Wednesday, March 18, 2009

No Nonfiction Friday

So everyone should be aware that the Aggies are playing in Idaho on Friday at 10:30 (am)! That should keep everyone happy for a while.

I would like to blog about the amazing past two days (including today).

Yesterday was ST. PATRICK's day, and boy do I hate St. Patrick. The St. Patrick I know about gave amazing sermons and helped a lot of people in the Christian faith, but he killed a lot of people who wouldn't convert to his faith. To me, pinching someone because they aren't wearing green symbolizes killing someone because they aren't of your faith. So, yeah, I hate St. Patrick's day.

BUT GOOD NEWS! I found a reason to love St. Patrick's day! That very same day that I used to abhor is Keara Lei's birthday! So now I don't hate St. Patrick's day--I just hate St. Patrick.

anyway, I think she had a lot of fun, and let me tell you what i gave her because you can use my idea for your own friends if you want.

Keara Lei loves Smilies fruit snacks from Walmart. She loves the red and purple ones, and the orange ones are okay. However, in each packet of 10 fruit snack pieces, 6-8 of the pieces are yellow or orange, so she doesn't get a lot of her favorite fruit snacks. So, I was walking through Walmart one day and I got an idea. I wanted to get her a box of just red and purple smilies. I almost didn't, but Becca the Fill was at the store with me and assured me that it was a good idea (because I was doubting myself--I get a lot of stupid ideas and I thought this was one of them). So I got some boxes of smilies (not revealing how many, because that's not the point) and becca helped me get all of the purple and red ones out. We ended up with 4.5 sandwich ziplocs full of yellow and orange smilies and 1.5 bags of red and purple ones. Then we put those red and purple ones into some of the empty smilies bags that we were very careful to open and we resealed them and put them in a smilies box that we were very careful to open and we resealed it. Then I hid it and had a difficult time keeping the surprise from Keara Lei because I get excited to give people presents. I ended up giving it to her at 12:00 am on her birthday. :D It was a fun gift.

Then, I went to nonfiction today and it was my professor's birthday! His wife and two of his kids came in and brought us cake. And he told us the story of how he met his wife, and they saw each other twice before he went on his mission and they had their first date (a musical at a high school) 2.5 years later and he fell asleep. :) Then he cancelled class on friday thanks to the aggies game!

Ha ha ha ha ha! My next blog is my 44th! YES!

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

commenters beware: time limit approaches

Josh and Jaycey gave me an idea for a fun way to get to my 44th post faster.

Here's how it works...The first three people to comment on this post will get something from me, possibly made by me. My choice--but just for you. This offer does have some restrictions and limitations:

1. I make no guarantees that you will like what I give!
2. What I create or give will be just for you.
3. It will be done this year (sometime, I don't know when)
4. You will have no clue what it is going to be.
5. I reserve the right to do something extremely strange.

The catch? Oh, the catch is that you must re-post this on your blog. The first 3 people to do so and leave a comment telling me you did, will win a marvelous homemade gift or handpicked gift by me! Let the games begin! Oh, and I have to be able to contact you with mailing information! I promise it will be something good! Good Luck to all!

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Dreams are Swell

I had a weird dream two nights ago with President Hinckley in it. It was really cool. He was talking to my roommate Megan and I, just us. Really awesome. Too bad in my dream I was trying to leave the country because the government wanted to kill me. Other than that it was a cool dream.



But I am rather distressed at the moment. I like to eat, and I want to eat, but it hurts to eat crunchy things, because my right side bottom gums are swelling. Do you know why?

Let me tell you.


I am not good at going to the doctor or dentist. About 2.813 years ago, I was scheduled to have surgery to remove the root of one of my teeth, because it had an infection. Instead of going to this surgery, I went to Alaska with my family. I didn't remind my mom that I was supposed to have this surgery because it sounded painful and if she didn't remember on her own, I didn't care.


So I've had this dormant thing in my jaw that swells up every now and then and doesn't let me smile completely or chew a lot, but otherwise I can live with it. I might have to take care of it this summer though, because it's annoying and I like eating and smiling too much to just ignore it for much longer.


It snowed like crazy yesterday/last night/sometime today. I say we got over two feet. Megan says it's at least a foot and that I should go measure it, but I don't want to measure it. I'll just say its a foot and a half. In Provo, it only snowed 2-3 inches. Stupid Provoists.


I really don't know what to say. I just realized I haven't blogged in a while and I want to get to my 44th blog soon.


