Saturday, November 28, 2009
I'ma Go Grinching
In case you missed it, I just wedged a Grinch metaphor into the introductory paragraph. It didn’t quite want to fit, but two or three whacks with a giant hammer made sure it got into place. Now, I believe I’ve mentioned in the past that, while I used to be particularly fond of Christmas, I find it harder and harder to be jolly as the years go by. This year, I’ve found myself anticipating Christmas with two full cups of disgust and just a hint of dread. I’m not quite in full Grinch mode yet, but, if I were you, I’d keep an eye on your Who-Pudding when I’m around, just in case.
I’m trying to focus on the things about Christmas I like: the Christmas movies, the plentiful excuses to hang with family and friends, the music… although that last one’s pretty tough. I tend to favor the more solemn Christmas “hymns” – like “Silent Night” or “God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen” (and I totally DID put that comma in the right place – philistines) – to the more inane carols like “Frosty the Snowman” and “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer.” Although, here I have to admit that I enjoy a few notorious holiday songs more than most. Because of some good early memories I have associated with Paul McCartney’s “Wonderful Christmastime,” I usually DON’T want to stab out my ears with a screwdriver when it comes on the radio. Also, I may be the only person in the world that still legitimately enjoys “The Hanukkah Song” by… *sigh*… Adam Sandler (may he be boiled in his own pudding and buried with a stake of holly in his heart).
Hm… while I just intended that last aside to be a derisive remark against Mr. Sandler and his unfortunate idea of “comedy,” I think it actually comes off a bit anti-Semitic, don’t you?
Anyway, focus… Last year I made the point that Christmas is a time for remembering. It’s a shame if you missed it – made for a heckuva blog post. Now, I’m not the first person to make that point, and I doubt I’ll be the last. The trouble is, though, many of the memories I hold from Christmases past bring me just as much unrest (if not outright angst) as all the commercializing we so frequently condemn (yet simultaneously condone every Black Friday).
My favorite memories from Christmastime involve… (here, I struggled for a euphemism for several minutes, and found that I could do more than tell the unadorned, straightforward truth) girls I’ve dated in the past. I hooked up with my first girlfriend (you know, that eternally-youthful sweetheart that always appears perfect in the misted, halcyon memories of childhood… kinda like Winnie in The Wonder Years) two days before Christmas my junior year in high school. That… is a long story, probably better saved for another date.
Another favorite Christmas memory comes from a few years later: After spending the afternoon with my grandparents on Christmas day, I went to spend the rest of the evening with the girl I was dating at the time, who lived just a few blocks away. We curled up on the couch and watched the movie Chocolat – she lay in my arms, rubbing her stocking-clad feet against mine.
(Okay, I know this sounds silly, but, darn it, those socks are an important detail. I can’t quite explain why – well, I guess if we were both still wearing shoes, it’d be uncomfortable to rub our feet together like that, and if we were barefoot, it’d be weird. And gross. Cuz feet are gross.
Seriously, though, the whole scene of playing footsie in stocking-feet, warm and cozy on a cold Christmas night, has stuck with me ever since. I’ve tried to make a poem of it, but every time, it comes off more forced than any frickin’ Grinch analogy I’ve yet to devise, so it’s on the shelf right now)
For those of you who might be confused by the cacophony of ideas that have been fading in and out of this verbal orchestration since paragraph one, here’s where it all comes together to create a familiar tune: Christmas time can kinda suck if you’re single. I’ve spent every Christmas for the past few years either trying vainly to recreate old memories or lamenting their absence. I’m dreading Christmas this year because, frankly, I don’t want to put up with all these ghosts again.
So, with the Christmas season looming like a kidnapper with a burlap sack, it’s time to grit my teeth and face it. I’ve got no worries about commercialism or anything like that this year – my shopping’s all done, anyway (thank you, Black Friday). This year, I’m going ghost hunting – and I’m going on the offensive.
Here’s my plan of attack – a plan to recruit an army of new Christmas ghosts to combat the old ones:
1 – I’ma read A Christmas Carol. I’ve always maintained that Charles Dickens wrote one of the best novels of the English language here, and it’s been years since I’ve actually READ the freakin’ book. So, yeah, I’ll pick it up again.
2 – I’m kind of excited by this idea – I plan to write a series of poems based on/inspired by A Christmas Carol. I wasn’t sure exactly how I was going to do it before this moment – I thought maybe a poem inspired by a particularly well-written line. The whole ghost image above, though, gives me a few ideas… (ominous trail-off).
3 – I need to find a way to offer some service to others over the Christmas season, to make it a bit less self-centered. I may not do much. In fact, I may just participate in a few Sub-for-Santa activities. But seriously, if I hate Christmas so much when my only complaints at Christmastime are “my shoes don’t fit and I don’t have a girlfriend,” then I need perspective.
4 – And, speaking of perspective, I need to make this Christmas a bit more of a… spiritual affair. I KNOW what Christmas is supposed to be about (I’ve seen Merry Christmas, Charlie Brown). The fact that I’ve never really felt the “spirit of Jesus” during the month of December is probably more indicative of my failing as a Christian than anything else. Guess this is the year to remedy that.
…Oh, fine. Here’s a last one, with a bit of a barb in it.
5 – I will kill anyone who sings that unbelievably atrocious “Holiday Season” song.
Holy CATS, that song is terrible.
Monday, November 23, 2009
Second Strike of the Sunday School Sketch Sniper
Nothing too new in this set. The sketch in the upper-left corner comes from a painting of Jesus I saw in Sunday School class.
The upper-right figure doesn't look too much like the person I was trying to draw, but I actually LOVE how I did the hair.
The guy in the middle illustrates that my problems with drawing hair extend even to facial hair.
