conditions) and I do not. But I truly wish I did.

J

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Boy, You Got Me Gone

I think Nelly said it best when he said, "There's something you need to know. You make me want to get physical. You make me want to get intimate..." The rest of whatever he sings kind of blends together and I lose focus.

To whom do I refer re: wanting to get intimate? Well, this of course: http://www.onsecondscoop.com/2011/04/new-to-us-magnum-double-chocolate-bars.html

Yeah, because I've been reading ice cream reviews for the last half hour instead of studying for FCP on Thursday.

J

Monday, November 11, 2013

Arctic Monkeys - "Hold On, We're Going Home"

Oh, my dear God. This is freaking awesome:



I'm getting a Logan Echolls in Ruskie Business playing Tom Cruise in Risky Business vibe here. It's very nice/entertaining.

J

The 1975 - "What Makes You Beautiful"

This would be a good cover to lose your virginity to:



It's very cinematic.

J

It Started Off Happy

I have officially entered Holiday Mood 2.5 days from my last exam on Thursday. In Holiday Mood, I half-assedly study and tell myself, "Well, it's better than nothing." This means I stop following my 40 minutes studying, 10 minutes playing roster and start doing five minutes on and off, here and there and everywhere.

Dad came home from Taiwan on Saturday. He was away for nearly a month. He brought back ridiculous amounts of food and took pictures of nearly every meal. Making me proud, that one. He brought back not one but three taro cakes, three boxes of pineapple tarts and a box of black sesame mochi. I thought taro cake was just pretty (you know, it's purple and I'm a girl etc.) but it kind of tastes like sweet heaven. I wouldn't mind going to there.

I had this idea the other day/night that I should start an all female self-defence kickboxing class. I would be the instructor. This would be a brilliant idea except I don't know how to kickbox and have never kickboxed in my entire life. I also suck at connecting with large masses of people. I also refuse to exercise in the presence of other people. But still, it was a nice thought.

I was reading a blog just now. I started going through the archives and was reading back until 2010. This girl had a boyfriend and, in 2010, posted a lot of pictures of her and her boyfriend. They were cute, I think they were living together. And then I thought, "Well, shit, I don't remember seeing her boyfriend in her recent posts." So, of course I spent the next 20 minutes going through her recent posts and instagram shots, trying to look for evidence of her boyfriend. He was absent and I came to the conclusion they must have broken up between 2010 and now.

For some reason, this makes me so sad. To go from living together and being in love to nothing. Perhaps not even knowing what that person is doing with their life, where they are living, if they're happy. I will struggle greatly the first time I break up with a boyfriend and will likely be so affected that I will trace their movements for the rest of their life.

This is the blog if anyone is interested: http://blushingambition.blogspot.com.au/

Alright, that's more than five minutes. Back to "study."

J

Sunday, November 10, 2013

Nelly feat. Kelly Rowland - "Dilemma (Live)"

Sitting at my desk and smiling like an idiot for all 4.28 of this:



Seriously, they are so adorable. I don't even want them to be together romantically. I just want them to be friends and eat cupcakes together.

J

Saturday, November 9, 2013

Never Will I Ever

Why does my brother's special lady friend talk in a baby voice? It makes me want to punch someone/thing in the face. I don't consider myself a violent person (har, that's a lie) but if there's one thing I can't stand, it's cutesyness.

What's attractive about that? Nothing, to me. If I was a guy, I think I would be attracted to women like the two main characters of The Heat (one of the finest comedies of the last decade). Straight talking or just plain crude, dressed in power pant suits or things with questionable stains on them.

Is it that protective instinct thing that attracts men to cutesy girls? Because that is bullshit. Why would you even want to be obligated to protect someone else? Wouldn't you want an independent special lady friend who could take care of herself thus freeing up your time to engage in your favourite hobbies (I'm thinking harmonica playing. I have officially requested a harmonica for my Christmas present from my parents)?

I certainly would and I don't even have that many hobbies. I don't even know if hobbies are a real thing these days. Everyone seems to enjoy doing the same things in their spare time; watch The Walking Dead, read the Internet, eat food, crank tunes, dance parties, illicit drugs, eat food. It makes ice breakers that involve the question, "SO, WHUT URR YURR HOBBIES?" very, very awkward.

Speaking of harmonicas (I keep forgetting the name for harmonicas and referring to them as accordions. I hope I don't get an accordion for Christmas), do you think Bastille would need a harmonicist to complete their little band thing? Because I kind of already have a plan as to how I would join the band, impress DAN SMITH (yes, I finally learned his name and have been reading every one of his interviews I can get my hands on. He is shy, or so he says, studied English literature at university and I think needs my sweet, sweet loving) with my harmonica skills and then we would start living in sin.

