Recreation


I hadn’t seen Vanessa since before my birthday, which I didn’t realize until she brought me my birthday present last nite. I’d gone home right after work to pack for the weekend cruise, and Vanessa and I had talked ab0ut watching Transformers, so she drove down after I got done packing. We met up with James at The Yard House in Brea and I was handed two compact packages which unraveled to become this:

That little gift bag spewed Happy Bunny (TM) products! Vanessa must be Jim Benton‘s new best friend! I hadn’t gone to the Happy Bunny website in awhile and I did not know there was all this new stuff out there. Lollipops, candles in tins (at least that’s what we believe is in the tin that none of us were able to open), license plate frames, keyboard stickers, keychains, stationery, metal thermos, just to name a few. To even out the karmically-questionable Happy Bunny vibes, she included a pendulum kit for getting in touch with my inner Ethereal Cindy and/or the Other Side. Vanessa always knows just what to get to make someone feel like she was paying attention. Thanks, Vanessa! Everyone got me such great stuff this year, I’m spoiled sick.

Vanessa also treated me to the Transformers movie, for which I had yet to find a negative review from anyone I know who’s seen it, all of whom were in my Transformers TV cartoons generation. I remember the days when I would watch G.I. Joe and then Transformers right after that. Speaking of those two cartoons, the Transformers movie was actually like G.I. Joe meets Transformers. Meets The Iron Giant (which was a better movie). But as I was saying earlier, I have yet to read a negative review, so I won’t write my own. Maybe I’ll like it better the second time around, when I re-watch it with Mr. W.

Last Saturday morning, Mr. W and I were out of the house at 7:30a to go line up for the 9:15a showing of Harry Potter in 3D at the Imax. I didn’t have expectations of the movie going in and I thought the movie was quite good (I like the young man that Harry is growing into, aesthetically speaking), but Mr. W and his female best friend (whom we met up with there along with her girlfriend) are Harry Potter fanatics and loved every minute. Of course they’d already read the books and couldn’t help commenting and revealing plot lines as the story unfolded on the 7-story high-def screen. The 3D effects were good; they did a solid 15 minute segment of a battle scene in 3D. Pretty neat experience.

After the movie, the four of us had lunch at P.F. Chang’s China Bistro, a first for me. I’d heard rave reviews of the place but had always been skeptical because it didn’t seem like it would be “real” Chinese to me. After eating there, my general impression of the place is that it wasn’t as bad as I thought it’d be, but the food tended to be over-seasoned (i.e., salty), but that the sea bass was one of the best I’d ever eaten. Plus, I got to use the $30 giftcard to the restaurant that my previous bailiff had given me for Christmas last year. I’ve been burning giftcards left and right after realizing my purse lining was about to explode with them.

Between the movie and lunch, I ran across some upcoming The Simpsons Movie publicity props, and was initiated into the Simpson family. See for yourself:

I’m learning to be like Jordan and whipping out the cameraphone everywhere I go.

College roommie Diana joined the 30S today! Hippo birdie, Diana! You’re in good company! Diana flew down from Northern Cal on business yesterday and joined her high school/college friends Ansen, Sabrina, Sabrina’s fiance Jon (who just HAPPENS to be my friend James’ coworker, and altho James says they sit diagonal cubes from each other, they have never actually seen each other), Mr. W and me for dinner at a new bar/lounge/restaurant in Costa Mesa called Mesa. Now THAT…is a really swanky place and was buzzing even at only 3 weeks old. They’ve had no advertising, no website, not even a sign outside the building to announce its infant arrival, and it was good enough through word-of-mouth alone to draw in Germaine Jackson who was there with his wife celebrating her birthday last nite. The only reason we knew about it was cuz Jon is a partial investor in the restaurant. We all ordered the 4-course prix fixe summer tasting menu, which started with a complimentary basil/cucumber/nut bisque soup to whet the appetite (not normally included but we got special treatment because of Jon), then came course #1, an angel hair pasta in a brown truffle cream sauce over an easy poached egg which, when the waiters brought our bowls out, they shaved whole truffle coins over (I’ve never seen the elusive expensive truffle served in that quantity before). Course #2 was seared halibut (?) cheek topped with veal-stuffed raviolis. Course #3, I actually got a picture of because it was too pretty not to whip out the cameraphone for, except the photo didn’t do it nearly enough justice due to the dark lighting of the place:

