It's going to be warm today - most likely, about 55 degrees. The forecast is for colder days ahead, so I feel like I have to take advantage of the opportunity to feel the sun's warmth outdoors.
This meshes well with my innate protestant lust for The Saturday of Accomplishment. My Saturday fantasy involves rising early at 7am, enjoying a small bowl of granola and yogurt, a cup of fresh coffee, followed by a walk to the grocery store. At this point, it's about 9am. Some Saturdays, I can industriously follow my to do list and catch up on errands, and maybe some housecleaning. That takes me through to 11am. And this is where things start to go wrong. What to do now?
I go to the cafe down the street. Sometimes, I can commandeer a tiny round table and chair, and drink cup of coffee #2 (savoring the burnt, oxidized beverage) while I read blogs. Most of the time, I walk in the door, scan the SRO crowd, order a cup and walk out. This is a good thing, right? I love the neighborhood and it's a good day for a walk. Skip ahead another 45 minutes, and that activity has run its course. Generally, by 1pm, the promise of Saturday is gone.
This is the problem: Saturday is the greatest day of all, but it's also the greatest disappointment. I used to watch Food Network in the afternoon, or the how-to block on PBS, but that has lost its charm. So here I am, at 1:30pm on a Saturday afternoon, doing nothing except writing about doing nothing. And this is the thing about Saturdays - by 6pm, there's the promise of the evening: drinks and dinner with friends, perhaps a movie, perhaps a club.
Saturday starts beautifully and ends brilliantly. But 1-6pm is a bitch.
2007-01-27
2007-01-18
The Once Gritty Capital
Thank You, CNN, for declaring the neighborhood to be habitable. I find this "MidCity" concept odd. Perhaps, with time. I certainly must be the only one never to have stopped at Ben's Chili Bowl - the result of my bad California Tortilla habit, now broken.
2007-01-07
Why Wait at The Diner?
That's the question of the day over at DC MetroBlog. It can't be for the food, which although quite possible, doesn't compel me to brave a 30-40 minute wait. Especially when La Fourchette is so close and so inviting and so much better.
2007-01-06
A Nice Evening...
... in front of the fireplace, crackling blaze, the dancing orange glow playing on the walls of the darkened room. My boyfriend and I, reclining, a cat in his lap, the other on the floor. A glass of wine and silence.
It's hard to surpass a moment like this.
It's hard to surpass a moment like this.
2007-01-03
Welcome, 2.0
I wrote my first blog post here, exactly six years ago. Well, that's a fucking long time. In the online world, it feels like a quarter of a century. I was thinking about it a few minutes ago, trying to remember every little detail I could - 8:18am, January 3, 2001, the room I was sitting in, that old Dell laptop I was using. Does any of it matter?
Google Calendar stores every appointment I've made since 1997. Entourage stores nearly every email. The Documents folder on my MacBook Pro contains nearly every word I've written and most of the stuff I've wanted to save. With just a bit of effort, I can step backward and reconstruct January 3, 2001. Or any other day, for that matter.
But, what of it? As I go on, the trail of data behind me gets longer and longer. The obsessive-compulsive demon within me whispers to me that it's valuable, important, a vital thread that connects me to my thoughts, experiences, surroundings. I've trusted that voice for a long time. But something else tells me that there are moments to begin anew.
This is one of them. So, the blog returns. The many hundreds of posts from version 1 are deleted. I haven't erased the past; it lives on inside me. But I have done something that feels exciting, and quite distinctly American: I've erased the past and started over.
That's pretty fucking fresh, if you ask me.
Google Calendar stores every appointment I've made since 1997. Entourage stores nearly every email. The Documents folder on my MacBook Pro contains nearly every word I've written and most of the stuff I've wanted to save. With just a bit of effort, I can step backward and reconstruct January 3, 2001. Or any other day, for that matter.
But, what of it? As I go on, the trail of data behind me gets longer and longer. The obsessive-compulsive demon within me whispers to me that it's valuable, important, a vital thread that connects me to my thoughts, experiences, surroundings. I've trusted that voice for a long time. But something else tells me that there are moments to begin anew.
This is one of them. So, the blog returns. The many hundreds of posts from version 1 are deleted. I haven't erased the past; it lives on inside me. But I have done something that feels exciting, and quite distinctly American: I've erased the past and started over.
That's pretty fucking fresh, if you ask me.
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