Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Little Princess.


When I was a little girl I brought my mother the gift of friendship. I changed her life forever. She can thank me all she wants because it's true. My mother met her best friend because of me. Because of cute, curly pigtailed, jelly smeared me. Here's how the story went down in history.
I often ran away as a child. Not out of spite, but out of complete ignorance of never knowing that the world was NOT my playground. Literally. I would get into my neighbors backyards to play on their swing sets and dig holes in their gardens for my grand idea of being able to tunnel underneath the neighborhood to the park. There was definitely nothing wrong with this in my little child mind. Why wasn't I allowed to pick flowers from the neighbors gardens? I was going to give them my beautiful bouquets anyway… well leave it on their doorsteps and run away. And to me, nobody minded a cute little girl doing cute little girl things, so what in the heck was the problem? Years later a next door neighbor would ask my mother what poison she could use on her fertilizer to keep our cats off of her lawn… thank goodness I wasn't my wandering self when we became neighbors.
My favorite thing to do on any average day in our townhouse neighborhood was explore. This often entailed making secret hideouts behind bushes, under decks, in sheds, etc. Never my own of course, that was no fun. Once me and my mother were in a Kmart together at a young enough age that I don't remember this ever happening. My mother strolled me through the isles of the store. I like to think that she was picking out shampoo for me in this story, the kind that has the plastic cartoon character as a top (a very important factor if my mother expected me to use it). She was picking out the different choices, Ariel or Goofy, and turned around to ask me my favorite. She said, "Hon, what do you…" but I was gone. She had never even left me, but I was gone. She looked up and down the isles but I was still nowhere to be found. My mother panicked and found a manager right away. They paged me over the intercom, sent employees looking everywhere, and then finally shut down the entire store so no one could leave with my mothers most precious possession.
When my mother tells this story now, it's with sarcasm and resentment at how I inconvenienced the entire world of Kmart all over the country. As if I remembered or knew that running away was bad at 2 years old. All of a sudden the story takes a twist from kidnapped concern to "BAD girl, BAD!"
As my mother and all fifteen Kmart employees were in a panic trying to find me and debating on calling the police, somebody noticed something. I don't know if it was my mother or a Kmart employee, but I was found by one of them. These are inexistent now, but there used to be a photo filmstrip drop off container in every grocery and convenience store. You could drop off your camera's film and the next day you could pick it up at the counter. Disposable cameras were everybody's actual camera in the 90's. So in a way, my mothers nightmare can never ever be repeated for another parent… because photo drop-off bins don't exist anymore.
Somebody heard me giggling. Somebody was walking by the photo drop-off bin. And somebody noticed that the cabinet was slightly open. Well, whoever it was flew open the cabinet door to reveal a little girl in over alls sitting in the photo drop box. Not only was a sitting there with a big fat smile on my face, but I was in the process of unrolling a film strip. "Hi Mommy!" is apparently what I said. I had caused the entire store to shut down and my mother to cry over her missing daughter because I had wandered off into la la loo la adventure land of mysterious quests… which happened to be the photo drop-box.
To this day my mother uses the same what-if situation, "What if she had been unrolling someones WEDDING PHOTO'S?!?!!?" Well, we contacted the owners of the film and they ended up being good sports about it. No cherished memories had been unrolled. I was probably taken home and punished, but thank goodness I don't remember that part either.
I had many run-away adventures in my youth. I once ran away to the local YMCA, an odd choice but a magical one. I wandered off in Disney World (a story for the books), libraries, parks, and various countless amusement parks. A friend of mine once told me that they were going to probe me and bring a laptop with them so they could locate me at all times because my sense of direction was so terrible. Thank God that the 2000's brought google maps. And my parents gave me a GPS as a graduation present. The point is, I am a lost little girl.
But back to me bettering my mothers life. Not only was a I great at running away and getting lost, I looked just fine in costume. I was decked out entirely in a pink tutu, pink leotard, ballet slippers while also being accessorized with a wand in hand, pink pipe cleaner tiara on my head, and sheer fairy wings on my back with elastic straps under my arm pits at all times. I was princess and that was that. And I loved to tell anybody who would listen.
So I went door to door telling the world of my royalty, singing my made up songs that chorused "I'm a fairy princess! I'm a fairy princess! I'm a FAIRY princess!" all around my neighborhood. The terrifying problem with this was that I often knocked on strangers doors just to tell them that I was a princess and did they have any kids that wanted to play? Well, Newark, Delaware isn't exactly the kind of place that appreciated fairy princesses. It did however appreciate poverty, child molesters, cancer, and inappropriate teacher-students relationships. This is why that knocking on my neighbors doors scared the carp out my parents. While we loved living in Delaware my parents were very aware of it's problems. Hence the move to Unionville, Pennsylvania where small town farm community met Beverly Hills Housewives with subtle BANG.
But, maybe, just this ONE TIME, I can say "you're welcome" to my mother for my philandering. One day, adorned head to toe in princess gear, I knocked on my neighbors door two doors down from my own townhouse. A rather tall woman with thick black hair answered the door and looked all the way down to gaze at my tiara'd head. "Hi, I live down the street at that house" (point to my house) "You have a dog right? Can I pet him?" Well, I don't remember if I got to pet the dog. I do remember being marched right back to my house down the street and my mother answering the door in tears. "You found her?! Oh thank God! I'm sorry, she does this all the time… it's a problem we're going to fix. Where did you say you lived?" And that was how my mother met her best friend, Debra Crossan. That was also how my older sister met her best because Debra had a daughter her age and they got on like peas and carrots. Our families became very close throughout the years. To this day the Crossan's make us cookies on Christmas. Debra started calling me "Lou Lou Belle" because I liked to skip and sing the nursery rhyme down the sidewalk. Lou Lou Belle turned into Lou Belle, which turned into Lou, which now I've decided to adopt the name Belle. My mother stopped calling me any version of the name when a kid at the pool asked what my name was and I honestly said Lou Lou Belle.
Little does my mother realize that the idea of being a "princess" brought her a lifetime of friendship. That my constant demand of always wearing pink made her life full of reward. That princesses made the world a slightly better place to live in. Well, she doesn't see it that way when you account for all the heart-attacks, tears, and frustration over my "episodes."
But I think, deep down, she's glad that she had all those years of rescuing her princess. It was only the beginning of a long life of singing and dancing and skipping to the lou, and who wouldn't love a lifetime of THAT?

