The Dangers Present in Wireless Internet

April 25, 2009 at 10:16 pm (Uncategorized) (, , , , , , , , , , )

My addition to the Internet is well-documented.  I can’t go more than a few hours without checking my email, my google reader, the top headlines on Jezebel.com.  I can give or take a TV in my living space, but that’s because I use my computer for almost everything there is.  It’s my entertainment source, my preferred method of communication, my news source, the way that I prep for classes.

That being said, my addiction has its drawbacks.  The immediacy of the Internet allows for a great deal of idiocy from its users, myself (often) included.  Social networking sites allow users to post their statuses at the drop of a hat, mini-blogs like Twitter allow people to post their musings in 140 characters or less, people use blogs like this one to write post after post of navel-gazing pseudo-intellectual crap.

Crap that they might regret at a later date, when they’ve sobered up, calmed down, re-examined the situation in the harsh light of day.

It tends to be my biggest regret in life.  Posting my most secret thoughts on the Internet is something I’ve been guilty of since I was sixteen years old and was dealing with the absolute pain of high school.  When you’re a sixteen-year-old girl, life is absolutely excruciating.  To be honest, it’s alarming that at 24, my outlook isn’t that different.

So I’m sitting here, listening to sad bastard music, my cell phone within arm’s reach for a phone call that was supposed to come over 20 minutes ago but in all probability won’t arrive at all, feeling the melancholic strings of nostalgia pull at my heart.

Christ.  Did I really just write “feeling the melancholic strings of nostalgia pull at my heart?”  I’m losing what little grip I have left.

Driving home tonight, after hanging up unsatisfied with how my conversation had ended with The Boy (who is out with friends and not me and who referred to me as “a friend” when someone at the house party he’s at asked who he was on the phone with), I willed myself not to cry because I’ve been doing too much of it lately and it doesn’t do me any good and then I turned up the music in my car really loud and I sang-shouted the lyrics to a sad song and it made me feel better and powerful if even for a moment because most of the time I feel like everything is so far out of my control and then I started thinking about whether I’m happy at all with how things are in general and how sad I am about the uncertainty of where my life is headed and also about how I feel like this relationship that I’m in yes I am in a relationship is at a standstill because he won’t acquiese to what was a lighthearted gesture that didn’t mean what he thought it meant and if I really admit it to myself, it still stings and then I started thinking about other nights when I would drive around in the dark and listen to music and think thoughts that I thought were so deep but were really shallow and are still shallow and I’m so SICK of thinking about The Boy and boys in general and then I randomly thought about the original BOY and I wondered if he ever thought about me and

my mind flashed back to this random night early in our relationship where we went to a show of a friend of his and we sat outside while the band loaded up their stuff afterwards and I remember sitting in the chill night air while He smoked an illicit cigarette and sulked about something but I can’t remember what it was.

I wish I remember more about certain things.  My mind used to be so sharp, and even the most insignificant details stuck in my mind and I so confidently boasted that I had a photographic memory and I never forgot anything but now things are slipping away and I

can’t

hold on to them.

I’ll probably delete this in the morning.

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So They Say

September 16, 2008 at 9:59 pm (Uncategorized) (, , , , , , )

Last Saturday night I let my hair down.

I mean this metaphorically and literally. I did actually wear my hair down, my curls were crazy, all over the place, standing up, sticking out, springing forward. I wore my favorite green sweater, and my favorite jeans, and I looked good, and I looked cute, and I was looking forward to seeing one of my favorite local bands.

So I had two drinks (rum and coke is my drink of choice, because I am, at heart, a nineteen year old sorority girl) before The Boy picked me up. I was dancing to Ginuwine (I’m not proud, y’all) when he arrived. I hadn’t eaten, and I suddenly realized that the drinks had been stronger than I’d anticipated.

“I might be a little drunk, young sir,” I said, my voice high-pitched. A dead giveaway that I was on my way to Crazydrunktown, population: me.

“You decided to get started early?” The Boy asked wearily, sitting at the dining room table and accepting the beer I handed him. He’d put in a full day at work, hadn’t been to his apartment in over 24 hours, and was acting as my chauffeur for the evening. He has his moments.