J

Back to Square One

University is meant to be one of the best times of your life. My university experience is certainly not meeting this expectation (I honestly believed I was going to turn into some kind of social butterfly once I entered those hallowed UWA halls. That could not be further from the truth) and it sucks.

But besides that, my dad keeps saying that completing a medical degree, regardless of whether you become a doctor, is a great asset to your resume. Great, can't wait to pad out my resume with six freaking years of slaughter. This shit is draining the life out of me and I don't know whether it's worth it.

So, I'm back here again. Contemplating leaving, contemplating staying. Last night, I decided, "Screw it all. I'm leaving med." By this morning, I'd managed to convince myself to stay.

I want this internal argument that has been raging in my head for the last semester to just stahp. It's a nuisance. It's painful for me to feel so uncertain about everything. I keep thinking of the consequences; what if I leave and start something I hate? What if I leave and instantly regret it but can't return? What if I can't get a job? What if it all goes to waste? What if I only graduate at 28 or something ridiculous?

I keep thinking to myself, "Life is too short to do this." Life is short but who's to say that the other side of the fence really will be greener? How am I to know?

All of these questions and no one can answer them but me.

J

MS MR - "Do I Wanna Know?"

Her voice is so ridiculous. It's not very powerful and she doesn't have great range but the tone. The tone! I want to crawl into it and snuggle there for the rest of my natural born days. Observe:



J

Friday, November 8, 2013

Taylor Swift - "Lose Yourself"

Oh, her introduction is killing me:



I love you, baby.

J

I Will Treasure It Forever

There's a message in my voicemail. It is from one R of Officeworks. It goes like this:

Oh hey, is this J? Oh shit, it's voicemail. Anyway, just wondering if you can come in to work at POS today 'cos we can't get anyone. Alright, give us a call back.

Well, let's start by saying that I will not be calling back as I have an exam tomorrow. But let's follow up that statement by laughing at R's evident inability to navigate voicemail and its intricate workings and further follow up that statement by saying... oh, I will now never forget your sweet voice, R. It will forever be stored in my voicemail (spank) bank.

I've also decided to officially take up playing the harmonica this summer holidays (oh yes, it's going to get very melancholy up in here) and may or may not learn to rap. We shall see where the road takes me.

J

She Got Me Gone

I dipped into the Beyonce/Destiny's Child corner of Spotify last night. The best decision I made yesterday. Then it occurred to me, "Wow, I haven't listened to "Dilemma" in a really, really long time." And that's how I ended up listening to "Dilemma" (and its inferior sequel, "Gone") on repeat for two hours.

On a separate note, Farmers' Union Greek yoghurt is the thickest, most luscious yoghurt in the world. It kicks Chobani, texture-wise, in the uterus any day. Sadly, it's limited to three flavours, as far as I can see. Happily, one of those flavours is blueberry. I do love a berry that is blue.

I finished reading the Jessica Darling series last night (I skipped the last half of the fourth book out of a mixture of sorrow and boredom). This series is very, very good despite what I said about the fourth book. Very rarely do you get to follow characters for many years. In this case, from young teenage years to young adult years. It's depressing and interesting at the same time.

I would go as far as to say that the Jessica Darling series is the best YA series I've ever read. It's very unique in that it isn't all fluff. The characters are so different that they surpass hipsterish individuality. They move into "epic" territory. And by "epic," I am referring to the Veronica and Logan thing. Jessica Darling and Marcus Flutie aren't just your typical Mia Thermopolis and Michael Moscovitz characters. They surpass time and physical boundaries. They stick with you and you cling to them. They are my new Cathy Dollanganger (nee Dollanganger) and Chris Dollanganger. They are so different to what you read.

I have the utmost respect and admiration for Megan McCafferty because she has written a series of books that has not only captivated (I assume) thousands of teenage girls but included so many themes that you never see in YA books and written in a way that I have never read in YA.

I am not saying it is my favourite YA series (that honour would have to go to the Mediator series) but it really is very special and worth your while.

It's my first exam tomorrow. Whoop, I'm done by Thursday. Wednesday should be interesting; I have not studied for Thursday's exam at all and plan on cramming it all on Wednesday. That being said, it's FCP which is a notoriously easy unit. Well, easy enough to cram for in one day. The clinical skills part of it is not always so easy... Maybe it is the exam stress talking but it occurred to me just now that I kind of assumed I'd get married one day. Even though I said a little while ago that maybe marriage isn't in the cards for me because it doesn't seem to work out that great for anyone, I meant that I still want a "life partner" or whatever.