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

New Found Poem.


I found this poem in a quest for another one. I really enjoyed it and I thought I would share :) The theme of this poem applies to my life right now because of finals coming up in a couple of weeks. I hope you all can find some appreciation for it like I did.

Forgetfulness

The name of the author is the first to go
followed obediently by the title, the plot,
the heartbreaking conclusion, the entire novel
which suddenly becomes one you have never read,
never even heard of,

as if, one by one, the memories you used to harbor
decided to retire to the southern hemisphere of the brain,
to a little fishing village where there are no phones.

Long ago you kissed the names of the nine Muses goodbye
and watched the quadratic equation pack its bag,
and even now as you memorize the order of the planets,

something else is slipping away, a state flower perhaps,
the address of an uncle, the capital of Paraguay.

Whatever it is you are struggling to remember,
it is not poised on the tip of your tongue,
not even lurking in some obscure corner of your spleen.

It has floated away down a dark mythological river
whose name begins with an L as far as you can recall,
well on your own way to oblivion where you will join those
who have even forgotten how to swim and how to ride a bicycle.

No wonder you rise in the middle of the night
to look up the date of a famous battle in a book on war.
No wonder the moon in the window seems to have drifted
out of a love poem that you used to know by heart. 

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Sandy.

Hey,

Hurricane Sandy has come and gone. My town was not really in the path of destruction, just some heavy rain and a lot of trees stand without leaves. However, New Jersey is basically underwater,  New York subways are completely flooded in, Ocean City is covered in 6 feet of sand, and Chincoteague Island is basically no more. Seaside (where they happen to shoot 'the Jersey Shore' series) has floated out to the ocean-- it really looks devastating. I hope that if you are on the east coast that you are safe.

We had two days off of school because of the state of emergency. Me and my roommate went to wal-mart to prepare for Sandy, but all of the water, chips, milk, candles, and bread were gone. We tried to get beer (idk, my roommate insisted that beer is helpful in natural disasters but I really didn't think it would go there) but all of the liquor stores were closed. People were in a rush to get inside, banging on the glass windows, so me and Erin decided to avoid that situation. With all this preparation and frantically running around town for supplies, we barely got any of the storm. Basically just hard rain. Didn't even lose power.