“I didn’t want to spend a ton of money on alcohol tonight,” I explained, and sashayed over to the stereo to change the song. (This statement is all kinds of hilarious, because I ended up dropping over $100 on dinner for the two of us about two hours later.)

We headed out. I had two martinis at dinner, and then a beer outside of his best friend’s apartment. By 10 o’clock, when we headed to the club to see the band play, I was pretty much drunk. The Boy and his friend Quippy stopped at a liquor store to buy a bottle of whiskey, but they wouldn’t let me come in (my behavior was a bit…flamboyant). As soon as they were out of the car, I began to drunk-dial and text various people. When they came back, brown paper bag in hand, I was giggling on the phone to T. and her friends, talking about The Boy and why my feelings for him were not “the drink talking”.

At the club, The Boy bought me a rum and Coke. I downed it. He bought me another, and I downed that, too. I was kind of pissed at Quippy, and we were sniping at each other. The Boy was upset that we weren’t getting along, and he chastised me. At this point, I was flat-out tanked.

The band we had come to see took the stage. I danced my little tush off. I was soaked with sweat by the time their set was over, and I was feeling exhilarated. I was so drunk that I had pretty much lost all inhibitions, because my behavior kept getting worse.

We stood outside the club, smoking borrowed cigarettes from one of The Boy’s friends. This friend, whom we’ll refer to as Abe Lincoln, was flirting mercilessly with me, and I was quite receptive to it, because when I drink I get flirtatious, and because part of me likes to see how The Boy reacts. It’s not a proud admission on my part.

Somehow, we ended up walking to Abe Lincoln’s apartment. The Boy and Quippy ditched out to grab the car and some burritos, and I made the rest of the trek with Abe Lincoln and some Random Dude. Random Dude passed out on the couch upon our arrival (not before asking me if there was any chance of us having sex. I told him he had a better chance of seeing God), and Abe Lincoln and I ended up in his room, on his couch.

I knew that he wanted something to happen between us, and a part of me kind of wanted something to happen too, but I was scared and shy and also kind of freaked out, so I grabbed a book off the shelf nearby and flipped through the pages. Abe Lincoln got closer and closer to me on the couch.

“Your hair smells good,” he said into the side of my head.

“Thank you. I bathe regularly,” I deadpanned, still flipping through Guns, Germs, and Steel. He was so close to me. I knew that if I turned my head, he’d kiss me. I started to turn my head.

My cell phone rang.

It was The Boy. He was outside. We got up to let him in. Abe Lincoln seemed disappointed. “Is he here to sweep you away?” he asked me as we walked to the back door.

I nodded. “I think that’s the general idea,” I said, feeling conflicted.

When I woke up the next morning, I had a hangover that could put all other hangovers to shame. I laid in bed, moaning softly. The Boy gave me a long back rub and took me out to breakfast (at 2 pm) at our favorite diner.

That night, on the phone, I said, “I’m not drinking again for a long time.”

“You were kind of out of control last night,” The Boy agreed, his voice careful.

His honesty stung. A part of me knew that he was right, but another part of me wanted to argue that he was one to talk. After all, it was only a month ago that he drank so much that he threw up in the car as it sped down the freeway, covering me in pizza and beer that had been partially digested. It had been him that had gotten so drunk one night that he told me he loved me and had then passed out. The next morning, he had no memory of saying such a thing and told me that he’d been lying.

Even so. It’ll be a good long while before I drink again. Probably when the Zombie Pub Crawl comes around, I’ll be singing a different tune.

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Why I Write Here Now

June 22, 2008 at 9:36 pm (Uncategorized) (, , )

Minnie Driver’s character said it best in the John Cusack classic Grosse Pointe Blank.

“You’re a fucking psycho.”

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And I know there’s only one direction we can go from here.

June 14, 2008 at 12:53 am (Uncategorized) (, , )

I’m overwhelmed by my feelings for him and by my feelings in general.

But fuck that shit. I’m going to bed.

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