09 October 2008

I Haven't Posted in a Really Long Time!

I'm sorry it's been so long, nonexistent readers! What with the start of school and everything, I just got busy and...failed so epically as to abandon lame excuses.
Hmm, what's new, you ask? Well, my cat meows like a small child who has just dropped her ice cream, my dog manages to find a totally pleasant and unstressful way to surprise me every day, and I eat more cheese than is entirely healthy. I am currently obsessed with the
graphic-novel-type works of Alan Moore and Neil Gaiman. If Sarah Palin were a sane vegetarian with a brain, she'd be a moose. I continue not to know what I'm rambling on about half the time. I haven't updated my books-read list in a thousand years. Alexander the Great is the bane of my existence (I'm doing this history presentation...). I have to go to bed now.

NEWGREGORYMAGUIREBOOKSOON!

Yours & c,
E. A. Weatherfield

01 September 2008

Ya da dum dum dum...

What does one do, I ask, when one has attempted to force oneself to go to sleep at 10:30, but finds she can't?
Does she roll over and try to get her obstinate cat to cuddle?
Does she turn on the light and pick up her book?
Oh, no. Of course she has to get up and, not bothering to turn the lights on, do a blog post. Is she aware that this effort is futile, as even though her entire advanced comp class has access to said blog, nobody is going to read it? Theoretically?
Now, that is a difficult question...
Hypothetically speaking, a person whose blog was guaranteed to be read might comment that, say, she wouldn't be able to attend homecoming, as she'd be at her cousin's wedding in New York. She might suggest the amazing movie Hamlet 2 to her classmates, or ask them how they were doing with their personality essays.
However, since I my musings are happily unread, I am in a position to rave about Jane Austen's Mansfield Park, or lament that my friend Bianca STILL has not returned my copy of Jane Eyre (which I want to reread, dammit!). I could even comment that my grandmother's pug puppy, Baby Dinkles, though cute, often behaves like a screaming hell-demon bent on sucking out my soul through my ankles, with no ill effects.
But no one's reading this, so what would be the point?

Many happy returns,
Yours &c,
E. A. Weatherfield

07 August 2008

Breaking Down

If there is one solid fact that is a comfort to me, it is that every once in a while, a person must make a complete ass of his/herself. It doesn't matter if you told a story you had no idea wasn't funny (did that today--and to a group of people I barely know!), asked a question you had no idea was socially unacceptable (that one gave me a lot of trouble when I was eight), or just did something you wish you could take back. Everyone must make mistakes like this.
Of course, some of these oopsies are more significant than others. Making an awkward remark at a party is a far smaller offense than, say, pulling a Darcy and causing the people of an entire county to mistake you for a highly unpleasant person. It follows, then, that to build up the anticipation of millions of fans worldwide for an entire year, only to completely poop out, bitterly disappointing them, is the greatest offense of all.
Sorry, Stephenie Meyer...you just has one of those assy moments.

01 August 2008

Breaking Dawn

For anyone who lives in a hole under a rock, I offer this information: The new Twilight book, Breaking Dawn, comes out at midnight tonight. I'm going to the Borders release party, and I'm ridiculously excited. I have done my vampire makeup: Made my eyes look big (with dark circles underneath), covered my skin in white glitter, even drawn vampire scars up my arm in solidarity with Jasper. I have painted my nails with images from the covers of the books (an apple, a flower, a ribbon, and a chess piece) and put Edward Cullen's initials on my toenails. I would say I was PUMPED!, if I were the type of person who said that sort of thing. But I'm not. I'm the type of person who listens to Jesus Christ Superstar while dressing up as a vampire. Go figure.

30 July 2008

May the Cliche Be With You

Tonight my mother and I started on our quest to re-watch all of the Star Wars movies in chronological order. Yes, I mean from episodes I to VI. So, tonight was Episode I: The Phantom Menace. I shall give a brief overview...
Higlights:
Liam Neeson's existance. Is there anything that man does not totally own? The answer is no. Or, rather, as it is always phrased in the Star Wars universe, NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO. Also, any scene including R2-D2 was a winner. And Queen Amidala's crazy outfits. Those had me riveted.
Lowlights: Darth Maul. Who does he think he is? He goes into the movie with no lines--just some horns and a scary makeup job--and...just...does nothing but...kills...Liam Neeson...it's too much! I can't take it! I didn't exactly enjoy seeing the 'naked' C-3PO, either.
Generally Speaking: It had Yoda in it. And Natalie Portman, pre/succeeding Carrie Fischer in the royal-who-kicks-arse -and-does-all-the-planning-even-though-the-other -stars-aren't-man- enough-to-admit-it part. A-

