April 30, 2008

Sorry to burst your bubble

But CSI: Miami is not filmed in Miami.

It’s filmed in Los Angeles, and right now, it’s being filmed right next door to my office. I was just outside watching everyone, and even though I don’t watch the show and have no idea who the actors are, I’m completely star struck right now.

There’s just something about all the cameras and the extras and the make-up people and the guy with the megaphone yelling “ACTION!” that makes me excited.

They have Miami Florida police cars and two giant hummers that say Crime Scene Investigation on the side of them. The scene they’re filming today is a drive-by shooting scene where some policemen are escorting a guy out a building (maybe a courthouse?) and the guy gets shot. If you happen to catch it, you’ll get to see where I work!

Very cool day, indeed.

2 days...

Only two days left until I load up and drive out into the desert! I’ve got my clothes packed, a brand new bright pink sleeping bag, and the perfect mix CD. Now all I need is Friday!

Today’s Stagecoach artist is a great one, and the song will really get ya moving. Don’t hold back. Pump those fists in the air, shake those hips and get down with your bad selves! Enjoy!

Stagecoach artist #2: Gretchen Wilson

Well, I’m an eight-ball shootin’, double-fisted drinkin’ son of a gun
I wear my jeans a little tight just to watch the little boys come undone
I’m here for the beer and the ball bustin’ band
Gonna get a little crazy just because I can.

(chorus)
You know I’m here for the party
And I ain’t leavin’ till they throw me out
Gonna have a little fun
Gonna get me some
You know I’m here, I’m here for the party.

I may not be a ten but the boys say I clean up good
And if I gave ‘em half a chance for some rowdy romance
You know they would
I’ve been waiting all week just to have a good time
So bring on them cowboys and them pick-up lines!

(repeat chorus)

Don’t want no purple hooter shooter
Just some Jack on the rocks
Don’t mind me if I start that trashy talk

(repeat chorus)

April 29, 2008

3 days...

With only 3 days left before Stagecoach, I thought I’d take some time to try and convert some of you country-hating readers. I figured it’s the least I can do in the midst of my excitement. So, for the next three days, I’ll be adding one new song a day by a Stagecoach artist to my music player and posting the song’s lyrics here on the blog. Feel free to turn it up and sing along!

Warning: The following song may induce feet tapping, hand clapping, booty shaking and general woo-hooing.

Enjoy!

Stagecoach artist #1: Big & Rich

Well, I walk into the room, passing out hundred dollar bills
And it kills and it thrills like the horns on my Silverado grill
And I buy the bar a double round of crown
And everybody's getting down
and this town ain't never gonna be the same.

(chorus)
Cause I saddle up my horse and I ride into the city
I make a lot of noise cause the girls they are so pretty
Riding up and down Broadway on my old stud Leroy
And the girls say "Save a horse, ride a cowboy."
Everybody says "Save a horse, ride a cowboy."

Well, I don't give a dang about nothing
I'm singing and bling-blinging
While the girls are drinking long necks down.
And I wouldn't trade old Leroy or my Chevrolet
for your Escalade
Or your freak parade.
I'm the only John Wayne left in this town.

(repeat chorus)

(spoken)
I'm a thorough-bred, that's what she said
in the back of my truck bed
As I was getting buzzed on suds
out on some back country road.
We were flying high, fine as wine,
having ourselves a big and rich time,
and I was going just about as far as she'd let me go.
But her evaluation
of my cowboy reputation had me begging for salvation
all night long.
So I took her out gigging frogs,
introduced her to my old bird dog,
sang her every Willie Nelson song I could think of
And we made love!

(repeat chorus)

April 28, 2008

Back at work. Blek.

1 of Big Dean’s famous hamburgers +
2 Tecates +
2 bike rides +
2 giant Coronas at Cabo Cantina +
1 game of pool at Barney’s Beanery +
1 pizza with black olives that tasted like green +
12 cinnamon streusel muffins +
1 boom box in my bike basket +
3 hours in the sun +
1 game of catch +
1 sun sick boyfriend +
1 night in +
1 episode of Tori and Dean Inn Love +
1 episode of The Hills +
9 hours of sleep +
1 morning drive with absolutely no traffic +
2 magazines +
1 strawberry smoothie +
30 minutes of Hannah Montana +
14 blocks on foot to the beach and back +
1 walk to the grocery store +
1 dinner of chicken salad and lentil soup +
2 peanut butter cookies for dessert +
60 minutes of The Real World Hollywood +
30 minutes of Family Guy +
45 minutes of Brothers and Sisters =

One pretty mellow, but very nice beach weekend.