Basically, I meant that I intend to live in sin with someone until the day I die and have their/our children and, if they should ever leave me and are richer, I want half their money. I just don't want to get married. So, that's nice because then my parents don't have to spend a shittonne of money on my wedding. Which is a ridiculous concept in itself (as much as marriage is) because, first of all, it is preposterous to spend upwards of $20k on a glorified party. It's a party, people. It's like food; once you've had it, it's gone. You can't use it twice. It's not a sweater.

Second of all, it's ridiculous that parents are expected to pay for half if not all of the wedding. Parents are old (well, most of them) by the time their children get married. They should be saving for retirement or saving their money if they're already retired, not paying for their kid's glorified party (the cake is worth it though).

There is no third point. I wish there was because three is a nice number for a number of points but there is no third point. I guess I kind of have a third point. My unofficial third point is (and the original point I was trying to get to before I got distracted) ... what if I never find myself a life partner to live in sin with until the day we die, clutching each other to our breasts and whispering words like, "We will be together again in our dreams," and other similarly cliched but altogether romantic things? And who will I have children with? Myself? I wish because I'm fucking fantastic but, as far as my Western medical education has taught me, that's not possible. Fuck.

I know the whole charade is, "Oh, you'll find someone one day when you least expect it! Much less attractive people than you are married and have kids!" but lezbe honest with ourselves for a second. I'm not much of a socially outgoing person, much preferring the company of books, TV and internet to that of actual human beings. And our teenage and young adult years are the ones in which most are most social.

Time is slipping away from me. I'm only going to become more antisocial as time passes. I'm already planning on buying some really large pieces of clothing to obscure whatever child-birthing anatomy I might possibly possess (not much. I may have mammary glands but can't tell so far) and invest in a good rocking chair.

TIME IS RUNNING OUT.

Who am I going to fight in my custody battle when my life partner whom I was initially living in sin with splits up with me? Who? Tell me?

It's not like I go out of my way to find boys to procreate with. In fact, I do the opposite. If I'm interested in someone, I do everything in my ability to not have them know that I am interested in having them ejaculating in me. So, what's going to change that will lead me to finding a life partner to live in sin with? Me? Because I'm not a very changeable person. Therefore, from past events and general observations on my character, the current trajectory suggests that I am destined for loneliness and > three dogs (my initial desired number of dogs) and no children. No children.

Let's not let these mammary glands go to waste. Please.

J

Thursday, November 7, 2013

Bastille - "We Can't Stop"

WHAT IS THIS PERFECTION?



Oh, don't worry, Mr. Hot Guy Whose Name I Don't Know But Who Sings That Pompeii Song. I won't be stopping anytime soon. And I wouldn't break your achey breaky heart if we hooked up. You can get a "hell naw" to that.

J

Started From the Bottom

It started... interestingly. The faces, Drake, really? You looked like you were having a stroke. I know that the lip curl is very gangster and obviously I can't really relate because, despite being very thuggish in both appearance and demeanour, I am a firmly middle class Asian girl living in a firmly middle class Australian suburb. And sure, the suburb in which I reside can sometimes nudge its way into firmly lower class (Sou' side), but I have not the Detroitian upbringing Eminem has to earn me gangster status in spite of my heritage or upbringing ('cos I'm a good girl and I know it).

Thankfully, this performance got a whole lot better when Drake started smiling, running through the crowd and into the loving arms of his audience:



Oh, Drake. I can't decide if I want to bang, play Nintendo with you or just watch you perform:



J

The Library is a Great Place

The year was 2010. I was sitting in the local public library, doing my business (whatever that might have been. I might have been studying or it might have been after WACE exams and I was just sitting around, smelling the library) when I heard the dulcet tones of Beyonce's "Halo" being played from a nearby computer. It was two high school aged girls, rocking out to the song.

They were very invested in the song. There were numerous pairs (and by numerous, I mean two) of shoulders bobbing, hair being shook, attitude being emanated. I was both laughing and envying them (I wish I had the confidence to shoulder bob in a public place). But it wasn't too soon after that my feelings turned from amusement to even greater amusement. The following conversation took place:

Girl 1: Man, I love this song.

Girl 2: I feel ya. (I am taking some artistic liberties with the dialogue for my own amusement and hopefully yours) Beyonce is sah cool.

Girl 1: I knooow. She is sah awesome.

Girl 1 and Girl 2 continue to shoulder bob and attitude emanate to "Halo," one of Beyonce's better songs from her 2008 album, I Am... Sasha Fierce.

Girl 2: (In a loud voice over the music) What does halo mean?

Girl 1: I don't know... Man, this song is so good.

It was the greatest conversation I've ever witnessed/eavesdropped on.

