Come one, come all, and revel as I navigate the ups and downs of the mundanities of my life. Thus far, my stomach-churning has been kept to a minimum, but I can't speak for my readers. You'll be riveted as you're kept on the edge of your seat, wondering, "Will the next post be the one that makes me lose my lunch??" Excitement, she wrote!

Tuesday, April 07, 2009

Winter, Kiss My Giant Ass

This week I've been seized by the paradoxically titillating and paralyzing thrill of baseball beginning and Star Trek on the horizon.

First things first -

Yes, the Phillies are defending World Champions, and no, they still can't win a non-post-season game that's broadcast nationally. It's not that we don't do well under pressure because last September we ripped it up pretty damn hard. But pretty much unless Harry Kalas is speaking directly to local fans through the t.v. screen, it seems like the game is going to go to the other team. Also, as Manuel pointed out, the pre-game WC celebratory hoopla was a big distraction for players that thrive on consistency.

Bottom line is: good for the Braves that they looked good on opening day. For the first time since helping the Dodgers lose hold of the postseason last year (and to the Phils, no less), Derek Lowe gets to smile and feel like a big boy again, Smelly Johnson didn't commit any cringeworthy goofs, and Jeff Francoeur's hip swivel changes from last season were all that the ESPN commentators could talk about. I don't give a crap because winter is really over (unless you're in Chicago and your opening day got snowed out), and baseball is baaaaaack.

OK, now for the other thing that's really getting me in a tizzy.

Have you seen the trailers for Star Trek?

Have you?!

It's like God took all of my secret unmentionable fantasies and wove them together with his dextrous surgeon fingers into a visual (and I'm sure excellent storytelling) orgy that, come May 8 for $9.50, I can request to have explode directly into my face. And the fact that J.J. is directing this - J.J. of those Alias nights when I fell to my knees screaming his name in frustration over another edge-of-my-seat cliffhanger, J.J. of a little show called "Lost" known to about 99% of the U.S. population - is just enough to make me go completely, out-of-my-mind, on goofballs, crazy.

It's too much. All this in one week, it's just too much.

Friday, January 02, 2009

It Was a Very Good Year

Possibly my last complete year in Philadelphia, 2008 will always be remembered as one of the first fullest years in my memory. Replete with historically long-awaited events, new beginnings, travel, and my first true appreciation and awareness of the short-lived moments of one's life, my 2008 is documented here with photographs of the highlights.

Spring 2008

















This photograph does not do justice the freshness and potential of spring, but it was one that I had been itching to take for weeks when the weather started getting warm. For me, the strongest sensation brought by spring was the gradual but tangible excitement of the children in my kindergarten classroom. Their restlessness was infectious, and it was an upstream swim to keep them focused. Especially when I knew that this would be my last season in a classroom.


In March, Grundton was afflicted with a serious bladder infection that luckily was caught and dealt with before its damage progressed. After weeks of antibiotic treatment and worry, the infection finally went away, and Chris and I were able to enjoy the season again, both indoors


March 2008, Caribou @ Johnny Brenda's
April 2008, Autechre @ Transit

and out.


Spring 2008, Narberth & Ardmore (Philadelphia suburbs)

It can be easy to take for granted the ephemeral beauty of the transitional seasons. I don't know whether I was truly touched by the lushness of the Pennsylvania arboreal landscape, or felt that something in me would be lost along with the delicate petals of spring as the heat of summer swept in. Whatever the reason, for the first time, I felt obligated to take photos of a season.

April also kicked off baseball season. It was an unsettling feeling to watch a team that I only marginally recognized. With Jimmy Rollins injured at the start of the season, Eric Bruntlett played shortstop and Geoff Jenkins and Pedro Feliz would be new fielders. Aaron Rowand had gone to the Giants, who would barely make a blip on baseball's radar that season. Of course, the fruits of the 2008 season for the Phillies would not be enjoyed for several more months.

To be continued...