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V vs. Visiting Boys

So I’m leaving today to visit the boyfriend out in California. Here’s what sucks about traveling to visit a boy …

I have to bring my whole damn bathroom with me.

When you go visit a girlfriend they have eight different kinds of lotion: 24-hour hydration, firming lotion, gradual self-tanning lotion, scented lotion, unscented lotion, etc. They have blowdryers and backup blowdryers. And curling irons, straightening irons and body wash with extra loofahs for guests.

Girls have shampoo AND conditioner – not shampoo/condition/bodywash in one.  Hairspray and damage-control serum.  Girls have different soaps, washes, exfoliators and lotions for face and body.

Boys?

Boys have … soap.

The End.

(image found here)

To read more by V visit her personal blog *uncorked.

Windows of Death

A few days ago, a man in a construction hat walked into our office area at work and, without comment, began taping off our office doors with crime-scene-yellow tape.

I might have thought it was a practical joke, except we’re not exactly big on those around here.

You see, they’re doing major construction on our building, a process that currently involves swinging large steel beams around on a crane. As you can imagine, there have been some welfare concerns involved with this process, which was best described in a recent e-mail from one of our higher-ups:

To avoid the risk of some tragic impaling as steel flies through the air outside of my office window, I have moved to the safety of ____ until the “all clear” is sounded.  My phone extension remains the same. All others on the Wall of Death will be moved to the outer reception areas of their offices.

Or at least this was the original story—until Hard Hat Man made my office look like an episode of CSI. They had previously told us we would be able to go in and out of our offices freely as long as there was no steel presently in the air, but now the story was quite the opposite—I had 15 minutes. We were like hurricane evacuees.

What do you save from your office in 15 minutes? Other than piles of the work-related stuff I needed for my actual job, I frantically grabbed up only the most essential personal items—chocolate wafers, a nail kit, and caramel coffee syrup. A girl’s gotta live.

My supervisor declared that she wanted me nowhere near the potential construction hazards—leading me to imagine some serious action-movie sequences in my head—so we began seeking out other options.

So there I was: a homeless, cardboard-box kitten in the rain.

The first possibility was in the midst of a frantic office, taking over various cubicles as their permanent occupants took staggered vacation days.

This porridge seemed a bit too chaotic.

Next was a secluded closet that may once have resembled an office, but which had since been overgrown with unwanted supplies, billions of nondescript shirts, and piles of too-important-to-toss-yes-useless-to-everyone paperwork that had stubbornly persevered through the annals of time. At the end of the world, there will be cockroaches and this paperwork. Most importantly, there was no sign of the computer terminals or desk that may once have resided here.

This porridge was too desperate.

Another option was the office of a part-timer who spends her summers out of state. This office was in the opposite corner of the building, near the end of an almost-deserted hallway. It’s always uncomfortable occupying someone else’s space, and this office in particular is located across the hallway from a notorious creeper.

This porridge too closely resembled a horror movie.

Luckily, in a last-ditch effort to find a home, I called the one person who may have had space available and was afforded a comfortable workspace—with a window, to boot! To IT’s credit, I had my computer and phone set up within the half-hour, and I was ready to go (minus my professional life being piled haphazardly on carts). Nonetheless, I have a new [temporary] home.

It may not be my office, but my coffee syrup and I can be comfortable here for a while.

The World According to Me

For about five minutes, several years ago, the title on my business cards was to have been She Ra Princess of Power.  Really.  We were re-tooling the department, brainstorming new titles that would better describe our actual job functions.  I suggested She Ra, because, well, I figured I was that all-powerful.  That, and because I wanted a tiara and a sash.

Up on the white board it went.  And there it stayed, until someone suggested a few more business-like titles.  What stuck was Strategic Relationship Manager.  Utilitarian, sure, but with little pizzazz.   I told everyone the story though, of how I got to be She Ra, Princess of Power for a little while.  I say all this because, deep down, I really do believe I am She Ra.  Or at least that I have She Ra-like powers. Mostly.   There are times when I want to shout “If you’d just do it my way, the world run so much smoother!”  And by the world, I of course mean my life:  if you all would just follow my rules, my world would run infinitely better.