April 25, 2008

Wait a minute, Mr. Postman

I’m never quite sure how I get to the places I end up most of the time. I start reading one blog, which leads to another blog, which leads to a comment, which leads to a profile, which leads to another blog. Long story short, I stumbled upon a very cool blog the other day and a very cool idea: homemade postcards.

The blog post I stumbled upon was an old one from last January when the blogger was involved in a postcard swap of homemade postcards, but it’s the pictures of the homemade postcards that amazed me and got my creative juices flowing. (Read the inspiring post here.) No sooner had I read the post than I was making a list of all the things I needed to make my very own fantastically creative homemade postcards.

Once I got all my supplies spread out on my coffeetable, there was no holding back. Three hours and 10 gluey fingers later, I had my very own homemade postcards. They’re not nearly as pretty as the ones I saw on the blog, but they were oh so fun to make, and I figure practice makes perfect, which means there are plenty more homemade postcards in my future! So, if I have your address, start checking your mailbox for a homemade hello from California! And if I don’t have your address and you want me to send you one, leave it in a comment or email me!

Have a great weekend everyone!

April 24, 2008

Grumpy Grumpensteins

You know what really annoys me? Positive, chipper, happy people when I’m feeling anything but positive, chipper and happy. Have you ever just been in a bad mood for no good reason? Maybe you’re annoyed that Friday is taking entirely too long to arrive this week. Maybe you’re having a bad hair day. Maybe you simply hate the smell of the popcorn that is constantly wafting over from the cube next to yours.

It doesn’t matter if your reason for being in a bad mood is legitimate or completely ridiculous. The fact is, you’re in a bad mood, and although you don’t necessarily want to be in a bad mood, you also don’t want another person giving you pointers on how to get out of your bad mood, but inevitably, they will, which will then turn your bad mood into a terrible mood and leave you grumpier than ever.

When someone asks me, “How’s your day?” and I reply with a less than enthusiastic, “Eh, not so good” or a bleak “Same ‘ole, same ‘ole,” this is not an invitation to “fix” my day. I don’t want suggestions on how to spice up my life (“Go for a pedicure on your lunch!”) or lessons in positive thinking (“Set a new goal for yourself today!”). If I wanted to go for a pedicure, I would. If I wanted to set a goal for myself, I would do that, too. But I don’t want to. Why? Because I’m in a bad mood.

I don’t know why it’s such a bad thing to be in a bad mood. We’re human beings. We are fickle, emotional, fluctuating creatures. We have good moods. We have bad moods. It’s all part of life. So why is it that when someone is in a bad mood, everyone in a 50 mile radius suddenly feels like its his or her duty to cheer that person up and haul them out of the funk they’ve gone and sat down in?

I don’t know about you, but that’s the last thing I want when I’m feeling grumpy. Instead, what I’d really like, is someone to hunker down to my level and be grumpy with me. I want to hear a solid, “Ah, I know how you’re feeling,” or maybe a just a simple “I feel ya.” I want to hear stories about how much you hate your boss or loathe the monotony of a 40-hour work week or really, really dislike the outfit you put on today. I want to hear about how your cup of coffee was cold, your dog ate your presentation, your boyfriend’s driving you nuts and your hair needs to be dyed.

Don’t have any terrible stories to share with me? Make something up. Seriously.

In other words, when I’m in a bad mood, all I really want is for you to feel my pain, not erase it. I want to know that other people have bad days, too. I want to feel like someone gets me, and I don’t want to feel like some weirdo whose mood needs to be fixed.

Honestly, people, bad moods aren’t that big of a deal. I’m an emotionally healthy 26-year-old. I’ll bounce back from it, I promise. And in a couple of hours, I’ll probably be positive, chipper and happy again, but for now, be grumpy with me?

April 23, 2008

8 days, 8 days, 8 days

I’m highly distracted today. I just can’t seem to focus on work or errands or responsibilities unless they have to do with the Stagecoach Festival. In short, I’M JUST TOO EXCITED TO DO ANYTHING BUT BE EXCITED!

Three days full of all the hottest country stars, old and new, Stagecoach is a country music festival out in Indio, CA, that I’ve been looking forward to since they announced it a million months ago, and now that it’s finally here (NEXT WEEKEND!!), I can’t concentrate on anything else.

I don’t want to work. I want to make grocery lists. I don’t want to clean my apartment. I want to try on clothes with my new cowboy boots. I don’t want to cook dinner. I want to load up the car!

