‘Shopping’ Category

  1. Caught red-handed showing feelings

    June 10, 2007

    I’d forgotten how much I love Pink Floyd’s film “The Wall.” We saw it at the Inwood last night at midnight with Brittney and Chris. We weren’t the oldest people in the audience but we definitely fell in the high end of the range.

    Near the beginning of the film, someone’s cell phone rang. The girl sitting in front of me turned to her boyfriend and asked, quite seriously, “Was that in the movie?”

    Sigh.

    Doc’s cluster headache cycle is just not going away. No screaming bad ones, but he has a headache almost constantly since about February. Saturday we went to three different health food stores looking for this capsaicin nasal spray which is said to help with migraines and anecdotally with some peoples’ clusters too. The first one was just a distribution center in an office park (closed), the second one was Roy’s Natural Market (closed on Saturdays… seriously, WTF?), and Whole Foods did not carry it. We may have to order it online.

    Our Whole Foods trip wasn’t a complete wash though; we spent a long time staring at the fabulously gorgeous desserts in the dessert cases. They are too pretty to eat. I just want to look at them all day! I purchased a new bottle of Dr. Bronner’s Peppermint Castile Soap. I love this stuff. The label, if you aren’t familiar with it (and if you’re not I suggest you read it!), will lead you to the conclusion that dear old Dr. Bronner was nearly all his pancakes short of a stack, but by God (pun intended) he can make some damn fine environmentally friendly non-sodium-lauryl-or-laureth-sulfate-containing liquid soap. It’s expensive but a little goes a long long way.


  2. Weekend Update

    December 11, 2006

    I got all my holiday shopping done today. I realized mid-morning that today was pretty much my only opportunity to do it, due to various commitments over the next 2 weeks. Not to mention, the closer to the 25th it is, the more doses of crazy get added to retail excursions, and I don’t much like shopping as it is.

    I was out for 6-1/2 hours (insane!) but surprisingly I still had energy when I got home. Perhaps this was due to the fact that I only spent a tiny portion of those 6-1/2 hours at a mall. Malls are their own special version of hell, especially around the holidays.

    Anyway, I had energy enough to bake and decorate sugar cookies for my office holiday party. From scratch, baby. They’re thin and chewy and have peppermint icing. Holy crap, they’re good; as K1 said, “hide-them-from-your-significant-other-good.”

    I had planned also to make pasta with meat sauce, garlic baguette slices, and a spinach salad for dinner, but that is going to wait until tomorrow instead.

    Yesterday we went with Kim, Brittney, and Chris to Six Flags. Like I’ve said before, winter is the only time of the year to go to amusement parks. I was shocked at how many people were there; I’ve never seen a crowd that big during the winter. The lines for some of the rides were really crazy long. I freakin’ love the Titan. The Spongebob 4-D ride was great too (not that I’m a Spongebob fan, but the seats moved and jolted you around in sync with the film and we got SQUIRTED at one point, it was nutty). We had a great time talking and laughing and drinking hot cocoa. I cannot believe that i paid $11 for a slice of pizza and a medium coke. Park food prices are absolutely insane; so is parking ($15).

    Friday night (hey, guess I’m working backwards chronologically with this post) we went to my office’s Level 2 holiday party (the one I am making the cookies for is the Level 3 party — my department; next week is the Level 1 party, hosted by the president of the university) at the division vice president’s house. There were waaaaay too many people there for the size of his house. We made an appearance, ate some appetizers and wine, and then left to go to Times Ten Cellars for a drink and some relaxation (me and Doc, Brittney, Yvonne and Nate, Ben and Chelsea, and Chelsea and Helena). Yvonne had her first glass of wine since she’s been pregnant! (It’s fine to occasionally partake after the 1st trimester). It took her well over an hour to finish that one glass; she says that it’s strange how her body is changing so drastically in response to Le Cheetoh.

