Monday, December 10, 2012

Two Completely Unrelated Things

1. I'm pretty sure I got felt up by a blind man the other day. I had just finished my volunteer shift at the hospital and decided I was too tired and too famished to make it to class, so I indulged in my guilty pleasure of a street cart falafel sandwich. As I leaned against a wall on first ave and 26th street, I saw a man in his sixties, blind cane outstretched like a metal detector on the beach in front of him. I knew the cane was going to hit my legs but didn't want to be the condescending asshole who blurts out "I'M STANDING HERE" to a blind person. Imagine if they were like, "I know, I can smell you" or something. So I didn't say anything and I watched the cane hit my legs. Awkwardly and apologetically I mustered a "sorry, i'm standing here".
To which he replied in broken english further obscured by an eastern european accent, "can you help me cross the street?" Who could say no to an elderly foreign blind man??!!!  I agreed and then I held out my arm for him to hold on to. Obviously, as he was blind, he couldn't see my arm, and instead reached out and grabbed a handful of my boob. Okay, maybe that one was my fault. So, I helped him cross the street juggling my unfinished falafel sandwich and soda while trying to keep us both balanced. Not an easy feat, especially considering I didn't want to spill my food on him a) because I wanted it and b) because I wouldn't know how to explain what had just happened to this stranger. So, we trudged along and crossed the street. After crossing, he asked if I was continuing in the same direction, to which of course, I promptly lied and said I was waiting for a bus at this corner. Yes, I am a total asshole, because in reality I was continuing in the same direction as he was, but really wanted to finish my sandwich and be alone (the most ironic thing a New Yorker can say- you are both forever lonely here and never alone at all)....  So he walked along, slow as shit, and I picked a fresh spot of wall to lean on and ate my sandwich and felt more guilt than a whore in church. I hastily finished my sandwich and realized I couldn't walk by him without feeling horrible about myself. Looking back, I realize I wanted to help him to spare myself my own guilt more than make sure that he continued to cross the street safely, which is admittedly kind of pathetic- but, in truth, I think a lot of charity is motivated by guilt and the fact that helping others makes YOU feel good. Anyway, I chased after him the half block he had moved in several minutes and told him that I had missed my "bus" and could help him walk to where he was going- 23rd street. I held out my arm, and guided his hand to it- didn't want another altercation involving my lady lumps... After crossing another block, now at 25th, he let go of my arm and was outstretching his arm in front of me. I figured this was for balance as his other arm- the one with the cane- was outstretched. However, this positioning was obscenely awkward because in outstretching his arm, his hand rested on my stomach... Which I thought was weird, but kept walking anyway with his hand on my belly.... THEN, his hand hovered lower, and lower, till it rested on the outside of my pants on my crotch. I pulled the move most women have pulled at a club when they are not quite slutty/drunk enough for this to happen. I did the loud chuckle and moved his hand back to my stomach. Had I not been in shock/awkwarded out by the whole thing, I probably would have left him right then and there to his own blind devices. However, I am an idiot and continued to walk the last block with him to his destination, where his hand traveled down the outside of my pants once again. Once I hit 23rd street, I ran away without saying goodbye.... I'm still not exactly sure if it was intentional.... you know, the weird touching, but I now can cross the "got felt up by a blind man on first ave" whole thing off the bucket list.

