Archive for the ‘Holidays’ Category

Happy Friday and Memorial Day Weekend

May 25, 2007

It’s the Friday before a long weekend, and it has that lazy, sluggish, relaxed, summertime “why am I working” feeling in the air. Even those of us who work out of a home office are feeling the cabin fever after months of snow, rain, ice, wind and (if you are me) accident recovery. i have an appointment with the allergist next week to get my asthma back under control (it’s as if the accident knocked it out of whack. Haven’t been this wheezy and uncomfortable since before I was diagnosed and receiving treatment.). After that I can actually go play outside with my friends!

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If you have a Mac, check out my contest over here.

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Also, I spent my evening last night making a friend a present. You can see her shiny new blog look and location here.

So what are your plans for the long weekend? Camping? Rafting? Gorging yourself on hot dogs, steak, burgers and beer like the rest of us? Let me know in the comments.

Our plans are up in the air. We’ve been invited to several barbecues. If I can get my allergyfst under control with OTC stuff, I want to go to most of them. Other than that honey will be mowing the grass and patching the roof, and I will be writing, writing, writing.

Now Listening: See My Mog

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Goodbye 2006

December 30, 2006

I'm not usually a resolutions person. Creating one momentous day each year to hang all of our hopes on for the next 364 seems a little unbalanced to me.  That said, I am going to make a few this year, and try a new technique.  I'm going to make my resolutions, then consciously re-make them every day.  Or, every day until I wake up too hungover to do it one day and stop the momentum.  Whichever. So, without further ado, my resolutions for 2007:

  • Take my writing blog and writing forum into the top 50 writing blogs of 2007.
  • Take my freelance career to a new level of financial stability that allows me to be completely debt free by December 2007.
  • Attain a size 6 again.
  • Live a non-smoking life.  I have been cutting back since before Thanksgiving with limited success.  We'll see if I can continue the trend.
  • I helped a few writers get a start on a career this year, I hope to help more on their way this coming year.

That's about it.  I have a few very specific goals this year, and I'm quite focused on attaining them.  I plan to refocus my goal each day by repeating the list out loud when I wake up and visualizing the actual results before bed.  I know! How "new agey" of me!

Now Listening:  The Cure <b>Standing On A Beach</b>

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ZeFrank, his Duckies and the story of the Human Baton…

December 9, 2006

This is going ot be a multi-part post.  It's worth every minute of reading, though, I promise!  (This is Leslie speak for grab a cup of joe, we're going to be here a while.)

First I want to tell you all a little story.  It's about a guy named ZeFrank (originally infamous for his mad dance skillz through a video email… well, go to his site and read that story for yourself.) and his vlog, Ze Frank's The Show.  I've been meaning to share this with all of my readers for some time now, but I keep putting it off.  Suddenly, the end is near, and I'd better clue you all in before it's over so you can catch up.

Backstory and linky goodness:

His main web site was awesome to begin with (check out the games, puzzles, scribblers, gadgets, singing frogs and whatnot on the sidebar), and then he began doing The Show this past March.  I watch it every Monday through Friday.  You should too. After all: he's thinking, so you don't have to. 

Some highlights from the past few months to start you off:

Jon Benet

How Do You Work This Thing

Hindsight

Brain Crack

Hollywood

Ride The Fire Eagle

Love Letter To Condoleeza

Or, start from The Beginning and watch them all.

Even further back, before The Show…  highlights from his main page:

How To Dance Properly (the video that made him famous)

Frog

The Scribbler

His Old Band 

Throughout the history of The Show, it has been very interactive.  From the offbeat humor and political commentary, to the in jokes ("Who likes the little little duckies in the pond? I do, I do a chicka-quack quack!") Ze includes his viewers (the Sports Racers, and also Duckies) in every aspect.  It's one of the many things that I love about The Show, this feeling of participation.

