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I’m Backkkk

After almost a full year, I’ve decided to write again. I have very few excuses to explain my long absence besides I’m lazy and forgot I had a blog. To make it up to anyone who actually reads this, here is a list of books you should read immediately:

The Circle – Dave Eggers (You’ll read it and think, “hahaha it’s scary and weird how much they rely on their technology, I hope that never happens to us” and then you’ll realize it’s too late.)

Hyperbole and a Half – Allie Brosh (This is one of the few books that actually makes me laugh out loud while I’m reading it, and she also just released a new book – Solutions and Other Problems – that is at the top of my To-Read list.)

How to Be Alone: If You Want To, and Even If You Don’t – Lane Moore (Fitting for our current times.)

Furiously Happy – Jenny Lawson (I love Jenny and aspire to be as successful/funny as she is.)

1 Dead in Attic – Chris Rose (Written about what happened in New Orleans during and after Katrina; you can’t read this book without believing New Orleans is special by the end of it.)

HaPpY rEaDiNg!!

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Quotes from Kiddos

A year ago I took a job teaching kids to read in a local Richmond city elementary school. I loved it. I also hated it. But mostly I loved it, and that is entirely due to the little faces I got to see every day. I’m missing my former students a little extra today, so I thought I’d share this list.

Things My Students Ask Me:

“Are you famous?”

“Do you wish you were Taylor Swift?”ย No.ย “No, but really?”

“Can I cut your hair?”

“Are you really a famous rapper?”ย (I got tired of being asked if I was famous and started responding “yes,” successfully convincing my 2nd graders that I’m a popular rapper on YouTube.) Followed by, “I looked last night and couldn’t find it, what’s the name of your YouTube channel?”

“Can I meet your boyfriend?”

“Do you have a mom?”

“Can I make you cookies?”

“Can I take a picture of you?”

“Why are there dots all over your skin? Are you sick?”ย *explains freckles*

“Are you married?” “Why not?” “You haven’t found someone good enough?”

“Have you met my guinea pig?”

“Did you know I have eczema?”

“Can you unchap my lips?”

“Why are you so white?”ย (This one gets me every time)

“Do you love us?”ย Always, and too much for my own good.ย 

 

 

 

 

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(wiki)How Do I Explain This

Working for wikiHow has been fun and fulfilling, fascinating and frustrating. I’ve written 350 ‘how-to’ articles on topics that made me laugh, learn useless skills, learn useful skills, and want to throw up. Here are the memoirable ones. 

Articles That Almost Cost Me a Lot of Money

  1. How to Style Mom Jeans: I had an online shopping cart filled with mom jeans that I was convinced would be my new look.
  2. How to Help the Rohingya: This turned into a rabbit hole experience, ending with me sending pictures to my mother of children from the Save the Children webpage I wanted to sponsor.
  3. How to Join Weight Watchers: After consuming the entire Weight Watchers website, I was convinced I needed to join to see how much weight I could lose and gain access to their point system. (Addison was adamantly against this waste of money, and we argued about it for an embarrassing amount of time).
  4. How to Order off the Starbucks Secret Menu: I hate coffee and don’t like Starbucks, but I wanted to order all the secret menu items to test the Starbucks employees/see if they’d resent me.
  5. How to Break Boards with Your Bare Hands: This should be obviousโ€”I wanted to break boards with my bare hands. This would have cost me money due to 1) the number of boards I’d have purchased and 2) the Patient First experience it would’ve resulted in.