Oh! I found a new amazing exciting frustrating game called SEQUENCE! It's fun. Everyone should check it out. Especially Kim. Kim would probably be really good at it.


I went to the temple on Saturday morning with my roommates. It was amazing, although they did get us through really quick and they wouldn't let us all go together, so next time we're making an appointment and we're waiting for each other before we do baptisms, and I would like to just sit in the temple for a while longer because it's a nice place to be, so hopefully they wouldn't mind just sitting there with me.


Another exciting thing that happened recently: I had a conference with my nonfiction professor about my work, and he pulled out one of my pieces (not posted) and said it was one of the most potent things he's ever read (potent is a good thing apparently) and he wants me to work on it for the rest of the semester! That's exciting news! He likes my work! That always makes me feel better.


I like facebook now. Took me a while, but I like it. I don't use all of it's features, but it's a fun little fake social life with real friends that I could be actually hanging out with.


I think we should make "hanging out with friends" into "hanging with friends" or make "out with" into "outwith." Just a thought to leave you with.

Saturday, January 31, 2009

40

I have been waiting for this blog for so long! My favorite number is 4, so my 40th blog is a big deal for me (and my 44th is coming up soon)!

So, I have been waiting for as long as I could wait so that I could make this post really super duper long in honor of the best deca-based number: 40! (You can't really tell, but that 40 is in all caps.)

Okay, so first, I want to show you all a short, nonfiction story that I wrote for my creative nonfiction class. The story stars me and my roommate Keara as we faced death.

*** “Brittany, we’re stalled.”

It took me a minute to understand what she was saying. Stalled...can automatics stall?

“We’re stalled,” she repeated, a note of panic in her voice.

“Turn off the car and start it again,” I instructed, careful to keep my voice steady. I made it this far remaining calm for Keara. I wasn’t going to freak out now.

I watched as she turned the ignition, then we listened to the engine do nothing. She stared at me with wide eyes. “Brittany, what do we do?”

I shifted into neutral from the passenger side. “Call 911, then call Chelsey.” Shifting gears had no effect—we were at a complete standstill, taking up two entire lanes, so I put us into park. Keara dialed. “Maybe I should put on my lights.” I was confused for a moment, but then I realized that she meant her hazards, not her headlights (which were on already).

“Yeah, good idea,” I replied as I scolded myself for not thinking of that. One of the most important things in this situation, and I didn’t even think of it. Without the hazards on, we might not even get the chance to talk to the 911 operator.

“What do I say to them?” Keara asked.

“Say you spun and you’re stuck on I-15.” They might want more details, I added to myself, but give them the general idea and they’ll ask for specifics. I looked back to see how long we had before someone swept us in a new direction. It was a bit difficult to see behind us—we were at such a weird angle that I didn’t know which window to look through, the back window or the passenger window behind me. I decided to stop looking. If someone was going to hit us, someone was going to hit us, and me looking wasn’t helping anyone. I focused on Keara. I focused on calm. It became a mantra. Be calm for Keara. Be calm for Keara.

The operator answered rather quickly, though to me it seemed to take forever. I listened to Keara explain our situation, and the whole time she was staring in my eyes. I held them with the most calm, assured face I could master. I think I did pretty well.

“Um...where are we?” she asked me.

I wasn’t very helpful here. I couldn’t remember much about anything right now. “I don’t know. South of Davis county?” I suggested like an idiot, a very calm idiot. If my intelligence was the deciding factor of our survival, our chances didn’t look too great at the moment.

Luckily, Keara had her wits about her. “We’re south of Davis county, just after the Legacy Highway entrance, around Farmington,” she said.

I focused on my breath, waiting for Keara’s next question, trying to anticipate her response, but it was hard. I kept seeing us spinning, seeing the expression on Keara’s face as she turned the wheel, trying to control the spastic movements of the car.

Looking back, I am surprised at my reaction to all of this. It was raining hard, and we had been hydroplaning (minorly) for the past forty minutes. I wanted Keara to stay calm since she was driving, so I’d been making light conversation and singing along to music with Keara, making sure to say her name every now and then (I’d heard that people are calmer when they hear their name). Plus, trying to act normal and carefree around her made me feel more calm—it’s so much easier for me to forget my worries when I’m trying to comfort someone else. And we both needed comforting at the moment. In Sardine Canyon, we passed a wreck so bad that the car was balancing upside down on its nose and windshield. I doubt anyone survived that wreck, and seeing it put both of us on edge.