The guy in the bottom-right probably best resembles the person I tried to sketch of all the attempts I've made thus far. So I'm kind of proud of it.
Meanwhile, the woman I modeled the bottom-left sketch after looks very little like Hillary Clinton in real life, so I can call that one a failure.
I recognize that I need to start sketching more inanimate objects as well as people, so we have a REALLY bad stool here, a fairly decent hanging lamp, and a bookshelf that I got tired of drawing books on, so I just gave up by the bottom shelf. People are SO much more interesting to draw.
In each of the corners here are cartoon people sketches I did without a model. The upper-left one I'm particularly proud of. For some reason, he looks like Guile from Street Fighter 2. Don't know why I drew Guile, and I REALLY don't know why I gave him serpent eyes. I think I was just experimenting.
I'm proud of this sketch: my first full-body person that DOESN'T make me cringe when I look at it. I designed him myself (which is probably why he looks a little bland). The hands still aren't quite the right size, but they're much better. Much, MUCH better.
And is anyone else surprised I hadn't drawn Batman until now?
Man, I love Batman even MORE than I love alliteration. Combine the two -
"Basically, Batman beats baddies by belligerently bashing their brains."
- and I'm in heaven.
Thursday, November 19, 2009
Battle Beasts
And speaking of violence and animals, anyone remember Battle Beasts?
Sweet Christopher Walken, I LOVED these things. Back in the day when boys were boys and toys were toys, my brothers and I would play with these little beauties for hours on end.
By today’s toy standards, Battle Beasts are probably nothing special. Each little figure was completely immobile except for the arms and came with only a dinky plastic weapon and a heat sensitive sticker that indicated whether the beast belonged to the Fire Tribe, Water Tribe, or Wood Tribe.
And if I hear so much as a SNICKER from ANYONE after the “Wood Tribe” comment, I swear I will turn this blog around and we’ll head right the heck back to MySpace.
Sickos.
Well, for the most part, the toys themselves weren’t really that fantastic. The stickers usually fell off, the arms got pulled out, and the weapons found their way under the sofa or into the vacuum cleaner. Even so, Battle Beasts were the BOMB.*
My brothers and I had a huge ice cream bucket full of the little beasties. Not a birthday went by that my grandmother didn’t decorate her grandkids’ cakes with at least two or three Battle Beasts. We never got any of the “official Battle Beast playsets,” but we made do with a giant, unfolding Transformer called Scorponok and a Cinderella’s castle from Disneyland… and it never struck me as weird that a family of four boys and no girls should have a Cinderella’s castle playset until just now.
When we’d settle down to play Battle Beasts, my brothers and I would pass the bucket around, and each person would pick out a figure one at a time until they were all gone. Of course, being brothers, we fought over the best of the figures. As I recall, the ones most fought over were:
I heard a rumor recently that some company had acquired the rights to distribute Battle Beasts again. If I find out that rumor is true, I’ma have to buy me a few, mostly for nostalgia’s sake. If nothing else, I’d like to remember the time when fun could be had with just a few pieces of plastic and a lot of fighting. Most of the time nowadays, fun requires several hours of preparation, a lengthy drive, and food from a country smaller than Rhode Island and with a name harder to pronounce than “supercalifragilisticexpialidocious.”
Hmm… well, I’m glad for that trip down memory lane. I feel much better. Go ahead and let all your puppies out of their kennels now. They’re safe from me. I promise.
*Do people still say “the bomb”? I don’t know anymore. I feel like I should sag my pants and turn my hat backwards or something to stay “hip.” Dangit, I’m too young to feel old!
Sunday, November 15, 2009
Highs and Lows
This blog is the closest thing I have to a journal, so I feel kinda bad that I don’t update it that often and, when I do, I generally don’t talk about my personal life so much. I usually just use my blog as a sounding board for my opinions, which are numerous, boisterous, occasionally erroneous, and multiplying like salmon upstream. So, in an attempt to be more personal, I’m going to take a page from Ashley’s blog and write up a quick list of the highs and lows in my life.
HIGHS
- I just finished a weekend of FANTASTIC improv shows with The Jesters Royale. Six hours of performance at Cottonwood High School on Friday, plus two hours both Friday and Saturday nights. It’s a total rush.
- Garret Peterson, one of my oldest, dearest, and downright bestest friends of all time, came with his lovely wife to Saturday’s improv show. Afterwards, we went out for pie and hot chocolate at Village Inn. I got home at two o’clock in the morning with something that actually resembled a smile on my face.
- My parents cooked dinner for the missionaries on Saturday and invited me to join them. They make some of the best food I’ve ever had. This time, it was Swiss steak, and it was glorious.
- I sent off three requests for letters of recommendation to my old college professors, meaning I’m about three-fourths of the way done with my grad school application.
- In the past two weeks, I’ve written five poems, which may equal (if not exceed) my output for the rest of the year to date.
- Snow. I HATE snow. I’ve said before that the snow is the devil’s dandruff, and I will stand by that statement till I die – likely in a horrible traffic accident caused by icy roads resulting from the freaking SNOW!
- I’ve come, slowly but inevitably, to the conclusion that, while my day job leaves me feeling fulfilled as an active contributor to society, I actively HATE what I do. The professional path I am currently on is not going to lead me to where I want to be, and I’m not sure what to do about it.
- I saw Transformers 2: Revenge of the Fallen last week. While the movie’s not as bad as everyone on the internet says it is… it’s pah-RIT-ty bad.
Hmm… five “highs,” and each of them something I can sincerely feel proud of/grateful for. Meanwhile… only three “lows,” and one of them’s really a movie review, not an actual tragedy…
When the crap did I become a happy person?