2. I hate my backpack. Literally, I have no idea why I haven't gotten another one yet, but it probably has something to do that everything I buy in Manhattan is twice the price of it anywhere else. Like a box of cereal here is six bucks, and I have no money, considering the trader joe's wine shop is on my block as well and tempts me to go in and buy a bottle of venetian moon every time I pass it. Back to my backpack. I have had backpack related trauma since childhood.
 In kindergarten, I had a nice royal blue jansport that lasted me until the second grade. That was probably one of my favorite backpacks. In the third grade, I decided it was time to act like I was in an airport while at school and wheel around my belongings. I was so adult then. Of course, like every roller backpack ever, it was a horrible idea and the backpack was so damaged by the end of the year that it was more of a liability to my stuff than a protector of it because everything was falling out of it all the time. I'm also pretty sure I got that backpack in the boy's section of GAP- because obviously that's where quality girl's roller backpacks should be bought. Fuck that "backpack".  In the fourth grade, I got this really bizarre back pack that was also jansport  (I wasn't allowed to get anything else because of the previous incident with the GAP backpack) but it wasn't the typical jansport. It was this stupid one strap thing that went across the front of my body and then had an diagonally positioned sack that rested awkwardly across the span of my back. This is probably the worst back pack ever engineered ever, and like the roller, it was a "backpack". THEN, came the backpack I have now. This backpack came as a gift to me on my 10th birthday before I started the fifth grade. By this point, my parents refused to buy me another backpack because I was 0/2 on recent "backpack" purchases. AND, how conveniently, one of my friends bought me a new backpack for my birthday. So there I was, 10 years old, and with a backpack I hated. Tragic. I hated this backpack for the same reason I hate it now. Its a jansport with the two big compartments-which makes it too damn big all the time. Its also this obnoxious shade of green that I just- hate. There's way too many compartments and the whole backpack just gets filled with useless shit and I end up finding travel size toothbrushes and receipts from 2004 whenever I'm trying to find something important, like my student ID to swipe into buildings, or my credit card, or a goddamn pen. After a year of agony and constant complaining, my mom bought me another backpack. This one was light pink, jansport, corduroy. This was also a good backpack of mine. I used it all of the sixth and seventh grade and by the time I was done with it, it was a gross brown color and had holes in it. Clearly, I took good care of my shit when I was 11 years old. By the time this backpack died, I was in the eighth grade and I was the hottest shit alive. Part of me truly does believe that I peaked at 13- it was the only time in my life where I had the "skinny with curves" kind of look. LOL. I can't believe I just admitted that but obviously anyone who was reading this is now frothing at the mouth or unconscious  because no one has ever rambled for so long about backpack struggles. But thats okay, because I can't blog for the fans anymore- it creates too much pressure. So, throughout 8th and 9th grade, I carried around a series of "off the shoulder totes". A favorite was a lesportsac brown tote with hearts on it that I stole from my grandma's closet, another was this black pleather bag (from GAP as I did not learn my lesson 8 years before when I bought my first GAP bag) and somewhere in there also was a red bag (also from GAP. This is getting humiliating).  The summer before 10th grade I finally realized I looked like an idiot holding the majority of my shit in my hands because not a single textbook of mine fit in my tote- god forbid I also brought lunch or a water bottle. SO, I begged my mom for another backpack. I think I was at sport chalet when I picked this baby out- magenta, because I was 15 and embracing the feminine. This would have been a great backpack, except for the fact my 6 year old sister had bought the same one that day with my dad. Don't think I didn't arrive to school on more than one occasion with nothing but paint by numbers and glue sticks in my backpack while my first grade sister showed up to coloring with a bunch of honors chem homework. My life is a joke. This magenta confusion lasted until senior year when I stopped caring about everything, apathy overcame my existence, and I showed up to school most days with a pencil, a notebook, and a hangover. No backpack was needed because I was too cool and couldn't bring myself to be organized or have anything I needed ever. I didn't even have a locker senior year... sigh. To be young again.

So then, I went on this gap year thing and disappeared for a while. That was lovely and I miss it everyday. I had three phenomenal backpacks that year, a relatively large backpacking backpack for all my clothes, a mid sized north face, and a tiny REI lime green one for adventuring. These backpacks are the best I've ever had. EVER. The north face one which would be appropriate for use is pretty dirty, but I don't want to take the dirt of it- because that dirt is from Africa. Sorry bout it.

So then, I arrive at college without a thought as to what backpack I should use. I literally don't remember bringing the green machine that I got when I was ten (scroll up) at all- why would I- but somehow, here I am, everyday, using that same fucking green monster that I got as a gift on my tenth birthday. Also, despite thinking about my hatred of my backpack everyday, I did not ask for a new backpack on any kind of holiday list. This was a rookie mistake, because I can't ask for anything between Christmas and my summer birthday. I guess I'll hold out for July 9, 2013, my 20th birthday, and finally get a functional backpack 20 years into life.

*dreaming of a understated backpack*




Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Ten Reasons I am Debatably Getting Serious with Netflix

10. He is there for me when I'm in my pjs, chillin with no make up on.
9.  He is literally ALWAYS down to hang out whenever I am. Our schedules... Perfect. Or maybe we are both just seemingly unemployed?
8.  He knows me so well. Whenever i'm in the mood to spice up my life his recommendations are clutch.
7. He's down to stay in or hang out after a long night out.
6. Best friend when you are sick. Would never leave you.
5. I never feel awkward laughing too hard in front of him.
4. He is SOOOO multidimensional. He's like a comedy, a drama, a documentary, a thriller, and a mystery series all in one.
3. Even he can break my Facebook addiction.
2. I can sleep comfortably in front of him.
1. Basically, he sleeps in my bed at night.

Laugh. Out. Loud.

Sorry. Not. Sorry.

Love. You. Netflix.

No. Shame. Mondays.

Saturday, June 23, 2012

"Hardships" of Being Home

Maybe I've been watching too much Girls and really just want to be Lena Dunham, or maybe because reading 50 Shades of Grey convinces me anyone can write as long as they talk about weird enough stuff... Long story short, I decided I was in the mood to blog once again.