    Yesterday I picked up my unrepairable sewing machine from the shop (it only sews backwards now! and sadly, cannot be fixed because they don’t make the 35-year-old parts anymore). I got it into the hatchback of the Prius with no problem, but as I scooted it back against the rear seat, a muscle in my mid-back went **TWINGE**. That crazy painful sharp pain that makes it hard to breathe. I tried to stretch it out a little before I got back in the car, and then when I got home I laid down on the heating pad for several hours. I wasn’t sure if I’d be able to make it to Six Flags later that day or not, but it looks like this time is not nearly as bad as it has been before. I did OK at Six Flags (thanks to my good friend Darvocet) and today I hardly feel it at all. I’ve decided to start doing yoga on my own again. I think that the reason my back has been spasming a lot lately is because I’ve let myself go, strengthwise. Yoga will help strengthen my back and stomach muscles and, hopefully, this won’t happen as much anymore.

    Today was the day of the White Rock Marathon. I did not participate. I feel all kinds of latent Catholic guilt about that, because I said over and over again that I would do it; in fact, I INSISTED that I was going to find a way to complete it despite my stress fracture. I realized, though, as the weeks went by this fall, that it would be a really really dumb thing to try to do. I would probably end up making my injury worse by keeping my training at that level. And even if I didn’t push myself with the training, if I’d tried to run/walk 13 miles today I know I would have re-injured that leg.

    There is always next year. Yvonne says that after she has the baby in May, she’ll want to train for it as well, to get back into shape. I think that it’s a good goal to have and I’m totally supportive of whatever she decides to do, but I also think that she might be so tired from being a mom that she just plain might not have the energy. I plan to train either way, once my leg has a chance to get stronger. I’d like to start training in earnest in March. I hope that’s enough time. We’ll see.


  3. christmas commercialism, take 2 (final)

    December 11, 2005

    today i had more success at finishing my shopping than yesterday. i located and purchased the one remaining xmas gift for doc — the one in whose pursuit i had the “bitch experience” at town east mall last night and i think that i also forgot to mention that the traffic was so terrible (like dorothy parker said “this was fancy terrible. this was terrible with raisins”) that it took me about 55 minutes to get out of the mall parking lot and home, which is only about six miles total — at the dallas galleria, and although i was dreading driving over there and trying to park and navigate through the hordes of rich folks, it was surprisingly calm for two weeks before christmas.

    (boy howdy, that was one hell of a run-on sentence!)

    the salesdrones at the galleria kiosks have apparently been instructed to snag passersby by any means necessary to bolster their holiday sales. they were very agressive, almost uniformly so. a woman at a skin care products kiosk stepped in front of me as i was walking past and said, “ma’am, can i ask you a question about your skin?” in a way that made it clear that my skin was dry, alligator-like, ugly, blemished, and in desperate need of the kind of help that only her $180 sea weasel placenta sugar scrub could rectify. a dude at a jewelry kiosk (ugly jewelry, at that) accosted me and tried to grab my upper arm while intoning in a low voice “i have something very special to show you, miss.” yeah, i bet you say that to all the girls.

    what do you say to these people? it’s not in my nature to be rude and ignore them. i think i usually say something like “no thanks” or “not today” while making eye contact, smiling briefly, and most importantly, walking on by without stopping. i’m not a fan of aggressive sales tactics. in fact, it generally has the opposite effect on me than what they intend — i resolve NOT to buy anything from a pushy salesperson.

    i learned my lesson last christmas when the guy at the cinnamon almond stand suckered me into buying some almonds. i mean, they were tasty, but not $25 per pound tasty. i was probably his first customer of the day, and i think i fell prey to his winning smile, cute foreign accent, metrosexual shoes, and the free samples. i know better now.

    i had a great lunch with kathryn, and spent some time catching up with her. it sucks that she lives in the far reaches of what might not even be considered “the metroplex” anymore… although i know she loves it out there. damn her and her ability to see stars at night!

    she and i went to another place where i thought there might be an off chance that i could find one other particular thing for doc for christmas, and surprisingly enough, i had some success there too. i didn’t find what i came in to get, but i found something else that i think he’ll like. and if not, it’s exchangeable. :)

    then we went over to the downtown neiman markus to look at their christmas window displays. their theme this year is, apparently, either Attack of the One Billion Killer Butterflies, or Holiday in the Trailer. they had these odd full-size representations of airstream and other style trailers throughout the store, made of plexiglass, with really expensive crap displayed inside. one of the mannekins inside a trailer had hair that looks like mine when i blow dry it.

