Monday, December 26, 2011

Tomorrow is a long time.

Why hello.

It's been a long time since I logged in here, and even longer since I've written anything. I blame the mission, plus the fact that I actually forgot about the existence of this ill-used bit of cyberspace.

I'm not really sure what possessed me to open this text window, to be perfectly honest. The thing about keeping a blog is that it automatically puts your deepest thoughts on display for all to see, and I am not one for that amount of openness. On the other hand, there's the idea that it's more like a journal, since I don't really know how many people (if any) actually read this.

I'm no stranger to online journals, however. Back in the days of high school (ah, high school. Remember that?) I was quite taken with the world of Xanga blogs. Then Myspace pages. Then Facebook notes. I'm always a touch behind the power curve, though, because a few of my friends were always on to the next venue before I had really gotten a handle on the first.

Then there was the local site for creative writing and photos started by my small hometown's artsy types, where I posted short stories and vignettes for a few months. That site shut down while I was away for eighteen months, so I'm extra glad I saved every thing I posted onto an external hard drive.

Originally, I began this blog as a sort of venue to build letters to a friend of mine who was out of the country. "Updates for an absent audience," I called it. The genre doesn't seem to fit anymore. Of course, now that I'm back, I seem to have a hard time fitting in myself. So this might become an experiment for me to piece together who I am. Or it might be a splash panel of ideas and stories, like PCityLive was.

Watch this space.

Friday, February 5, 2010

5 (12) days to go.

I have heaps to do. Final preparations, packing, checklists. I have to go through most of my worldly possessions and determine which will be placed in storage for two years and which will be accompanying my family to England in June. I need to go to Tallahassee to move the rest of my things home. I want to see old friends one last time before I disappear. I have to find a packet of papers the Oklahoma Mission sent me which I read and promptly lost three weeks ago.

I have a cold. Lying in a semiconscious heap whilst pushing the cold meds and fluids was not exactly how I envisioned spending the last four-odd days before my life changes forever. Technically I'll have a week in Utah with family before reporting to the MTC, but I'm supposed to be set apart by my stake president before I get on the plane, so the mission essentially begins on Tuesday night-ish. I'm not sure how the rules are in between getting set apart and setting foot on MTC property, but I'm guessing all the rules about not being alone and not watching non-Church-related media will be in full effect.

It's a bit depressing, leaving. Technically my farewell from the student ward took place back in December. I've spent enough time in the fifth ward and seen enough missionaries leave from here to realize that nothing will be the same once I come back. (The uncertain part of me adds, If I come back.) Every year there are new arrivals into the social scene, and others leave for school or jobs or missions or marriage. Every year I've spent in Tallahassee old friends have left for one reason or another, and new people have come in their stead. Sometimes it's hard to remember that Friend X never knew Friend Y, because they just missed each other in the end-of-summer shuffle that sends out recent graduates or transfer students and receives a boat load of incoming freshmen or new grad students.

So I'm not kidding myself that everyone I leave will be here to greet me when I come back to Tallahassee, whether to visit or to live. Heck, when I came up only a few weeks ago there were people I didn't know, and half the ones I did were looking at me funny with greetings of, "I thought you were on a mission already."

The singles ward is a transient way of life. I won't expect that to change just because I'm the one who's leaving.

Monday, January 4, 2010

Church. Some awful (i.e. more of a travel log than anything spiritual) testimonies followed by an awesome first-time testimony by my ten year old sister. Several people in the ward wondered who she was and came up to her to tell her how good it was. Turns out the bishop got several questions wondering who this new girl was and called my grandma once he found out who she belonged to.

Left church early to go to Salt Lake. Felt a little guilty taking my laptop to the Apple Store for repairs, but they operate on scheduled appointments and since my family's leaving on Tuesday this was the best we could do. Ran around the shopping center while we waited and rode the elevator up and down with some people who smelled like cigarettes. Rode the escalator up but then it broke ("An escalator can never break. It can only become stairs.") Got a call from Daddy telling us he was done dropping off my laptop and as we ran to the car this noble fanfare music broke out all over the shopping center. Who knew why, but it made us feel epic.

Drove to see the DeGraffenrieds, the family my parents met while they were on a cruise. Likely the only two LDS families on that cruise, and they somehow wound up assigned to the same dinner table. They have eight kids, which is fan-freaking-tastic. We stayed there for dinner and chatted for hours. I finished the scarf I started last night, and made a hat to match since I hate having leftover yarn.

Went over to my aunt and uncle's where my aunt had slaved over Julia Child's cookbook making an amazing chicken with parmesan crust and spiced green beans and chocolate almond cake. All containing vast amounts of butter, of course. Julia wouldn't have it any other way.

Family leaves for Florida the day after tomorrow. How they'll get home when we don't even know what happened to our stolen car (which was then found and has yet to be collected by the insurance agent since the police won't tell them which lot it's in)...well, I guess we'll find out soon enough.