I went to Stagecoach last year, and it was the perfect kick-off to an amazing summer. This year, I can’t wait for more! (Especially since my fabulous sister is flying in from Texas to come!)

I can’t wait to wake up in the early morning desert sun and eat Poptarts on the grass outside my tent. I can't wait to spend the days laying out, drinking margaritas, eating sandwiches, dancing to the music from my boom box and playing beer darts in the sun. And I really can't wait to end every night on a field of cool grass in a sea of thousands of people all singing the same songs at the top of their lungs! I just don’t know what could be better than that.

Here’s the (AMAZING!!) line up:

The Eagles
John Fogarty
Trisha Yearwood
Nitty Gritty Dirt Band
Michelle Branch
Craig Morgan
Rascal Flatts
The Judds
Dirks Bentley
Dwight Yoakum
Taylor Swift
Bucky Covington
Luke Bryan
Rissi Palmer
Shelby Lynne
Tim McGraw
Carrie Underwood
Gretchen Wilson
Big & Rich
Trace Adkins

And those are only the ones I want to see! There are more!

Anyway, I know country music isn’t all the rage these days, so I understand if you’re less than interested in this post, but I just had to write and share my EXTREME, CRAZY, FRANTIC, IDIOTIC, RIDICULOUS excitement with you guys!

Only 8 more days….

April 22, 2008

Lovey dovey

I’m sick today. My throat hurts. My eyes itch. And my body aches. All I want is a bowl of soup, a blanket, a comfy seat on a couch and somebody to take care of me. But since I can’t have any of those things right now, I figured I’d focus on something positive, like the things I love right now. I like doing journal entries like this because they’re always fun to look back on, and since this blog is my new electronic journal, here goes nothing:

Things I love right now...

Egg salad sandwiches
Dried bananas
IM conversations
Weekend get-a-ways
New books
Taylor Swift
Pineapple juice
Cowboy boots
Beach days
Purple nail polish
Blog comments
Bike baskets
American Idol
Santa Monica
Walking instead of driving
Running partners
Olive bars
New recipes
My replacement gold sandals
Summer plans
Fast food hamburgers

What do you guys love right now?

April 21, 2008

M is for Monday

1 really cool pair of vintage cowboy boots +
2 plane rides +
2 Starbucks breakfasts +
1 trip to the Seattle Aquarium +
30 purple and orange starfish +
2 cups of soup +
1 fluffy cat named Bowie +
1 wedding in a castle +
2 hours of getting lost +
1 unfashionably late entrance +
2 new pairs of sandals +
1 rented Chevy Impala +
1 interesting night at the Emerald Queen Casino +
1 mullet +
1 handlebar mustache +
1 chicken and prime rib buffet +
2 scoops of horse radish +
1 chocolate cupcake +
2 glasses of wine +
1 night out in downtown Kirkland +
1 big Chinese dinner +
100 North Face jackets +
1 day of snow +
1 breakfast at The Brown Bag +
1 game of pool +
1 house party +
1 Cougar fight song sing-a-long +
2 shots of Patron with limes, no salt +
5 bright pink satin bridesmaid dresses +
1 drive through the UW campus +
1 trip to the mall +
1 happy baby +
2 taxi rides +
2 shuttle rides +
1 racquetball court turned dance floor +
2 tacos at Taco Time =

1 very fun 3-day Seattle get-a-way!

April 17, 2008

Up, up and away

My back hurts. My eyes hurt. And my fingers hurt.

Thank goodness it’s Friday, for me at least. I’m off of work tomorrow and heading to Seattle at 8:00 am, and my mini vacation couldn’t have come at a better time. The past four days have felt like four years for some reason, and I’m looking forward to some fun and a change of scenery, but mostly, I’m looking forward to the airport.

I haven’t flown in months, and it’s one of my very favorite things to do. I love everything about it. I love the early morning taxi ride to the airport while the city is just waking up for work or still huddled beneath warm blankets, hitting the snooze button. I love checking my bags and taking the escalator up to security. I love smiling at all the other early-morning travelers as they yawn and pull their luggage along behind them. I love standing in line for my Starbucks breakfast and trying to figure out where everyone is from or where they’re off to.

And once I get all cozy in my window seat with my blanket and pillow, I love watching the men load the luggage down below and trying to spot mine in the rainbow-colored pile. I never do. And it always makes me a bit nervous.

