Showing posts with label Having Fun. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Having Fun. Show all posts

Friday, March 27, 2009

The Gift in My Mailbox

As I sat huddled over my Mac, creating a last-minute ad that was already three hours past deadline, writer's block muddled my brain and my half-baked InDesign skills inspired prayers that I never find myself without a capable graphic designer on staff.

Hastily, I created a pdf of the ad and printed it off for editing. I rushed into the dining hall, thrusting the ad upon three witless interns, trying to sound managerial as I begged them, in desperation, to proofread the piece for me.

As I rushed to submit the ad before the weekend, somewhere across the office, someone was putting time and thought into making my day a little happier.

I submitted the ad for publication, and while I was submitting, someone else was someone else was sticking an awkwardly wrapped gift, complete with big, red bow, in my office mailbox.

I present you (pun fully intended, because I'm witty like that) with Evidence A, "The Gift":


Standing at my desk, taking in the boyish wrap-job and Christmas colors, a smile spread across my previously grimacing face. Someone cared enough to wrap up some little something for me.

I snapped this photo, and I proceeded to unwrap the package.

I slid the white box out from the shiny, striped paper, and I grinned goofily as I opened it up.

Inside, this is what I found. Observe Evidence B, "the Empty Box":


Nothing.

I have been the target of an intra-office practical joke. I'm sorta flattered.

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Cupcakes (a.k.a. Bet You Wish You Were at My House)

Photos and Cupcakes by Smalltowngirl


Happy Thursday night!

I'll bet you wish you were at my house right about now...


These cupcakes are chocolate and peanut butter with homemade milk chocolate icing, topped with Reese's Peanut Butter Chips.

(They're really as good as they look.)

***

I spent my morning in downtown Farmington, Missouri. What a delight to walk down brick sidewalks from a music store to a restaurant; an overflowing florist's store to a warm and cozy bookstore. 

The Downtown Farmington Parntership/Alliance (I forget it's formal name) has done a really nice job bringing life back to downtown.

Much to my excitement, Farmington has a new and quite legitimate cafe! Brauhaus, our new coffee shop and lunch spot, has a story to tell, and I hope to tell it soon. 

The owner enthusiastically told me today about its name, the photos on the wall, and the two years she and her family spent renovating the historic building the cafe calls home. I'm planning to visit her again soon, this time with notebook and camera in tow so that I can blog about it.

Until then, where quaint downtowns and kitchens big enough to prepare 3 dozen cupcakes are concerned, MO = 1; NY = 0

Monday, March 23, 2009

दिस्कोवेरिएस!

I'm not sure why my Title is showing up in a foreign language. (Hindi, apparently.)

The funky title can't rain on my parade though. I just had an exciting hour-and-a-half phone meeting with our web designer, who is bright and knowledgeable, and living in the St. Louis neighborhood I didn't know existed (but that I'm head-over-heels in love with).

There is a bit of Brooklyn in St. Louis. Check it out:
Old North St. Louis

This neighborhood is essentially a renovation district, and while it's still in its building phase, I can't express to you how excited I am to see a real community in St. Louis proper.

From what our web designer told me, most of the buildings here had become very, very run down. The homeowners' restorations are labors of love. Check out this blog about the restoration of a home that was missing an entire wall.

Another website, seemingly dedicated to property sales in the area, has some great photos of the commercial district (under renovation) in the neighborhood.

And on my "Must-See, Must-Eat, STL" list? Crown Candy Kitchen, an ice cream shop and restaurant founded in St. Louis in 1913.

My car accident brought on a lot of "I miss New York" sentiments for me, and honestly, I spent my weekend pretty down in the dumps. Having my eyes opened to this St. Louis neighborhood has, thankfully, lifted my spirits.

Yay, St. Louis!

MO and NY = TIED.

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Dark Was the Night

Disclosure: My best friend works for one of the artists on this album, so my opinion is probably influenced by her talking this album up, pre-release.

Last night, I downloaded "Dark Was the Night", the newly released album produced by Aaron and Bryce Dessner from one of my favorite bands, The National, as an AIDS and HIV awareness project.