Really.  They’re not difficult rules.  Here’s a sample:

If God had meant for their to be flavored coffee, God would have created flavored coffee beans.  Cream is acceptable.  However, if you add whipped cream, you now have a milkshake, not coffee.  Even if it’s hot.

Drive-through lanes were invented for speed and convenience.  They are not designed for question-and-answer hour.  Seriously— when’s the last time the menu changed in any meaningful way?  It’s a burger.  Or chicken nuggets.  Or fries.  Move on.  Drive through.  Oh, and this doesn’t mean drive-and-then-stop-and-check-your-order or contemplate-just-how-hot-that-coffee-is.  It’s hot; trust me.  Put the cup in the cup-holder and drive.

Lettuce doesn’t belong on a sandwich.  Ever.  It is slippery.  No good can ever come from a slippery sandwich.

You are not the arbiter of how fast the fast lanes on the highway should be.  If you find yourself zipping along in the far left lane, happy in your three-miles-over-the-posted-speed-limit haze, oblivious that the car behind you is all but kissing your bumper, and more cars zoom past you on the right (some of whose occupants are looking decidedly annoyed, and some gesticulating madly, one finger at a time)— move over.  Highway driving is a cooperative effort, people.  Cooperate.

You’re not so special or so important that you cannot wait the extra two minutes and NOT block the intersection.  And stop being fake-surprised when motorists with the actual right-of-way give you snarky looks.  You drove into that intersection precisely so you would get caught and wouldn’t have to wait for the next one.

Regardless of ever-changing grammatical rules, irregardless is not a word.  Ever.  And while we’re at it— “your” is NOT the same as “you’re,” and there’s a difference between “who” and “whom.”   Likewise there, their and they’re take some thought.  There’s no excuse for bad grammar or bad spelling— even while texting.

I am all for your religious beliefs.  Have at ‘em.  Practice with all the fervor and passion and joy you can muster.  Do not, however, mistake your faith for my fact.    Feel free to do or not do as your God commands, but don’t legislate those thou shalts and thou shalt nots for the rest of us.

Simple rules, right?  Follow them, and the world continues to spin on its axis, and I don’t spin like a mad dervish, riffing on some nefarious infraction or misstep.  I can be a benevolent Princess of Power, as long as you play by the rules.  My rules.  It always comes back to that.

Here’s the thing though: I’d give them all up, every single one of my beloved rules, if we could all practice these:

Patience.  Tolerance.  Kindness.  Love.

Let’s face it: we all have our own battles to fight and demons to exorcize.  It costs us nothing to comfort or care.  Indeed, a kind word can heal a broken heart or give hope where once there was none.

Even She Ra, in all her glorious power, can’t hold a candle to that.

Interested in reading more about the world according to Stacey?  Check it out here.

Hotel, Motel, Holiday Inn (say WHAT?)

Bed headImagine this scenario:

It’s midnight. You’re in a new city, and you’ve spent the day exploring on foot (read: lots of walking; tired feet). Afterward, you visited a piano bar and, due to high drink costs, had only enough alcohol to make you sleepy and to coat your teeth in that oh-so-pleasant layer of scummy sugar.

You walk into your hotel lobby to cash in on a room reservation that you’ve made ahead of time and already paid for in full.

There’s no one at the desk.

There’s also no bell to ring, so you figure you’ll just wait a few minutes until they come back from rounds, a smoke break, or whatever errand they may be doing.

About 15 minutes pass, and there’s still no sign of anyone. You start craning your neck toward the back room and calling “Hello? Hello?” in that pleading way that means you want nothing more than to just go to bed in peace.