I love the pilot’s voice as he welcomes everyone aboard. I love watching the flight attendants demonstrate the safety belts and show us all where the exits are with their perfectly choreographed hand motions. I love the unsettling feeling I get when we start rolling into our take-off position. And I love when we blast off into the air, headed for an adventure somewhere far away from here, however short of an adventure it may be.

It makes me happy just thinking about it. There was a time in my life when I thought I’d never set foot on an airplane. Just the idea terrified me. I suppose that just goes to show you we should try everything at least once, even the things we absolutely know we’ll hate. They just might turn out to be our very favorites.

Have a great weekend, everyone! I’ll be back on Monday, hopefully with some fun tales from my three-day Seattle get-a-way!

April 16, 2008

Mid-week musings

I have way too many things on my mind today to write a post about just one thing so instead, I’m going to write a little about everything I’m thinking about:

1. It’s crazy to me how insecurity can creep up on you when you’re not looking and slap you over the head with it’s slimy little hands just when you thought you were perfectly happy just being you. Recently, I got a lesson in confidence from two good friends who happened to be in exactly the right place at the right time. Since then, I’ve been thinking a lot about confidence and what it means to be totally confident in everything about yourself, from your accomplishments to the way you look to the things you feel, and I’m beginning to think it’s actually possible.

2. Marriage, marriage is everywhere, and it makes me all sappy. I just read a MySpace bulletin about a high school friend of mine that’s getting married in Maui next month. On the beach. At sunset. Sounds fantastic. This weekend I’m going to a wedding somewhere outside of Seattle. It’s supposed to be in a castle, and I really can’t wait. I love weddings and all that they represent. I love the dresses and the food and the dancing and the toasts and the rings and the crying moms and the flowers and seeing two people who love each other more than anything stand before their family and friends and vow to be there for each other in good times and in bad, in sickness and in health, in times of plenty and in times of want. Sigh. I just love it all. (Told you it makes me sappy.)

3. I really, really want a talking chipmunk. Last night, I watched Alvin and the Chipmunks, and today, I can’t stop thinking about Theodore. His little voice. His big eyes. His little ears that go back when he’s sad or scared. I just wanna squeeeeeeze him! If anyone knows where I can get a fat, cuddly, talking chipmunk to keep as my pet, please let me know!

April 15, 2008

Porn stars and motorcycles

It’s no secret that girls and guys are different. After all, men are from Mars and women are from Venus, right? Makes sense to me. There are many things I’ll never understand about the opposite sex, and this weekend, I added two more things to my list: porn stars and motorcycles.

What exactly is the male fascination with porn stars and motorcycles? This weekend, I had way too many conversations about both, and I just don't get it.

Maybe I’ve read one too many Marie Claire articles about the sister/mom/daughter/best friend who became a coke/heroin/insert drug here-addicted porn star and ruined her life and the life of her family, but the thought of shaking a porn star’s hand kind of gives me the heebie jeebies and makes me want to run for the hand sanitizer.

And as for motorcycles, well, I’m terrified of them, and yes, I’ve ridden on one. 70 miles an hour. On a Los Angeles freeway. It was by far the scariest thing I’ve ever done, and I prayed that if I could just hold on long enough to get to the exit, I’d never sit my butt on a motorcycle seat again. I also know someone who got very hurt on one in an accident that wasn’t his fault.

Neither of these arguments do anything to change the minds of my male companions. Their eyes continue to light up when they talk about the porn stars they met at the bar and the motorcycles they want to buy off of Craigslist, and I continue to shake my head, baffled.

Beer. Sports. Bar food. Tailgating. A clean pair of sneakers. New cars. Dart boards. Guys nights. Drinking games. Leaving the seat up. Baseball caps. Frat parties.

These things I get, but porn stars and motorcycles…

Sorry, boys, you’ve lost me on those.

April 14, 2008

Monday morning blues

1 itty bitty, teeny weenie, bright pink polka dot bikini +
2 really great friends +
1 slumber party +
3 cokes in a bottle +
1 cheese enchilada dinner +
1 strawberry margarita +
1 Cosmo at Blue 32 +
4 hours of dancing and music videos +
30 minutes of advice +
1 Jamba Juice smoothie +
4 hours of laying out in the sun +
2 days at the beach +
1 trip to St. Nick’s +
1 slice of pepperoni pizza +
2 extra hot cinnamon dolce lattes +
2 new pairs of shorts +
1 long walk to Pinkberry +
2 hours of Lords of Dogtown +
1 plate of spaghetti with Italian sausage +
2 peanut butter cookies +
3 hilarious YouTube videos +
2 accidental (but VERY FUNNY) YouTube comments +
1 really, really old man +
1 Glamour magazine +
1 new pair of sunglasses =

One hot weekend that finally felt like summer.