    giant strands of gold and green butterflies hung down from the ceiling throughout most of the first floor. oh, also the elevator bank, which was probably thirty feet long and maybe twenty in height, was completely swathed in big gold sequins. you know how sometimes you’ll see a sparkletts water truck on the road, and it’s got that wacky thing on the back made of hundreds of silvery hanging tiles that flap around with the movement of the truck, which i guess is supposed to make it look like shimmering water? this is what the elevators looked like, except in gold.

    so all in all, totally ostentatious.

    maybe all i need to do is blow dry my hair and wear something with metallic sequins to make people think i’m fancy.

    i got some great laughs from looking at the price tags on things. i mean… shit, i could make two house payments or buy a ragged yellow and white tweed cardigan.

    oddly enough, i didn’t get the feeling from any of the salespeople that (like valerie said the other day) i clearly did not belong in their store. i had on levi’s 501s and a pink cardigan over a green “where the wild things are” tee shirt, and riverdancing shoes. in otherwords, they don’t sell anything i was wearing at neiman’s. yet i didn’t get “the look” from anyone. maybe they’re desperate for sales. who knows.


  4. cock and bull

    December 10, 2005

    we had a great time out last night. first off, we went to a little early evening holiday party at my company’s VP’s house. it was funny how most people, rather than mingling, stood and talked to their immediate co-workers. me included, of course. i’m not that outgoing. i have to say that the mashed potato bar rocked. i’d never thought of serving mashed potatoes in martini glasses and letting people top them with things like pesto, mushrooms, cheese, sun dried tomatoes, etc. the VP’s house is quite nice. quite large. quite the cool wide-plank hardwood floors and all stainless viking appliances in the kitchen.

    after an hour or so, doc and i, brittney, yvonne and nate, and ben and his wife chelsea went over to the cock and bull pub in lakewood for a drink. i had SO much fun!! chelsea and brittney are both like four feet something tall and veeeeery outgoing. like two peas in a pod. she might even be perkier than brittney. ben is my supervisor but he’s a lot of fun to hang out with socially. he and chelsea left after a while but the rest of us stayed for a couple of hours. i like that place. not terribly loud, not smoky enough to make me want to immediately leave, nice colors on the walls, small, not full of college frat boys, and good happy hour prices. doc said that the hamburger he ordered was the best he’s had in recent memory. then he and nate started talking about all the good burger places in town. we resolved to try keller’s, if only for the cheezy drive-in classic car factor. i can’t even remember what all we talked about but after a while i started to get a headache — i blamed it on the smoke but what i didn’t want to admit (for whatever reason) was that the headache was from laughing so hard and my face constantly having a smile plastered on it. it started to hurt after a while! how dumbass is that!!

    doc’s two belhavens put him over the cluster edge; at the time he said it would be worth it to have a drink (24 hours later and the headache’s still going… now he’s rethinking the wisdom of that plan). we had talked about going back to yvonne and nate’s house to play board games and have more drinks and snacks, but we decided to go home instead. maybe next time.

    i really like yvonne and nate, and i’m glad to be making new friends. not that there’s anything wrong with my old friends!! i don’t see them nearly enough, and i miss them. but as i said before, i’m not very outgoing and don’t make friends easily. i also tend to assume that all strangers are completely unlike me and are not the type of people that i would want to be friends with. until, of course, i meet someone under circumstances where i am able to slowly get to know them (like work, say) and my preconceived notions unravel. maybe it’s from living in texas which is full of right wing religious republican SUV-driving gay-hating yokels (ranging in looks from cowboy to highland park mom), and me being a left wing atheist/agnostic liberal tree-hugging gay-loving person, i tend to assume that there are very few people like me, and what are the odds that i’ll meet another one.

    i oughta give strangers more credit, but somehow i just can’t. i guess it’s closed-minded of me to assume that. maybe i should work on it harder.

    so today i tried to bust a move and get all my holiday shopping done. i nearly succeeded; i just need to get one more item from doc and i have to go to another location of the store i was at to find it. i spent about seven and a half hours shopping today. it was kind of a nightmare. i hate crowds, traffic, shopping, and people. i hate malls especially. do not, under any circumstances, go near town east mall this time of year. i held the door open for a woman who was exiting dillards, and got called a bitch for my trouble. i was going in the same door she was coming out of, and i stepped back and caught the edge of the door for her. did she think i was in her face or something? whatever. even though she was mean to me, i decided to be extra nice to other people while i was at the mall instead of taking it out by being rude to other people. building up extra karma points or something.