Today I got my first bill for verizon internet. It was $150, I nearly fainted. I couldn't believe all of the charges that they had on the bill, things I didn't even remember talking about. There was thirty dollars for this, and an extra 40 for that, and menial charges of 10 dollars. Me and my roommate were on the phone with verizon for two hours trying to figure out what the hell happened. We ended up getting the bill down to $86, but I'm still dissatisfied. So I'm taking the bill to my boyfriends mother where apparently she's great at getting verizon to do whatever she wants. She once got 4 plane tickets to Germany for $20. I just want to warn everybody that verizon is terrible. If you have any suggestions for other internet services, please tell me and tell me soon.

Back to school tomorrow. Please be safe wherever you are.

-Lou


Friday, October 19, 2012

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Busy B.

Hey,

I've been really busy but I definitely want to update my blog. It's very therapeutic for me to write everything out.

So pledging is going ok. Not good, but not bad. One girl already quit because somebody in our pledge class called her the N word... I know, charming right? It makes me nervous too. And also, a lot of us are butting heads a lot and different decisions we have to make as a group. There's definitely a power struggle and I feel like I'm playing mediator most of the time. We're supposed to make a scrapbook,  interview all of the sisters at their home, create a plaque with all these different insignias on it, and on top of all that we have to memorize every sisters big and their animal family... by saturday. As if that's not enough add all of my homework and work.

But I'm enjoying it anyway. I wish that our pledge class was more cohesive but that's ok. We haven't got our Bigs yet but I'm eagerly awaiting mine. We got clues from our bigs as to who they are, but I'm still in the dark about it. I think I'm in the giraffe family but really it's all up in the air.

That's about it for now. Will ensue with pictures at another time!

-Love,

Lou

Saturday, September 29, 2012

A short update.

Hey,

So I've decided to use Daisy from the Great Gatsby for my paper (shout out to Janiebug for the idea and possibly the only one who might read my blog anyway!). So crisis averted... for now.

I decided to join Tri Sigma. I'm already loving it and I'm not even a full sister. I have never had so many people sincerely interested in my well being at one time. The other day they all gathered in my apartment and decorated my door for bid day! I got a purple rush tshirt and 28 personal hand made cards from each girl. Each card said a little about themselves and had their phone numbers in them. It was so entirely sweet! Unfortunately it's a hundred dollars to be in it officially on sunday... so that sucks. But I like feeling involved in something again, like being apart of something bigger than myself.

These are all the cards and stuff they gave me taped to my door.
Isn't it nice? Notice the streamer and the balloon on the other side too.

I've had a revelation about what I want to do with my future career. I do like English and I love kids. But I realized that I don't want to teach English to kids, that I love them separately. The only reason I want to teach is to be around children and influence their lives for the better... not necessarily spread my love for reading and writing. I discovered that I really just want to study kids. That I want to get to know them on a personal level, I want to teach them about themselves.

So I'm thinking about child psychology for a masters degree. I want to hold focus groups for all sorts of girls and maybe even boys. I want to find out what motivates girls to act the way they do. What makes a bully into a cyber bully when they're philanthropists in school? Why do some girls click while others never will. What family issues shape their lives? How can I help? I want to motivate them. I really want to work with self-confidence and teach girls to notice their surroundings.

So child psychology may be the place to start. I'm having a meeting with my advisor on monday to see where this can take me.

-Love,

Lou

Sunday, September 23, 2012

Need help!

Hey,

This isn't  a normal blogpost, it's just that I'm desperate.

I need to write a paper comparing Delilah from the Bible to another female character from the 19th century onwards. Except I can't think of a single one on my own... my brain is empty. Google is not helping me.

If you have any ideas please let me know. Please remember that Delilah is a temptress and a bitch, though she is fiercely loyal to her people the Philistines.

Thanks,

-Lou

Thursday, September 20, 2012

Women and Greek Women.

Hey!

It's been a little while. However, I have much to report! I came back from the PASSHE Women's Conference at California University of Pennsylvania. I have to say that it was probably more for an older crowd of people, there were students there but the panels really didn't relate to anything our age group is going through. The hotel was BANGIN. The literally melted in the bed, the comforter, and the pillows.

It was a 3 hour drive to the University with another girl I had never met before. Turns out that she's pretty awesome though. She got a blister on her foot in the first hour of the conference and didn't wear shoes for the rest of it haha. We got along really well so it wasn't awkward hanging out with her for two days and two long car trips.

