Sunday by the numbers.

Number of hours I had nothing important to do: 5
Number of cocktail makers previously received as housewarming gift: 1
Number of months said maker had been left relatively unused: 6
Number of martini glasses won over New Year’s: 6
Number of drinks I decided to make on Sunday: 4 (regular martini, apple martini, manhattan, black russian)
Number of drinks I intended to consume: 2
Number of drinks I intended to give to roommate: 2
Roommate’s appreciation of cool cocktail maker and martini glasses, on scale of 1 to 10: 10
Roommate’s appreciation of the taste of alcohol in any given form, on scale of 1 to 10: 1
Drinks actually consumed by roommate: 0
Deviation from plan, in terms of unconsumed drinks: 2
Drinks consumed by me as a consequence: 4
Number of hours spent somewhat inebriated: 3
Number of hours spent watching bad LeeLee Sobieski movies on HBO: 3

Soloist.

In response to a previous post, someone expressed disappointment that I’m not like Han Solo.  Well, it’s true--he married a princess from Alderaan, is a crack shot with a laser pistol, and represents the epitome of coolness for an entire generation.  Still, we do have some similarities.  In the interests of painting a more complete picture, I wanted to list them here.

1. We are both followed around by a large, fuzzy thing who acts human but isn’t.  He has Chewbacca, and I have my roommate’s cat.

2. People call his trusty ship, the Millenium Falcon, a “hunk of junk.” I hear the same thing about my Honda Civic.

3. Han played a key role in erradicating the forces of evil from the universe.  I recycle bottles, cans, and paper products as appropriate.

4. Han is played by actor Harrison Ford, who turns on Callista Flockhart.  (She recently agreed to marry him.) In the past, I have “turned on” Callista Flockhart by activating my television in preparation for watching “Ally McBeal.”

5. Prior to joining the rebel alliance, Han made his living as a smuggler.  I have smuggled several cans of Foster’s beer into various movie theaters.

6. Han was once frozen in a block of carbonite.  I was born in Alaska, where it can be very cold.

7. Han has trouble kickstarting his ship into hyperspace.  I have trouble breaking a nine-minute mile.

8. At times Han’s ship completely sputters and shuts down.  At times my computer performs an “illegal operation” and shuts down.  (Said illegal operation might indeed be another kind of smuggling, which would add to the smuggling similarity already mentioned in #5.)

9. Han is pursued relentlessly by bounty hunters.  I am pursued relentlessly by jury duty summons.

10. We both have noses.

You know how English teachers always end their lectures with some inane homily like “There’s a little Jane Eyre/David Copperfield/Hamlet in all of us”?  Well, I really do think there’s a little Han Solo in all of us.  It’s just that there’s more in me than in most of you.

Separated at birth?

Broke fast.

There couldn’t be anything more domestic about the International House of Pancakes. Their “German” pancakes, for example, are just American pancakes that the chef has stepped on, thrown against the wall, and slathered with lemon butter.

One shudders to imagine the American tourist in Germany. He or she orders breakfast, stares down at the plate in disbelief, and signals for the waiter: “I’m sorry, you’re going to have to take these back. And could you please give me directions to your nearest IHOP? I’m looking forward to sampling the cuisine of your fine country, but I really need to have it cooked right.”

Academic standards.

I know this isn’t the point, but there’s something funny about the headline “Expelled U.N. Inspectors Leave North Korea.”

“What did they get you for?”

“Oh, I didn’t know the capital of Uzbekistan.”

“Man, they’re tough. I was all, ‘Look, all I need to know is how to detect fuel rods in your nuclear reactors.’ And they’re all, ‘We like our U.N. inspectors to be a just a little more well rounded than that.”

Wolfgang Greg.

It’s the year 2003, and I have successfully grilled turkey burgers. Thanks for everyone’s advice, comments, and sarcasm.

Next up is marinated steak. And then martinis, so I can make use of the martini glasses I won at my friend’s New Year’s Eve party.

(No, I’m not going to the grill the martinis. I just mean, I’m going to learn to make them.)

Oh. And happy frickin’ New Year. They’ve been delayed a few years, but I predict that this is the year the monoliths are coming to do some schoolin’. You scoff now, but we’ll see who becomes a highly evolved, glowing baby and who doesn’t.