Periodically the LOA (League of Awesomeness) gives Sports Racers interactive projects, and sometimes the Sports Racers challenge Ze in return to things like chess games online and Fabuloso Friday.  (Really, there are a lot of inside jokes Ze has created for his viewers, so just watch from the beginning and catch up.  It will eat a weekend, but it's worth it, and then you'll be all up to speed on the pupils, the not blinking, the duckies, the vacuum cleaners, Ray, and so much more.  Go! Do it now!) 

The most recent group project has become known as the Human Baton project.  It started off as a simple idea – RunningFool, one of the Sports Racers, wanted to get to California on Duckie power over his winter break.  It has snowballed into hundreds of Sports Racers putting aside their hardcharger ways and helping Runningfool go all the way across the country and back on the power of the internet and the kindness of strangers.  It's really quite cool, and extremely monumental in scope (he went from 10 volunteers for a OR to CA trip to over 300 for a round the US and parts of Canada trip). 

We're hoping to get Luke (that's RunningFool) enough buttons to make movement awkward, lots of friendliness and beer, and maybe some news coverage.  John and I are helping out in Massachusetts and New Hampshire, having volunteered to be his Emergency Rescue Service should anything happen to him or if one of his relay drivers or beds in the area backs out last minute.  John doesn't even watch The Show unless I make him watch an episode here and there, but he thought the idea of a human baton was so cool he was completely into helping out Luke.  Love that about him! 

If you want to know more about RunningFool and his journey through sports Racer land as a Human Baton, visit the links below:

The Human Baton Flickr Photo Album

The website AwedJob (a Sports Racer and all around awesomely ducky guy) created for the event, Human Baton .

The Running Fool interview on the ZeFrank wiki.

The Running Fool wiki page on the ZeFrank wiki.

The Running Fool group on MeetUp .

The Running Fool thread in the forum about The Show.

 Update 12/28/06: Luke Makes The News in KC !

Don't be a Hard Charger! Support RunningFool in his journey!  

•••

On a more personal note, please think happy and peaceful thoughts for my little grey cat Ethel . She and Lucy are sisters, and are 14 years old, and up until yesterday you would have pegged them at 2 years old, tops. then yesterday, Ethel started had a seizure so severe it sent her down a flight of 14 steps.  She seems to be relatively calm, and is mobile, but I am now worried sick about her, my bay-bee!  Even the rottweilers are worried about "their" cat and can't stop coming over to check on her and make sure she's ok.  We take her to the vet on Monday, so fingers crossed, etc. people, please. 

•••

Now Listening: The Cramps Stay Sick

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How To “Do” The Holidays, From The Boston Globe

November 27, 2006

The article amused me, but the required registration to the site that asked a ton of personal questions did not, so for your viewing pleasure (and with FULL credit to the Boston Globe), I present:

How to Survive the Holidays Without Angering Your Family, Annoying Your Friends, and Alienating Your Neighbors

Miss Conduct’s indispensable guide to a jolly season.

ASKING AN ADVICE COLUMNIST HER OPINION of the holiday season is rather like asking an emergency room physician her opinion of motorcycles. We rarely hear about the times when things work out well. I have never, for example, gotten a letter like this:

Dear Miss Conduct, I just wanted to write and tell you what a great Christmas our family had. All the family members loved their presents, and the shopping came in well under budget this year! Uncle Sid from the Jewish side made his famous latkes and sang a hilarious version of “The Hanukkah Song.” Chandra, our new sister-in-law from India, looked beautiful in her red-and-green sari and said she was amazed at how much Christmas and Diwali have in common. The kids behaved like little angels and, best of all, Mom stayed sober the whole day!

No, I don’t get very many letters like that. Don’t get me wrong: The holiday season can inspire joy, generosity, playfulness, indulgence, nostalgia, spiritual renewal, and love. But it can also be difficult for the bereaved, members of minority religions, the unhappily single, the unhappily married, those who desperately want children and don’t have them, people with difficult children, people with difficult parents, people who are broke or in debt, those struggling with their weight, recovering addicts, teachers and students facing end-of-semester deadlines, anyone who works in the retail, travel, or service industries, and everyone with close friends or relatives in any of the above categories.