Your humble critic,
E. A. Weatherfield

Chipmunk/Vampire

No matter where you are, no matter who you know, there are certain truths about two professions: Dentists are psychopaths and orthodontists are sociopaths.
Not that I have any quarrel with my tooth-fixated amigos. I'm sure they are perfectly nice, for the most part. Many sadists are.
But why, you ask, do I make these accusations? Trust me, it is not without cause. Take, for instance, the psychopath. A psychopath is someone who kills (or maims or tortures) indiscriminately, for thrills. The dentist fits neatly into this category: they torture more people more excruciatingly, but for briefer periods of time and less money.
The sociopath is a classier, more discerning sadist. A sociopath picks and chooses their victims, hiding the evidence well. The sociopath seems quite nice to their neighbors because they have no sense that they are doing anything wrong. This is the very picture of the orthodontist, whose careful brand of torture is refined down to an art. At first, nothing seems sinister about a bit of metal in the mouth. The victim goes home waving cheerily to their teeth-correcting friend. But, slowly, hour by hour, the teeth become tender to the point of absurdity, until the victim's very existence is excruciatingly painful. The orthodontists even appreciate the little details; they charge an absurd amount, therefore insuring that the victim carries through their course of pain to avoid wasting their money.
The crux of this argument: rubber bands. Little pieces of elastic that simultaneously make it difficult to talk and impossible to yawn, cause pain, make you look like a chipmunk when your mouth is closed, and make you look like a vampire when you smile.
The jury is out. I rest my case.

Yours &c,
E. A. Weatherfield.

29 July 2008

It's Nothing...

It is my humble opinion that the absolute most amusing phrase a parent can use is "it's nothing, you'll see." This is a very versatile phrase with a number of applications. Is your four-foot-tall, frizzy-haired, history-loving kid worried about cheerleading tryouts? It's nothing, you'll see. Is your kid's favorite cat going to the vet to have a sock and three pennies removed from its stomach? It's nothing, you'll see. Is your kid not exactly excited about going to the dentist to have their teeth pulled--the day after their birthday? It's nothing, you'll see.
Yes, this vaguely positive method of evasion can be used in many ways. However, I must admit I have a favorite use of the all-purpose phrase: To soothe the trepidation (Ooo, vocab word! My former English teacher from hell would be so proud!) of lifelong committment to a daily annoyance. Here's what I mean. When I was about four or five, my mother introduced me to the hygenic wonder that is the toothbrush. She showed me how to run the bristles over my teeth, explaining to me why this rather odd ritual was necessary. At the end of the lesson, I only had one question:
"Mommy, do I have to do this for the rest of my life?"
You'll never guess what she said...
"It's nothing, you'll see."
Considering the year or two it took me to learn to brush my teeth twice a day, every day, with toothpaste, like a normal person...you'll see why I find this phrase so dubious.
Another such incident was when I got contacts. This was, I must admit, quite recent; my eyes decided to follow the route of every one of my family members', miserably and suddenly failing me in the middle of my junior year. I was given my first pair of transluscent nemeses just this summer.
Something you should know about me: I am not one for motor skills, fine or otherwise. In fact, in the alotted hour and a half did not suffice for the whole sticking-a-strange-slimy-thing-in-your-eye-then-pinching-it-out-again-against-your-better-judgement lesson. I had to (cue scary music)...go back a second time!
A week later, when it was still taking me half an hour to get them in in the morning and an hour to get them out again at night, I went to my mother in a state of despair.
"Maybe I should just get glasses," I lamented, "even though they look hideous on me..."
"You'll get it," she assured me.
"I haven't yet," I complained.
"Oh, it's nothing," she said, "you'll see."
So...what do you say when your anal-retentive, perfectionist, academically-oriented high school senior (who has had her sights set on William & Mary since she was 12) expresses her concerns about college applications?
It's nothing, you'll see.
Yours &c,
E. A. Weatherfield.

28 July 2008

Debut

As this is my first blog, I suppose I should start it off with something clever. You know, a real zinger. A regular Dickens of an opening sentence. As an aspiring author, I claim to know the value of a good opener. As for actually writing them, well...easier talked around than done.
Now. As for the blog. As I write this, you may notice my affinity for the word "as." Well, as I've often not said, a word's not overworked till it's overworked. As I wrote that, I started to irritate myself...
Well, since this is my first blog, I suppose I should tell you a bit about whose ramblings you're wading through. I should tell you that I like movies, costume novels, fanfiction, my dog Bilbo, all other animals (except, occasionally, my cat Pudge), books, my PowerBook (her name is Daisy), theatre, clouds, and platypi. I should warn you that I hate tomatoes, forwards, Hemingway, trashy Myspace pictures, country music, boring clothes, spiders and reality shows. I could even tell you that I can currently see a life-size cardboard cutout of R2-D2, a Life of Brian poster, an American Girl doll, a Phantom of the Opera mask, a platypus puppet, and a TV playing Monty Python and the Holy Grail. Of course, I would never really do that; to give you that much information right off the bat would be absurd.
Well, rather than writing more and more in order to stave off the boredom of waiting for my grandmother to wake up, I will cut this blog off to delay the possibility of embarrassing myself by rambling on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on.

And on,
Yours &c,
E. A. Weatherfield.