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A cab ride

 taxi

A light breeze complimented the warm sunlight. There was not a drop of humidity in the air. I could’ve walked home from the Mall, but felt lazy. I stepped to the curb, raised my arm, and hailed a taxi.

I settled into the leather backseat, placing the bulging Barnes and Noble plastic bag and ever-present oversized black carryall on the floor. As I rummaged around for my wallet, I gave the driver my address and off we went.

NPR wafted from the radio. The interior was frosty, the air-conditioning blowing on high. We drove passed the Washington Monument and I noticed the even green carpet growing where dirt and bulldozers had resided less than two weeks before.

“They finally cleared out the mess,” I said.

Deep brown eyes peered at me from the rearview mirror. I pointed to the grounds surrounding the monument, crawling with kids kicking a soccer ball and groups of tourists, and repeated my comment.

“What were they working on?” he asked.

“I think they were building an underground visitors center. Though I don’t see the difference the tunnel will make if someone with a bomb is intent on blowing up the monument.”

The driver nodded.

“There is much construction near the memorials. They waste too much money and the schools have no books for the children,” he said.

It was my turn to nod.

I was in no hurry to rush home. We took the scenic route to my building and continued to exchange thoughts on the G8 conference, pledges of aid to Africa and the state of life in the District. It was one of the most interesting conversations I’ve shared in a while.

Just goes to show… you never know what might happen on your way home.


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Bag Ladies of DC

baglady

Look around and you’ll find them everywhere.

Women who ride the metro, walk down the sidewalk, climb into cabs, share the elevators, while carrying two, three, sometimes four bags.

I’ll admit, I’m guilty. I’m a bag lady.

Every morning I sling an oversized black bag over my right shoulder as a small purse swings from my left arm.

But even I stop and gape in awe when I notice a relatively normal-looking female wrapped in an oversized black bag, a gym duffle, a laptop case, and a small purse while gripping a Starbucks paper bag filled with what I presume to be lunch.

Why are we compelled to live like nomads?

I need most of the things stored away in the trendy purse – house keys, metro pass, pen, lipgloss, mobile phone, wallet, digital camera.

But why do I insist on carrying a large black bag around with me daily? Will I ever really need any of the things I stuff in there?

Let’s see (dumps contents of bag on floor):

Dell laptop, Nike sneakers, Filofax, one paperback novel by James Rollins, one collection of short stories by Carol Shields, kleenex, two silver barrettes, Kate Spade shades, five different shades of Lancome juicy tubes, TDK Mojo mp3 player, three AAA batteries, four bandaids, last week’s issue of The Economist, an issue of The New Yorker, suede case filled with three Cross and Caran d’Ache fountain pens, one red leather blank journal, businesscards, two Advantage chocolate peanut butter lo-carb bars, a black spiral notebook, a bottle of Advil, a pedometer, two pads of post-it notes (one hot pink, one yellow) and $2.89 in loose change.

Hmmmmmmmm……..

What’s in your bag?


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Purple Reign

Prince

Last night, I joined four girlfriends up in the rafters of the MCI Center for Prince’s Musicology show. W-O-W!

I cannot even begin to descibe how godawful my day at work was. So awful, in fact, that I toyed with the idea of bailing out and eating my ticket.

But in a fit of, what…. rebellion? despair? complacency? – I logged off my computer, grabbed my broken red umbrella, and ran in the rain to Fado for a quick pint before the show.

And once I was there… Prince worked his magic. The show was incredible… HE was incredible. I will forever remember his acoustic rendition of Little Red Corvette.

At one point, Prince disappeared, leaving Greg Boyer on stage with his trombone, and changed from a devilish red ensemble into a teal outfit. The fabric shimmered, like a glossy silk.

The color reminded me of this suit I once wore, when I was first interviewing in DC some nine-odd years ago. And the music conjured a strange sensation, a long lost feeling of hope and idealism and fun and adventure. My first job paid less than $25,000 a year, but I was so much more upbeat, intoxicated by life’s many possibilities.