Reason #3,327 why I’m going to burn in hell.

I like Mandy Moore’s cover of “Stupid Cupid” better than the Connie Francis original.

Mandy has a nice voice and the arrangement is just darn perky. Francis, on the other hand, sounds a bit like a female impersonator.

Oh, and also? All these trendy garage bands like the Strokes and the White Stripes? I liked you all better when you were called The Replacements.

Grilled.

No one gave me a vest for Christmas this year, but my brother Geoff did give me this bad boy:



I excitedly assembled it, rearranged the plants on my balcony, and prepared to sear the hell out of some turkey burgers. I poured the charcoal and stacked the briquettes, then squirted on some lighter fluid. I lit them using this cool “no match” lighter gun that was part of the gift.

As the flames roared to life, I shouted happily: “I am Prometheus! I bring this fire to all of mankind at the cost of my very soul! I bless thee with the gift of flames, and--”

Uh…

Er…

The flames died down. They had apparently been burning on the gas, but had completely been unable to ignite the charcoal. So I added some more briquettes and lighter fluid, and re-lit the grill.

As the flames sprang into blazing existence again, I screamed ecstatically: “I am Prospero, burning my books! I have given fire and rifted Jove’s stout oak my own bolt--”

Uh…

Er…

The flames had vanished again. My first barbecue experience was an abject failure.

I suspect it’s because the rain hit me as I was carrying the charcoal from the market to the car, and some of the water seeped into the bag. Or maybe I shouldn’t have used generic-brand charcoal. In any case, I’m not finished yet. I’m prepared to escalate this conflict as far as it needs to go. If you see a mushroom cloud emanating from a balcony on Moss Avenue, it’s simply because I’m doing everything and anything in my power to light the damn grill. There’s no need to worry.

Much.

Things said at my family gathering.

“Holy mother of God. How are we supposed to unwrap all of those presents?”
“We can work shifts.”
--------------
“What are you doing?”
“I’m putting a gift in Geoff’s stocking.”
“No, Geoff’s stocking is down there. That stocking is for the cats.”
--------------
“Those are wine charms, Greg. You put them on your wine glasses so your dinner guests know which glass is theirs.
“But Greg’s wine glasses already look completely different from one another.”
--------------
“I made your blog my home page.”
“Really?”
“But I haven’t had a chance to read it for a while.”
--------------
“Scientific studies indicate that all the races and ethnicities in the world are descended from five individuals.”
“That must have been a heck of an orgy.”
--------------
Bonus! Overhead expressions of endearment/affection:
“Love.”
“Dear.”
“Sweetheart.”
“My little muffin tin.”
“My little Krispy Kreme.”
“I’m your bitch.”

A poem.

Twas the day before Christmas
And Greg gave blogging a rest
To spend time with the family
And hope he didn’t get a vest
(Nothing wrong with a shirt, or something that is polo
But a vest? Who am I, Han Solo?)
The blog will return, with plenty of geese
So Gap model lovers everywhere can tell me to cease
In the meantime, I wish you all joyous celebrations
And very happy holidays--regardless of your religious denominations.

Marathought.

Not to rip off my friend Anna’s marathon training journal, but I had the sweetest run today. The air had the brittle snap of an October in New England. The late afternoon sun backlit the trees. Drivers slowed their cars so they could admire the milky glare of my legs pumping up and down, keeping time to the beat of the world. (They did too. No, you shut up.) And what got me through the last mile? Not my normal gasoline of pain, frustration, and determination. It was wings of glory, my friends. Wings of glory.

Dear Santa.

There’s some stuff I really want for Christmas, so I thought we could take this moment to set the record straight on some of my alleged misdeeds over the past year.

1. First of all, there’s the See’s candy incident mentioned below. Just scratch that one off your list, because I’ve been punished enough. Who in their right mind came up with the idea that coconut should be something people want to eat?

2. All those times I blew off going to the gym. Like you’re one to talk. Take a good look in the mirror, fat boy.

3. Yes, I did kind of sleepwalk through the last press release I wrote. I used the word “solutions” about six times. But, y’know, we really do provide solutions. It’s all the other companies’ press releases that are full of meaningless, self-serving hyperbole--not mine.

