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The latest, latest:

*NSYNC (Justine Henin BEL)
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IN TYPICAL BOY-BAND FASHION, MADE A YOUNG GIRL HAVE ALL KINDS OF HOPES AND DREAMS AND THEN RUTHLESSLY CRUSHED THEM — AND HER LEMONADE STAND, TOO — BY KNOCKING

OPPORTUNITY (Dinara Safina RUS)
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OUT OF THE TOURNAMENT.

Later, though, they followed her around singing, Would you be my girlfriend? Would you be my girlfriend? Why don’t you be my girlfriend? which is just plain creepy and manipulative. Reel ‘er in, break ‘er heart, reel ‘er in, break ‘er heart. Sick, *NSYNC. SICK. Stop messing with the poor girl’s head.

Sorry, Opportunity.

Asked for comment later about their bizarre behavior, *NSYNC simply said, “Nah nah-nah nah nah. Nah nah-nah nah. Be together say Nah nah-nah nah nah nah nah.”

Which, frankly, we neither understand nor care to.

In another heartbreaker NOT brought on by *NSYNC …..

THE LIBERTY BELL (Jelena Jankovic SRB)

LOUDLY PROCLAIMED THE LIBERTY OF

AMERICAN IDOL (Sybille Bammer AUT)
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ALLLL ACROSS THE FRUITED PLAIN!

Poorla’s head was cracked in the process. Luckily, she sustained no damage.

Our condolences, but sad Boo-Byes welcome, of course.

sad chairs

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50 Sad Chairs, a project by artist Bill Keaggy.

I love this whole idea. Our relationship to chairs. How they seem without us. How they seem — yes — sad without us. How their loneliness makes us sad, too. Sometimes — actually, most of the time, I think — a chair is not just a chair. If you have a favorite chair, you have a relationship with it. Don’t laugh. You do. There’s an alchemy between a person and their favorite chair. A symbiosis. You are one, you and your chair. I mean, think of a chair you’ve loved. The chair that was the coziest. The softest. The most comfortable. The one that fit your particular lumps perfectly and soothed each and every one of them every time you sat in it, without fail. That chair. If you don’t have it anymore, you miss it. And if you still have it, it’s the place you want to be at the end of a troublesome day. Or any day. The place that welcomes you and holds you and makes you go “ahhhh.” That’s love. You love that chair, whatever kind of chair it is, however old it is, however old you are. You will always love that chair. Maybe even pine for that chair.

When I was 7 years old, for reasons I began to tell in this post and will probably never be able to finish, I began an intense, obsessive, needy relationship with our rocking chair. I mean, I wore that thing out. Probably tested every last spring it had. Maybe even wore out my welcome a million times over while it suffered in stoic silence. But I loved it so. I needed it so. It was a crushed yellow velvet creature with box pleats and was basically glaring and ugly. Actually, it was probably velveteen, now that I think about it. Probably not the real deal or I wouldn’t have been allowed to sit in it. We’d had it for several years and no one in the family sat in it but me. It was mostly considered a good chair, a guest chair, you know? And, well, guests would sit in it, awkwardly, struggling and trying to hide it, but I could always tell because I would watch them. Closely. I wasn’t allowed to sit there if guests were visiting — and that made me kind of antsy, really — so from my quiet swatch of carpet nearby, I’d sneak little anxious peeks at them. The way they squirmed. Their shifting positions. Their restless legs. Their furrowed brows giving it away: Do I sit still here? Do I rock in this thing? Do I sit on the very edge and pretend it’s not a rocking chair? Always, they struggled with it and that’s how I knew that they did not understand the chair. Maybe they resented the chair, even, for the anxiety it put them through. And let’s not forget, it was yellow and glaring and ugly. Stupid chair, I could almost hear them thinking.