I've been considering writing a post for a while, but I didn't know where to place the post. I felt that writing about the mundane hilarity of being home was too... NOT COOL ENOUGH for the "globe trotting blog" and I felt as though the Jambo NUC was a little too high school after reliving some of the posts at a barbeque. I apologize for mocking the La Canada experience so publicly on my blog. Actually, sorry I'm not sorry. I'm a Altadena girl/ NEW YORKER/ global citizen now BITCHES. HAHA. I'm sooooo pretentious. 

So, here I am, tacky giraffe print and url still the same. Oh well, jambs. Even I thought it would be too ANNOYING to have three blogs.

HERE I AM, AT HOME.

Which after my year abroad, is pretty weird. I find myself having the same conversation every time I go out. I am REALLY flattered that everyone looked at my facebook pictures and is interested in my travels. Its almost overwhelming when random people tell me they've been stalking me all year... Like, HELLO, I didn't wear make up in any of my photos and wore hippie pants in various prints. By the way, if you've seen those pants, Indian/Cambodian people (where I purchased the pants) don't actually wear them. Its the white tourists that rock them so they can feel more... down to earth. Enough about the pants though. The worst questions I get are:

"What was your favorite place?"
I don't even KNOW where to start with that one. I usually say India because it was the most mind boggling, and I admit to disliking China. But what was my favorite place? I don't think I'll ever know. Every place I went was an expansion of thought, of deep reflection, of something new and exciting. Its not like asking oh, whats your favorite color or ice cream flavor (btw, purple and cake batter from coldstones).

The other really bad kicker is the "Tell me a story". When people say that I want to say, once upon a time there was a man who stumbled upon a tribe of native American peoples. He befriended a wolf named two socks and saw some weird stuff happen to a woman in the tribe. He became friends with the leader and had an odd and enriching life. Later, this story was made into a movie with Kevin Costner....
I'm not sure what that the "story question" even means! A STORY? And by the way, I was referring to the story of Dances With Wolves if anyone missed the reference. Reoccurring theme of that book: Rebirth. 8th grade lit for the win. For the record,  my best stories from my trip involve poop, and no one wants to hear about explosive diarrhea between games of BP. 

The worst part about being back though, is having a job. Its hard because three months ago I was shadowing a caretaker in a township in South Africa, meeting people with the most interesting stories, listening, learning, cleaning bed wounds of the sick and helping to distribute medicine, discussing the social causes of disease and the problems with patenting medicine. Now, I'm a Swim Instructor. I decided just like college majors (which I shall design my own and make an incredibly lengthy title for at NYU's Gallatin's School of Individualized Study) the longer your job title is, the cooler and more enjoyable of a job it really is. Swim Instructor buys me two words, which I guess is a step above Janitor (which really could be called Maintenance Personnel and then I'd be tied)...

I can't decide if it is any job I'd struggle to find joy in, or if its just the two word one I have now that is painful. Gold Digger is also two words, so I figure worse comes to worse, it can't be anymore painful gold digging than teaching swim ;).  I teach parent infant classes, which is cool, except I have to sing, which I don't do well. And hello, my ego is out of control, I have to do everything well. It really blows though because I have to shout to have my class of 48, 24 parents (actually sometimes more like 35 parents because parents don't get that its really crowded and the class says parent infant not mom, dad, aunt, and grandma and infant) and 24 infants which leaves me with a voice of a chain-smoker of thirty years by the time I'm done on Saturday. I also teach preschool 1, also known as "the class for kids who have never swum before in their lives and are terrified of the water and have parents that think the best technique is to shove them into the instructors arms and assume the instructor can hold their one hysterical shrieking kid the entire class time and coo to them even though the instructor can't because she has four other kids waiting on the step yelling that they are bored".  Oh, and that is if the other kids bother to stay on the step. Kids this age, ages 3/4 either think they are invincible and know how to swim and jump off the steps and nearly drown every five minutes or are watching the kids nearly drown and are afraid its going to be them and don't move at all. Oh, and everyone, fearless or not, kicks and scratches.... and occasionally grabs nipples as knobs of support.

Enough about nipples.

Being home though, does have its novelties. Like In and Out, the HBO I recently begged my mom for so I could watch Girls (once again Lena Dunham=life), facebook, and of course my bitchberry. Its hard to believe that just a few months ago I was easily satisfied with four crappy nokia phones split between 11, and now I can barely stand my bitchberry because it doesn't have instagram. Luckily, spoiled little me has an iPod touch and can still be part of the instagram community. Except my instagram isn't epic because I never even HAVE my iPOD touch with me. Gah. White Girl Problems. Don't judge me.

Now, if you'll excuse me, since I'm sitting at home, I'm going to try and instagram a great picture of my tan lines, courtesy of my two-word job.