This is foie gras and mushroom topped with a puff pastry, on the side of a New York steak topped with beignets of battered fried garlic whips. If you’ve never heard of garlic whips, don’t feel bad because last night was all of our first times, too. It’s apparently a mushroom that looks like an asparagus sprig, that tastes like garlic. Course #4 is dessert, chocolate mousse with a center of whipped peanut creme, topped with chocolate and a crispy peanut butter “brittle” made from carmelized peanut sauce. It was served alongside an espresso-sized cup of chocolate malt shake (it ain’t McDonald’s shake!) decorated with a tiny sugar spiral that looks like a spring sitting across the top of the cup, with a mint leaf caught in the coil. In between the malt cup and mousse was a cluster of brown syrupy sauce which we tasted with the tips of our forks and were all surprised to find it on the salty side. It had what seemed like coarse grains of salt with grated peanuts. After our inquiry, we learned that it is indeed sea salt, but really exclusive expensive sea salt that is made from the misty brine of ocean that floats through the air and collects on the nearby ocean plants and leaves, and then it’s collected, after it’s dried, grain by grain from the leaves by hand. (Doesn’t this sound like a Grimm fairy tale?) It was great to offset the sweetness of the shake and mousse and give the two smooth items some texture.
Overall, regarding the chef, I have never tasted such richness in so many different courses of food collectively at one time in one place. The guy is a culinary genius. Here’s another guy’s review on the place, the only one we could find on the internet, but this guy seems to know his food better than me.
The location was very cool, a former pool hall now completely rebuilt into a restaurant lounge divided into three sections: upon entry past the foyer, the left side of the large square room is an eclectic lounge sitting area with two cushion-surrounded fireplaces and the most amazing thing of all, you look up and see straight into the night sky with the glass ceiling panels folded aside like giant horizontal shutters; the center is the double-sided bar with a cocktail and wine list so varied and unique you’d want to try it all (I ordered a Bourbon & Cherries, made from bourbon, muddled cherries and mint, sweetened with grenadine); and the right side is the split-level restaurant area with two lengths of tables and large semi-circular padded booths along the wall so the patrons eat facing all the action in the room. The restrooms were also something to behold. There’s no “restroom;” instead you walk into a restroom area behind the open lounge area, and are confronted with two rows of four or five doors facing each other, like you’re in a broad hallway of a hotel. Each of these rooms is a restroom with its own sink, mirror, toilet. You know which “room” is free by a strip of light over each door; green is vacant, red is occupied. Music was as eclectic as the different heights of chairs and tables in the bar lounge, going from techno rave to orchestral to old style blues. It may have influenced our dinner table conversation to meander in the diverse way it did going from Transformers and 80s childhood cartoons to socio-political reform to healthcare in various socialist countries to ethics on wedding attendance and vacation spots.

To make myself feel better, I’m gonna say that our night was a microcosm sampling of who we are, people with a broad spectrum of interests, accomplishments, opinions, tastes and friends, all developed painstakingly through our last 30+ years of life.