You then notice a phone sitting in the lobby. Perhaps you can call the front desk and get it to ring in the back somewhere, where someone will pick up.

No luck. It just rings at the front desk where, as we’ve already established, no one is standing.

You try the same thing with your cell phone, yielding the same result.

At this point, it’s been about 20 minutes. This is getting weird and very frustrating. Where is everybody exactly? How is it possible that you are so close to collapsing into a comfortable bed for the night and yet so far away from it?

25 minutes have passed since you walked into the lobby. By this time, you’ve tried walking around the attached hallways, which only lead into mazes of locked guest rooms. You’ve gone in and out of the front door multiple times in hopes that some motion-activated bell would ring somewhere and get someone’s attention. You’ve called the other hotel of the same chain in town, and they said they would try to get a hold of someone. Their fruitless call also went to the staff-less front desk.

In a moment of desperation, you even screamed at the top of your lungs like you were being attacked because—let’s face it—this is an attack on your humanity.

What do you do now? Who else is even working at midnight?

I’ll tell you what I did: I called the police.

Yes, it was a ridiculous situation. Yes, the police probably have better things to do. But I was at a loss for appropriate action. I needed somewhere to sleep now. Plus, I’d already paid for this particular somewhere, so I couldn’t just up and choose a different one.

The police assured me that they would send someone over to make sure everything was ok. A few minutes later—we’re about 30 minutes in at this point—an officer walks in, and I admit with embarrassment that it was indeed me who called. He informs me that the other hotel across the parking lot (a different chain name) is actually attached, and he calls over the desk clerk from over there to see what’s going on.

The clerk says that he hasn’t seen our hotel’s employee yet tonight, and that she should have gotten in at 11. He knocks on the same door that we did—the one that employees enter to go into the back portion of the desk—and also yields no response.

So he slowly opens the door. I see his eyes pan around the room and then down to the floor. I see him give my fiancee a look, although from the angle I am standing, I can’t discern horror or annoyance specifically. The other employee enters the room and crouches down near the floor, gives a shake, then gives a significantly harder shake. Finally, there are signs of life.

The desk worker has been sleeping on the floor the whole time. Jon later tells me from his glimpse inside that she had set up a full bed for herself on the floor, complete with blankets and pillows.

I can’t hear if any words are exchanged, but the employee slowly emerges. Her hair is a mess, its short cut sticking out at countless odd angles. Her face shows no signs of remorse or panic, but rather she yawns laboriously, stretches a bit, and ruffles the back of her hair to smooth it down. In a small moment of victory for us, this ruffling actually makes her hair look worse.

The cop stands there just long enough to witness all of this, then whispers, “I’ll let you voice your complaint to her” and exits. I’m pretty sure he was trying to get out before he busted out laughing, and that he’s currently radioing in a pretty entertaining story to his cohorts.

So, finally, after she asks us if we’re “logging in” (…?) and to confirm our names—despite the the printout we handed her that lists everything in writing—we receive our keys. It is 12:40 a.m.

I sincerely doubt that this stuff happens to other people.

You Seem To Be On Fire

Here’s a dirty little secret: teachers don’t like all their students. Some of them are jerks, and we wish they weren’t in our classes. We try to be compassionate, but despite our best intentions, sometimes we just give up.

Obvious, no? It should be. Teachers are people with emotions and opinions just like anyone else, but I have this teensy-little problem with self-delusion. (See my post about traveling to London.) I left my education program with the absurd conviction that I would change lives, inspire the listless, and turn even the most resistant student into a fervent, life-long English enthusiast. Yeah, right.

My first year teaching high school was a nightmare. (Later, I learned this is true for most newbies.) I was 27, looked about 18, and had absolutely no idea how to relate to teenagers. My optimism gave way to desperation as I realized my so-called “radical” teaching methods were useless without classroom management, and my classes were chaotic. Like so many other young grads before me, I wanted to be the “cool” teacher, but I wasn’t cool. I was a mess.