Now I’m bored, detached, reclusive, in park, spinning my wheels but not going anywhere. I spend most of my days daydreaming instead of doing something I enjoy. Is this what happens when you meet goals and get what you think you want?

The concert inspired me. Why am I working in public relations? My destiny is screaming – go on the road baby… travel and see the world…. be a roady… be a dancer…. be a groupie…. blog about the tour from the road…. be happy now, today.

I want to leave all the bureaucrats to their peon existences and trade in my corner office – and all the good it’s doing me – for a happier existence.

Things did look better this morning (things always do, right?) – and the music and the rhythms and the nostalgia and screaming my lungs out and gyrating like a mad woman and hanging out with a bunch of girly-girls and flirting with the guys behind us definitely helped some – but my job search, my career makeover, offically began today.


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bicycles in Amsterdam

It’s been a brutal month at work. Who’s ever heard of a busy July? I was expecting to cruise along this month, but instead have been running ragged.

This morning I overslept. Standing at a busy intersection, I waved my arm in the air, attempting to hail a cab. That’s when I saw her…. a woman, dressed in a conservative navy blue business suit, her skirt hiked up to her thighs, briefcase slung across her back, riding a bicycle in 3-inch heels.

Most cyclists in DC are couriers, zipping in and out of traffic in their body hugging chromatic uniforms.

But this woman looked completely out of place. It reminded me of my time in Amsterdam – where everyone rode a bicycle…. in suits, in dresses, to the office, from the clubs.

And although I was running late and dreading the day ahead, the memory made me smile.


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Americans spend 90% of their lives indoors

I rode the metro home yesterday from a briefing on global climate change on Capitol Hill. The entire event was depressing.First off – it looks like a bomb went off on the Capitol grounds. I know they’re building tunnels and bunkers and reinforcing foundations, but it looks like hell. I thought the White House looked bad. Walk at your own risk if you’re by the Capitol building.

Then I sat through an hour-long briefing about climate change. Humans are stupid. People are greedy. And the scientists were making a lot of sense.

The images were ghastly – esp. side-by-side photos of Kilimanjaro taken in 1912 and in 2000. The contrast is staggering. By the year 2020, the ice cap will be gone.

Anyway – so I was already feeling a little grumpy, a little unsettled, when I looked up and read this advertisement for Wisk’s America Needs Dirt campaign.

“The average American spends over 20 hours a day in an enclosed structure.”

How depressing!

It’s no wonder no one pays attention to the environment – the quality of the air we breathe or the water we drink – or the climate. I mean – if everyone stays indoors, who cares if the sea level rises 20 centimeters or that the air quality index warns of unhealthy levels?

That also provides an answer to the American obesity problem. People are bigger because instead of gardening, they’re sitting on a couch watching television; instead of going for a walk, they’re crosslegged on the bed surfing the net; instead of playing outside with their kids, they’re trapped in cars stuck in traffic.

Doesn’t sound like much of an American dream to me.

Don’t get me wrong – I’m guilty of preferring the artificial cool of air conditioned rooms to the humid heat of outside. I sit indoors, drinking gallons of coffee at $4.95 a cup, surfing the net in coffeeshop bliss. I’m guilty of plopping on the couch to zone out for hour after hour of Netflix pleasure.

I don’t know if it was the shock of seeing the Capitol grounds torn up (because I never ever go down there and hadn’t seen any of the construction until yesterday), or the effect of the climatologists dire predictions, or my dismay to realize that I too am one of those Americans who spend 90% of their lives indoors…… I’m going to spend more time outside.


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Forget that African Safari

 cicada

Scientists have been buzzing about the cicadas for months. The red-eyed Brood X have been making headlines.

The press has done a good job of forewarning about the noise, the lifecycle, the poor eyesight, and get `em while they’re hot items.

