the everyday adventures of sabrina

i'm happy, hope you're happy too
  • I tallied it up. Not counting batts from my carding class, I only bought 2.25 lbs of fiber. Not like I don't have SOAR to look fwd to… :) #
  • I know I should take pics of my new fiber before I spin it. But… that's no fun! #
  • Sadly, my wallet says it's time to go home! But I can go home and spin, so that's not too bad. Just gotta survive traffic first! #
  • My iPhone pai gow game keeps dealing me a full house. I think it's trying to tell me about how much I should shop today. #
  • Perfect traffic, and it still took 56 mins to get here. Commuters are definitely nuts. #
  • Ok. Off to day 2 at MW Fiber Fest. The drive is a drag – I can't believe people commute like that daily. I mean, you'd have to be nuts. #
  • My jerk of a cat woke me up at 5:30 AM because his food dish was empty. Fed him. He didn't even eat before wandering off, happy. #

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  • Oh, and I have to haul my drumcarder to class tomorrow. Jeez, it's a good thing I looked at the requirements, that would be embarassing. #
  • I dunno why the MW Fiber Fair market doesn't run later than 6. Classes don't get out until 4:30. Hardly any time to browse after that. #
  • Fortunately someone in my class today is in lace class tmrw – off now to do my homework, and watch some Yes Prime Minister. </knitting_nerd> #
  • I kinda wanna spin some of the fiber I just bought, then go surprise the person I bought it from by showing it to them tomorrow. Heh. #
  • I didn't get through the whole marketplace, but since I have classes tomorrow too I'll be back. To pet the angora bunnies!!! #
  • Home from fiber fair! With… fiber! Who saw that one coming! #
  • The band here is pretty unimpressive, but they're playing "the Lincoln Park Pirates," so I forgive them. (& maybe sing along sotto voce.) #
  • Look what I did! Intarsia! Yay me! http://tweetphoto.com/33063264 #
  • Ok. Feet still angry and bitter today. Fortunately, intarsia class should involve little standing. Must get ready to head north! #

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  • Okay. Class done with for the week, homework turned in, speech speechified… that just leaves KNITTING WEEKEND YAAAAAY. =D #
  • zomg you guys a month at the MSI living there i wanna do this i wanna do this i wanna do this! http://is.gd/dtJfr #
  • Some day I hope to grow and mature to the point where I remember I wear euro size 42, not 40, even if they're REALLY REALLY CUTE. ow. #
  • Ow. Ow ow ow ow my feet ow ow ow. Blisters from walking 5 blocks to class so bad I walked the 5 blocks home barefoot. Ow ow ow ow ow. #
  • I have to say, I like it when people use "service" instead of "serve" about people. I find it hysterical every single time. Tee hee hee. #
  • Ok, so, just to warn you, I am totally going to be cackling "are you threatening me!?!?" with alarming frequency. \o/ http://is.gd/dt53H #

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  • That said? @OhDoctah does make a compelling argument. Ladies *do* like duvets and high thread counts. http://is.gd/dskpg #
  • I can safely say that I have thought about @OldSpice more in the past week than in the past twenty years. So, congrats, advertising firm! #
  • The cat doesn't even care that his head, lying on the keyboard, trying to nap, is totally in my way. He's all, quit typing and pet me. #
  • I wasn't even rickrolled and I *still* have that song stuck in my head! Aaaaaaaaaauuuuuuuugghghghghghghgh…. #
  • Also, now discovering I never turned in my notes Monday has sapped all my will to actually sit and write the paper. Raaaarrrrrrrrr. #
  • So now I get no points for turning it in on time AND no feedback before the stupid essay I have to write. Fucking Blackboard can bite me. #
  • Oh, fan-fucking-tastic. I hit "save" and not "submit" in Blackboard and now my homework which I THOUGHT I turned in on Monday? Not so much. #
  • Though the only of his books I've read was Diary, and that a few years ago, so I'm not really sure what that indicates I'm doing. #
  • According to the Interwebs, I write like Chuck Palahniuk. I could have done worse! http://iwl.me/s/2b568272 #

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According to the nice people out there in electronland, an analysis of the text of my last (non-tweet) blog post indicates that…

I write like
Chuck Palahniuk

I Write Like by Mémoires, Mac journal software. Analyze your writing!