I've also decided that it would be really great if my friends could put together a choreographed performance to Beyonce's "Love on Top" (perhaps my favourite of all of Beyonce's fabulous ditties) for my future wedding. You should probably start rehearsals now; I will accept nothing less than synchronized perfection.

J

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Ed Sheeran - "You Need Me, I Don't Need You"

Would bang this talented mofo. Would not even paper bag it. Haters gon' hate etc.



J

A Belated Rebellion

It's been decided. Not only will I go to Europe this summer holidays (and therefore endanger not only myself but my precious "gifts." You know what they say about randy European men) but I will also get a tattoo (I've decided against the world map idea and instead will get a small open book on my ankle. The nerdiest, lamest of all tattoos. The juxtaposition will be exquisite and will likely gain me the admiration of many a handsome nerdmen. I'm thinking a Seth Cohen lookalike sporting Ulysses under one arm) and dye my hair.

Yes, dye my hair because I've never dyed my hair in my entire life. Not in my nearly 21 years of life on this very earth. Never having dyed my hair? What is this? A centre for ants? I think not. As such, and in the spirit of gaining every single life experience I can get my grubby hands on, I'm going to give myself (wait for it) blue streaks. Or highlights. Just something blue.

I've drawn a sophisticated diagramatic representation of my summer plans on Windows Paint to ease you into envisioning my future self. Please, remain calm.


I took some um... artistic liberties regarding my boob to waist to hip triple ratio. You're welcome.

J

To a Boy Who Will Never Know

So, I wrote this thing last night because I was feeling sincerely mushy and girly. And because I wanted imaginary closure. It's the first thing I've written in over six months, I think, and I had the biggest, stupidest smile on my face as I typed the last few sentences. Save me.

To a Boy Who Will Never Know

I fell in love with you when I was 19. And it was in my twentieth year that I think I fell so completely for you that my life changed. Whether in a miniscule or major way, I spent the better part of my twentieth year so completely enamoured with you that I forgot that other boys existed.

You went away just before I turned 21. You went to Japan for six months that turned into 12 months that turned into 18 months. It was a working holiday and we used to joke that you’d get married to a Japanese girl while there.

“Married or knocked up,” I said, fork stabbed into a piece of lettuce. We were sitting in the break room. It must’ve been a Saturday; I rarely worked any other day because of uni. You rarely ate during your lunch break and I used to wonder how you managed such a seasonable weight when skipping lunch. Sure, people say skipping breakfast makes you gain weight but shouldn’t that mean that skipping lunch makes you lose weight?

“Nah,” you said. You smiled and, inwardly, I cried out in absolute delight. I was a delusional little girl then. I was so taken by you, your every smile, laugh. Every nuance, every movement. It was almost sad.
“You say that now!” I joked.
“No way,” you said, steadfastly. You were always steadfast.
“Yeah, we’ll see. Do you have facebook? I want to see your pictures from Japan,” I said. I tried to maintain my cool but I was really nauseous at the thought I might never see or hear from you again.

I think that only teenage girls can understand the feelings to which I refer. Only teenage girls know the extensive range and intensity of emotions that one can feel. The sad thing was that I wasn’t a teenage girl then. I was 20, technically a woman. I had the medicine cupboard of sanitary pads and panty liners to prove it too.

Maybe I looked at your smiling face too long. Sometimes, I tried too because I thought that was flirting. Really, I think I came across as a little stalkery or maybe disturbed. Regardless, you never said anything about it and sometimes I even deluded myself into thinking you got the message.

“Anyway, my break’s over,” I said, standing up.
“Yeah, see you out there,” you said. You were lying on the couch as per usual. You were always on the couch, lounging. I hate lazy people, I really do. I can be lazy but I hate it when other people are lazy. Does that make sense? But, with you, I never hated your laziness. To me, it was endearing. You were like a little boy on his summer holidays. Days that stretched onto more days of absolute freedom. School was just a dot in the distance. Kilometers away, never coming any closer.

Never coming any closer. No, you were going even further away from me. Never to come any closer.

I walked out of the break room. I pretended that you watched me from the couch, eyes on the back of my head, my shoulders, maybe lower if I was lucky... I pretended you thought about me. It didn’t need to be romantic. Just the idea that you maybe gave me a second thought, maybe wondered if I was working the same shift as you. That was enough to get me through my twentieth year. And in my twenty-first, I lost you.

*

In my twenty-first year, I finally got the scrotal sacks to leave med school. I’d been thinking about it for a few months by then and, if I was being honest, since I’d been accepted to med school. I took six months off tertiary education and spent most of it working. It wasn’t the same without you and I spent almost every one of those days imagining you lounging on the break room couch. I pretended you were still there and it made everything, my indecision in myself, my choices, my future, alright if only for a few moments of synthetic images.