My favorite panel was the one about women representation in the media. They mostly talked about how female politicians are portrayed in the media. For example, did you know that Elena Kagan was harassed endlessly by the media over her sexuality. The cabinet told the media that she was not a lesbian, but did nothing to say that "Even if she was, what does it matter?" All because she didn't have a date to a wedding and had the stereotypical look of a lesbian. The other girl who I was with, who happens to be a lesbian, said "Funny, she doesn't look anything like me." That made me laugh because it's so true. Elena Kagan is the kind of woman that we've all seen before; over 50, short hair, stout body shape. True, she's not going to be a Dallas Cowboys cheerleader any time soon but she is a regular looking person. How many women can you count on your fingers and toes that look like this? Half of my female college professors have this same figure! And even if she was a lesbian, so what? Even if she was straight, so what? Why is her sexual preference front page news over her foreign policy preference? She's on the cabinet for goodness sake. Anyway, that's my rant about that.

My professor verbally accosted the hotel people because they lost her credit card information. They almost wouldn't let us leave the hotel because they knew that we had no way of paying. We were told that the university was paying for it, but they didn't have the card information so they thought we lied. I didn't hear the whole conversation but I did tune in for "It's actually very disturbing that you lost something as precious as credit card numbers in a hotel, I'm questioning your job abilities!" I think we ended up getting a discount on the hotel room :P

There was also a TON of free food! I ended up eating more than I probably should have because it was free. The first day I was so hungry that I ungracefully got up from the conference table in mid sentence of the chairperson announcing lunch. My female counterparts told me that it was the least subtle thing they had ever seen lol.

All in all, I had a great time! There were two awesome key note speakers at the conference. The first one was named Ellen Bravo, and she talked mainly about how the word feminism scares people away and men take the word the wrong way. She talked about how to incorporate equality in the home, especially in front of children. The other key note speaker named Ayana, talked about how women never negotiate because it's in our nature to accept whatever happens to us. The majority of women believe that if we "work hard and have good work skills" that we will be rewarded eventually by our employers, whereas men will ask for a raise without fear and without waiting for anybody else to say 'go'. Interesting topics, very great speakers.

My next topic is that of Greek life. Up until last week I was against the whole system. I was literally talking about how people are paying for friendships when they join greek life. Like, last tuesday I was complaining about it. Even on the car ride to the conference I was talking about my hate for all things greek. My older sister Jenna was very involved in Tri Sigma. Without it, she would have never made friends at school and never have been involved in anything. So when Tri Sigma had it's table set outside one of the class buildings.... I checked it out.

BIG MISTAKE because I might become a hypocrite. I went to one of their rush events and I was very impressed. The girl who talked to me was so so so nice and I ended up really liking the group a lot. They remembered me coming up to them and said how glad they were that I ended up deciding to come. I told them that I was on the fence about it because I'm a junior and I didn't know if it was me.

The reason I think I want to pledge tri sigma is because once I told my older sister that I was thinking of going to their rush event tonight she. went. balistic. She texted me super long texts, and then called and talked to me for a half hour. She told me what to say and wear and ask. She was so excited that now I feel like I can't back out. I like getting this attention from my sister. Then I actually went to one of their events and they were really awesome... so I don't know. I'm going to become a hypocrite if I join. And what do I have to gain from a sorority? I have a boyfriend and a best friend, do I really need anything else? What could it hurt? I've never really understood sororities, but they seem to have so much fun! It's like instant coffee, except instead of coffee grains it's a semester and instant friends! I've always loved community service and they're big into community service. Would I have the time? I'm not sure with my job being five days a week. And omg, my boyfriend would make fun of me so much. I'm going to ask my mom about it, and talk to Joe about it, and list the pros and cons. Since I'm not cheering anymore, it might be nice to be apart of something, something that doesn't make me feel like I'm not wanted. Cheering never got any better and I never made any good friends. I guess I don't miss the sport so much as the community and Lock Haven cheer never gave me that feeling anyway.... So I have a lot to think about. I want to, but I don't want to do it for the wrong reasons. I think it would be different if I really had nothing going on. A sorority would have been so great for me my freshman year when I had no friends or boyfriend or job... but now I don't know if I'm already fulfilled. And putting those pictures up all the time on facebook! And the corny status' about loving your sisters. But at the same time, so many people are in sororities and fraternities (including the co-ed honors fraternities) that it's almost strange to not be in one.

I'm very confused. As you can tell by my rambling that I'm on the fence about it. Please, if you're out there, let me know what you think.