  5. potatoes, reorganization, vacation week

    October 2, 2005

    this weekend i moved my art studio from the garage to my office upstairs. the space is much smaller and i can’t be nearly as messy as i’m used to being, what with the carpeting and all, but i think that if i have to see my equipment all the time i’ll be more inclined to actually work. not to mention the serious benefits of central heating and air!!

    in the process of moving my stuff upstairs, i decided to clean the garage too. not fully, but i just organized it a little, swept it out about 75%-assed (which is more than half-assed but less than perfect), and ripped up the astroturf that covered about 1/3 of the concrete and which had probably been there since the house was built. imagine 25 years of dirt and bugs ground into a sickly green plasticky sheeting. you can only sweep that crap off so much. it was really nasty underneath. but now it’s clean-esque.

    and it was 93 degrees out today (yes, it IS october). i’m pretty sure that i sweated at least 2 pounds off. maybe i should do this more often.

    left to do: get rid of a bunch of crap (old desk parts, broken monitor, huge cardboard boxes) next bulk trash day; thoroughly clean out the secondary fridge, make sure that its new “feature” of shocking the crap out of you when you touch it, which we discovered when we had it plugged in for the garage sale in may, was just a function of it being plugged into an extension cord.

    earlier today we went estate-saleing with kat and brett. these were rich peoples’ estate sales (one house appeared as if the rather young-ish family had just packed a few belongings and moved, leaving most of their stuff behind). doc likes to make up stories about what he thinks that the families that lived there were like, and i love to listen to them. i bought 3 glass christmas ornaments at the first sale — that really thin thin glass with a deep red anodized metallic coating, and a very tastful glitter pattern on it. doc found several other things that he liked, including a bag of plastic dinosaurs, some old leather photo albums, and an unused rapiograph pen set.

    we had lunch at holy smokes, which has good barbecue (some of the best i’ve tasted in dallas) and a coronary-in-a-bowl delicious southern potato casserole, which tasted like it had more butter, cheese, and sour cream in it than actual potatoes. it was probably good that i worked in the garage later on and sweated off a couple of quarts of water.

    i have had the last week off on vacation, and have really really enjoyed myself. we did not go anywhere out of town, but i spent some time working on the freelance brochure project, cleaning out my office, getting organized, doing a little catching up on housework, and seeing friends. for doc’s birthday on wednesday, i took him out to dinner at pei wei, and we watched a violent thunderstorm rage through town (birthday gifts: a salt grinder from williams sonoma, season passes to the state fair, and DVDs of shaun of the dead and garden state). thursday night we went to leslie’s art show at counterculture, then to the trinity hall for drinks afterwards. we had a great time — lori, brittney, leslie, mark, brittney’s friend robert, kathryn, and rachel all were there. saturday i had lunch with kathryn, which i desperately need to do more often.

    i hope to make our first trip to the state fair this thursday night. hopefully, doc’s schedule will allow for that… it is only supposed to be 76 on thursday. however, this is texas and the weather tends to not cooperate with the forecasts, so we’ll see.


  6. what would jesus smell (like)?

    September 7, 2005

    from the strange and/or sad news files…

    Couple Sells Candles That Smell Like Jesus
    Product Flying Off Shelves
    Now there’s a candle that lets you experience the scent of Jesus, and they’ve been selling out by the case. You can find candles with just about every fragrance imaginable, from blueberry to ocean mist to hot apple pie. “We see it as a ministry,” says Bob Tosterud, who together with his wife came up with the idea for the candle. Light up the candle called “His Essence” and its makers say you’ll experience the fragrance of Christ. 

    now, nothing against jesus; i’m sure the man was as nice as can be… but christ probably smelled like ass. people in that time period just did not bathe regularly. EVERYONE undoubtedly smelled like ass. including jesus. now do you REALLY want a jesus-scented candle? didn’t think so.

    Rescue ‘ticket’
    Posted: 6:24 p.m. ET
    CNN’s Drew Griffin in New Orleans, Louisiana
    “I am stunned by an interview I conducted with New Orleans Detective Lawrence Dupree. He told me they were trying to rescue people with a helicopter and the people were so poor they were afraid it would cost too much to get a ride and they had no money for a ‘ticket.’ Dupree was shaken telling us the story. He just couldn’t believe these people were afraid they’d be charged for a rescue.” 

    and last but not least, foamy the squirrel reports to us, live from new orleans, with a very special message.