In my twenty-fourth year, I finally graduated from uni. Not in the degree that I started with but with a degree that I liked. It had been two and a half years since I’d last worked in the store, our store. The place we’d met and the last place I’d seen you. I hadn’t heard from you in all that time.

On a Wednesday afternoon, about two weeks after I’d graduated and two months until I’d get a call-in for an interview for my first adult job, I walked home from the shops, a bag of bread in one hand and a carton of apple cider in the other. The only alcoholic drink I could tolerate. It was almost 7pm but the sun was still in the sky. It was an Australian summer; the days here are so long like you can’t get rid of them.

It was in my twenty-fourth year that I finally saw you again. At first, I didn’t think it could be you. But it was the same head of unruly black hair, the same lopey, slopey walk. The same dopey shirts that never fit you quite right. I’d been in love with guys since I’d fallen in love with you and they always wore perfectly fitted shirts that hinted at gym workouts underneath. But nothing could compare to the shirts you used to wear that hinted at a summertime barbecue underneath. You were everything I swore I would never want in my adolescent days and yet I’d been perfectly and honestly enraptured by you.

“Ryan!” I said. It was definitely you. You’d turned around, on your phone. For most of the time I’d known you, you’d had a really crappy, old phone despite being a tech guy at work. It was only a few weeks before you left that you’d upgraded. That was you though, wasn’t it? You were ironic without trying. You were perfect while being imperfect.
“Yeah?” you said. You looked up and I was too happy to feel self-conscious about what I was wearing, what my hair was doing, what my skin was doing, what I was doing.
“Hey!” I said. I walked towards you like I was being pulled in with a rope.

You looked almost the same. You’d lost a little weight, all that tofu surely. And your skin was devoid of most of the acne you’d suffered through in your early twenties. But you were still essentially the same. And hell, so was I.

“Do you know who I am?” I asked. A grin lit up my face. I was floating on clouds, I was so gone by then. I was on ecstasy. E, e, e, e, e, e, eeeeeeeeeeeeeee.
“You look so familiar,” you said. You squinted your eyes, thinking deeply. “How do I know you?”
“Top Office,” I said. I didn’t want to delay it any longer. I wanted to see the acknowledgement in your eyes, I wanted to hear you say my name.
“Top Office?” he said. “Wow, that’s so long ago… Sally?”
“Yes!” I said. It was a cheer, a wallop to the back of the team’s star player, a whoop, an orgasmic cry into the night.

God, I was so done for. I was so done for the second I clamped eyes on you. The first time I saw you, I thought you were absolutely weird. You were so sloppy, quiet but outgoing. These were things I’d quickly grow to admire and love about you.

“Sally!” you said. You were never scared to show enthusiasm, the opposite of which was a fault of mine. “How are you?” you asked.
“I’m great! How are you? God, it’s been so freaking long,” I said. My heart was racing. I was 19 and 20 again. I was 19 and 20 at the same time. But I was 23 but I was 19 but I was 20.
“I know!” you said. All exclamation marks. Every sentence. “You must’ve graduated uni by now?”
“I just graduated,” I said. “What about you? When did you get back from Japan?”
“Wow,” he said, thinking. Thinking face. You were thinking. What I wouldn’t give to go into that brain and see what you were thinking. “About a year and a half now? Then I spent a few months in Finland with my brother. I’m back visiting my parents then I’m going to aviation school in Denmark for a couple of years. I’ve already down a semester online with the school.”

Just like that, I felt my heart sink down and out of the soles of my feet.

“Denmark? Wow.”
“I know. I can’t wait,” you said. Your smile wasn’t enough this time to distract me. Your eyes were the brownest of brown. Dirt brown, poo brown. Brown brown. I lost myself in the excrement.
“That’s so cool. I didn’t know you wanted to be a pilot?”
“Yeah, I kind of was thinking about it for a few years before Japan. Or I wanted to get into photography but I figured piloting would be more… international.”

I laughed. Out loud. Very obnoxiously and too loudly for what the situation called for. You didn’t care and laughed with me. We stood there, two people laughing way too loudly for the situation.

“Oh, my God,” I said. I wiped a tear from my eye. “We have to meet up for coffee or something. I have to hear all about Japan and Finland.”
“Sure!” you said and, my God, you actually sounded enthusiastic. It lifted me like a Wonderbra on a chilly morning.
“Do you have facebook yet?” I teased. We’d had this conversation before. You laughed as you remembered. Thank God, you remembered.
“Yes! Add me. Ryan Button. We should meet for coffee next week. I’m going up north to visit my brother in Exmouth the week after that. I won’t be able to wait until I get back to see you again!”