What an odd week. It began with my judge gone (vacation at a dude ranch, seriously) and causing me to float, covering 2-3 courtrooms a day, with a holiday smack in the middle of the week, a par-tay on the rooftop with boyfriend, friends and coworkers to watch fireworks, my judge finally returning today, and ends with a funeral tomorrow. Some other oddities:
– met up with my childhood friend Lily and her husband Arnold for dinner on Monday at Market City Caffe in Brea, one of my favorite Italian joints, and had Crepes Suzette (butter, powdered sugar, orange zest, orange syrup, Grand Marnier, a la mode) at a new crepes joint on the same street for dessert. Spent the $30 giftcard I’ve had for 2-3 years at the annual sale of Bed, Bath & Beyond.
– at the gym on Monday, I was entering my stats on the elliptical trainer as I began my workout, and when it asked for my age, I had to put in 31 for the first time. How official it felt.
– I only worked out Monday and Tuesday since Wednesday was the holiday, didn’t do it Thursday cuz after driving to the gym, parking, and going around the car to get my workout bag, I realized I’d left my shoes and socks at home. The one thing you can’t just buy a quickie replacement for at the gym. Today, Mr. W talked me out of gymming at lunch cuz he didn’t feel like it, so we met up for Lee’s Sandwiches instead. But we did just return from a 3.25 mile run just now. He’s at the pool to cool off and I’m sitting here blogging in sweaty running clothes.
– I have a headache from my ears being so cold from the run, and uterine cramps from PMS.
– I actually sorted and did laundry this week. I didn’t complete The Laundry Project as after presorting, turned out I had 9 piles/loads of clothes to wash, but I did get approximately halfway done. The categories left to wash and dry and put away are handwash delicates, reds, regular lights, rough-and-tumble lights, and regular darks. I’d already done sheets, delicate lights, delicate darks, and rough-and-tumble darks. (What OCD? I really have that many clothes that need washing. Nearly a full load each category! That’s how much I hate and procrastinate on laundry.)
– James came by yesterday as I was working on The Laundry Project and brought my birthday present. He’d complained that I was taking too long retrieving it, as it was taking up too much space on his desk at work. Why was it at work instead of home, you ask? Because he has no room in his house for this, he said. He did indeed hand me a gargantuan wrapped box that should really be housing a 32″ TV from the 80s (i.e., NOT flat screen), and I told him it better not contain a life-size fully animated interactive electronic bust of a mountain gorilla. Mr. W and I had bought that from The Sharper Image for Mr. W’s brother for Christmas, and it was so lifelike it scared the bejezus out of people walking by the kitchen, where it was sitting all disembodied on the counter. It even broke my heart when everyone was playing Guitar Hero in the living room and it was lonely by itself in the kitchen, and would let out these sad elongated coos. But James reassured me that it did not contain any gorilla parts. Instead, I tore into the box to find…a big heavy coil of garden hose! Woohoo! And a new Zaino spray polish product, plus a new Zaino polishing pad. I had to laugh. Both the Accord and IS350 sitting in my garage are filthy, and my singular excuse for not doing something about it had been, “I don’t have a hose, I’ll have to wait till I go to my parents’/Mr. W’s/James’ house to wash cars together.” So much for that. The box is now a nice cat toy for Dodo in the living room.
– James and I had mall food for dinner last nite after he brought over my hose, since I was craving a particular little French cafe in the Brea Mall. I think it’s called the Le Diplomat Cafe. Afterwards, I finally spent the $50 gift certificate to Pottery Barn that college roommie Diana gave me for my bday in 2003. Met the most computer-unsavvy chick I’d seen since the 80s, and she was our age, so no excuse! We had to explain AOL vs. SBC Global DSL Internet Service to her. She was paying for both at $49/mo each. And she didn’t know what we meant by “uninstall AOL.” So she begged James to help her and he nicely gave her a business card, telling her to call if she “really, really can’t find anyone else.” She was cute, too. Too bad she’s married. (For James, I mean.)

So aside from the yet-to-come funeral of my coworker’s mother tomorrow morning, that concludes my irregular week in a (rather oversized) nutshell.

Yesterday morning, Mr. W and I brought our free passes we got in the mail over to Universal Studios Themepark, Hollywood, arriving over half an hour before the park opens. That’s life with the W — always cracking the whip in the morning panicking about being “late,” always waiting at the destination having arrived overzealously early. I have to say, though, that I enjoyed Universal Studios so much more than I’d enjoyed Disneyland. I think it has better rides, better special effects on the rides (well duh, it’s Universal Studios with Hollywood magic), and less people! Best of all, less kids! They also let you bring in your own water and provide cooling spray misters and roof overhangs/awnings so we’re more comfortable in line. Disneyland has virtually no shade and no trees near lines and no misters in order to force its customers to buy water, ice cream and sodas at its strategically placed concession carts. Because of the uncrowdedness in the earlier half of the day, we were able to get on every ride we wanted by noon with lines of 5 minutes or less. “Jurassic Park, The Ride” was a first for me. And might I say — KICK ASS! They say it’s “now wetter than ever,” and they were right! They accomplished that by having dinosaurs pop out of the water at random points of the river coaster and spray us directly with their mouths! We also duck under trickling waterfalls, and there’s a big, GIANT splash at the end that got me completely by surprise. Water hit me directly in my face and on my body for long enough that my brain went through this, “Okay, now I’m getting wet. Gotta close my eyes. I’m still getting wet. What the heck, it’s just coming down!” and I yelled, “Oh my GAWD!” while covering my face with my hands at this point. And then the water stopped. I realized as I climbed out of the ride that the way the ride loads, it’s specifically designed so that the people getting into the raft as well as the people waiting in line for the ride can not see the drenched riders getting off. Such is movie magic, and the element of surprise maintained by controlling the audience’s perception. (Seriously, click on the link. You’ll see the short 15-second video.)