4. When I wrote the check for my property taxes, I scribbled “For the Robber Barons” in the “memo” section. You have to admit, that’s pretty funny. Oh lighten up.

5. Instead of letting KQED keep the $65 honorarium that they give to their commentators, I’m using it to buy the Buffy the Vampire Slayer Season 3 DVD. I’m sure you’re about to get all self-righteous now, Mr. Run-the-Business-with-Illegal-Elf-Labor.

I hope we have an understanding. I expect to see quality loot this year, and none of those lump of coal shenanigans. Remember, I know where you live.

Love,
Greg

Sugar shock.

My co-worker had a box of See’s candy on her desk, and no one was around, so I snatched one. I ended up with the chocolate equivalent of a landmine: ugly, evil, coconut.

Let me get this straight. The Rwanda massacres happens and that’s just fine; the Middle East is in turmoil and the world keeps spinning. But I have one little moral lapse and suddenly the universe is all, “You see that? You see that? Unleash the karmic hounds!”

Saber rattling.

I was surprised when my friend (who is also manager of my department) wanted to see “Attack of the Clones” on opening night last May. He can geek out on occasion, but he also has a wife and two children to offset those impulses. Still, he really wanted to do this, so we took off from work several hours early to wait in line at the Corona theater in San Francisco.

The scene was predictable. Everywhere you looked, people dressed in outlandish costumes brandished space-age weaponry. They waved yellow and blue lightsabers frantically, as if trying to land passenger planes. A group of laughing friends drank cans of a mystery substance from a gigantic R2-D2 ice cooler.

The guy in front of us, though, was of a completely different caliber. At first glance he was nothing unusual--he was in his thirties, dressed in a Ben Kenobi brown cloak, and holding a large, powerful-looking lightsaber. (If I owned a lightsaber, I would have brought it too. Because that’s what you do when in Rome--or among the Jedi, as the case may be.) But the guy started talking to his friend about his toy, and we learned that it was a hard-to-find item that cost him $200. But that’s not all: “I made several of my own modifications to strengthen the metal plating around the handle, and to improve the bulb intensity. Isn’t it bright?” He waved it around for effect. In fact, I noticed that he always stood in a kind of half-crouching attack pose, as if fearful of being jumped by stormtroopers at any given moment.

My friend seemed to take inspiration from the rampant geekiness around him, and started talking about another friend’s stereo system. A high-end system costing thousands of dollars, it had rear speakers. And subwoofers for those speakers. And equalizers for those subwoofers. And hardware upon hardware designed to make every drop of sound as crystal-clear as possible.

As my friend talked, the guy in front of us started listening. He even arched his neck so he can hear. And, in the middle of my friend’s sentence, the guy suddenly turned around--still holding his prized lightsaber in front of him, still half-crouched in order to defend the universe--and looked my friend in the eye, and said, with an earnest voice that had never known a single shade of irony:

“Isn’t that just a little bit obssessive?”

Stormy Monday.

The problem with living in California is that people aren’t used to storms. So when we face a little bad weather and rain, people blow it out of proportion.

I’ve lived in Boston, where I was late for a class I was teaching because I had to dig my car out of a solid block of ice and snow. I’ve visited Chicago, where the wind feels like an x-ray when it sweeps off the lake. And I was born in Alaska. (I was too young to remember anything about Alaska, but it makes a good rhetorical capper to my point, so I’m mentioning it anyway.)

In California, though, people get bent out of shape whenever the sun is gone for more than a few hours. Grim-faced newscasters forecast the weather as though they’re announcing casualty lists: “I wish the news were better, my friends.”

And across the Bay Area, people catch the cue and speak to each other like they’re in disaster movies. “I--I’m going to work now, sweetheart.”

“Oh my God.”

“If I don’t make it back--”

“No, don’t say that! Don’t say that!”

“Please--let me just get through this. If I don’t make it back...you can defrost the meatloaf that’s in the freezer.”

Feminism begins at 24-Hour Fitness.

Overheard at the gym:
Teen girl employee #1: You looked tired.
Teen girl employee #2: I’m mad tired.
Teen girl employee #1: Sucks to be at work.
Teen girl employee #2: I can’t wait to grow up so I can just be a housewife.