Besides Feist and The National, the album features an impressive list of artists, including Beirut, Kronos Quartet, Bon Iver, Arcade Fire, Cat Power, The Decemberists, and more. It's a two-CD set, and it is working much-needed magic in my soul.

Living in the rural midwest is a lot easier in 2009 than it would have been in the past. Ten years ago, I would have needed to drive to St. Louis on the release date of an album like this, hoping that a store like Vintage Vinyl might have it in stock. Last night, I downloaded it from my bedroom.

Ten years ago, I'd probably have been one of the only people I knew digging an album like this one. Now, I can probably find a thousand people online talking about it. 

So as I sit in my big, red, paisly arm chair, feet propped up and sun streaming in my window, I listen to this album, and I don't feel far from NYC at all.

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Camping

Photo by Smalltowngirl
Photo also OF Smalltowngirl

Note to self - use the bathroom before putting on four pair of socks, two pair of gloves, and zipping yourself into your sleeping bag. 

Between my bladder and the coyotes, I didn't sleep much last night. (Note the one-eyed, glaze-over stare out from inside the sleeping bag cacoon.

Home and showered, it's time for this small town girl to take a nap.


Saturday, February 21, 2009

The Final Seventy-Two

I'm counting my time in Brooklyn down by the hours now. 
 
At T-Minus 72 Hours...
I was touched by my coworker Kate's toast to me during the office farewell party. We sipped Yellow Tail Shiraz and Merlot, and I was given more hugs, compliments, thanks, and well-wishes than I can count or than I deserve. 

I moved the last of my files onto the shared servers, double-checked that I hadn't left anything
behind in desk drawers, and send a farewell email to our staff. 

I switched off my overhead light, handed in my key, and walked out of my office at the Garden into the cold winter air for the last time.

At T-Minus 67 Hours...
I walked up Flatbush Avenue towards Flatbush Farm, where I was meeting friends for more send-off celebrations. 

Flatbush Farm was the bar of choice in part for its low-key and spacious interior, but also for the play on words. I'm leaving Brooklyn for Farmington, MO, after all.

Imbibement and celebration carried us into the 65th hour...
At which time we migrated to Union Hall, Park Slope's hipster bar. 

Johanna, Melissa and Meghan en route to Union Hall, 2/20/09
Photo by Big Mike
 
Union Hall's warm lighting, leather chairs, and bookshelf-lined walls welcomed us. We had a few drinks and made our way to the downstairs music venue where someone was celebrating their birthday with karaoke. 

At T-Minus 62 Hours...
The 'Staches closed the joint down, and headed for the deli for some late night sustenance.

The 'Staches, 2/20/2009
Photo by the Barkeep

And speaking of 'Staches, check out his mustache!
The Bartender, 2/20/2009
Photo by Big Mike

T-Minus 61 Hours...
Found us at the apartment of three of our teammates, eating and talking until the sun came up.


T-Minus 58 Hours...
(i.e. 8:30 a.m.) Found me walking home under a sunshine-filled Saturday morning sky, most of my teammates asleep on either beds, couches, or floor space at the apartment. Goodbyes are so much easier when I can slip out the front door without many people noticing.

T-Minus 48 Hours...
I'm still awake, and have been now for somehwere around thrity-six hours. My apartment is mostly packed...

I've said goodbye to almost everyone I need to say goodbye to, and I'm going to go have tea with my coworker and Friend, Kat, before coming back home to go to bed.

My Dad will arrive tomorrow at around noon with the moving fan and a bear hug. Stay tuned for the my story of our father-daughter cross-country trek. 

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Exes, cows, and Almondine

Almondine
DUMBO, Brooklyn
Photo by smalltowngirl

Among Brooklyn's most well-known eateries is Almondine, a patisserie in DUMBO known for it's baguettes and pastries.

When the ex-boy called to see if I wanted to get together one last time before my move, it seemed like a good opportunity to check out Almondine.

(@andrearosen gets a mini-credit for unintentionally inspiring this trip with a tweet this morning about Almondine's stuffed pretzels.)

The food was tasty. I had tomato and spinach soup, a grilled vegetable sandwich, and some sort of blue cheese that tasted great broken up into my mixed greens salad.