We were about three miles from the exit to Centerville when we nearly had a similar experience. Keara had been doing so well at staying away from scary drivers and not overcorrecting when we slipped, but we had to get into the right lane to exit the highway. Apparently, changing lanes is difficult in the rain. It started as a simple slip to the west, then turned into a simple slip to the east...it seemed controllable. But then we slipped west again, then east, then west—I don’t know how many times, but each time the swerve became larger until we spun about 270˚ to the east, approaching the cement median serving as an unforgiving barrier to oncoming traffic. We were facing North on the Southbound side of the freeway when Keara turned the wheel again and we spun another 180˚ to the west.

I remember looking straight ahead, looking at the cars behind us on the freeway, the ones that might kill us. But I wasn’t really scared. I was breathing. I was focusing on the breath, like my nonfiction writing professor had told us to do. I was breathing, just experiencing the moment, realizing that I was closer to the oncoming traffic, so I might get hurt the worst, unless we spun more, which would mean Keara would get hurt the most. I started thinking of what I would do without Keara, but I didn’t like the bitter taste in my eyes as I pictured us smashed and shredded on the road. So I focused on my breathing and just observed what was happening. I’d always imagined myself in these types of situations, and I thought I’d be screaming, or that my life would flash before my eyes, or that I’d think of the people I love. But I wasn’t really thinking of anything. All I thought was “We’re spinning on the freeway...is Keara okay?” I was very disappointed that I was so calm and dull in a near-death experience.

Then we came to a complete stop in the two right lanes of the highway, facing the right direction (more or less), where Keara discovered that her car had stalled.

Keara gave the operator her name and phone number. I watched as several cars parked to the side of the road to help us out, and others parked behind us with their hazards on, because our hazards weren’t working. Keara hung up.

“Call Chelsey,” I reminded her. She nodded and started calling, trying to start the car again at the same time, but some helpful looking men got out of their cars and headed toward us. Keara passed the phone to me as I put shifted the car into park. I figured her car wouldn’t start up again unless it was in park, and lucky me, I think I was right, because the car started. Keara rolled down her window and started talking to the guys just as I started a conversation with Chelsey.

“Hey Chelsey, we’re going to be a little late...well, maybe a lot late for your birthday dinner because of the weather, so don’t wait for us to start eating.”

“That’s fine, we aren’t ready yet. Where are you?” she replied.

I would’ve told her, but the guy Keara was talking to had a deep loud voice, and I didn’t want Chelsey to hear him. Then she’d ask who it was, and I’d have to tell her that we spun out on I-15, and I didn’t want her to worry about us when she should be partying—we were relatively safe now, right? No need to scare her. So I just said, “Close, but traffic’s bad. See you in a bit,” and I hung up on her.

We made it safely to Chelsey’s house. Eventually, our scary story came out.

“You guys are spending the night!” Chelsey ordered. “There’s no way you’re driving back tonight.”

“Oh, thanks,” Keara replied, and I felt a rush of sanity claim my mind again. I was safe. I wasn’t getting back in the car.

But Keara apparently hadn’t finished her sentence. “But I have homework and I need to be up at the school really early tomorrow.”

If I didn’t love Keara so much, I would’ve cried and demanded that I was not going with her. She was crazy! She’d rather drive and risk her life than miss an assignment? What was wrong with her?

But I didn’t want to say anything, because I wasn’t going to let her go alone. Besides, I’d rather risk my life than tell anyone that I was afraid. So I sat through the party, like the calm idiot I was.

***

Okay, so now I want to tell everyone that I want to get my master's degree now. I have to decide what to get it in: writing and literature, graphic design, public relations, journalism, or even maybe a law degree. something. I'm trying to decide before valentine's day so that i know what graduate school application test to take and where to turn for scholarships. which reminds me, i need to do my taxes for my fafsa...

I got a calling finally! I am the ward webmaster. Yeah, that means I'm going to learn more tips and tricks on how to maintain websites rather than just creating them and destroying them.

I went to a masquerade with Keara and Chelsey (both roommates) and two of their friends. It was amazing and fun and beautiful and we're going to make it a tradition. We made our own masks, so that made the night extra special, in my opinion.

I met Keara's parrot named Sargeant, Sarge for short, and he's going to star in one of my upcoming nonfiction pieces. I will probably post it when I write it.