Articles That (For Some Reason) I Love

  1. How to Go to the Bathroom in the Woods: This was simultaneously gross and fascinating to write. Here is an excerpt of this article before I was tasked with editing it: “If you’re trying to get the turd out, you can just pull it out with the thumb and fore finger.” ??? No.
  2. How to Deal with a Toddler Who Is Afraid of Baths: I felt like I was really advocating for the toddlers when I wrote this.
  3. How to Throw Ashes in the Ocean: I had no idea youโ€™re legally required to drive 3 nautical miles from shore out in a boat before dumping ashes. But I do know that no one actually does this.
  4. How to Be Creative When Playing with Your Barbies: This required watching YouTube videos of children playing with Barbies, which sounds creepy yet entertaining because it was.
  5. How to Distinguish Mennonites from Amish: I’m hoping that one day I’ll be asked, “Do you know if that person is Amish or a Mennonite?” and I’ll say, “No, but I know how to find out.”

Articles I Hated with a Fiery Passion

  1. How to Be a Cute Girl in Middle School: Picture me taking detailed notes on the advice given by middle school girls promoting their vlogs about how important it is to have cute-looking notebooks.
  2. How to Preserve Extracted Teeth: This was gross and forced me to read several medical studies all about liquid chemical germicides, as well as all the diseases you can catch trying to preserve said teeth.
  3. How to Draw the Map of India: If you look at a map of India, you’ll notice that its shape is full of detailed squiggle marks and bumps that jut out. You try describing how to draw that.
  4. How to Get Angelina Jolie’s Lips: This required writing about the process of getting lip injections, which made me nauseous.
  5. How to Remove Butt Hair: Need I say more?

Articles That Probably Shouldn’t Exist

  1. How to Organize Trophies: If you have so many trophies that you’re overwhelmed and looking up how to organize them, this is a problem. Get rid of them.
  2. How to Kill a Joke: This is a great way to be an asshole. Why are you planning ways to ruin other people’s jokes? (Some guy commented, “My friend told a joke while we were out with 3 others, and every joke he told I deflated with help from this.”)
  3. How to Convince Your Friends You’re a Mermaid: This is filled with deception and I feel guilty about it.
  4. How to Cut Celery: Celery is literally the easiest vegetable in the world to cut. It’s long and thin, just chop it up.
  5. How to Sneak Out of Your House at Night: Another one I feel guilty about. I taught children how to become silent ninjas by doing things like oiling up the squeaky doors in their house beforehand with WD-40 and hiding their change of clothes outside so they’re still in pajamas if they’re caught. (This one has close to one million views, so if you’re a parent reading this, sorry! And go check your kid’s bed.)

Lastly, I will share with you my wiki Pro Tip: Hover over “Explore” on the site and click “Random Article.” I’ve just provided you with hours of useless (but occasionally useful!) entertainment. Within a few minutes, you can learn how to Be a Badass Girl, Care for Holland Lop Rabbits, Become a Race Car Driver, Develop Psychic Abilities, and Adopt a Russian Baby.

You’re welcome.

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Things My Mother Says

“I just don’t understand canes. How could they possibly keep you balanced? They have canes now that you can pour alcohol into and drink from them. But I don’t think that would help steady me either.”


“Stop drawing at the dinner table, this is the time when we mock each other.”


“Since you’re leaving soon, I feel like I should give you some advice. If you’re ever fighting over a balloon with someone, just let it go.”


“You should write down the things you don’t like about me because you’ll want to change these things about yourself later in life.”


Me: Mom, you have a problem where you can’t sit still without talking to people.

Mom: I know. It happens in church too, that’s why I don’t go.


Anddddd last but not least:

My brother: Mom said she’d buy Jimmy John’s for dinner. So a little while later I walked upstairs to ask her when she was buying it, and she said, “once I get to 6,000 followers on Instagram.”

Mom: It was a motivational treat for myself.

My brother: ….luckily she got there.

Mom: I got to 6,000 and then ordered Jimmy John’s, but then someone unfollowed me so I had 5,999. It was a moment of frustration.

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Meet our little savage.

This is our dog. Nap. Short for Napoleon, the conqueror.ย 

Yes, I’m wearing socks with his face on them.