For desert, Jeff and I split a coffee and a fruit eclair that vaguely resembled a footlong sub, only in miniature and with fruit, not deli meat. As good as the real food was, the eclair kind of made me wish we'd just skipped lunch and gone straight for sharing deserts.

I can now cross Almondine off my NYC to-do, to-see, to-eat list. While I don't think that St. Louis is without good bakeries, I would guess that this one is a notch above, so the final score on Almondine:

NY = 1; MO = 0.


Empty coffee cups at Almondine
Photo by smalltowngirl

***

On the bright side, my ex doesn't live in Missouri, so I won't have to make decisions about whether to see him once I'm gone. Every time I see him it gets a little easier, but it's still awfully hard. On the ex-boy front, the score is:

NY = 0; MO = 1

***

As an addendum to the "I like your boots" story, I owe MO an apology for under-estimating its supply of cobblers.

My mother kindly informed me that my hometown has a large shoe repair and boot shop now. I no longer feel pressured to have my boots fixed before I leave town.

Thanks, Mom!
NY = 1; MO = 1

***

And, finally, I've been assuming that MO would get the cow credit over NYC. How wrong I was.

This photo, taken on our walk back from DUMBO today, is evidence that this midwest ain't the only cow country 'round these parts. Where cows, go, I'm sure rural MO will have more real ones, but I have to give NYC a point for trying...

NY = 1; MO = 1smalltowngirl with cow
Brooklyn, NY
Photo by the ex-boy

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

The Wrong Number

We glanced at each other, and Mark asked me if I was at all nervous about what we were about to do. I smiled, "Yeah, a little bit, but usually the things that make me a little bit nervous are also the ones that make the best stories to tell later."

Mark's silent gesture toward the door indicated his agreement, and so we passed the barred front window, opened the heavy wooden door with the Yankees sign on the front, and entered the dimly lit bar.

There was no question that we "weren't from here". Around (and behind) the bar were a woman in sunglasses (despite the already low lighting in the place), a friendly guy with a big, toothless smile, a bartender whose cool countenance said he'd seen more in his sixty years than all of us in the joint combined, Mike, and Baldy.

"What can I do for you?" The bartender, barely lifting even his eyebrows, asked.

"We're looking for a house," Mark answered. I glanced at him, assuming that his word choice had been careful enough that making it sound as if we were shopping for real estate was no accident. This was the most interesting third date I'd been on in awhile.

"What kind of house?" Asked the bartender.

Mark hesitated, so I answered, "It's pretty small," and looked back toward Mark. He pulled his Blackberry out of his pocket, showing the bartender a photo that he'd been emailed of a tiny little house sitting between two much larger ones.

"Where's it at?" someone else at the bar asked.

"We aren't sure. It's somewhere near T and Van Sicklen," Mark responded to the group. The handful of patrons at the Wrong Number were all listening in casually now.

With more excitement than the rest, the toothless guy (who was not that old, to be clear), reached for Mark's Blackberry to examine the house.

"I've lived here all my life and I never seen that house."

"You mean you want to look at that house, and they didn't even tell you were it's at? That don't make much sense," someone else offered.

"Can I get a Bud?" Mark asked the bartender. He looked to me, "do you want one, too?" I did.

"Make that two."

I waited for our beer while Mark used the restroom. The bar was straight from the 30's with original Art Deco ceilings and vents. Since dating Mark, I've learned a little more about New York's architecture.
While he was gone, I made small talk with a good looking guy in his 50s named Mike. Mike had the wrinkles and cough of a guy who spent way too much time in bars, smoking cigarettes, and probably doing some kind of work with his hands in the sun. I imagined stories of his first wife, whom he had truly loved, and of his second who in my imagination she was still in the area. In my imagination, his kids were estranged, and he found that The Wrong Number and its patrons were his family. His neatly combed, dark hair was brushed straight back, and when he smiled, his perfectly straight, white teeth surprised me.

He asked me where we were both from. "Mark's from Staten Island, and I'm from St. Louis."

"St. Louis? You a Cardinals fan?"