April 12, 2008

Inside looking out

I wrote this last night at a Starbucks while I was waiting on my Friday night to get started. I thought I’d post it today just for fun.

The warm day is fading into a warm night, and I find myself sitting at a small birch table sipping a latte and watching the world busily rush by outside the glass windows. Couples walk hand in hand, shooting each other sideways smiles and renting movies, preparing to snuggle on couches and whisper sweet nothings. Young boys bound by, gearing up for sleepovers that will surely drive their parents crazy. Women hurry along in groups, trying to make their 8:00 dinner reservations. It’s a night away from their husbands, and the smiles on their faces say they are in need of some serious girl talk.

The light turns green, and the sign says walk. Strollers are pushed, heels start their tap-tapping. I can imagine the air smells like perfume and anticipation. It’s Friday. The weekend has finally arrived, and it feels like it’s going to be a good one.

As I gather my things and head out into the night in search of a slice of pizza, I become one of the people I was watching. I look back at the warm glowing insides of the coffee shop and wonder what the people inside are thinking about me.

Part of me hopes they’ve got me pegged as someone completely different, but another part of me hopes they’ve gotten it right. Because right now, on this sidewalk, with the sweet smell of spring all around me, I’m pretty happy just being me.

In my life.

On my Friday night.

And that feels really good.

April 11, 2008

Livin' the cube life

Just as I was sitting here in my cubicle feeling very "Office Space-ish" as I enjoyed a really, really unhealthy (but really, really good) McDonald's double cheeseburger and checked my hotmail account, my sister sent me an email that was entirely too appropriate for the moment.

I had to share it with you guys.

Enjoy! And have a happy cube-free weekend!

Do you know the muffin man?

For about 5 months now, I’ve been craving muffins. But I haven’t just been craving to eat them; I’ve been craving to make them. I’ve been craving the rhythmic mixing of batter in a bowl, the plop-plopping of little spoonfuls of batter into a muffin pan and the soft rising of dough in a warm oven. So, why didn’t I just make muffins already, you ask? Well, I didn’t have a muffin pan.

I had looked at muffin pans at the store. I had eyed them for months. But buying a muffin pan just seemed like such a silly, needless thing to do when there was soap and shampoo and toothpaste to be bought. So every week, I would talk myself out of buying one, only to wake up on Saturday mornings dreaming of big, puffy homemade muffins.

So finally, last week, I put an end to my muffin pan lust. It was Friday, I had some extra change in my pocket and the muffin pans were calling to me, and I must say, it was one of the best purchases I’ve ever made.

Last weekend I broke in my new pan with blueberry muffins. They turned out fabulous — warm and bursting with berries. I sliced them down the middle, melted butter into their squishy insides and ate them with a giant glass of milk. I could have eaten all twelve, but I made myself stop after three.

Just thinking about them makes my mouth water and my pulse spike, makes me crave the cracking of eggs and measuring out of sugar, makes me want to rush to the grocery to browse the baking isle for ideas for future muffin masterpieces.

This weekend, I’ve got my heart set on banana nut. Next weekend is up in the air, but chocolate chip is always an option. You name them, I’m gonna bake them. That’s my new muffin-making motto.

Some might ask, do you know the muffin man? But not me. I ask, do you own a muffin pan? If not, I suggest you get one.

April 10, 2008

Giving back

Maybe it was the Black Opal cabernet I was drinking. Maybe it was the part about the family of five living in a crumbling trailer somewhere in Kentucky. Maybe it was the fact that the Idol contestants sang both Shout to the Lord and Seasons of Love. Whatever it was, it moved me.

I’m not usually the kind of person swayed by those TV ads about the starving kids in Africa. Maybe I’m insensitive. Or maybe I’m just desensitized. Who knows. But last night, during American Idol’s Idol Gives Back, something hit me, and it hit me hard.

There I was, sitting on a comfortable couch in a nice, warm apartment, eating Hawaiian chicken with sautéed vegetables and sipping red wine, and there were children dying in Africa. Cliché, I know, but last night, I really understood the reality of it.

There was this one story about a little girl who was dying from malaria. She was in the hospital with all sorts of tubes coming and going from her tiny little body, and she looked absolutely terrified. I thought about how scary it would be to be sick at my age, and then thought about how much scarier it must be to be sick when you’re only a child and you can’t talk or comprehend what’s happening to you.