Some other noteables — our first ride of the day was “Back to the Future, The Ride,” and it’s a simulated flight ride in a large projection screen room much like Disneyland’s “Star Tours” and California Adventure’s “Soaring Over California.” We’re in a convertible DeLorean and it seats four across the front, four across the back. We got put in a group with a robust dad, corporeal mom, their two substantial kids, and another adult couple who are the family’s corpulent friends. The 4-member family took up the front row with the 2 kids in the center seats, and the back row from left to right was me, Mr. W, male friend, female friend. The joint lap bar that had to be lowered over everyone together across our row stopped at my chest level, leaving a good foot-and-a-half gap between it and my lap. I’m not blaming the strangers for being physically configured so as to stop the progress of the bar early. I’m just saying that I feared for my life as the topless, side-less DeLorean pushed forward toward the screen and the floor dropped away beneath us, and the ride began its shaking, rocking, jolting simulated journey. I also couldn’t see what was coming because I was behind the father and despite the size of the screen, his back and head blocked most of my view.

Oh, I was also an official actress at a real studio with real cameramen and special effects crew yesterday! While standing in line waiting for the next “Special Effects Stages” show to begin, Mr. W suddenly started raising his arm and jumping. I looked to the front and there were 2 workers in blue vests looking around. Apparently they’d asked for something. Were they asking for a party of 2 to fill in some seating somewhere? We were selected and Mr. W, pulling me to the front of the line, said, “Is that okay?” “Is WHAT okay?” I asked him as the worker said, “Thanks for volunteering!” We were shuttled inside the building as everyone else remained outside in line, and Mr. W was handed a waiver form. The worker quickly explained that we’re going to be on 10-foot high platforms and Mr. W would be chained to a wall groaning in pain and I would be screaming and moving “heavy” foam blocks from one side of me to the other. Eh? Well, I don’t get to do THAT at work!
Turned out we were being used to demo the special blue-screen effects used in Universal Pictures movies and TV shows. After the audience was situated, Mr. W and I were instructed to leave the actors’ fold-up chairs we were in, and I went onstage as the audience was viewing an old 50’s movie clip that showed a woman looking out her living room window and seeing a huge cat face taking up the window, and she was doing the 50s hysterical screaming with hands to her face. I was handed a curtain string, and the demonstration guy doing the show asked me before the audience, “Are you scared of cats, Cindy?” If you know me, that’s the last thing I’d be scared of, so I hesitated, and decided upon the answer, “Um, I can be.” The audience laughed and the guy said, “Good answer, actress! Okay, when I say ‘action,’ pull the string, opening the curtain. Look out the window, and you’ll see a huge cat head. If you look at the monitor, you’ll look about 6 inches tall, and this cat will be pawing at you and batting. Scream, and keep screaming like a scream could save your life. Let’s do a scream now for practice.” He leaned back, covered his ears, and I did my blood-curdling horror movie death scream while covering my face like the black and white actress, stopped abruptly, and grinned at the audience, changing my expression completely. The audience laughed and cheered. The presenter complimented my scream, I was told to remain standing on the “X” on the floor, and ‘action’ was called. I screamed, ducked, screamed some more, raised an arm to block my head from the giant fuzzy paw on a stick that Mr. W was holding to bat at me off-stage, screamed, tried to push the paw away, screamed. The audience was really impressed and cheered and applauded, but I had no idea what the finished product looked like, since I was too busy screaming at the giant cat.