Evan was the first student I gave up on. He led his best friend Darnell in an ongoing plot to derail my class. They rarely showed up and when they did, they actively tried to upset me. They were totally up-front about this, grinning with satisfaction when I lost my cool. Evan and Darnell never, ever did any work, never even brought backpacks to class, and frequently interrupted me and their classmates by shouting random, rude nonsense. Sometimes they’d just hop up and walk around the classroom. Sometimes, they’d just get up and leave. I didn’t mind, because if they didn’t leave on their own, I inevitably had to kick them out. Even after they’d gone, though, restoring classroom order was nigh impossible. I breathed easier when they were absent.

Midway through the second quarter, I’d given up on my cheerful circle of desks and reinstituted regimental rows. (A useless solution.) I’d positioned Evan and Darnell on opposite sides of the room, and Evan sat front and center. (Bad idea.) One day, Evan stood and left. I didn’t expect him to return, but he did. He sat quietly at his desk for a few minutes before I smelled something burning. A thin ribbon of smoke rose from Evan’s head.

“Evan,” I said calmly, “You seem to be on fire.”

The class went insane with laughter. I quickly reassured myself the fire extinguisher still hung on the wall. Would I actually put him out if he burst into flame? No idea.

Evan stood and, with a sloth-like languor I couldn’t duplicate even if I tried, walked to the trash can. Looking straight at me, he reached deep into the pocket of his jeans and removed a smoldering cigarette, its end glowing red. Apparently, he’d shoved a still-burning cigarette into his pocket. Yeah, he was that bright. He smashed out the burning ash with his bare fingers, threw the cigarette into the trash, and, with the same impossible slowness, returned to his seat.

Naturally, I kicked him out, and later I told the principal he was no longer welcome in my classroom. Darnell didn’t return either, probably in solidarity. Fine with me. I couldn’t be sorry they were gone, but I did feel sorry for failing to reach them. They obviously needed close, personal attention and serious guidance, but I wasn’t able to give it to them.

My second year was better. I learned that logical, clear rules actually help students learn and aren’t always restrictive. I tried desperately to be fair, consistent and not lose my temper. Sometime during that year’s second quarter, I moved the desks back into a circle. For the past ten years, I’ve taught college composition. I still feel bad when I lose a student, but I realize it’s impossible to reach everybody. I know every semester there will be a student or two I just won’t like. I don’t torment myself. Instead, I try to keep a sense of humor, focus on the students who actually want my help, and remember that for every student who drives me nuts, twenty others are great.

Visit Renee Cohn at 2000 Irises

Photo by Rachel Groves

Why Grad School Ruined My Life (and Made Me Fat)

I know, I know. A higher education is supposed to open doors. More degrees = more opportunities, and all that. And since I am someone who in fact works in higher education, I must believe in it, right?

The answer is yes it does, and yes I do. I definitely wouldn’t be where I am if it weren’t for my master’s degree, and the fact that I have one at all is a great point of personal pride.

But tell that to the 15 extra pounds I packed on—and still haven’t lost—in year one of grad school.

Grad school, though great for intellectual development, is not exactly the prime place to optimize one’s girlish figure. Major stress + no free time + a billion late-night caramel lattes is not a good combination. Oh, the love-hate, addictive relationship I have with those lattes.

And then there’s the actual content of those grad-school classes. Grad programs, particularly those for Higher Education, are all about sensitivity to diversity and personal identity development, so most classes become sociological debates. Combine two years of this as a full-time student with a year of GA-ship in the Women’s Center, and you develop this near-constant, uber-feminist, damn-the-man, “what do you mean when you say ‘gay’?” mental feed that is very hard to turn off. Super Bowl beer commercials aren’t advertisements, but the misogynistic media oppressing women (and what does that body wash commercial say about men’s identity development?). Pop culture vampire movies are blatant demonstrations of white privilege. And can you believe the lies that Disney sold us as children?