It felt like I’d broken in half. Did you realize what your words did to me? How you could turn me from devastated to overjoyed with simple sentences like that? Did you know what I’d felt for you at all during that year I’d been so… into you?

“I’m going to facebook stalk you so hard,” I joked. I wasn’t scared to say these things with you. Maybe when I was 19 I had been but now, I felt different. I wanted to be in control, I wanted to be an adult. “Did you end up getting a girl pregnant in Japan?”
“Not to my knowledge, no,” you said. “Let me give you my number, anyway. We can go through all the girls I could have possibly gotten pregnant in Japan and then come up with ways to skip out on child support in case I got one of them le preg.

We exchanged phone numbers and, my God, you had the same phone as the one you’d left for Japan with. No, not the super old flip phone (hinges. Those phones had hinges) but the one you’d upgraded to just before you’d left. It had been new and state of the art then. Now, it was so old. It was so you.

“By the way,” you said as the interaction came to a close, “I never thought I’d get the chance to say this to you but I figure I should do it now before it’s too late.” I’d gone through enough tea breaks with you to never get my hopes up at such leading statements anymore. You were always prone to grand introductory speeches with main paragraphs that left you feeling a little flaccid.
“Yeah?”
“I kind of liked you when we were working at Top Office. Like, I liked you quite a bit.”
“Really?” I said, feigning surprise. “You never said anything.”
“I guess I didn’t want to make things awkward,” you said. For once, you almost seemed shy.
“That’s kind of funny,” I said. My heart, my hips, my feet, my head lurched forward. I was an adult, a woman, a university graduate. I was moving out in three months. I’d be married in two more years. I was no longer a 20 year old virgin; I was a 24 year old sex god.

“Because I kind of liked you back then too. In fact,” I said, and this is when things got very dramatic and just like how 19 year old me would have wanted it. “I still kind of like you. Quite a bit.”

 J

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

I Can't Get Over You

It's official. Jessica Darling is bumming me out. What started out as a charming and unique look into the internal psyche of an atypical teenage girl has turned into a very depressing foray into the internal psyche of a slightly depressing woman. I don't know how much more I can take of it (I am reading Fourth Comings, the fourth (get it?) book in the Jessica Darling series). What's perhaps worse is the constant back and forth with her and Flutie Tutie. I wish, I wish, I wish Megan McCafferty had left it at, say, book three and ended with them blissfully in love and still in college.

Now, Jessica has graduated college. I don't like thinking too far into the future (like, the idea of being a working gal and not having the structure of tertiary education to guide me is frankly terrifying) so reading about Jessica and her confusion about her future is like reflecting on my own doubts and questions. Ain't nobody got time or wants to do that.

I had to stop halfway through reading Fourth Comings last night to start reading Lola and The Boy Next Door. And yes, Lola and The Boy Next Door is just as good as the name suggests. Yes, it involves a boy next door and yes, the boy is the love interest. Excuse me? What's that? Yes, freaking awesome storyline. Do you want to know what else? They were childhood friends and then he moved back into town.

WHAT'S THAT? Fucking awesome.

It occurred to me the other day that it would be a lot easier if someone rich and famous came to town and we ultimately got married and I lived off his riches until the day I died. He bumps into me whilst I'm strolling through the city, being all wistful and special. In this alternate universe, I'm comfortable enough to go on solo outings, just me and my cup of coffee (because I drink coffee in this alternate universe because I'm very mature and have matured tastes for such exotic delicacies), my thoughts and these boots made for walking.

There I am. Strolling, just strolling. Gazing longingly into the distance, thinking, "Damn, I can't wait to see what's out there." I also have a slightly British accent. I'm very distracted by gazing longingly into the distance and accidentally bump into Rich and Famous Guy.

Who is Rich and Famous Guy, you ask? I'm not sure. I just know he's Rich and Famous but he's also very intelligent, funny, kind, personable and has nice biceps and triceps. I know this because, when I "accidentally" bump into him, I grab hold of his highly toned arm to steady myself.

"I'm so sorry!" I gasp, all feminine and wiley.
"It's okay!" he says. He's momentarily distracted by the impact but then we make eye contact. Sparks fly. He's very taken by my very delicate and ladylike physique (har) and kindhearted eyes (HAR!). "I'm Rich and Famous," he continues.
"Hi, Rich," I say, suddenly shy but in a charming way. "I'm J."
"Why don't I take you out for a coffee? To say sorry for bumping into you," he says. Oh, his voice is smooth like red velvet cake (I don't even like red velvet cake).
"But I bumped into you!" I say. This is when he purposefully and comically nudges/bumps me. Gently because I'm a woman and therefore of great fragility. Handle with care.