Next, I was placed in a chair onstage as the presenter explained that they were about to see a clip from the upcoming sequel of “The Nutty Professor” starring Eddie Murphy. All actors in the clip are in place except for one, which I will be bluescreened into. Turned out it was the dinner table scene. They rolled the clip, and I was instructed to wave to the camera. So all of a sudden, in the monitor, there I was seated at the dinner table with a family stuffing their face and waving at the audience. I was handed a plastic turkey leg and told to gnaw at it like a Neanderthal, go! I held it in both hands and gnawed like it was corn, and I appeared in the shot in mid-action and the audience busted up. Then I was told to wag an index finger back and forth in front of me and lip sync the words, “You betta mind yo’ own business, grandma!” with attitude. So I appeared and I mouthed the line with a snobby expression on my face while doing the “sista-head-action.” The audience roared.
The last thing was the 10-foot platform scene we were prewarned about. We were put in ancient Egyptian garb and walked up stairs backstage. Mr. W was chained ankles and wrists to a stone wall in front of the audience, and I was walked a few steps down past him in between two stacks of foam bricks. He was instructed to moan and groan in tortured pain, and the presenter at the lower stage said, “Go ahead and give us a cry of pain, [Mr. W].” Mr. W let out two or three noises, and the presenter retorted, “I said CRY OF PAIN, not MOAN OF ECSTASY, [Mr. W]!” as the audience laughed. I was an Egyptian slave who was taking the large “heavy” foam blocks from my left and placing them on my right, and “action” was called. I struggled and yanked the first block, barely slid it off the stack as I fell to one knee with the weight, then moved it to my right, placing it above the other stack. Turning back to my left for another block, I saw the second director yelling at Mr. W to moan louder, look more tortured, as Mr. W moaned like I’d never heard him moan before. =P On the monitor, we were bluescreened into the movie “The Mummy.” I struggled and managed to yank another block over to my right, topping over the rest of the blocks, and then lightning struck Mr. W and the studio went dark. In the darkness, a presenter said, “What happened? Okay, just a minute folks, nothing to be worried about, we’ll have our lights working shortly.” The lights came on, and the presenter at the lower stage looked up at us and yelled, “OH my GOD!” Everyone looked over to where Mr. W was, where there is now only a skeleton strapped to the wall. Everyone laughed. The second presenter ran up to the bones. “Is he alive?” the first presenter called from the bottom. “[Mr. W]! Can you hear me?” the second presenter yelled at the skeleton while giving it a backhand pimp slap. The audience laughed. The second presenter walked sadly to the front of the elevated stage, looking down. “No, I’m afraid he isn’t,” he announced. I put my hands together in a delighted clap, jumping up and down lightly. The audience laughed again. “Is CINDY alive?” the first presenter, who was out of view of me, asked. The presenter on the stage with me said, “I’ll check” and turned to me with his arm up like he was about to give ME a back-hand, too. The audience gasped and I dropped my jaw in mock horror, and the 1st presenter yelled out right in time, “NOOO!” The 2nd guy froze. I was then walked down to join the audience in a special VIP seating area to enjoy the rest of the show. Alone. Since Mr. W was struck by lightning onstage and died.
In the next show segment, the presenters of the special effects told us about the fake blood that Hollywood had used through time, how it used to be chocolate syrup in the black and white days, and then red-colored water in the Jaws days. One presenter raised a large jar with some crusty red stuff in it. “I’m out of fake blood,” he announced, “So I’ll have to use REAL blood for this demo. Where can I get real blood?” All of a sudden the wall behind him rotated and Mr. W came spinning into the room screaming bloody murder, bound to the wall. “Oh my GOD! He’s been brought back to LIFE!” the presenters said in joy. They grabbed his arm, put it in a sink, and the monitor over them showed a knife sinking into his arm with blood gushing out. Mr. W screamed. The kids in the audience whimpered. I laughed. And then they showed how it was done as they raised the knife with the semi-circle cut into the edge. Then they cleaned the “blood” off his arm, returned him into the audience, thanking the heavens that he was brought back to life “altho Cindy didn’t even seem to care. She was like, ‘Eh. Whatever.’ ” Well, he SIGNED a WAIVER.

The weekend went too fast! Where’d it go? On Sunday, I sat there and had to really think about whether the next day was Monday. When I found the answer, I was deeply disappointed.