Friday, January 1, 2010

This time last year I made no definite plans.  I'm not one for making huge, life-altering resolutions, partly because I think it doesn't need to happen every year at a certain point.  Partly because I'm not a fan of following the crowd.  

I didn't make last year's resolution list until January 4.  That shows how much of a rebel I am.  And I didn't include earth-shattering resolutions like "Get married," "Lose 20 pounds," "Cure cancer."  That's not my style.  I preferred to select little things, like "Appreciate the times when the bus comes right when I need it," and "Realize that no matter how hard I try, my new haircut will never look as good as the photo I'm basing it on."

But this year I think it's best to write down a list of things that will probably happen.  You know, if all goes well.  "Resolution" means "a firm decision," and I've come to learn over the past several years (and even months) that a lot of things are really not up to us.  So I'm going to do my best to make these things happen, but I'll allow for a little wiggle room.

In 2010:

I will enter the Provo MTC for a few weeks of intensive spiritual boot camp.

I will begin my 18-month mission for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, laboring in the Oklahoma Tulsa Mission.

I will meet a variety of interesting, friendly, difficult, happy, angry, frustrated, curious, and possibly smelly people.

I will learn more about the gospel, about people, and about myself than I have ever known before.

I will ask a lot of questions.  I might even answer some as well.

I will take lots of pictures.  I will write many letters.

I will probably not attend many movies, dances, parties, or sporting events.  I will likewise not get asked out on many dates.

But before all that, I might...just might...solve this Rubik's cube.

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Lots of change and not much sleep make Claire extremely, overwhelmingly, mind-numbingly nostalgic.  

There's a lot to write about but right now my bed is more welcoming than a computer screen.

Off to Atlanta soon, won't make it there till midnight or one in the morning, then going to Utah at around five a.m.  I will miss Tallahassee and the people in it more than I can say.  Though right now there are considerably fewer people in Tallahassee...they're off on their own adventures too.

Soon enough it will be time for mine.  

I hope I'm as ready as I seemed to be.

Saturday, November 28, 2009

Hello, world.  Claire's taking  a break from her blog until November blows over.  I'm one of her main characters.  My name is Kate, and I'll be here as her replacement until this whole National Novel Writing Month thing blows over. 

I haven't seen much of Claire lately, so I can't really say what she's been up to.  Mostly she's been doing an excellent job of avoiding me and the rest of my roommates here in the realm of her imagination.  It's not really our fault that we're so boring to her.  Actually, we tend to place the blame squarely on her shoulders, seeing as how she dreamed us up in the first place.  It's quite irresponsible, if you ask me, inventing a whole world full of people and then abandoning them to their own devices, stuck in limbo until our story is told.

On the other hand, she has been quite busy lately.  I think her family's planning a garage sale this weekend.  And her computer has been acting up over the entire month of November as well.  Her laptop fan doesn't work, so every few minutes she has to stop working on her novel to shut her laptop and wait for it to cool down.  Pathetic pieces of technology aside, it gets quite frustrating being in the middle of a life-altering, character shifting moment, and then have someone slam a lid shut on you midsentence.  Being a character isn't all it's cracked up to be, you know.  

And our relationship isn't all bad.  Early in the month Claire was contemplating abandoning us in favor of another story she was toying with.  I'm glad she decided to stick with us.  She has given us quite a lot to do early in the month.  On Veteran's Day we were extremely busy.  Seems she wrote over seven thousand words in a single afternoon.  And she also introduced us to various professions, hobbies, and menfolk who always make our days interesting.

I just hope she gets some inspiration while she's out there in the great wide somewhere.  It's getting a little boring in our little world.


Saturday, November 21, 2009

I never thought I would be so happy to see something in the mailbox as I was today. I checked the mail at three thirty, thinking anything that would be delivered would have gotten to me by that point. The mailbox was empty, so I figured I'd have to wait until Monday. I went to the library to check out a couple of books for my mom and returned home a little over an hour and a half later.

I decided to check the mailbox one last time, just in case. And inside the mailbox, glory be, was my MISSION CALL!! I burst into tears in the middle of our apartment parking lot and did a dance of joy once I got inside.

Whereupon I promptly began freaking out. I was alone. My roommate was nowhere to be found. My mom was in Panama City, my dad in Utah. The Bowcutts, who had been calling me all day long to see if my call had arrived, were not picking up their phone. I called Lance in desperation and he said he'd come over. After about an hour's worth of frantic phone calls, I got through to several of my friends who made their way over to my house. I tried to get my broken laptop to work well enough to get hold of my parents on video iChat and called my dad and put him on speaker phone.

And then came the actual reading of the letter. I am still freaking out about it, two hours later. I think I've run the complete gamut of emotions over the past four hours. My roommate doesn't seem to think so, though. She just sneaked up behind me and grabbed me by the hair. Thanks, Rebecca. Thanks a lot.