You want to see my inner social-justice crusader go ape? Try suggesting to this 20-something, master’s-holding, recently engaged (after much related overanalyzing) individual that it’s selfish for a woman not to have children.

Yes, life was much simpler—albeit suckier—before grad school. When you’ve been constantly exposed to those kinds of debates, it’s really hard to just turn them off. I overanalyze everything. And you, dear reader, usually get a taste of that inner insanity in this blog.

The latte habit isn’t easy to kick, either.

Hey, Baby

“Hey, Baby,” he called out to me as I walked past. I knew who he was. How could I not? He went by one name only and had a reputation. A reputation of his clients begging for mercy, pleading for the pain to stop. He was a personal trainer.

I first heard of him about five years ago. Another mom mentioned his butt kickin classes. I hadn’t worked out in almost 4 years due to those little people that invaded my house. Maybe it was time to get back into it.  A month later, I gave it a try.

What. A. Mistake.

The arm strengthening class was non-stop, with no rest in between bicep, tricep and shoulder reps. My muscles throbbed. I down-sized to lighter weights, thinking this would get me through the remainder of the 30 minute class (of which I was only 10 minutes into.) He noticed the switch and immediately placed heavier weights into my struggling hands. I tried to protest, but my words fell on unsympathetic ears. I had no choice but to leave the class. I had a baby to lift, a preschooler to play with, a house to clean and food to be prepared. Rubber arms would not be able to muster the strength. I was singing Duffy’s tune just like the others.

Fast forward several years and YES, I had become a regular at the gym. I exercised almost daily. I had to, unless I wanted to spend the very short time the children were in preschool  wandering around Costco, spending too much money at Target or hanging out at Starbucks. At least there are reported benefits from exercise. One benefit not mentioned in scientific journals is that a kick butt personal trainer  would start greeting you with “Hey, Baby,” every time he saw you. And that non-existent article would not mention that somehow those two words would do more for you than they would  if your husband had uttered them.

You have to understand that we were not on a first name basis. He was not trying to jockey for a new client or pick me up. (HA!)  I noticed that he used this greeting with other women I knew who exercised. I applied mathematical reasoning and deduced that “Hey, Baby,” was a compliment that I had earned from putting my fitness needs first. It was a two word motivator that could only be spoken by him that made a difference in my time at the gym.

That all came to a screeching halt when I returned to work briefly last year. My daily visits to the gym ceased.  So did the “Hey, Baby” comments. The months following were filled with packing, moving, unpacking and getting settled. I was about as fit as a contestant on day one of The Biggest Loser. But I had to prioritize. Finding the dishes, towels and shampoo trumped the elliptical trainer. Besides, I now had stairs. I was partaking in the original StairMaster workout by default.

Soon enough, I found myself back at the gym. I ran into Mr. Tall, Dark and Muscular trainer, but he only greeted me with,  “I haven’t seen you in a while.” I told him I had moved. “Welcome back,” he said before turning to his client and ordering her to jump up onto the weight bench sixteen times, convincing her that she could do it. (She couldn’t. ) I wasn’t  part of the “Hey, Baby” crowd anymore and I felt left out. That was almost seven months ago. Guess it’s time to get started. Again. I wanted to hear “Hey, Baby”.

Carb Face

Many people ask me, what is Carb Face?

Carb Face is what happens after heavy binge drinking or eating a large, lumberjack-sized meal such as, Thanksgiving or Passover.

Other culprits include: pasta, bread, Mexican food, Italian food, Chinese food, pizza, french fries, burgers, etc.

Rule of thumb: Anything that’s going to make your ass fat will make your face fat too.

I first learned of Carb Face in college. Oh, the glory days.

I used to take a 32oz cup, pour in 4 shots of vodka, add a bottle of Mike’s Hard Lemonade, a generous glass of Champagne and a splash of OJ. I called this special concoction, Vodka Surprise.