When asked if there was anything that could’ve prevented the little girl from getting sick, her mom said a mosquito net. A $10 mosquito net would have kept that little girl and millions like her from getting malaria, but her family was too poor to afford one. I looked around at all that I have, thought about the paycheck that I take home every two weeks, reflected on my childhood with parents that could afford to buy me so much, and I felt my heart breaking. I wanted so bad to hold that little girl and comfort her, make her healthy and give her everything she ever wanted.

But because I couldn’t actually do any of those things, I instead stopped contemplating making a donation, reached for my credit card and contributed a small part of the $22 million dollars that was raised last night. Part of me worried that I’d regret my spontaneity once my cabernet-induced haze wore off, but I don’t. Today, I feel pretty darn proud of myself for putting my selfish desires aside and giving something back to this world that has been so good to me.

Sure, maybe it’ll mean a few less trips to Starbucks this month, but it’ll also mean a few mosquito nets, a few malaria pills and a few good meals for some kid who needs it way more than I do.

April 9, 2008

In celebration of poetry

Did you all know that April is National Poetry Month? I stumbled upon this fun piece of information at work today and thought it would be fun to join in the spirit of celebrating poems and the poets who pen them. However, aside from the poems my sister makes me write her every year on her birthday, I’m not much of a poet. So, I decided to post a video of one of my very favorite poets in the whole world, Kim Sasser.

I had the honor of hanging out with Kim for a short time in my life, and it didn’t take me long to realize she had an amazing way with words, as well as an amazing view of life. Her poems and spoken word changed the way I thought about poetry, and I will always count her as one of the most inspiring people I have ever known.

If you like the video, you can also listen to another one of her poems called “Lemonade” on her band’s website.



Who are your favorite poets? I’d love to hear about them! Feel free to post your favorite poems as comments!

April 8, 2008

Nite, nite

Four hours ago, the couch in the picture above this sentence was completely covered with five loads of clean laundry that needed to be folded. I had been avoiding it for a week, but tonight I came home from work vowing to get stuff done, and boy, did I do just that.

In the past four hours, I:

Got a haircut
Went for a run
Folded and put away five loads of laundry
Washed and dried a sink full of dishes
Dusted my entire apartment
Sorted and filed a huge pile of paper/junk/bills
Opened all my mail from last week
Took a shower
And ate dinner

And now here I sit, completely wiped out, watching American Idol with a big glass of milk and a basket full of well-deserved Easter candy that I’m almost too tired to eat. Jason Castro just sang an amazing rendition of Somewhere Over the Rainbow. Randy’s being kind of a jerk. Paula looks like she’s going to the prom. And my little eyes are so sleepy.

I think I’ll keep myself up for 30 more minutes and call it a night.

Sleep tight, everyone. Don’t let the bed bugs bite.

My blue cheese weekend

Hi, my name is Charisse, and I’m a blue cheese addict.

Now that I’ve gotten that out of the way, let me explain.

I’ve never been a fancy kind of cheese girl. I’m more of a classic cheese girl. American, usually. Swiss, occasionally. And parmesan only on my spaghetti. But recently, something has changed. I’ve become addicted to blue cheese, and I’m not exactly sure what to do about it.

To better understand my predicament, let’s take a closer look at my most recent blue cheese incidents:

Blue Cheese Incident #1, Friday:
The weekend started out with an innocent trip to the supermarket where my eyes came to rest on the olive bar (another one of my addictions). A closer inspection revealed green olives stuffed with blue cheese. I filled up a container and spent the rest of the night stuffing myself with stuffed olives.

Blue Cheese Incident #2, Saturday:
A spontaneous late-afternoon trip to Hooters (not the classiest joint, I know) to catch the end of the UCLA basketball game should’ve resulted in a beer or two and maybe an appetizer. However, as soon as my eyes fell on the blue cheese burger staring up at me from the menu, I couldn’t resist. One container of blue cheese olives and a blue cheese burger later, I vowed it was the end.

Blue Cheese Incident #3, Sunday:
After four hours of shopping on an empty stomach, I found myself sitting at a table at the Outback. I looked over the menu, decided on a steak, chose my two sides (mashed potatoes and green beans), and was feeling pretty darn pleased with myself. Then, the waitress came.

“You can also choose from the soups and salads for your sides,” she informed me.

“Oh, ok, what kind of salads do you have?” I asked.