In short, all of us. Which is why approaching the holidays in the spirit of Murphy’s Law, grim though it may sound on the surface, ultimately makes sense. Here, then, are some tips to avoid the most common missteps and make the holidays what we all want them to be. Let’s start with the elephant in the room.

For Christmas People: There Is No “War on Christmas,” So Get Over It. Last year, a group of loudmouths decided to make a big fuss about a nonexistent “War on Christmas,” the major point of which, as far as anyone could tell, was that people were occasionally being wished “Happy Holidays” and that religious displays in public squares were correctly identified as such. Christians were urged to fight this “war” by sticking proudly to their guns and wishing everyone around them a Merry, Militant Christmas. This is utterly ridiculous – and utterly against the spirit of Christmas. As a religious holiday, Christmas celebrates the miracle of God entering the world as an infant born in a stable: naked, poor, and powerless. The most beloved secular myths of Christmas are also about treating the poor (Bob Cratchit), the different (Rudolph), and the humble (Charlie Brown’s Christmas tree) with respect and compassion. So how about showing a little of that Christmas spirit to others who don’t celebrate as you do? Particularly, don’t get snooty with salesclerks who wish you “Happy Holidays.” You’re not standing up for any grand principle when a clerk says “Happy Holidays,” and you respond “Merry Christmas!” in a snarky tone. You’re just being mean to people who probably make $6.75 an hour, so stop it.

Know That “Happy Holidays” Is PC – Plain Courtesy. Saying “Happy Holidays” doesn’t mean that you’re denying your religion or cultural practices; it means you’re being considerate to others who might not share them. (Or that you’re covering Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year’s for people whom you don’t see that often.) That said, if you do know what holiday someone celebrates, it’s rather silly not to wish him or her a nice specific one. When the Cohens show up at the Mahoneys’ annual December party, a round of stilted “Happy Holidays” at party’s end sounds a bit ridiculous. Better for the Mahoneys to wish their guests “Happy Hanukkah” and the Cohens to wish their hosts a “Merry Christmas.” A diverse city like Boston includes more than just Christians and Jews, and “Happy Holidays” works fine if you’re not sure what, if anything, someone celebrates. (It’s not always simple. Some non-Christians celebrate Christmas as a secular holiday, and some Christians do not celebrate Christmas.) Whatever your religion or lack thereof, chances are you’re getting some time off in November or December or bonus pay for working, so “Happy Holidays” is appropriate.

For Non-Christmas People: You’re in the Minority, So Get Over It. Being wished “Merry Christmas” is hardly the same thing as being baptized and forced to recite the catechism at gunpoint. If you are a Muslim, Jew, Buddhist, or random heathen who is wished “Merry Christmas,” look at it as an opportunity to espouse your values and tell your well-wisher how you plan to spend December 25: “Thanks! I’ll be subbing for one of my colleagues at the hospital so she can be with her family.” “Merry Christmas to you, too. My friends and I always get together for Chinese food and a movie.” “I can’t wait. Christmas is one of the few days of the year I have time to get to the mosque for all five prayers!”

Remember That Excessive Christmas-ness Gets on Everyone’s Nerves. Many folks who don’t celebrate Christmas are annoyed by the holiday’s relentless in-your-faceness. Here’s a secret: It annoys most Christmas-celebrators, too. Even the most rabid Santaphile does not want to hear those sleigh bells jingling and ring-ting-tingling before the Halloween candy is cleared from the shelves. And if the ubiquitous decorations irritate you, be grateful that you’re not the one who has to dig them out, put them up, and take them down every year.

So can we all just get along now, and none of this “War on Christmas” nonsense? Good. Now let’s get to some fun stuff:

Don’t Do Things That Make You Miserable. You’d think I wouldn’t have to say this. But many people seem to stress themselves out no end over the holidays. Maybe your bubbe used to make perfect golden latkes for Hanukkah, and now every time you try to grate the potatoes the way she did, you wind up with bleeding knuckles and a foul temper. Buy a mix, already. Your family might whine at first, but in the long run, they’ll realize it’s nicer not to have their potato pancakes served by Raging Bull. So if the earlier sunsets and the whispers of frost fill you with horror at some dread holiday chore approaching, try not doing that chore this year. Skip it altogether, pay someone else to do it, or foist it onto the hobbyist calligrapher in your family who actually likes addressing Christmas cards.