I laugh. He is Funny with nice biceps and triceps (I know because I slap him on his arm with laughter as I chortle at his mild mannered joke).
"Okay," I say. "Let's go for coffee."

We have coffee then fuck (sorry). Then we get married and I never have to finish uni or work ever again. I just be feminine and wiley and of slim physique and slim waist and waste. It's great.

J

Monday, November 4, 2013

Poutine

She seems particularly inebriated in this one:



I am enjoying it.

J

Use a Spoon!

THIS SHOULDN'T BE THIS FUNNY:



But it is.

J

Bon Appétempt

Ugh. I love this hobag so much:



I just keep laughing. Sometimes, I'm not sure what I'm laughing at but I just keep doing it anyway. Part of me thinks, "God, it's almost too good. I prefer the rawness/rawnitude of someone slightly less funny and therefore more endearing."

But then I think, "Shit, just shut up, J." Then I keep watching videos until whoops, it's exam today and I haven't studied more than half the material.

J

Sunday, November 3, 2013

A Shocking Human Being

This R experience has taught me a lot. I used to think I had fabulous self-esteem. I used to describe myself as opinionated and egotistical, albeit in a half-joking way but still, I thought I was pretty damn great. But, as I reached the end of my teenage years and started uni, I sunk lower and lower until I couldn't imagine ever describing myself as opinionated and egotistical.

Sure, I was the same person with my close friends and those I'd known for a long time. But I was the opposite of who I felt like inside with people I didn't know well. I stopped answering questions in classes, stopped challenging myself, stopped wanting to be around people. I started seeing myself as stupid, ugly, fat, unattractive, unworthy of love (omg, cheesy), respect or admiration.

I've known this for a long time but honestly, it kind of came to a peak when I got to know R. I wanted, and still want, so badly for him to like me and want me as much as I wanted him. But, so many times, I second guessed myself and wondered whether I was good enough for him. Am I pretty enough? Am I smart enough? Am I nice enough? What would a great guy like him see in me? Shit, he's so good and I'm so terrible. Why would he even look twice at me?

I had very similar feelings during my Zeter Febbs interlude. Shit, what would such an intelligent, witty, tall human being want to do with a shrub like me? Whenever Little Mishelle or Big Michelle used to say, "You're too good for him," I used to think, "As if."

That will always hold me back if I think like that. How can anyone dare to be great if they only ever think of themselves as the lesser understudy?

J

Dear Marcus

Dear Marcus "Flutie Tutie" Flutie,

I need to tell you something. I suspect you are the man of my dreams with your penchant for cryptic one liners, observational poetry (a new genre that will explode in the new future, I am sure), lanky limbs and hypersexual proclivities.

Remember when I remarked that your creator, Megan McCafferty, failed to describe the state of your forearms let alone describe them adequately in the way I desired? Well, she is released from my bad books as she has more than adequately described your "pelvic V." Yes, the very one Katy Perry described as being the most attractive part of the male physique. And yes, your pelvic V must be very amazing and, if you really did exist and if you existed in 2013 instead of 2002 (?) as in the books, I think we would be meant to be.

To hell with the rest of them. We could sit on car hoods and stare out into shimmering city lights atop some sort of lookout just 15 minutes out of whatever podunk American town we deigned to reside in. We would live the perfect American YA novel. We would fight and lose touch then make up. The sex would be explosive. We would have a pregnancy scare but, doowop, it would thankfully come to pass that I was not pregnant. But then, tragedy, as we would find out the I was infertile, never to carry child. Ever.

Alternatively, I really would be pregnant but then, in some sort of accident, I would lose the child. We would both be distraught as we would realize that, hoo, we actually do want to have that picture perfect suburban life with the two kids (or three, in my case), Subaru and corn on the cob. Albeit, in an ironic way.

Alas, you are already gone. I am reading you some 10 years after the fact. After your creation. After you came to pass and after you came to leave. I'll always treasure you, Flutie Tutie. You are a fine fictional character.

J

The Hardest Part

I missed the best part from my story yesterday. As we were talking in the staff room at the very beginning of my shift, we started talking about all the crap we were having to buy to bring with us on our respective holidays/extended work/travel plans. He asked me where he should buy his clothes from as he doesn't go shopping very much. I asked him what he usually wears and where he buys his clothes from.