But me, I never tried to figure out how to sit in the chair. It was a rocking chair. You rocked. That’s what it did; that’s what you did. I always felt like we understood each other. There was no awkward struggle, no furrowed brow. Just sit and do what the chair is supposed to do. Rock. Rock. Rock again. Simple. And for me, at that time in my life, that chair was a kind of savior. It always embraced me. It was always waiting. It never rejected me. It made no demands. It listened to me. And I swear, it understood. To this day, you cannot tell me that chair did not understand how terrified I’d become of life. Its soft steady rocking was comfort and sympathy to me. And, yes, it was yellow and glaring and ugly, but I always thought it looked like gold. A golden chair in streaming sunlight. Every day, after school, it was the first place I’d go. My brother would instantly charge outside to play. My sister would retreat to our room to do homework. And I would tiptoe to the chair and crawl in. Through the window beside the chair, I could see kids in the park across the street, playing, riding bikes, chasing each other. But I couldn’t do that, couldn’t bring myself to do that. No. I wasn’t ready. Not yet. When I came home after a whole day at school with all those kids who didn’t know how scared I was, what I needed most was to rock in the chair. What I needed most was a break from holding my breath and pretending I wasn’t scared. So the chair let me breathe. Stop pretending. Be a quavering mass of fears until the rocking calmed me down. Let me sleep. Helped me forget.

My family would mock me, call me lazy if I stayed too long in the chair when there was homework or chores to be done, but I needed things right then in that stretch of my life that I could not possibly verbalize. I didn’t have the vocabulary. I was 7 years old, for God’s sake. I didn’t even know the word trauma. What little kid does? I didn’t know what else to do with my mute fears, so I would slink to the golden chair near the big window and let the honey light pour through all the dark places. Every day. Over and over. And I did it all the way through high school. All my life, I’ve struggled to “get over things,” move on, be bouncy! resilient! I don’t get over things easily or quickly; I never have; I probably never will, and I imagine this is where it all started and why I needed that chair so much. I thank God for it. My chair. In the end, that chair knew me, knew things about me, all there was to know, without rejecting me. It knew me and endured me and healed me. That chair gave me grace. Like a savior.

I miss my chair and what we were together.

Because, really, a chair is never just a chair.

froth

Saturday morning. A man and woman walk into Boheme, approach MB, and order.

“I’ll have a nonfat mocha, no whipped cream, NO FOAM,” the woman snarls.

“Yeah,” the man adds, “if it has foam, she’ll scream and break things.”

I stop and look at him over the espresso machine — to see if he’s joking, to see if she’s getting pissed, to see if these people are for real. He catches my eye for a split second; he’s serious. His look is equal parts fear and threat. What’s more, the woman doesn’t seem annoyed that he’s just outed her to strangers as a total beeyotch. It doesn’t even seem to register with her. She just sort of drifts around the room. How weird, I think.

Or maybe it’s that dance that boxers do seconds before they make someone hemorrhage from their head.

I’m kinda scared now, I also think. I hesitate for a second.

Do I really want to make a drink for someone who might scream and break things, someone who is drifting and/or doing the boxer’s dance of death? On the other hand, I decide, they seem like your basic Boheme muttonheads. Plus, they are staring at me, so, mechanically, I lug the milk out of the fridge, pour it into the steam pitcher, and start to steam.

Now, you may be surprised to learn that something happens to milk when you stick a hot steam wand into it. It gets hot, yes — but also, and even more surprisingly, its texture changes. Even if you’re not trying to make foam — and I know how to make some mean foam — it gets frothy. It’s more full-bodied, not thin anymore. And when you pour frothed milk into a drink, you will likely get a thin layer of — gasp! — white froth atop whatever brown concoction you’re making. The white may cover the brown. It’s just the way it is. To me, froth is not foam. Foam is something you carefully create; froth just happens.

So I pull the shots, add the chocolate sauce, and, finally, pour the steamed milk. At the top of the cup, there is the thinnnnnest layer of white. Maybe an eighth of an inch. I look at it and decide it’s fine. That’s not foam, right? We’ve established that, right? Still, I feel a little twinge in my gut, but think better of it. It’s a beautiful drink, I buoy my inner barista. Only a crazy person would make an issue of this, I soothe my inner frightened child.

Oh, Tracey. Tracey. You poor sad cow.

Gently, I push the drink across the counter to her and say, with fake certainty, “Okay. There ya go.”

She stares at it. The man stares at it. There is a huge pause. Huge. It’s like they’re having a moment of silence in honor of my wrongness. Really, it’s practically an homage, like for the dead people at the Oscars. I busy myself with, ah, cleaning my area.