Communicate Holiday Plans and Expectations Well in Advance. This is particularly important if you are in a new relationship. Decide at whose house various festivities will be held, who will do what chores, how religious or secular things will get, how extravagant or minimalist present-giving should be, and the like. Interfaith couples often have it easier with this one, because they realize that they will need to discuss and negotiate in advance. People from similar backgrounds can take their traditions for granted, leading to unpleasant surprises when Calvin expects everyone gathered around the Thanksgiving table to say grace and tell what they’re grateful for that year, and Marianne expects them to keep their mouths shut and watch the game.

You should also pay attention to friends’ levels of holiday enthusiasm. Some people just do the holidays to a far greater degree than others. Jenny Jingles assumes that she and Franny Frosty will exchange presents, because haven’t they been each other’s support system and best friend all through that awful first semester of law school? But Franny has never in her life bought a present for anyone other than her immediate family and is horribly embarrassed when Jenny shows up with a snow globe purchased just for her at the Cambridge Art Fair. Franny could have avoided this awkward situation if she had noticed Jenny’s impending Christmas cheer and suggested that they treat each other to a nice holiday lunch at Harvest instead of getting presents. And Jenny could have been more attentive to the fact that Frances never once mentioned the holidays in a context other than that of much-desired time off.

Make the Preparations Part of the Celebration. Don’t think of the holidays as events; think of each holiday as a process, and try to let the process be as social and entertaining as possible. Preparing for the holidays alone makes the work feel like chores and makes you feel isolated and resentful of all the people you’re doing it for. So have some fun. Go present-shopping with friends and stop for lunch or a coffee or a cocktail somewhere along the line. Set aside evenings or weekend days for the whole family to bake, clean, and decorate together. If you live alone, invite friends over to wrap gifts and have hot chocolate – or crank some tunes, fix an indulgent snack, and turn the gift-wrapping (or online shopping) into a little party for one. Yes, of course these all sound like unbelievably dorky ideas that no urban hipster would ever do. That’s because you must . . .

Admit That the Holidays Aren’t About Good Taste . . . “Good taste” in the sense of kindness and sensitivity toward others, absolutely. But not “good taste” in the sense of albino-pumpkin-and-white-chrysanthemum Thanksgiving centerpieces or Christmas trees of Art Deco perfection that no yarn-and-Play-Doh kindergarten ornament will ever desecrate. If that’s your thing, by all means have the holidays as you like and revel in your tasteful splendor. But if, deep down, you really want to wear reindeer sweaters and listen to Andy Williams, or go outside and bang pots and pans at midnight on New Year’s Eve, or throw all the Hanukkah gelt down on a roll of the dreidel like a riverboat gambler – then the holidays are the time to let those nerdy impulses hold sway. When it’s cold outside, baby, why be cool? The holidays are the one time of year we’re allowed to regress and wallow in nostalgia and anti-hipness.

This goes for outdoor decorations as well. If you want splashy colored lights instead of tasteful white ones, go for it. If the theological weirdness of Santa and Rudolph worshiping at the manger makes your heart fill with Christmas joy, put ‘em up. (Tasteful minimalists can express holiday-season love and tolerance by being patient with their gaudy neighbors.) Just one, quite serious, caveat: Gaudy or refined, all outdoor holiday decorations are utterly grotesque by early January. Please, take them down.

Accept That There’s No One Right Way To Do the Holidays. People who prefer all-white centerpieces and truffle stuffing are not snobs brainwashed by Martha Stewart who have forgotten the true meaning of Thanksgiving. Those who go for gemutlich decorations of construction-paper hand-outline turkeys and Stove Top Stuffing are not hopeless rubes who should have gone back home to Nebraska the minute they finished grad school.