“We have a ceaser salad, a blue cheese and pecan salad….”

I didn’t even listen to the rest of the options. Instead, I miserably ordered the blue cheese salad and hung my head in shame.

So, I say again, my name is Charisse, and I’m a blue cheese addict.

Hold me accountable?

April 7, 2008

Monday wish it was Sunday

1 late night sing-along +
1 bloody mary +
10 green olives stuffed with blue cheese +
1 trip to Cabo Cantina +
3 strawberry margaritas and some nachos +
2 final four basketball games +
2 bike rides +
1 trip to Hooters +
1 plate of fried pickles +
1 30-minute run +
1 year and a half anniversary +
1 margarita, corona and tequila party +
3 coronas +
1 trip to Buzby’s +
2 songs on the dance floor +
1 vodka red bull +
1 $20 cab ride +
3 dogs +
12 homemade blueberry muffins +
4 hours of shopping +
1 new pair of jeans +
1 pink polo +
2 hours of Into the Wild +
1 steak dinner at the Outback +
1 tall, decaf, extra hot cinnamon dolce latte for dessert =

One really fun weekend with way too little sleep.

(And by the way, Into the Wild is one pretty amazing movie. I watched it last night and kept waking up thinking about it. Even today, it's still heavy on my mind, so I decided to add some music from the soundtrack to my music player. Hope you all like it.)

April 4, 2008

Friday, bloody Friday

It’s finally Friday, and I couldn’t be happier. This week went by fast, but can it really ever go by fast enough? Right now, I find that my brain is a bit fried. I wanted to post something really great about springtime or running or bike lanes, but I find that I can’t string together a sentence on those subjects. Instead, all I keep thinking about is how much I want a bloody mary, a barstool in some dark, trendy bar and some good music.

In fact, I’ve just decided to go to the store on my lunch break and get some bloody mary mix for tonight. Is it appropriate to drink bloody maries at night? Or are they strictly a morning hangover drink? I never really know about these things. And right now, I really don’t care. Maybe I’ll even get some celery to decorate them with. Or maybe green olives and salsa. What can I say, I’m feeling festive like that.

Anyway, I hope you all have a fantastic day! I’ll be back on Monday with a rundown of my sure-to-be-fabulous weekend. Until then, have yourselves some fun (and a bloody mary or two), will ya?

April 3, 2008

Where I come from

I was born and raised in a small Texas town on the Gulf Coast. Groves, TX. A town full of oil refineries, supermarkets, churches and one-level brick houses where snow cones are a summer staple, Texas flags are flown proudly and high school football is king. And growing up, all I wanted to do was get out.

When you’re a teenager in Groves, TX, your days are usually spent listening to indie rock bands, wearing trendy thrift-store clothes, sipping lattes, reading books on philosophy and politics and basically doing anything un-Groves, TX.

The kids in Groves, TX, are not the kids you see on those feel-good Southern movies about football and first loves. No, the kids in Groves, TX, spend their whole lives wishing they were anywhere but there and counting the days until they can leave.

So, when my plans to move to Los Angeles went through, you can imagine my happiness. The day I signed the lease on my very own LA studio, I vowed to become an LA woman and leave Groves, TX, far, far behind.

And I did a pretty good job of it, if I do say so myself. I lost most of my southern accent within a couple of months and picked up a nice west coast one that I thought made me sound more intellectual. I listened to all the hippest music, went to all the hippest shows and wore all the hippest clothes. I even began to eat like a west coaster. Gone were the sweet potatoes and macaroni and cheese. In their place were hummus and pita bread, raw vegetables and organic milk.

I had arrived! Or so I thought. Until I met someone who changed everything.

Born in Idaho and raised in Eastern Washington State, the person I met had the complete opposite mindset from mine, and at first, it drove me nuts. Raised on a farm in the middle of nothing but rolling wheat fields, this guy absolutely loved where he came from. Then again, maybe love isn’t the right word. He was obsessed with where he came from. He could spend hours upon hours talking about the city he grew up in and the people that live there and the memories he had made growing up. He talked about small town family values and dirt roads and the struggles of modern-day farmers, and I listened with amazed ears. I had never met someone so proud of where they came from, and it got me wondering if I had possibly been too quick to shake the Texas soil off my shoes.

This crazy farm kid somehow managed to blend his country ways with the city’s ways and create a life that was irresistibly fun, and before I knew it, old stories about creek swimming and dock fishing and snow cone eating were bubbling up in my mind and making me really, really happy.