-Lou

Saturday, September 8, 2012

First Apartment Pictures!

Hey,

College is very different this year. But in a good way. My new apartment is fabulous, how I am going to pay for it myself is still keeping me up at night... but I'll figure that out at another moment. Here are some pictures that I promised!









Isn't it great? I absolutely love every room in this place. High ceilings, wood floors, cozy bedrooms, large closet, great pantry etc. etc. I am so happy with my first apartment. My grandmother thinks that People should only get apartments when they get out of school, but dorm life truly sucks.

Anyway, have to run!

-Lou

Monday, September 3, 2012

Some good things going on in my life :)

Hey,

So I am all moved in to my new place and it is kick ass. I love having my own room with french doors. It is so freakin cute. I love it, I love it, I love it! Pictures definitely to come. My roommate is awesome. She's been my best friend at school since freshman year and she's so easy to get a long with. She really is wonderful. I'll definitely put a picture of her up :)

Yeah. Here we are. This is a typical day being her friend.

Seeing my boyfriend everyday has been great. I worked all summer at a camp where I could never see him. I saw him once in 3 months. I was mostly distracted by my kids and work, but there were so many times that I missed him terribly. He's a cutie because he just wants me to be happy. He's not that good at sad feelings though. Haha whenever I'm sad he doesn't know what to say so he just gives me stuff. So far I've gotten a plastic dinosaur, a comic book, a slinky, and a box of play doh. I love seeing him everyday, he makes my day brighter. And he's not a bad cook either ;)

This is my goofy guy. I love him. And all of his hats :)

Classes started! Books are hecka expensive of course. I actually transferred one of my classes because I thought $80 for a text book was effing ridiculous. I'm taking the exact same class now with a different professor whose book is only about $21. Books are such a scam. In fact I went all last semester without buying a single one because of the expense. Thank God my boyfriend had my french books because they were $80 per book (workbook and textbook) and the cd's were $36. Do professors think college kids are made of money? Cause we're not that's why we all have student loans for the rest of our lives.

SOMETHING REALLLLLY COOL HAPPENED. The women studies administration at my school voted me as their representative as the PASSHE international women's conference! I am so excited! I was led to believe that they would pick a senior to go to the conference but they picked me! The school will pay for my hotel and meals and everything, it'll be freaking sweet! Me and this other girl were chosen to go and go to all of these different speakers and presentations. My mom was so proud, she was all like "You can make job contacts!" and I was all like "YEAH!" lol, real reaction. I'm going to wear a pretty suit too. I'm also going to take tons and tons of pictures for a portfolio!

I actually enjoy my women's studies minor a lot. I never realized how interested I was in the subject until I had stumbled into the minor. At first I did it just because it was six credits and it was an easily accomplished minor. I took women studies 101, which was a little awful because the professor was a little too into the writing assignments and not enough into the issues. She's an English professor so I guess that makes sense. I would do more activities than just reading articles about women studies. I think I can teach better than a lot of professors at this university.... but I digress.

I am so excited! Everything is happening so wonderfully!

-Love,


Lou

Friday, August 24, 2012

Moving in to the first official apartment

Hey,

Today starts my adventure of moving into my first apartment. Well, without a bed. My bed is coming on sunday. I'll probably be staying at my boyfriends place or, to my parents knowledge, on the futon. I have a 3 hour long drive to get back to Lock Haven University. My car hasn't even begun to get packed and it's going to take forever. Summer is officially over :( I'll post some pictures of my new place and my new roommate soon!

-Lindsey

Monday, August 20, 2012

Food Trucks for an American Recession!

Hey,

Through the recession my dad has gone through a lot of jobs. He owns his own video rental place but evil forces known as blockbuster, netflix, and redbox have made it difficult for much progress. Eventually he plans to shut down the store in the coming couple of years and move onto something more. Since 2008 my dad has worked for Wal-mart (I'm ashamed to admit that I was a little bit embarrassed about this when I was in high school), realtors agency, electrician, and an orderly for a hosptial. Most recently he has worked for a funeral home company picking up dead bodies in a hearse and bringing them to the funeral home whenever they... well, croak. This means that he is on call at all ungodly hours of the night. When he is called to get a body at 3 a.m., he has to drag himself out of bed, put on a suit and drive out to who-know's-where Pennsylvania and make the delivery. He tends to love this job because he loves to talk to people. He can make anybody laugh even with a dead body in the room.