The surprise was – you’d wake up the next morning and not remember a thing.

Although reflecting back it’s more like, “Surprise! You were an alcoholic!”

Did I mention this was my pre-party beverage of choice? Believe me, I’m not bragging.

Anywho, after a long night of vodka surprises, double vodka waters (yup, vodka and water), shots of tequila, beer bongs and whatever else I consumed, I’d wake up with a face the size of my ass.

Friggin’ carb face strikes again.

So what’s a gal to do? How do you recover from the Carb Face?

  1. Sunglasses
  2. Water
  3. Exercise
  4. Hide in bed until the swelling subsides
  5. Pour yourself a mimosa, and just keep on drinkin’ till you can’t see your face
I must admit, number five is always the most appealing.
And besides, diet starts tomorrow….

The Perils of Listening In

Remember the last time you were sitting in that café, minding your own business, chatting with a friend? You were completely focused on one another, catching up on recent events, sharing traumas and victories, emotions, fears. It was a wonderful conversation, wasn’t it? Personal and satisfying, meaningful, refreshing.

Yeah. I remember that too. I was listening the whole time.

I possess the dubious superpower of Super Hearing. (Imagine concentric red lines emanating from my ears.) I’d rather have Super Strength or Eidetic Memory, but I suppose I’ll take the hand I’m dealt (or ears, if you will.) I haven’t yet used my power to thwart criminal masterminds, but I totally will if the opportunity rises.

Like most superheroes, I have a love/hate relationship with my super ability. Generally, I use it for good. After all, Super Hearing can be practical and useful. For example, when I waited tables, I always “magically” knew what my guests needed before they asked. Imagine the tips! Later, as a teacher and professor, I easily discerned whispered conversations, the rustle of passed papers, the pucka-pucka of cell-phone keypads. A glance in a student’s direction usually sufficed to bring them around. You can also easily imagine how handy Super Hearing can be for a mom.

Beyond its benefits to maintaining order, though, Super Hearing can be vexing. You see, I can’t turn it off. There are many, many conversations I just don’t want to hear. For example, recently I’ve been unwittingly privy to:

  • “She thought it was hidden, but I found her diary under her mattress. She called me a bitch.”
  • “I’ve been clean since I got out of prison, but it’s hard. I’m lonely a lot.”
  • “Oh yeah, she’s hot. I’d love to get my hands on that ass.”

Ewwwww.

All this wouldn’t be so bad if I weren’t also ridiculously empathetic – another “talent” I can’t turn off. Sometimes others’ whispered confessions and harrowing stories bring me to tears or inspire such fury, I have to escape to the safety of my car and cry. There have been times when I’ve heard things so awful I’ve considered whether or not to contact authorities. Occasionally, with students in genuine need, I have intervened, but mostly I keep my nose out of other people’s business.

Instead, I compensate. I never leave home without my iPod because I don’t want to hear your hushed argument with your boyfriend, your regressive political views, or your cell-phone conversation with your divorce lawyer. I don’t want to know the details of your sex life, drug habits, medical issues, bank account balances, or relationship with Jesus. I always wear my noise-canceling earphones in the café, in doctor’s waiting rooms (deadly), in the library, on public transportation – anywhere bored people are prone to chit-chat.

Originally, I cultivated my Super Hearing. As a young child, tuning in to others’ voices served me well if things got dicey. But I no longer need this skill. Voyeurism holds no allure for me. I’d happily trade my Super Hearing for, say, Time Travel or Super Speed. Super powers never come free though. As Spiderman, Batman and Catwoman have demonstrated, there’s always a cost.

I imagine old age will eventually dull the constant din of other people’s voices, especially as I’ve spent the last twenty-five years listening to loud music through earbuds. In the meantime, know that I honestly don’t want to eavesdrop, but if I’m sitting nearby without my earphones on, I’m listening.

Read more by Renee Cohn at 2000Irises.