You know how it's snowed a couple of times this year? I hate it, even though it's not as bad as it was last year. Here's another nonfiction piece I wrote. I call it The Color of Snow.

***Fresh powder drifts lightly to the ground as I wait for the bus, staring at my feet. The flakes look so innocent and fragile, lightly attaching to the sidewalk without melting. But I know better—they aren’t innocent, and soon they won’t be fragile. They’ll melt just in time to freeze overnight, becoming the slick magicians that make my feet disappear into thin air, the traitorous sidekicks of gravity that bruise my backside.

I step on a small, untouched patch of snow in front of me to examine the intricate pattern of my footprint, but the snow turns brown and melts before I can fully appreciate my stamp on the world. I pat my foot again, this time dragging it back and forth, painting the sidewalk with lines of the nasty brown muck that seems so much more appropriate for today’s temperature.

I lift my head momentarily to examine the other people at the bus stop. Some look very serious, foreheads furrowed and mouths straight as they concentrate on some very important business that consumes their lives. Some look bored, and understandably so—patience is not a natural virtue. One girl speaks loudly into her cell phone while making large, animated gestures with her left hand as if the person on the other end of the line can see her. Two boys discuss how gross their roommate is for watching horse porn. Yeah...the world is an interesting place.

The bus arrives and I watch. The serious people make their way to the bus doors with haste, as if they fear there are only two seats left and someone pissed on one of those seats. The bored people follow at a leisurely pace, avoiding the loud, animated girl on her cell phone like oil avoids water. The two boys discussing their gross roommate must not be waiting for the bus at all, because they remain behind. I get on last, because that’s what I do sometimes.

The bus is warm, a comforting fact since I only wore two coats, a hat, a scarf, and gloves today. Regardless of the reviving heat, I still feel awkward on the bus. I’m never quite sure where to look once I sit down. Do I look ahead at the person across the aisle from me, or should I pretend that I’m texting someone so that I don’t have to meet anyone’s eyes? I settle for reading the ads above the seats, the ones I’ve practically memorized.

Getting off the bus is a scary prospect for me. Going down the steps can be treacherous, and stepping onto an ice-covered sidewalk is an entirely different ordeal. I grab the railing and count the steps. One, two, three steps and...sidewalk. I realize that the sidewalk isn’t as slippery as I expected, and I let out a deep sigh of relief, watching my breath dance with the air in front of me.

Walks in the winter are definitely not my favorite thing in the world. It seems to take longer to get home when it’s cold outside. The worst part of walking home is the stoplights, because I have to just stand there and wait while the snow piles on my shoulders and wiggles its way into my bones. Today as I cross the street, I notice that there are some rather impatient drivers in the world. One driver needs to turn right, but I’m in his way, which he makes obvious by riding my heels. He might as well roll down his window and shout, “Get out of my way, stupid girl.” I can understand why he doesn’t do this though—it’s far too cold to roll down the window. Another man turning left lets me know that I’m in his way, too. I’m just so glad that my presence is enhancing people’s lives today.

I finally get into my apartment and shed—coats, hat, scarf, gloves, shoes, and backpack. Everything wet comes off, excluding my pants. I plop on the couch and sit still, eyes closed for a few minutes. I try to relax, but it is hard. I have so much to do, and I am not at all in the mood to do it. y hands ache from the storm. I don’t have arthritis or anything, I just pop my knuckles.

My roommate Megan comes through the door a few minutes later, snowflakes covering her hair and jacket like lacework. I’m amazed at her ability to wear winter as a jeweled accessory. “Hey,” she says. “What’s up?”

“Nothing much. Just thawing.”

“Yeah, it’s cold out there,” she replies with a big grin on her face. “I’m gonna take a nap before work, okay?”

I smile back at her and nod. I wish winter would treat me as well as it did her. My winter leaves me with crappy brown muck. Her winter adorns her with stars of pearl.

***

Three of my roommates are going to China for the fall semester and I will miss them terribly, but I want to stay here in the fall with Megan and her sister and friend. My only concern is this: what will my other roommates do when they come back in the Spring? Where are they going to live? I want to be roommates with them again.

pancakes with hotfudge and caramel and strawberry slices are yummy.

Keara has the complete collection of the original The Sims game. I am jealous. She gets to build houses in her spare time.

And...I got a 100% on my first statistics quiz! Yeah Me!

Megan asked me why I don't update my blog more often. I hope this was good enough for her.


 
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