Unfortunately, the only one of his novels I’ve read was Diary, and, entertainingly slash embarrassingly, I only grabbed it because I got him mixed up with Chuck Klosterman, so imagine the dissociative shock when I actually started reading it.

(That said, of course I finished reading it. It’s a good book. Maybe I’ll go re-read it now and figure out what it is about his style that I also share that should make random interwebs strangers point out similarity. Does he also abuse parentheses ruthlessly like I do? (I’m seriously trying to quit it, at least in my academic writing. You don’t know how hard a habit it is to break, dudes. I don’t even realize I’m doing it until I look at a printout of the first draft and go “what the shit is this?”))

I need to go write something right now, as a matter of fact. Having completed my walking tour of Union Station and writing up my notes about that, I have a homework assignment to write 1500-2000 words on it in a historical context. The instructions for this class’s assignments are pretty freeform, so paradoxically, that paralyzes me: in the absence of actual instructions, I throw my hands up in the air and stare at a blank Microsoft Word document page while a blinking cursor whispers, “j’accuse!”

Specifically, the direction for today’s assignment is: “Historical places: A discussion of significant venues and how they characterize a city and its people.” So. Yeah. How does Union Station characterize Chicago? Well, all the people in the food court getting bad takeout after 3PM are in a big fucking hurry, and god help you if you’re between them and the escalator. Does that say something about us? What would Carl Sandburg or Nelson Algren have to say about that? Or maybe it’s just a lesson for me; I can ramble on quite happily and (relatively, if you forgive the parenthetical asides) coherently for a couple thousand words on any random bullshit that strikes my fancy, but give me a vague topic and I’m a helpless fourth grader struggling with a book report for Where The Red Fern Grows. Bit sad, honestly, for someone who likes to yap so incessantly. Also, I’d like to introduce it with a line of verse about trains or something, but all I can think of is “Hog Butcher, Tool Maker, Stacker of Wheat, Player with Railroads and Freight Handler to the Nation,” and that feels a little dirty, like cheating due to complete obviousness.

Worse yet, though, than the prospect of turning in another shitty essay — I turned in my first essay with the comment that “this is stream-of-consciousness crap, and I’ll happily revise it if you give me some feedback on what you want” — is the fact that I have to get up and read it in front of the class tomorrow night. I don’t mind public speaking, and I think I’m even halfway decent at it, but when I’m going out in front of people like that, I prefer to say things that are not crap. So if this essay is crap as well, then, well, bummer. My mad spelling skillz are great in print and have served me well in my academic doings thus far, especially contrasted with others’ pieces that didn’t benefit from use of spellcheck, but I’ll lose that slim advantage in speech. Unless I can create some sort of imaginative piece (what? Comparison essay? Short story? Dry historical recounting of the building? Continued ranting about the food court?) I’m going to be stuck out there talking about the fact that the lamp standards in the Great Hall are really neat, and leaving people wondering what the hell a balustrade is.

Of course the reading in front of the class is only step two. For our final project we’re supposed to prepare one of our homework pieces and send it off for publication somewhere. So, no pressure, then. I’ve got two more assignments that will have possibilities to use for that: the “liminal and sacred spaces” assignment, wherein we’re supposed to write about a place “where heaven and earth meet,” and the “a place for art” piece, where we’re supposed to either watch a place-related film or visit a distinctive location and write a short story set there. You know, I read the syllabus before I even registered for this class, and I said, “Yes! This is the class for me! I love Chicago, and I am a decent writer. I can totally take a class that is all about writing about Chicago, for it will rule.” But now that I’m actually in the class? Everything seems like this crazy difficult undertaking. It’s not the length requirements; they’re not even that much. (Hey, this blog post is about half the required length of the essay so far, and I’m not even trying.) It’s, like, wanting a perfect execution of what is assigned, to get that delicious, delicious A grade — only, without specific instructions I’m sort of hacking away at a guess and hoping for the best, and I hate that.

It is entirely possible that I am just blathering on here as a way to avoid actually writing the stupid essay. I should probably stop doing that. But first, I need to just polish this post a bit before clicking “publish”… .