However, he just got fired from this job last month for arguing over salary. This put enormous stress on my family, especially my mother. While he still has his video store and the hospital job, together they both barely make ends meet. Don't be worried though because he was offered a full time job at another funeral home with less strenuous hours on my 50 year old daddy.

While that is a God send my father has higher ambitions for himself. Bigger dreams that you and I would say to them "um, what?" In fact I did. I walked into the kitchen, and right there on the table was an unmistakable copy of "Starting a Food Truck Company: For Dummies" and "50 Great Food Truck Recipes." Yes. My father wants to start his own food truck company and have me work summers for him. I looked through the pages of the books wondering where on earth this idea could have come from. Immediately my dad pulled up a video online called Food Truck Revolution. I must admit that I was a lot more impressed than I thought I would be.

People who don't have the money to start restaurants, start food trucks. More often than not the food truck becomes an actual eating establishment but the truck lives on. I didn't realize how amazing the food that comes from them can be. It's funny because you can name your food anything you want at a food truck whereas a restaurant you would want to name your food something sophisticated. One food truck named one of their choices "Big Ass Sandwich" solely based on the fact that it really was a humungous sandwich.

There are setbacks however to running a foodtruck. If you have a truck with only one window, it limits you to one side of the street. The trucks themselves are the most expensive cost. For Dummies says that you should spend no more than 15,000 on your truck but the ones that sell for good are at least 25,000. Not only that but then you would have to have a mechanic check out the truck for fear of fault machinery. An ice cream truck is more expensive than burger truck. A pizza truck needs to have a  ceramic oven in it, which makes the temperatures in the truck unbearable hot. And the time tested question, where do you go to the bathroom?

BUT THINK OF THE GOOD STUFF. You can take your business anywhere. If you have to move, your business moves with you. Festivals and fairs often hire food trucks because the mess is easier to clean up. There is less customer attitude because they don't sit down to eat... they leave. When there's a concert in Philadelphia you can drive your truck right up to it and serve food to the multitude of people. Food truck food is less expensive but have more customers than an average restaurant. With the great social networking of the generation one can simply tweet "#LarrysBurgers Going to be in front of Lincoln Financial field between 12-3. Go Eagles!" and you will find a swarm of hungry costumers coming to your truck from wherever they are. It's becoming a wildly popular idea among the masses. One that I hope happens for my dad.

The other night my dad got all excited about this food festival on Germantown Avenue, in Philadelphia. We took my friend Matt who is always excited about new food. Me, my dad, and Matt arrived on the street and all you could see among the huge crowds were food trucks. As many that could meet the eye. There was your standard, italian, burger, and ice cream trucks. But then they got creative. There was a vegan truck, a Mexican bar-b-que truck, Native American inspired truck, grilled cheese truck, a hot doggery truck, and even a beer distributor truck. All of the food was delicious. The Native American inspired food truck even had blueberry soup, I didn't taste it for fear of wasting 3 dollars. But I did have one of their bean and cheese empanadas. 3 dollars well spent.

This was the menu for The Dapper Dog. At food truck conventions
they only offer 2-4 types of their food. On regular work days just driving around the
menu is more complete. Food truck only put out their best selling products
when they are competing.

My favorite truck was called Vernalicious. I had the most amazing mozzarella and pesto grilled cheese. The service was friendly, the food was great, the truck was adorable, all sorts of sauces were available at the ready. This particular truck also appeared at the Train concert just recently in Philly much to my delight. This is one truck that I would follow around on twitter... if I had a twitter. If you ever get a chance to try food truck cuisine, I say go for it.

This was the best truck in my opinion. Look for it if you're ever in Philly.
Delicious grilled cheeses.


Yours,

Lou

Friday, August 17, 2012

C. First video

C is for confidence.







Camp. Camp Tockwogh.

Hello,

Well I'm back from the depths of summer. I love summer vacation but with summer vacation comes a summer job. Dun dun dun. However, I have the best job of all during the summer months. Summer camp! Not just any summer camp, Camp Tockwogh on the Chesapeake Bay. A place where magic ensues for children ages 7-17. Younger kids are comforted by caring and patient counselors, while the older kids have older role models and good influences to look up to.

I live in the middle of those two ages. I have 11-13 year old girls in my cabin every session. The best of times and the worst of times. There are tears over boys, bodies, and missing denim abercrombie shorts. That's actually a real story I had to live through. It's a funny age for kids to go through and my experiences are living proof. I never in my life realized the pressures that pre-teen girls go through, and it might seem so silly to us but it's a very real concept for them.