Friday evening, Mr. W and I met up with my parents and maternal grandmother for dinner. My grandmother wanted to treat me and my mom to dinner, since Friday was my mom’s birthday and this Friday is mine. *panic* OH my GAWD, I did not realize that I have to flip the number up by one on Friday!!! Holy crap, where did the time go? Soon every time I enter my age on the cardio machines and on the digital scales, I’ll have to put…31! AAACK!! *hyperventillating* So anyway, my grandma gave me a cute little handbag with some Lancome eyeshadow and Victoria’s Secret “Love Spell” body spray, lotion and bath gel. That’s my favorite toiletry scent! What a koinkidink. My parents gave me a tiny golden dragon (my zodiac sign) encased in a small display stand shaped like a rickshaw, and a little glass horse figurine to put at the front of the rickshaw to pull the dragon around. It’s sooo cute. I had fun playing with it as if I were 5 years old. And of course, from both my parents and grandma, the much coveted, omnipresent gift among Chinese circles: red envelopes. My grandma’s contained $60, and my parents’ contained $160, which I was a bit distressed about, because that means they returned every bit of the money I spent on them for running shoes the weekend before.

On Saturday, Mr. W and I took a long walk to go errand shopping. He bought nylon rope to retie his hammock and the Tanita scale, and I bought a larger pot and potting soil for my little avocado tree. Ya know, that’s all I remember about that day. Hmm. Wow. I don’t even recall eating.

On Sunday, Mr. W and I got up bright and early and hit up Disneyland. This would mark our 2nd attempt to go on the new “Finding Nemo” submarine ride. The park opened at 8am, we were there right about that time, and the line for that ride was already 2 hours long. What the heck!! No ride could be THAT good. We decided again to skip it and instead, hopped on the virtually line-free “Indiana Jones Adventure” and “Pirates of the Carribbean” rides. Then we got back to his house, changed and got prettied up and went to his male best friend’s hosted buffet brunch in honor of their son’s high school graduation. I didn’t know that El Torito had buffet brunches, and was pleasantly surprised to find pretty delicious food. Mr. W’s daughter was already at the restaurant when we got there; we hadn’t seen her since his son’s graduation since both kids had been at their mom’s house since. We hugged each other and she exclaimed how pretty I looked, and I told her it’s weird without her around, the house is so quiet. I think I may have accidentally guilted her into coming back home with us that night. So Sunday night, the three of us watched Norbit (it’s sub-par even as a rental, despite the many stars) and ate popcorn after taking Daughter out to practice driving. This was our first time having her drive, and she did pretty well. I’m impressed that Mr. W didn’t yell or cuss, and no one lost their tempers. I’d left 5 or 6 belts on Daughter’s bed from the 80s that had been hiding in my closets so long that they actually came back in style. I’d told her that I was going to donate them along with the rest of the crap I’d cleaned out from my closets unless she wanted them, and she wanted them all. It’s really nice to have a little sister to pass stuff down to.

Despite my insistence that I don’t want to celebrate my birthday this year, and that all I want as a gift is a new pair of workout gloves, Mr. W booked a 3-day cruise yesterday as his gift to me. It leaves Long Beach port Friday evening, July 20th (easiest day for me to take off because my judge will be on vacation anyway), and returns the following Monday morning. Because Mr. W made these arrangements over the phone, I don’t know the information or itinerary for the trip, except that it’s supposed to go to Ensenada, Mexico and dock there all of Saturday. Yay, I get to have cheap Mexican lobster! (*watching Jordan wipe drool off her chin*)

I am feeling guilty that Mr. W is doing something so big for li’l ol’ me. But maybe it just goes to show, if you’ve been very very good, and you wish and pray very very hard, life will take care of you very very well. 😀

P.S. Does this mean I’ll have to get my own pair of workout gloves?

Months ago, Vanessa signed up for the Marine Corps Boot Camp Challenge which is to take place Saturday, October 6 at Camp Pendleton in San Diego, California, and extended an invitation to me to do the same, which I’d declined. The event is described as such on the event website:

EVENT FEATURES
The first and best! A fun and furious 3-mile course featuring obstacles used only by Marine Recruits at the Marine Recruit Depot. Get “encouragement” along the way at each obstacle by MCRD Drill Instructors. Compete as an individual or a member of a 3-person or 5-person team.
Great post-race party with plenty of music, food, drinks and beer, awards to the top 3 finishers in each category/age group, official race T-Shirts to all entrants. A very memorable day!