He was tentative.
"...Live?" he said. Oh R, I sympathize. When people ask me where I bought a certain item of clothing from, I suddenly become very self-conscious of my style choices. Will they judge me for my devotion to K-Mart (or my recent shift towards Target)?
"Why don't you just buy your clothes from there then?" I asked.
"I don't know..."
"Well, what do you usually wear?" I asked him. We were standing close (I am exaggerating the proximity of our closeness to convey the primal urges I felt at this time. They were manifesting themselves as delusional thoughts).
"Like, those shirts with the things," he said.
"..."
"You know!" he said. "Those button up shirts with the pattern."
"Pattern?"
"Like, the little squares and stuff."
"Plaid?" I asked, as tentative as he had initially been. In my mind, I was screaming, "PLAID? PLAID? DO YOU MEAN PLAID? DO YOU MEAN PLAID?"
"Yeah! I think that's what it's called. Plaid."

Well, well, well. I sized him up, sized him down, sized him sideways.
"You should buy more plaid shirts then," I said with all the authority in the world. "Plaid is a universal style. Stick with plaid."
"Yeah, I think I will," he said. We smiled at each other and I left the staff room to start my shift.

J

Saturday, November 2, 2013

Cardiac Arrest (Be Still, My Beating Heart)

"Sup," I said to him as I walked into the staff room. I didn't expect him there already. I thought his shift started at 12pm, not 11am. But there he was, lounging yet again. He does love to lounge.
"Not much," he said. "How are you?"
"Good," I said.

And so it began. As we were closing up at the end of the day, I said to him and some of the other guys, "Guess what? I can do the pallet jack now. Kyle showed me."
"Really?" they all said, evidently impressed by my impressive physical abilities.
"Yeah!"
"Come on, then," R said. "Show me."

So, I went with him. We spent 15 blissful minutes together as he helped me bring in the pallets from outside. Him somewhat tutoring me in the art of pallet jacking (off); I had previously exaggerated my jacking abilities. I made my "pallet jack off" joke and he laughed for long enough to convince me that he found it legitimately funny.

It was exactly like in the books. The guy teaching the girl some new skill. The girl melting at the knowledgeable voice and words of the guy. The guy saying words of encouragement, so sweet and tender in his patience. Every one of his smiles, his chuckles, his gentle instructions, never pushy, impatient or mean, sent me closer to the edge.

Is this the perfect closure to this chapter of my life? Only a few Saturday shifts to go. Only a few more times to look into this brown eyes and bask in that glorious smile.

Later, as we were officially closed for the day, an older gentleman carrying a little quarter Asian baby walked in. I was off closing up one of the registers so watched from afar. R, smiling widely, went to hold the baby. His niece, I presumed. If I had the balls, I would have jumped him right there and then. It took a lot of self-control to fight those urges to procreate with him and create our own quarter Asian babies.

The older gentleman and Ryan carrying the baby left soon after.
"Bye!" he said. He seemed so happy to be holding the baby. I've spoken to him about his niece before and he's so obviously in love with the baby. It is goddamn beautiful.
"You're holding a baby!" I said with a laugh. "Whose is it?"
"It's my..." he struggled to find the words. "sister's baby. My niece."
"I thought you were going to say it was yours!" I said.
"Better hope not!" the older gentleman said, laughing as well. I guess he is R's father.

It was a blissful afternoon shift.

J

Friday, November 1, 2013

Jessica, Darling!

I am in the process of reading the Jessica Darling series by Megan McCafferty. Have you heard of this series? I went into this reading experience off my recent The Princess Diaries high and expecting something similar. Kind of childish but still, there's nothing quite like Meg Cabot's ample, swoonworthy (haven't used that word in a while) descriptions of Michael Moscovitz's forearms. Word, Meg. Word.

Well, let me say that Sloppy Firsts, the first book in the series, is nothing like what I imagined. It might even be better. It's kind of hard to say. For one thing, there is a satisfying amount of profanity, references to masturbation, sex, statutory rape, shitty parents, drug overdoses. But it's all wrapped up in a package that has been delivered across the street from the usual The Princess Diaries-type tween scene books.

While it has plenty of darker tones, it's still injected with enough humour and teenage romanticism to please both sides of me. The side that loves reading about the dark, dreary and depressing and the side that will sit in a dark corner and read about Michael Moscovitz's forearms for eight hours in a row.

Then there is Marcus Flutie. Marcus Flutie is the main romantic interest (as far as I can tell). What can I say about Marcus Flutie? Well, he's no Michael Moscovitz (there have been no remarks on the appearance of his forearms so I can't comment in that regard. But he has not invented any robotic arms for cardiac surgery yet so I think my judgment is fair). He's a little Jess Mariano meets Rob from 1800-Missing-You (another classic Cabot series) meets Macon from How to Deal (the movie adaptation starring the Benjamin Button-esque Mandy Moore) meets someone from Dawson's Creek I'm sure (I have only watched a handful of Dawson's Creek episodes but he feels like he would fit in that creek).

I will tell you how the rest goes. So far, I am enjoying it.

J