That’s when it hit me: If this guy could manage to be both LA-trendy and farm-fed-fun, then I could, too. And in that moment, I went from running from my roots to embracing them with all my might.

Since then, a lot has changed. These days, I can’t go 24 hours without some good old country music, and I’ve added foods like sweet potatoes and baked beans back into my diet. On any given day, you might hear me boasting about my line dancing skills, joking about my flannel-wearing uncles, raving about crawfish boils, or reminiscing about my visits home when I get to swim in lakes, drink sweet tea, ride four wheelers and wear cut-offs to dinner.

But the most significant change can be seen when people ask me where I’m from. I find that I no longer wish I could say LA. Instead, I smile my sweet southern smile and proudly say, “I’m from Texas. Never been? Well, ya’ll should go there one day. It’s a mighty fine place.”

I never thought a boy from the north living in the west could help a girl from the south find her way home, but I’ll always be so glad that he did.

April 2, 2008

Looking through windows

I fear I have become addicted to other people’s lives. People I know. People I wish I knew. People I’ll never, ever meet. It’s these people I find I suddenly can’t live without.

Now, I admit, I’ve always had a strange sort of fascination with other people’s lives, preferring to do my jogging at twilight so I can see what the rest of the world is doing inside their warmly lit apartments and spending full days people watching at coffee shops, pretending to read while I strain to overhear the conversations around me.

Maybe it’s because I’m a writer. Maybe I’m just strange. But I really like people. They’re interesting, all characters in their own dramas and all with stories to tell.

So imagine my delight when I realized I don’t have to go to the trouble of straining to overhear in crowded coffee shops anymore, that I don’t have to piece together my own stories about the couple sitting next to me at dinner or the quiet guy in the cube across from mine or the dreadlocked barista who makes my lattes.

These days, I can simply read their stories, or more accurately, their blogs.

Reading someone’s blog is even better than seeing through their windows. It’s like being invited in to sit down for a cup of tea and a nice chat.

Seattle chefs. New moms. Teachers living on islands in the Bering Sea. Marathoners. Foodies. Poets. Sports fanatics.

Over the past few months, it’s these people’s lives that have come to amuse me, frustrate me, embolden me, teach me things and make me think. Their words, experiences and beliefs have inspired me to be a better writer, a better friend, a better person. And even though I don’t know many of them and may never exchange more than a comment here and there (if that), I feel like I’ve suddenly made an amazingly interesting and eclectic group of new friends who are always ready with advice, a funny story, an angry rant, a provoking observation or a simple rundown of their day.

Why do I care where some Seattle food columnist went on vacation or what some high school science teacher thinks about religion? I’m not exactly sure. I suppose it’s the same reason I often look at the person in the car next to mine and wonder where they’re off to, what they’re good at, who they’re in love with and what makes them happy.

What can I say, people are interesting.

Don’t believe me? Read their blogs.

April 1, 2008

Going green

The other day, I had a new experience during my biweekly shopping trip. That’s right. A brand new experience. One that I’ve never, ever, ever had in my entire life. Pretty monumental, right? So what happened, you might wonder? Well….

I brought my own cloth shopping bags.

Crazy, I know.

And when I got to the check-out stand and the bag boy asked me, “Paper or plastic?” I so smoothly replied, “I actually brought my own bags. Can you fill these up?”

And for all of five minutes, I was that uber-trendy, eco-friendly California girl who buys only organic fruit and wears only organic cotton clothing and visits farmers markets every weekend and leaves only when her arms are overflowing with brilliantly colored flowers and vegetables.

And I have to admit, as I walked out with my cloth bags swung comfortably over my shoulders, I felt really, really cool.

Since then, I’ve been thinking: How else can I go green?

While I’d like to say I’ll start eating all organic food and taking three minute showers and unplugging all my appliances when I leave my apartment, I know those things are a little ambitious. I figure I should start small, incorporating simple yet significant changes into my everyday routine.

These are the ideas I’ve come up with so far:

Use cloth napkins.
Go car-less on the weekends and whenever possible. (Beach cruisers really are so much cooler anyway.)
Take advantage of the office recycle program and toss bottles and cans in the appropriate bin.
Bring real silverware to work for lunch instead of using the plastic stuff.
Pay bills online and choose not to receive a paper copy.

These are my initial ideas for ways that I can make little differences everyday. I’ll let you know if I think of more. In the meantime, what’re you guys doing to help out the planet? If you have any easy ideas for going green, feel free to pass them on!