Well, perhaps they are, and perhaps the albino-pumpkin people are pretentious twits. But you don’t know that. Don’t accuse people of moral failings based on how they decorate their tables or what they put on them, or how much or little they spend, or if they celebrate any holidays at all. Some wonderful and generous people prefer to spread their wonder and generosity about year-round and not make a huge deal of the holidays. Some people who spend lavishly to make their families joyful on Christmas day never put a bit of effort into making them happy otherwise. We all do the holidays based on our own idiosyncratic traditions and emotional needs. So don’t try to jolly up the “Grinch” in the next cubicle who spends Christmas alone with a good book or sneer at “Cindy Lou Who” across the street who wears a different Christmas sweater every day in December.

Accept That There’s No One Right Way To Do the Holidays, Part 2. And just as ways of celebrating the holidays differ person to person, they differ year by year. If you haven’t celebrated Hanukkah since childhood, but this year you are in special need of spiritual rededication, it’s time to break out the menorah and prayer books. Or if you have suffered a loss in your family and just can’t bring yourself to do the traditional Thanksgiving at Aunt Bessie’s, why not suggest the family go to a restaurant instead? Just as you shouldn’t make others feel guilty or inadequate for not celebrating the holidays the way you do, you shouldn’t make yourself feel bad for not celebrating them the way you have in the past. Holiday traditions are lovely, but they shouldn’t be a straitjacket. Instead, they should be more like a really great pair of black trousers – something that goes with everything and with which you can be creative. (Yes, I do realize that after all my efforts to stay sensitive to readers of all religions, I have now just alienated practically all of the men. But it’s a really good metaphor, guys! Stay with me!)

Don’t Expect Perfection. Chances are good you won’t have a sepia-toned Norman Rockwell fantasy of a Thanksgiving or a sparkling New Year’s Eve party straight out of Noel Coward. Don’t make yourself crazy about what your holiday isn’t – try, instead, to appreciate what it is. And accept that there will be times when holiday preparations will be stressful and that some of the time spent with family or friends may feel more obligatory than joyful. There may be times when the blandness of “Happy Holidays” annoys you or when you feel as though you’re going to rip your hijab off and scream if one more person says “Merry Chri-” and then turns beet-purple and stammers apologies at you. All worthwhile things have their moments of boredom, stress, and anger. Let yourself feel what you feel, and move on.

Give Yourself the Best Holiday Present: A Margin for Error. Don’t expect life to go on as usual during The Season. Accept that you probably will spend too much, not get as much done at work as you’d like, and gain some weight. Decide in advance how much of a margin of error you want to allow yourself (say, 10 percent over budget or a 5-pound weight gain). And decide where you can afford to err and where you can’t – perhaps you can spend time but not money or indulge in sweets but not alcohol. A little forethought can prevent regret later.

Expand the Circle of Joy. Finally, keep in mind that the holidays are not only about love and joy for you and your family and friends. Take some time to be extra-kind to those who may be struggling (remember my list earlier of those for whom the season can be difficult). Be patient with other people’s moments of holiday-induced stress, boredom, and frustration. And be extra-polite to salesclerks, please!

And from the bottom of my unhip, imperfect, politically correct heart to all of you: Happy Holidays! Robin Abrahams, a Cambridge-based writer with a PhD in psychology, writes the weekly “Miss Conduct” column in the Globe Magazine. E-mail her at missconduct@globe.com.

For more articles like this, go to The Boston Globe’s web site, here.

Now listening: The seemingly endless sounds of crappy xmas carols everywhere.   Who wrote The [stupid #$%$] Christmas Shoes, anyway??
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Turk The Bastey!

November 23, 2006

Happy Thanksgiving, everyone!