A couple weekends ago while hanging out at Mr. W’s male best friend’s (both men are former Marines, btw) house, we watched a new reality show called “The Academy” that depicts Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department recruits go through their “boot camp” training at a training academy local to us. I watched these people struggle on obstacle courses and wondered aloud whether I could pull off that training course. Mr. W had replied, “Pssh. You could do that entire obstacle course blindfolded.” Really. Hmm.

And then while hanging out with Dwaine last weekend, he was so enthusiastic about the obstacle course Mud Run he’d done that day that I thought about Vanessa’s prior invitation to this event. This morning, I finalized the talking-Dwaine-into-Boot-Camp-Challenge and registered myself. Yay!! Just to keep Mr. W in the loop, I put him on the email mailing list to confirm my registration, and I just spoke to him, and HE registered!!! DOUBLE YAY!!! He’s familiar with the training grounds from his own Marine Corp training days, and said the obstacles “are a blast.” Anyone else out there wanna join?

I had an amazing weekend! Because my gym trainee was coming over to my house (for the first time) to help me clean out my closets, I was embarrassed to have her see my house as the mess it was, so I spent all Saturday morning before she got there cleaning, scrubbing, vacuuming (never could spell that word), Windexing, disinfecting, sorting, disposing, decluttering. My house is SO spic and span right now that I loved being in it all weekend. We spent 3 hours digging through four closets, and I’m donating 3 large trash bags full of clothes, plus one packing box full of undergarments. Man. I can’t believe what an ugly fashion period the 80s and early 90s were. There were some things I had no problems parting with, but there were many more that I had to look to her. “This still fits. What do you think?”
“That is OUT. I don’t see you wearing that now.”
“Really? Is it the box cut [with drawsting on the bottom], or is it the flannel plaid pattern?”
“It’s BOTH!!”
“Oh.”
All the oversized t-shirts, sweatshirts and sweaters caused her to exclaim over and over again, “I don’t understand. Who were you buying clothes FOR back then?! Some fat…man? If a guy today fit in that shirt, I wouldn’t date him!”
This made me examine my old wardrobe thoughtfully. “I wonder why my parents let me buy all this masculine, oversized stuff when I was in high school. They’re all really unflattering.”
“They were probably just happy cuz the less feminine you looked, the less they had to worry about.”
Funny thing is that I told my parents today about all the closet cleaning, and they even brought up that my clothes back 10 years ago were big and menswear, and my dad reminded me accusingly of the flannel shirts and sweatshirts I’d taken from him. Oops.

(as usual, rest mouse pointer over photos for captions)

After my gym trainee left, I took off to Dwaine’s house. We went to buy lasagne ingredients at the grocery store, and then went back to his place to cook it. He was an avid student, very hands-on, wanting to do a bit of most things himself so that he’d know how to do it again later on without me. The lasagne turned out very well, except that he was so exhausted by then from the earlier San Diego mud run catching up with him that I had a really hard time getting him to slunk from the couch over to the kitchen to take out and cut the lasagne. (The reason why he had to do this instead of me, was because he wanted photos of him doing the impossible — cooking and pulling homemade food that he’d made out of the oven.) As we ate dinner we watched puppet sex on a Comedy Central show “Team America: World Police”, by the creators of “South Park.” Its antics were laugh-out-loud funny in their ludicrousness. And lewdness. It was a fun night. I even got a surprise phone call from Mr. W in Vegas, at a bar with his brothers while waiting to see the topless show “Bite.” It was a surprise cuz Mr. W doesn’t typically think to call me when he’s on a trip. He called me once the entire 2 weeks he was in Alaska last year. I was so glad to hear they were getting some good quality brother time in, and also that they were seeing “Bite”, as I know Mr. W had been wanting to see it every time we’d gone to Vegas recently, but the timing never worked out. Plus, I wasn’t particularly interested in the show so in a selfish way, it worked out for me. Hee hee. Altho I don’t think one of the brother’s wives was too pleased that they had gone to a topless revue when she found out about it afterwards.