Silence? What silence? They are admiring the perfection of .. it … all …

Then, as I straighten up from putting the milk in the fridge, I see it. The move of ultimate dismissal. Perfectly executed. It goes like this: the woman moves her head to the left as she says, “Oh. NO,” while, at the same time, her right hand pushes the drink to the right, towards her husband. Head moves one way, hand moves the other. She verbally AND physically rejects the drink. In one smooth move. Really, in retrospect, it was perfect. Left no doubts. You should all try it next time you want to make someone feel like crap.

The man now stands there alone and bug-eyed with the rejected drink. She has walked away. She hates the drink, obviously, but somehow, it’s his problem. Here we go. I wait for her to start screaming and breaking things. She actually seems to be doing breathing exercises now. Maybe to forestall the imminent statewide killing spree. The one that will start with me.

“Do I need to remake the drink?”

“Yes,” she throws over her shoulder.

“Well, it has foam,” the man whispers.

And I say — slightly defensively, I admit — “Um, well, milk does froth when you steam it, but I can remake it if you want.”

The man looks nervously at the woman, now pacing around Boheme, and offers, “Well, honey, if you want I can just drink that part off for you.”

“No.”

Since I only steam enough for each individual drink, I reach down and take the milk out again.

“Okay. Don’t make more milk. Uhm, just scoop this off, will you, and add some hot coffee. You have hot coffee, don’t you?”

No, Slappy, we sell blood sausage. Pleease.

I skim the layer of offending froth from the top of her drink and splash some coffee in it.

“Okay. Thereyago.”

“Here, honey.”

The woman scowls at the drink, at me, at the man, and stomps out, leaving him trailing after.

when he wears that t-shirt

Watch out.

MB is wearing his Ruger t-shirt at Boheme today. This means he is in NO mood to take any crap from our incredibly demanding, gun-hating customers.

It always cracks me up watching the looks he gets. What can I say? The dude was raised a mountain man.

Watch out, all you Slappies.

missy’s the poo

…. so take a big whiff.

Anybody else watching “Bring it On” tonight? Man, I love this movie.

Uh, that’s all.

once upon a time

1989. I was obsessed with Mandy Patinkin’s version of this song. I would listen and ache and love the aching.

And I still love this song.

Once upon a time
A girl with moonlight in her eyes
Put her hand in mine
And said she loved me so
But that was once upon a time
Very long ago

Once upon a hill
We sat beneath a willow tree
Counting all the stars and waiting for the dawn
But that was once upon a time
Now the tree is gone

How the breeze ruffled through her hair
How we always laughed as though tomorrow wasn’t there
We were young and didn’t have a care
Where did it go?

Once upon a time
The world was sweeter than we knew
Everything was ours
How happy we were then
But somehow once upon a time
Never comes again

Once upon a time
Never comes again

I live in my own little world

There are things I see ’round here on these Innernets — things I just don’t understand. I lack basic awareness, you see, of the world around me. I’m not cool. I’m not modern. Or in touch. Unless touchy counts. Not touchy-feely, because that’s icky. Just touchy. Also, I’m not hip. “Hip”? Do people say hip? No, Tracey, no, they do not, you sad little cow.

So, that being said or whined or whatever, will someone please tell me:

What is “teh”?

Why, just today, I saw ricki comment that something was “teh awesome!”

And, well, let me be honest. When I first saw “teh” many months ago, I thought it was maybe a typo for “the.” But I don’t know anymore. And it really doesn’t seem to fit here, does it? Do you say something is “the awesome”? Well, maybe you do. Which means I’m desperately behind the times. Not surprising, since I don’t even have basic cable. But then I thought, “Hm … maybe it’s a letter in the Hebrew alphabet,” You know, the letter teh. Not to offend my Jewish friends with my ignorance here. Sorry, Jesus and all. Plus, a swift, furtive Googling on the Hebrew alphabet proves one wrong on that score. Still, I don’t know. I really don’t know. As I said, I’m really not cool or modern or in touch or hip.

So what teh heck is teh?

And what did I just say??

