What the Hell?!

May 22, 2008

Not just yet...

Reading has been a part of who I am for as long as I can remember. I learned how to read when I was four years of age, moving onto novels when I was five. While all the kids my age were learning how to read, I was in a corner playing on a computer. I was able to negotiate with my parents that during the “necessary absent of progeny” time, which they shortened to N.A.P. time, I could read as opposed to sleeping. I was even able to extend my bedtime an extra half-hour by requesting I be allowed to read in bed.

My grandparents were thrilled, as were my parents, that I loved such an intellectual pastime. To further encourage this habit of mine, my grandparents constantly sent me books. I received novels in various languages, on different topics, with little notes from them on the inside cover for my birthday or Christmas. Over the years, they have remained the foundation for my book-collection, going with me wherever I moved.

The first time I stepped into a library, I didn’t know where to begin. My mother had a bag that I filled with the maximum number of books I was allotted. She eased my frustration when she told me that I could come back to the library when I finished the books I had. I think she underestimated how fast I could go through them, because we were back at the library in a matter of a couple days for more books. I was devouring every single page of text at a rapid rate, which caused my parents much disbelief. So as to verify I actually read a book, they flipped through a few pages, asking me questions about the book’s plot. The expression that was on their faces when I regurgitated it to them was priceless.

In secondary school, I raided the library on a daily basis. I would checkout my two allotted books for the day, returning them the following morning, checking out another two books. I was “that” kid who walked around school with her nose shoved in a book. I couldn’t help myself: I loved to read. The students hated me in my literature courses, because we’d be assigned a book to spend several weeks on, and I would come into class the following day having already read it. Then so as to add more salt to their wounds, I would reply to inquisitions about the book with a sly smile and a simple “Read the book.”

Of course, looking back on things, I realize that reading was my escape from life when things were hard. I survived my brother’s illness and subsequent death by daily escaping into another world for a few hours. My father’s affair and parents’ divorce was accompanied by several hundred pages, sometimes over a thousand a day. Even when I was without electricity last fall I passed the time by reading a book accompanied by lantern-light.

When I began college things changed and I realized just how stubborn I was. I didn’t like being forced to do what I had done for fun up until then: reading several hundred pages a night. I know people found it overwhelming to suddenly have that much “work”. For me, it wasn’t that it was difficult, but that it was “work.” The difficulty also arose that if I found a book that I liked, I couldn’t read it because I would deviate from my schoolwork. Read a novel, or read my textbooks? It was admittedly a decision I hated having to make. Was this a part of adulthood that I will always have to deal with:  to put real-life over a paged one? I was continually asking myself this.

Up until that point I was non-discriminatory in choosing the work of one author over another: I just read anything. Then, I fell into the group of people who will read a book, devouring it whole, and then wait for the next book by the author of the book they enjoyed. Of course after waiting for that book to come out, sometimes well over a year, they are finally at the midnight release for the book. They take the anticipated book home, create their ideal reading environment, and begin to engorge themselves upon the pages, the tapestry of the author. Before they know it, the experience of reading the book for the first time, something that cannot be replicated, has come to a close.

That was my routine the past few years. I knew my time for leisure reading was precious, as it something that I didn’t have much for anymore due to my studies. I got my copy of whichever Harry Potter book was out at the time, cracked it open, and before I knew it the moment I had waited so long for was over in a matter of a few hours. Of course once I finished the book, I would read it again, but anyone who has experienced what I’ve described can agree that nothing can compare to the first read-through.

Why am I writing all this now? Why am I taking the time to wander aimlessly through the pages of my memories in my mind? It is because for the first time I’ve done something new and I am trying to make sense of it. I waited months for “The Host” by Stephenie Meyer to come out. I’ve read all her other books, devouring them as soon as they’ve hit the shelves. When “The Host” came out a couple weeks ago, I bought it the day it was released. However, instead of devouring it the moment I got it through the door, I placed it on my bedside table, and there it has remained unread.

Why haven’t I read it yet? I’ve had opportunities to. I spent one weekend cleaning my flat, thinking oh, I’ll climb into bed and read it once I’ve a spotless flat. Instead of doing what I had planned, I found myself looking at it wistfully and going, not just yet. Not just yet? What am I waiting for? I can only postulate that I’ve finally grown to truly appreciate a good book. I no longer just appreciate the escape it provides, nor do I just appreciate reading it after much anticipation. No, now I appreciate that I can only savour a bottle of fine wine for the first time, once. Am I ready to pop the cork? No, not just yet.

Biologisvensk • 05.22.2008 • 06:59 AM (Bare Naked Bio) (Bite Me) (Life's a Bitch) (What the Hell?!)
(1) comment • (0) pingsPermalink


May 20, 2008

Brain Dead

No, your feed-reader isn’t malfunctioning: this is actually a new post for all three of you who might be hanging around wondering if I’ve dropped off the face of the earth. At first I just couldn’t access my site: it was down. That excuse was valid, but once it came back up and I could log in whenever I wanted, I had no idea what to blog about. Hell, right now I don’t even know what to blog about, I’m just typing randomly, making a fool of myself, but who cares? My mind is numb, as it is at the beginning of any given week. I feel like a zombie, then when I finally wake up, I collapse into the weekend, beginning the zombie cycle all over again come Monday. Am I the only one tired of that monotony? Although, it admittedly can be reassuring to have some sort of routine, it just gets old. And right now, I need a jolt of something to wake my brain up because I feel as if I am going into an intellectual coma. 