Sunday (today), guilt from having eaten like a pig but not worked out at the gym since Wednesday roused me from slumber, and I got up and hit the gym for 2.5 hours. I did about 1.5 hrs of warmups and weight-training, and a full hour of cardio. I would’ve done less on cardio because the boredom always kills me, but “American Pie” was playing on one of the TVs. That easily killed the hour. I’d forgotten how funny the first movie in the series was. Strangely, it turned out my weight’s lower than it had been in a long time, at 125 (rattlesnakes be damned!) and my fat percentage dropped 2% as well. After the gym, I showered up and went to my parents’ house, picked them up, and we went to get fitted for shoes at A Snail’s Pace. I got reconfirmed that I overpronate, my dad was diagnosed as an overpronator as well, and my mom’s gait was neutral. “HAHA!” she laughed at us. “I’m neutral!”
“That doesn’t mean anything!” I told her.
“I’m normal,” she insisted.
My mom got nice Asics, my dad got a newly engineered pair of Sauconys, and I got a brand I’d never heard of until now, Brooks. My parents were excited to go on their hilly neighborhood walk tonight to try out their new shoes. It’s so cute, they never acknowledged the importance of really good shoes so my dad was stunned walking around in his corrective, supportive stability shoes. “It’s like walking on air! So light!” he exclaimed. My mom was a bit perturbed at the orange-colored accents on her shoes because she’s the fashion queen, and kept migrating toward the “cute” or sale shoes that aren’t even neutral and being disappointed that they felt funny on her feet. I left them with their new birthday (mom) and Father’s Day presents after dinner.

After spending more quality time with the DodoCat, I took Mr. W up on his invitation to hang out with him at his house. And that’s where I am right now! Blogging to my readers instead of catching up with the newly returned Mr. W. Oh well. 😀

Happy Friday! All’s quiet on the Western Front. I came back today to find that our trial is over; the jurors returned their verdict yesterday while I was at graduation. Unfortunately, the floater court reporter took the original verdict home with her. Who does that?! But according to the floater clerk, he’d already tracked her down and she’s going to mail it back to us.

I may join my coworkers for happy hour tonite at Outback Steakhouse. Tomorrow, my gym trainee volunteered to come to my house for a much-needed closet cleaning. After that, if Dwaine doesn’t poop out after his San Diego 10K Mud Run on Saturday, we’re gonna hang out and cook. “You can come over and prod what’s left of me with a stick after the mud run,” was how he put it.

Mr. W is already in Vegas with his kidlets. They’ll be back Sunday. I’d planned to give his son this cool gadget as his graduation gift, but it turned out you can only get this online, so I ordered it today. Now it’s gonna end up being more of a birthday present than a graduation present, his birthday being only 2 days before my own. Oh yeah. Mr. W, if you’re reading this before I give your son his graduation gadget, don’t tell him what it is! I figure this’ll come in really handy when he’s deciding whether to drive from school all the way to his mom’s house after class, or to wait out traffic at Mr. W’s house or in school. Or to take an alternate route. Here’s a review on the product.

Kids are great, aren’t they? Here’re some anecdotes my dad email-forwarded me:
WHEN MY THREE-YEAR-OLD SON OPENED THE BIRTHDAY GIFT FROM HIS GRANDMOTHER, HE DISCOVERED A WATER PISTOL.. HE SQUEALED WITH DELIGHT AND HEADED FOR THE NEAREST SINK. I WAS NOT SO PLEASED. I TURNED TO MOM AND SAID, “I’M SURPRISED AT YOU. DON’T YOU REMEMBER HOW WE USED TO DRIVE YOU CRAZY WITH WATER GUNS?”
MOM SMILED AND THEN REPLIED….. “I REMEMBER!!”

A new teacher was trying to make use of her psychology courses. She started
her class by saying, “Everyone who thinks they’re stupid, stand up!”
After a few seconds, Little Davie stood up. The teacher said, “Do you think
you’re stupid, Little Davie?”
“No, ma’am, but I hate to see you standing there all by yourself!”

« Previous PageNext Page »