  7. blue dress

    February 23, 2005

    i went to a feeding frenzy dress sale a couple of weekends ago, looking for a light blue dress suitable to wear in kathryn’s wedding. this was one of those one-day sample sale type things, so there were probably 40 women in this tiny storefront, frantically rummaging through racks of wedding and formal gowns. they’d cordoned off a small corner of the place with black drapery as the communal dressing room, which at any given time contained about 20 half- to mostly-naked women and one tiny mirror. i was amazed to find two dresses that did not look hideous on me. i bought them both since they were only $30 each. here they are:


  8. and the bridesmaid wore…

    January 20, 2005

    Last weekend we went out looking for bridesmaids’ dresses for Kathryn’s wedding. She’s being quite cool about it, and is choosing a color for us to aim for in whichever dress we choose. While there are a few dresses out there in the light blue shade range that she wants, most available formal dresses (and I’m not exaggerating) are either some bright neon hue or RAINBOW striped. Witness the following, many of which are actual dresses that we saw in the stores:

    That last one, the one that looks like a muppet freaking out on acid, we did not actually witness. I found it while poking around online, looking for a photo of the “Rhiannon”, the rainbow monstrosity to the left. The Rhiannon actually looks worse in person than in the photo. It’s much poofier in the skirt region. And check out the embroidered butterflies on the bodice! That must be why it’s $350.

    I shudder to think what this year’s high school proms will look like.


  9. hi, can i ignore you?

    September 21, 2004

    doc and i have noticed this phenomenon lately — and it’s really not that much of a phenomenon, it’s just one of those things that made you think “wow, is this actually happening?”

    have you ever been completely and utterly ignored by a customer service person at a retail establishment?

    example #1: while having breakfast last weekend at a popular (read: we put everyone else out of business) bagel joint, our order was incomplete when doc went to pick it up. so he stood at the counter by the cashier, waiting for someone to ask him if he needed anything. the cashier was right there, ringing up peoples’ orders, and the bagel drones were walking back and forth behind the counter, going about their own business.

    he stood there for probably four or five minutes before anyone noticed he was standing there and asked him if he needed anything. he was not two feet from this cashier, who never once looked his way. he told me that he was perfoming an experiment, and waiting without saying anything to see how long it would take for someone to notice him.

    example #2: a few nights ago, when we picked up dinner at a local chicken restaurant, the same thing happened: he went to the counter to ask for some salt packets, and stood there for several long minutes. the cashier was nowhere in sight, but there were several chicken drones and a chicken manager behind the food service area, who could clearly see through to the dining room, who completely ignored both Doc and the two other customers who were waiting to be helped. finally one of the other customers said loudly, “HEY” to someone in the back, who then came out. who knows how long he would have waited if the other customer hadn’t said anything.

    i told him that there was no way i could wait that long, even for the sake of an experiment. i’d give about 30 seconds and then i’d start waving my arms or loudly saying “excuse me?” to anyone in sight. i’m too impatient.

    example #3: numerous times at the grocery store and various other retail establishments, i have been totally ignored by the cashier. the cashier is busy talking to another employee, or looking around the store while scanning my groceries, or just flat out ignores me — and sometimes does not even tell me my total, so that i have to ask, and only then do they begrudingly mumble what i owe.

    it’s just amazing. i shouldn’t be amazed by this stuff anymore. i should be jaded. is it rudeness? lack of manners? apathy induced by a pathetic minimum wage paycheck?

    on the other side of it is rude customers, of whom there are all too many. i do feel sorry for people working in the retail world; i’ve experienced it myself. i’m especially put out by customers on cell phones, who completely ignore the cashier while continuing their conversations. i heard about a post office somewhere around dallas that has put up a sign stating “we will gladly assist you after you have finished your phone conversation.”

    and then again, there are the occasional super-nice and helpful customer service people. i had a good experience with one at southwestern bell a few weeks back. she was so pleasant and really made me feel like she cared that i was having a problem. so i wrote a complimentary letter to her supervisor. it’s sad that i felt compelled to write a letter for what should be standard service. but unfortunately “standard service” these days is often apathy at best.