Also, someone please enlighten me on:

“Clutch” — what is “clutch”? Because that same thing that ricki described as “teh awesome,” was later proclaimed to be “so clutch!” by one Sheila O’Malley

And these are my references for clutch:

a car thingy

“A clutch play”

“Evil clutches”

(Although, the phrase wasn’t “That is so clutches!” which almost sounds like it’s someone’s name and you’re saying something like “That is so Paris” or “That is so Britney.” You know: “That is so Clutches!” Which isn’t what it was at all and I digress, but maybe that’s what it should be, if you think about it, which I need to stop doing.)

Oh, and I also have this last reference for “clutch”:

“a brood of chickens”

But, then, I doubt if one would exclaim: “That is SO a brood of chickens!”

Although, I don’t know. I really do not.

So please help. Someone.

I would really like to be cool.

And modern.

“In touch.”

Even hip.

Mostly, I would really like to be “teh awesome” and “clutch.”

bookypants

Okay. Everyone is doing this meme. And I’d hate to be a joiner. But I’d hate to whine about being left behind, too. So I’ll just be a jhiner. A whoiner. And do the freakin’ meme already.

From Sheila.

What are you reading right now?

I’m reading Seven Gothic Tales by Isak Dinesen.

Do you have any idea what you’ll read when you’re done with that?

Well, there are Seven Tales, you see, and that’s quite a lot, so I’ll probably read something shorter.

What magazines do you have in your bathroom right now?

You mean, apart from the magazines for MB’s 9mm handgun that he chased me around the house with the other day?* Oh, well, let’s see, there’s that and oh, a mixed-media magazine. It is a pretty pretty pony and I love it.

* I am totally kidding. I chased him.

What’s the worst thing you were ever forced to read?

I remember hating Giants in the Earth, by Olefarrrken Hedda Gabler Rooodevarggge. I’m pretty sure that’s the dude’s name. But I don’t remember why I hated it so much. Also — that chapter on Commedia dell’Arte in my “History of Theatre” textbook scarred me forever. I hate you, Pantalone. Get away from me, you perv, with your giant crippling codpiece and your hooky penis mask. You sicken me.

What’s the one book you always recommend to just about everyone?

Oh, Giants in the Earth, for sure. I mean, I read it, so I want everyone else to read it and remind me why I hated it.

I also seem to recommend lots of Philip Yancey, my Disco-Stu Christian boyfriend.

Admit it, the librarians at your library know you on a first name basis, don’t they?

Well, one does, but I’m not going back til she leaves or dies because instead of greeting me with a cheery hello, she seems to like to scowl at me and bark, “Tracey, you need to pay up. You have $14 in late fees” and niggling stuff like that.

So I just started to feel unwelcome, you know?

And I mostly buy books now, because when you check out a book and love it and then have to give it back? Well, it’s like giving back a cute wiggly puppy, I say. Why do you think I owe Marion the Mean Librarian $14??

Is there a book you absolutely love, but for some reason, people never think it sounds interesting, or maybe they read it and don’t like it at all?

Well, I became very obsessed with Over the Edge of the World by Laurence Bergreen last year and I would go around saying, “Oh, you have just GOT to read this book about Magellan! I am telling you!” And people would either say, “Eh?” or “Who’s Magellan?” or “Lady, my dad will be here any minute to pick me up.” So, it didn’t seem to go over real well. Weirdos.

Do you read books while you eat? While you bathe? While you watch movies or TV? While you listen to music? While you’re on the computer? While you’re having sex? While you’re driving?

Suuure, all the time. Everywhere! And MB prefers that I read whilst having sex.

When you were little, did other children tease you about your reading habits?

No. I was teased more about my perpetually red burning face habit. And my dressing habits.

What’s the last thing you stayed up half the night reading because it was so good you couldn’t put it down?

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows.

in absentia

I’m gone for a few days. Won’t even have my computer with me. It’s all very last minute, but we’re just …. gone …. out into the wild. So no blogging, obviously; no email. No nuthin’. Just me, MB, and me noggin.

See you later in the week.

overheard in zion, utah

In the dining hall — yes, there was a dining hall — from the table of teenage ranch workers:

GIRL: Just think, if the South had won the war, we’d all be driving flying cars and black people would still work for us.

Uhm, did I mention we spent our trip at a white supremacist commune?