For example, we have a dance every session for the 11-13 year old age group. The counselors had to live through about 5 of these dances through out the summer, so we start to lose our steam after the second one. We always have a theme for the dances that only the counselors get into because we love to dress up! Besides, what pre-teen wants to dress up as a pirate for our pirates vs. ninjas theme? Not many. So instead of dressing to the theme, there is a certain protocol that apparently all 13 year old girls must adhere to.

Here it is:
~ Plain colored flip flops
~ Denim or colored shorts
~ Sugar lips (or other tight fitting tank top)
~ Cammy with cute top over it
~ Crop top
~ NO JEWELRY
~ Black eye liner, mascara, and eye shadow
~ Straight hair or some type of braid
*Dresses may be suitable as long as 1 to 2 of friends are wearing them as well

A Picture of my 2nd session girls before the dance. Notice the attire.
Then notice the counselor in the background wearing a super hero costume.
See what I mean?

Here are the counselors. Notice how I am the only
one not in costume (I am holding a Thor hammer though)?


I had no idea that this was such an important part of going to the dances that this shocked me. I was taking my cabin to the dance after an hour and a half of getting ready, pictures, and comparing outfits. We're halfway to the rec hall when a girl comes bawling out of her cabin wearing a pink top and running shorts. She started going on and on about how she didn't have jean shorts and no one in her cabin was her size and she didn't want to go to the dance looking like THIS. I said "Come to my cabin we'll find you something!" So of course none of my clothes fit her because she's a size 2 and I'm a size 8. When I told her I had dresses she sobbed even harder about how none of her friends were wearing dresses. In my head I rolled my eyes... but I felt sorry for her. I grabbed another counselor from a cabin that hadn't left yet. She looked about the same size as the crying camper. I explained to her why she was upset and if she could lend her any of her clothes then she would stop crying. She had just the right pair of jean shorts for her that were from american eagle. Perfect. Then the girl turns to me and says "Do you know how to french braid?" No I don't. So that meant another trip to find a counselor who could. Finally, hair french braided and jean shorts on, she asked me to do her make up because she didn't have any. This girl warmed my heart.

I didn't realize how sensitive girls were to these kinds of things. I was a girl and I don't remember caring all that much about how I looked. I often times showed up to school with wet hair from showering that morning while other girls had dry, straightened hair. It just goes to show that this is a reality for them, no matter how silly we all think it is.

I love camp. I really do. It has nothing to do with selfish means and everything to do with FTK (for the kids). And if you're in it for the money, you're in the wrong place because some of the things I do, like helping a crying girl with the peer pressure to fit in, is something I'll never get paid enough for.

In this economy, you'd think it'd be more cost effective to stand out instead of fitting in. Just a thought.

Love,

Lou

Thursday, May 24, 2012

College Boys.

C is for college boys.



Notice I say boys and not men or guys. They are boys in every possible meaning you could get out of the word. Let's compare the two.

Let us take 11 year olds, an age I'm familiar with because of my younger brother. 11 year olds like to get dirty and not shower for days. Play video games well into the night until their eyes itch. Make fun of girls while wishing girls talked to them on the playground. They are perfectly fine with dirt. Lot's of dirt. Dirt in their hair, in their clothes, on their bed, on the floor, in the sink, and especially on their hands which in turn gets on everything they touch. They like instruments but they won't bother learning how to play them. Play dates often turn into sleepovers, which often turn into extended-weekend long interactions. However, don't be fooled, they've just been playing video games for 72 hours in a dark basement. They'll eat pizza and soda for the rest of their lives unless you hand feed them something else. They never stop eating either, hours and hours and hours later they will still be eating. They think farts and burps are just hilarious every time they happen. Finally, they pretend they don't care about what clothes they wear but secretly their outfits have to be just right.

Now college boys.

Exactly the same except replace soda with alcohol and playground with facebook chat. It's not that fair of me to judge them so harshly just because I'm not one. They enjoy each others company and that should be good enough for half of the population despite their many flaws. Most of them have many good qualities that get overlooked because of the bad ones... and the many layers of dirt. I just recently heard someone tell me that most males don't calm down and become better gentleman until 25. Well that's a little long and inconvenient. 

I must tell my future daughters to wait until their 25, and then shop around for the ones who shower most frequently. Thanks for letting me rant.

-Lou