"I am!" and so we talked about baseball for a minute or two before Mark came back beside me and took a sip from his red plastic beer cup. Mike was just finishing his story of watching the Cardinals beat the Tigers in the 2006 World Series, and I smiled, telling Mark I'd been hearing lots of stories lately of where people were win the Cardinals won the Series.

The guys at the bar (the women never spoke up), placed wagers on where the little house was located.

The toothless guy said, "It's gotta be further up Van Sicklen. I know this block. It ain't here. Unless I drove right past it and didn't see it it was so small. But it ain't on this block. I'm thinking it's up further, by where Toni Marinelli and them's house is."

Mike said, "I've lived in this neighborhood my whole life, and I'm telling you, if you go further up Van Sicklen, you hit those big old houses where the Hassidic Jews live." He looked at me, "mansions, these houses are mansions they live in. You're not gonna find this little house over there."

The toothless guy was adamant that we just needed to go further up Van Sicklen.

"You wanna bet on that?" Mike asked him.

An old guy in tinted eyeglasses and a velour Puma tracksuit and wifebeater came out from the back room. He walked over to us, took the last puff of his cigarette, and dropped the butt on the floor of the bar, grinding it out with his tennis shoed right foot. Smoking is illegal in bars in New York.

"What are you guys looking for?" the guy asked.

"This is the owner," Mike said. "This place is famous. Famous. Been here since the prohibition."

"Not in this location," chimed in the bartender.

"Have you owned it that whole time?" Marked asked the owner in the velour tracksuit.

"Famous," said Mike, and then he half whispered to me, "organized crime. You know," with an emphasis on the word "you".

The owner told us that the bar used to have a different name and a different location, but said that he'd owned it for a long time, and that the bar had, in fact, been open since the prohibition, hence the 1930's ceiling and air vents.

It seemed that everyone in The Wrong Number had a different idea as to where the house was that we were looking for. We could have walked through the neighborhood all afternoon and not covered all of the blocks that they'd suggested we walk down, so we didn't argue when the owner offered to drive us around to look for it.

And so Mark and I climbed into the owner's white SUV with black leather interior, and peered out the windows as he drove us through the neighborhood hoping to spot the house. The owner told us about the different blocks as he drove, and Mark, sitting in the front seat, reached his hand over his shoulder and wiggled his fingers. I squeezed his hand for a minute, content.

We found ourselves back in front of The Wrong Number, having had no luck finding the house after fifteen minutes or so in the owner's car. As we climbed out, Mark asked the owner, in the tan, velour, Puma track suit with the wife beater underneath, what his name was.

"They call me Baldy."

"Baldy, I'm Mark. Thanks for your help. It was great of you to drive us around."

"Thanks so much," I said from the back seat, and Mark and I headed back toward the N train, my hand in the crook of his elbow. We paused for a minute over the tracks, looking down at the graffiti, the white frame row houses, and the litter strewn on the ground. He stole a quick kiss, and into the subway station we went.

*Note: Upon further investigation, and adding irony to the name of the bar (The Wrong Number), I found out that the little house we were searching for is actually not in Brooklyn at all. It's in Toronto.

Monday, May 26, 2008

Baby Owls in Central Park

After an hour of walking through North Central Park, craning my neck upward to search in the trees; and after the group leader lent me his binoculars, I finally saw two baby screech owls perched high up in the trees above our heads.

Just as Bob, the bird watch leader, had promised, the fluffy baby owls made exaggerated movements of their heads. Since the owls can't move their eyes, they move their entire head to see what's around them and to approximate what's directly in front of them. And so the awkard little baby owls started stretched up tall, and while keeping the faces directed at us, swung their necks down and around in a clockwise motion. Up high....swoop around down low, and up high again...not unlike the motion of the Egg Scrambler at Country Days when I was a kid.

It was dusk, and I was witnessing a little bit of magic. I wouldn't wander solo in the park at night, but we were a large group of maybe fifteen or twenty people, and we stood watching the little owls until the sun went so low that we could no longer see their profiles in the trees.

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

The Golden Compass

They've put one of my favorite books on the big screen. I'm so excited to see it this weekend!