I'm about to start my annual bachelorhood. Every year, Kelly and the boys go to her mom's during the boys' spring break, and I stay here. Why? Because I work at a school that uses a trimester schedule. Our spring break is in early March, after winter exams. The boys' spring break starts on Good Friday and continues through the week after Easter. In other words, the public school system observes Easter with a week off, while the private school with required chapel services has no Easter break at all.
In any case, I usually celebrate Easter by sitting around at home watching a lot of movies, usually movies in which Kelly has no interest. I try to mix things up a bit, though--I don't want to watch drek and nothing but drek. Thus, last year I had a double feature of
Dr. Jekyll and Ms. Hyde and
Babette's Feast. Let me tell you, there's nothing to set off the lonely beauty of the Scandinavian coast like watching Tim Daly turn into Sean Young.
I'm also working on the whole "Wizard of Floyd" thing. I'm sure some of you have tried it--putting on
Dark Side of the Moon while watching
The Wizard of Oz? It's supposed to reveal all sorts of hidden connections between the two, like the "ching!" of the cash register when the movie switches to the more expensive technicolor scenes. I've tried it myself, and it's a cute way to spend 45 minutes. Unfortunately, some people--my students, for example--have developed some sort of drug-induced conclusion that the boys of Floyd deliberately set up their album to correspond with the movie. I'm here to debunk that one good and hard, folks; if nothing else, back in 1973, Roger Waters & Co. would have had to predict the existence of both the VCR and the CD player. The latter is especially important, because when they recorded
Dark Side, the listener had to get up and flip the record over--a startling truth for those of you in the post-vinyl generation, I know--which would have thrown off the syncronization with the movie.
So one of my projects this week will be to find some other record that will correspond to
The Wizard of Oz just as well as
Dark Side does. I'm thinking of starting with something straightforward, like
Revolver or
Blood on the Tracks, but I may have to try something a little more adventurous, like Robyn Hitchcock's
I Often Dream of Trains; I just know there's some fascinating bit of Judy Garland-related synchronicity hidden in the lyrics of "Uncorrected Personality Traits."
1:38 PM
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I'm still not really used to the idea of my name appearing in print. It's happened reasonably often, I guess, but whenever my byline appears publicly, I find myself stupidly pleased and eager to see it with my own eyes.
I think the first thing I had printed in a form that others could see was a first-person account of a trip I took to Vermont when I was twelve or so. Chapel Hill's pioneering recreational soccer program, Rainbow Soccer, had given birth to a similar program in Middlebury, Vermont, and a delegation of Rainbow players, ranging in age from about ten to about forty, caravanned up to New England for a celebratory game or two. For some reason the Chapel Hill Newspaper--yes, that was really its name in those days--thought a twelve-year-old's viewpoint might be entertaining, and like most twelve-year-olds, I was more than willing to share my opinions. Whether I knew anything worth sharing I have no idea.
I kept writing through high school, and when I got to UNC I published a few letters and columns in the Daily Tar Heel, despite the fact that the music editor of the DTH hacked up my review of Stevie Nicks's Bella Donna album to the point where several of my sentences were turned into fragments. I also had a heartfelt if extremely gimmicky short story published in the Cellar Door, UNC's literary magazine.
And god help me, I still have every publication in which something I wrote appears.
Yesterday, I was happy to see that a submission of mine had won third runner-up in the Washington Post's Style Invitational; all I really did was swipe one of my own contributions to Readerville.com's semi-legendary
Books That Never Were thread, but I remain stupidly excited at the fact that
the Washington Post has my name in it!
Part of me is hoping that I eventually get over this over-excited frame of mind, so that I can handle the idea that I'm getting published with some degree of decorum. But part of me simply won't be convinced. Publication is like sex, says that part; the fact that it's happened to you before should in no way keep you from whooping for joy when it happens again.
1:41 PM
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The Whirlwind That Is Life has been especially damaging to my mental trailer park this week.
On Tuesday, I went riding with the school's cycling team. Being young and energetic, the guys set a pretty quick pace, despite the fact that the roads were either a) freshly re-gravelled, or b) muddy, two serious momentum-killers, and the weather was grey and abnormally cold for March, about 47 degrees. Nonetheless, we rode out from school about nine miles without too much trouble; unfortunately, then it started to rain. I was pretty sodden and chilled by the time I got back, and the dirt-road portions of the ride had caused a deeply unattractive spatter of mud right up the middle of the seat of my pants. Hey, it's exercise.
On Wednesday, my son got his finger slammed in one of the big metal doors at school. We drove him to the ER in Charlottesville, where they put eight stitches into his right middle finger. He was incredibly stoic the entire time, except when he first saw his mom. I have no idea why we hold up so well when there's no one around to comfort us, but we turn to complete puddles of goo as soon as we're reunited with the ones who love us most.
On Thursday, Duke lost to Indiana in the NCAA Tournament. Heh.
On Friday some of our friends from Readerville.com (Click on this site's link if you want to know more about my online home-away-from-home...) arrived at our house for the weekend. Kelly was a bit under the weather, but I went with them to Charlottesville that night to meet up with some other Rville pals. We ate fish & chips and drank cider at Rapture on the Downtown Mall, talked about books and publishing, and learned about the differences between Literary Sex (which Goes Wrong and Teaches Something) and Commercial Sex (which is, we presume, any kind of sex that the participants enjoy).
On Saturday, I taught my morning classes (
Oedipus Rex and memorizing speeches, if you were wondering) and headed back to Cville with my pals for the annual Gordon Avenue Branch Library Book Sale, where I snagged a ridiculously large pile of used books for only $34. I was especially tickled to find several Ursula K. Le Guin books, including a hardback copy of
The Wind's Twelve Quarters (which contains "The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas," one of the most powerful short stories ever written) and a hardback of her nonfiction collection
Dancing at the Edge of the World, which I don't think I'd ever even
seen before. (I'm a stone Le Guin fan, and if I ever get to meet her I fear I'm going to be reduced to pure fanboy gibbering...) We then met up with Kelly and the kids at Barnes & Noble (where we laughed smugly at the book prices) and went out for Mexican food before returning home, playing a savage game of Scrabble, and collapsing in exhaustion.
And today? We had waffles. All is well.
12:20 PM
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