Biologisvensk • 05.20.2008 • 01:50 AM (Bare Naked Bio) (Bite Me) (Life's a Bitch) (What the Hell?!)
(6) comment • (0) pingsPermalink


March 30, 2008

Egads!

Well I finally found a use for that potent-as-hell bathroom cleaner. I spent half the bottle wasting it on this mofo, (after squealing like a girl and hiding in a corner for a few minutes of course):

Aggghhh!!!

It took it awhile, but it eventually went down for the count. I would’ve used my hairspray/lighter method, but I wanted to get my security deposit back for the flat at the end of my lease.

Oh yeah, I’m going to be checking my flat for these things for weeks now. Did I mention I’ve a bit of arachnophobia? I’m still waiting for the “flight” adrenaline response to subside: this shit is better than caffeine on a narcoleptic.

Biologisvensk • 03.30.2008 • 08:25 PM (Bare Naked Bio) (Bite Me) (Life's a Bitch) (What the Hell?!)
(27) comment • (0) pingsPermalink


March 26, 2008

Post du Jour

I just made kick-ass Irish Soda Bread and had it piping hot out of the oven. Just add a little butter and honey and polish it off with a cuppa and you’ve a winning combination.

Jealous?

Come on, admit it. You know you are!

Biologisvensk • 03.26.2008 • 05:30 AM (Bare Naked Bio) (Bite Me) (Life's a Bitch) (What the Hell?!)
(1) comment • (0) pingsPermalink


March 23, 2008

Tear Gas

Apparently bathroom cleaners are becoming more and more potent these days.  A few sprays of the one I was using today and my eyes were on fire and my lungs felt like I stuck my head in the smoke from a campfire and inhaled a few times. I finally remembered that I had my old chemistry goggles still, so I had to break them out to finish the simple task of cleaning the bathrooms in my flat. Furthermore, I took my goggles off and saw that the fumes from the cleaner changed the pigment of the ink that I had inscribed my name on them with from a navy blue to a bright fuchsia. Screw the chemistry goggles. With the way my lungs are still burning four hours later, and with what the mere fumes did to my goggles, I’ll need a HAZMAT suit to clean my bathroom next time. However, they seem to be a bit out of my budget, so I’ll just have to change cleaners.

Biologisvensk • 03.23.2008 • 10:51 PM (Bite Me) (Life's a Bitch) (What the Hell?!)
(4) comment • (0) pingsPermalink


March 17, 2008

Landfill

I determined a long time ago that my site has a life and a mind of its own. If it wants to shut down and go on holiday, it does so. Of course, it does this without discussing it with me first. It doesn’t even bring me back a souvenir, bastard.

As for me, I’d post except I don’t feel like posting, and if I don’t feel like posting, therefore, I don’t post.

Makes sense doesn’t it? That is how I’ve managed to maintain a relationship with this site for so long. We are two individuals who meet up over espressos when we feel like it. If we don’t feel like it, we live our lives separately until we do feel like it.

I managed to fill a blog post full of a whole-lotta-nothin’. Yay!

And now, back to my manuscript. 

Biologisvensk • 03.17.2008 • 01:33 PM (Bite Me) (Blog Whore) (What the Hell?!)
(3) comment • (0) pingsPermalink


February 10, 2008

Blurbs

-My schedule at work means that by the time I get home in the wee AM hours, the only things on the telly are infomercials, preachers, and anime on Adult Swim. I succumbed to watching the anime and as a result am addicted to it. I thank the youtube and torrent gods on a regular basis, because without them I’d have to wait until mid March for Volume 9 to come out. My favourites thus far are Blood+, Bleach, Fullmetal Alchemist, Death Note, and Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex.

-I am addicted to peppermint mochas at Starbuck’s. It helps that my sister is a barista there, because I score discounts on the necessary products to satiate my cravings.

-I’m writing. Alot. It is like I am possessed. I’ll start to fall asleep and that is when an idea hits that I absolutely have to get down on paper because it is so good I don’t want it to slip away. As a result I am having fun falling asleep lately.

-I’ve been a royal bitch at work lately. Of course it more than likely stems from the frustration that I am surrounded by idiots there who react more so than stop to think things through. People are too lazy to engage their minds these days.

-It annoys me when characters in a telly series are from, say, France, and instead of speaking French with each other and there being subtitles, they speak heavily accented English with each other. Combine that with the fact that they’re father and son, and it makes me want to turn the show off. I guess the majority of the target audience is either illiterate or just lazy. Regardless, I think it is stupid.

-I am going to go immerse myself in 20th century tales of espionage now. I’d tell you more, but then I just might have to kill you.

Biologisvensk • 02.10.2008 • 11:12 PM (Bare Naked Bio) (Bite Me) (Edjumacation) (What the Hell?!) (Work Hell)
(0) comment • (0) pingsPermalink
Page 2 of 28 pages  <  1 2 3 4 >  Last »