I don’t care that they’re not particularly dangerous. I could care less that they don’t bite. They’re gross!

I’ve been blessed… haven’t seen any of those darstedly critters until this morning and all day today. Walking from the metro to my office building I noticed 6 squished cicadas on the sidewalk. By the time I grabbed lunch around 3:00, the pavement was littered with carcasses. (shudder)

I felt like Jack Nicholson in “As Good As It Gets” as I danced down the street, trying to avoid stepping on one of them and feeling icky – just thinking about them.

Well… they’re here, they’re in my way, and let me put if this way – they ain’t no ladybug. I say good riddance! I can’t believe I have to put up with them til July (shudders again).

And this coming from a girl who’s dream vacation is a monthlong African Safari. Yeah. Right. Who am I kidding?


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Weekend Update

M Street I’m officially on vacation. For a week. A much needed break from the chaos around me.

Work has been crazy for the last couple months. One event after another followed by a series of minor crises. At least my life’s not boring. Add weekend visitors to that mix and you get a touch of madness.

The heat in DC was almost unbearable last week. And the a/c in my building was on the fritz. As in – the temperature in my apartment was higher than the temperature outside. And outside was hot! So it’s been a challenge.

Of course the building engineer claims a/c will be up and running tomorrow. But I won’t be here to enjoy it. Instead I’ll be in Massachusetts, crashing on my parents’ couch, with no a/c. I only hope the weather cooperates.

Two friends came down from NYC this weekend for today’s March for Women’s Lives. I begged off, claiming exhaustion. But in truth, I feel jaded towards these marches and protests.

The first march I remember is the Million Man March. Since then I have participated in a dozen rallies (including the Tibetan Peace Concerts and have met protestors from around the world, participating in the hundreds of protests and marches organized each year…. all causes are represented from PETA to the World Bank and IMF to Earth Day to the WWII Memorial. Some groups are small and other events require the DCPD to put up barriers and put in overtime.

I have a been there, done that attitude. So I stayed in for this one – watching updates on tv and relaxing.

What did you do this weekend?


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A Cinematic Treasure

 Uptown Theatre from the balcony

Sunlight filled my apartment. I sat up in bed in panic. Did I sleep through my alarm clock? No- it was only 6:19 a.m. What a glorious day! Right then I decided to play hookie.

An unexpected day from work feels different from the time off on weekends. There’s something rebellious, almost adventurous about a free day. The hours pass slower and the urge to “do something” feels greater.

After languously lounging on my couch, reading the Sunday Post and back issues of the New Yorker, I motivated.

The air felt crisp. I emerged from the Cleveland Park Metro Station to find Connecticut Avenue in its familiar state of activity. Someone new to DC might be surprised to find an exquisite movie house in Washington, DC. The single-screen theater stands defiant in the face of cinema multiplexes littering the landscape coast to coast.

John Zink designed The Uptown Theater for Warner Brothers in 1932. Built in the golden age of Washington movie-going, the original art-deco theater boasted 1120 seats. A $500,000 renovation in 1996 replaced the original chairs with high-back velour seats, as well as new wallpaper, carpets, and a second concession stand. The stadium seating in the balcony reduced the capacity to 840 seats.

Crimson, velour curtains pull open to reveal a larger-than-life curved screen, 40-feet high and 70 feet wide. Installed in 1966, this screen wowed audiences during showings of Star Wars, The Shining, 2001: A Space Odyssey; and special screenings of classics like Citizen Kane and Lawrence of Arabia.

Recently, people have stood in long lines that snake along the sidewalk and behind Ireland’s Four P’s to see The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King. I’d planned to see the last installment for months, and never made it to a show. Today would be the day.

I shared the theater with a handful of people: mothers with small children, a father with his two pre-teens, a rowdy group of teenagers in the balcony. What a luxury!

Clocking in at 3 1/2 hours, the film met my expectations. That said, I hated the ending and thought the last half hour of the movie dragged.

A longer critique to come soon.