Photo by val.pearl

A More Learned Faux Trixie

I recently turned 30.  From what I hear, it’s all downhill from here.  I feel like the one truly fun decade of my life has passed me by so quickly, and I didn’t take full advantage because I was busy being a serious student and furthering my career.  However, now that I’m older, I look back and realized I’ve learned a few lessons.  I don’t know how serious or pragmatic or valuable they are, but if I could sit with my 20-year old self over a cup of coffee, I’d let her know this:

You look better tan.  Stop trying to pull of that pasty, pale look.  It doesn’t look good on you.  Always be tan.  You’ll feel better about yourself in pictures later.

You also look better brunette.  I know, I know.  You’re naturally blond, and you embrace it.  However, think about changing your hair color before age 27.  Also, those red streaks?  They make you look more like a porn star than a lawyer.

Your dream is to live in the city?  Move to a big condo overlooking beautiful downtown Chicago?  City living is not really all it’s cracked up to be.  Also, we don’t have a trust fund and you’ll never make enough to have a penthouse in the sky, so stop believing that you’ll be listening to Frank Sinatra and drinking a martini from your leather couch.  You’ll be in an old apartment in Andersonville with no view, a hand-me-down couch, and a glass of cheap Lambrusco.

You’re never going to be rail thin, but you’ll look good, even with a little meat on your bones.  Don’t sacrifice every burrito, piece of cake, fancy cocktail, or decadent meal to lose 8 ounces.  This is why God created the empire waist.

Stop piercing your eyebrow.  The piercer lied to you.  It will leave a scar, and for the rest of your life, people will ask you what happened, wherein you will have to explain your wild streak in college.

Mom and Dad aren’t so bad.  You’re just being kind of a jerk all the time.

Your friends will get married before you.  Don’t freak out.  It’s not that big of a deal.  You’ll find someone eventually.  And, by the time you get married, you’ll be so old that a big traditional wedding will no longer be acceptable and you’ll have to do a destination wedding.  BONUS: Vacation!

Take more vacations.  Your bosses don’t care as much as they think you do that you’re not in the office.

Stop smoking.  For the love of GOD, stop before it is incredibly hard to do so, and you’re waking up every night hacking up a lung.

You and your college boyfriend are going to break up.  That is a fact.  You’re going to freak out a little when you find out that he’s engaged.  Just remember, it was not at all meant to be.

Take better care of your car.

You always do whatever is easiest for you.  Every once in awhile, try something that challenges you.  Don’t worry, you won’t always fail.  Sometimes, you’ll actually succeed.

You will be extremely belligerent and generally unpleasant to be around when drinking until age 28 or so, when you’ll become fun after a few cocktails.  Lay off hitting the sauce too hard until that time.

Learn which angle of your face looks best in pictures.  You’ll thank me when you don’t have 90 bazillion pictures of you looking horrible.

Don’t sign up for that credit card.  It’s a just a bad idea.  You’ll max it out and then be paying it off for the rest of your life.  Also, learn how to budget.  Sure, that designer shirt is cute now, but you’ll wear it twice.  Do you really need it?

Someone will convince you at age 26 that you should get a tattoo of the scales of justice after you are sworn into the bar.  Seriously stop and consider that choice before moving forward.

Your best asset is your sense of humor and outgoing personality.   You’re never going to be the hot girl.  Stop trying to be and use those assets you do have to your advantage more.

Not everyone is going to like you, and you’re not going to like everyone.  That’s perfectly fine.  Just learn to accept that some people are clearly not as awesome as you and move on.  You’ll waste way too much time and energy trying to change their minds or exacting your revenge.  It’s not worth it.

I can’t wait to see what my 40-year old self has to say to me in ten years.  Just kidding; yes I can.  Please pass by slowly, 30s.

Re-posted from the Faux Trixie’s personal site, which you can access here.

Photo used with permission from “irisb477″

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