How To Cook  Turkey

Step 1: Go buy a turkey

Step 2: Take a drink of whiskey, scotch, or JD

Step 3: Put turkey in the oven

Step 4: Take another 2 drinks of whiskey

Step 5: Set the degree at 375 ovens

Step 6: Take 3 more whiskeys of drink

Step 7: Turn oven the on

Step 8: Take 4 whisks of drinky

Step 9: Turk the bastey

Step 10: Whiskey another bottle of get

Step 11: Stick a turkey in the thermometer

Step 12: Glass yourself a pour of whiskey

Step 13: Bake the whiskey for 4 hours

Step 14: Take the oven out of the turkey

Step 15: Take the oven out of the turkey

Step 16: Floor the turkey up off the pick

Step 17: Turk the carvey

Step 18: Get yourself another scottle of botch

Now Listening: The Be Good Tanyas Hello Love

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High Heels, Fall Leaves, Wet Weather: A Recipe For Disaster

November 14, 2006

So, I’m an idiot and a clutz. It’s official.  I injured my self walking today. Who does that, I ask you?  There I was walking from my car to the post office, when the next thing I know *wham*, I’m on the ground.

I had on high heels on the way to a client job (I rarely “dress up”. I work from home in jeans and a t-shirt 9 times out of ten.).  I apparantly stepped into a pile of leaves soggy from the weather we’ve been having.  My entire weight (considerable, I assure you) slammed onto my right knee.  Stars. Birdies. Words to make a sailor blush. Bruises.

I managed to get up, get the mail and drive to the clients in my stick shift. I snagged a bandage and bandaged it up. couldn’t ice it for a while, and it hurt like all hell. Finally I ice it with frozen veggies.  I’ve been keeping it up, bandaged and trying not to move it much or walk on it much for hours. It still hurts. The swelling is minimal, it makes a slight “click” feeling when I move it, but everything seems to be in place.

If it still hurts tomorrow I’ll try to go to a regular doctor, but I hope it is fine. Really, really hope. I have clients all week 16 hours a day trying to clear time for Thanksgiving, books to sort and shelve this weekend, baking to do for hosting Turkey Day here, grocery shopping, a stick shift to drive every day… the list is long.

Gah. Only me, I swear.

Now listening: House, MD

Happy Halloween!

October 31, 2006

Happy Halloween everyone! Enjoy some Halloween treats:

Thanks to the folks over in the RSM comment section, we have this groovy site with tons of cool pictures of spooky buildings and haunted house type sites. One of my favorites:

Over on ZeFrank they are having a Carve That Pumpkin Bitch pumpkin carving challenge. You can see the images so far here. One of my favorites so far:

Enjoy!

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Friday the 13th: The Freaky Friday Post

October 13, 2006

In honor of Friday the 13th, I thought I’d post some general freakiness for your enjoyment.

The folks over at ZeFrank: The Forum and EA have been talking about favorite conspiracy theories, all in a spirit of fun. I don’t know about you but I love conspiracy theories. I tend to “collect” them. Some of my favorite conspiracy theories mentioned so far:

The 23 Enigma

We never walked on the moon

Numbers Stations

Toynbee Tiles

Other freaky linky goodness for your Friday the 13th enjoyment:

• A fear of Friday the 13th is called Paraskevidekatriaphobia.

• Snopes, that most fantastic urban legend debunker, offers a timeline of Friday the 13th through the years here.

• A breakdown of the history and legends surrounding Friday the 13th can be found here.

• How about a dose of “do it yourself numerology” to pass the time?

Now Listening: The Cure Faith

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Best Wishes for Health and Happiness in the New Year

December 31, 2005

I hope 2006 is better than 2005 for everyone who reads this. Happy New Year everyone!

‘Tis the Season

December 26, 2005
No travel plans loomed, no heavy traffic delays were in our future, no last minute trips to the mall hovered leering over our heads as we had no one we were forced to buy for – with the mandatory trip to the midwest to “see family” cancelled this year, we were blissfully on our own.

The treasure of a Christmas spent with the one I love, enjoying each other’s company over Chinese take out in front of our own Christmas tree while exchanging a few heartfelt presents for each other was worth more than words can say. I will treasure it always, as family obligations not of our own choosing will once again enroach on our holiday joy next year.

May your New Year be happy and healthy and may you all be as rich in friends as we find ourselves.