Heโ€™s a Beagle, but heโ€™s also part cat, rabbit, statue, and savage.ย 

Here is a list of things you should know about him:

He likes to sit on people. Not close to them, or beside them. On top of them. He will back himself up like a beeping truck and plop his butt on top of your feet, legs, face, or whatever other body part he can reach. Then he will sit very rigidly as if he realized he did something awkward but now it’s too late to fix it.

He has a long list of things that scare him. These things include water (lakes, rivers, rain, puddles, you name it), boats (for obvious reasons), crossing busy streets, sudden movements, other scary dogs that try to eat him, brooms, large unknown objects, anything remote-controlled, playing fetch, balls in general, abandonment, and being alone forever.

He howls more than he barks. He hardly ever barks, and he only sometimes howls. Nothing puts Nap in an angsty, melodramatic mood like howling. He howls in response to three different sounds: firetrucks (he has to be right next to the firetruck as it’s going by, giving a full-body lament that often earns a laugh from the firemen), blenders, and my boyfriend’s (Addy’s) saxophone playing (this last one is understandable).

We thought we had potty trained him. When we first moved back to New Orleans with him, he never peed in the house. Then one night we found a puddle of pee right next to the toilet, so obviously we figured it had been a real emergency and Nap noticed that the toilet was the place where peeing happens, so he did his best to follow suit. WE WERE SO PROUD. What a brilliant dog we had!

Except then the next day he peed directly into our printer.

He can hug. After he learned how to sit and stay, I decided the next most important trick would be to hug. What’s better than having your dog give you affection on command? So now when you say hug, Nap jumps up and wraps his front two arms around your body (or really your legs, he’s not that tall) while balancing on his back feet. It’s very cute and entirely necessary. He only hugs certain people thoughโ€”even dog has standards.

We both compete for attention like children. Addy originally found Nap wandering around Tennessee and decided to keep him. By the time I went to visit him, the two of them had already established a tight bond. The first night I was reunited with Addy, Nap peed on all my clothes in the middle of the night. A coincidence? I THINK NOT. If I go sit next to Addy on the couch, dog has to scooch up in between us. If I walk into the room to ask Addy a question, dog has to follow to make sure he doesn’t miss anything. If Addy kisses me, guess who has to jump up with his wet dog tongue and get in on the action? This has brought on an entirely ridiculous but very real rivalry that I feel I must win at all costs. ย 

He death stares using his whole body. Here is picture evidence.

If only I could be so intimidating.

A true conqueror.
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This is a story about a couch and some cookies and an unfortunate amount of cash.

After moving in to our apartment without any furniture, it was decided that we needed a couch. If it had been any other piece of furniture, such as a table or bookshelf, weโ€™d have found it the way we found all of our other furniture: go outside and walk around until you find a discarded chair or coffee table on the side of the road. But as couches are trickyโ€”theyโ€™re stuffed fabric, anything could be in themโ€” you have to be a little more careful. So instead I spent hours perusing Craigslist and Facebook Marketplace, looking for the perfect unused, sparkling clean, beautiful couch that also happened to be between 0 and 100 dollars. 

I believed I had found the perfect one: a beautiful blue velvet couch listed as $100. After sending the seller a thousand questions, I found out that the couch was barely used, and when it was used, it had a sheet covering it to keep it clean. Pet-free and smoke-free. I could come get it anytime. It was couch fate.  

We rented a U-Haul truck for a couple hours one morning and drove to get our new couch. After arriving at the sellerโ€™s home, the woman brought us inside to a mostly empty room, with the one exception being the couch sitting against the wall. My boyfriend and I took one quick look at the couch and then at each other.

First of all, the couch was GREEN. Not blue. This woman must have had to edit the photo so much that it literally turned the picture a different color. Why did she have to edit it, you ask? The couch was covered in hair. It reeked of cigarettes. It was immediately the most disappointing thing I had seen in a long, long time.

Then the woman proceeded to tell us that she loved this couch. She had slept on it every single night for the past few months. By the looks of it, so had seven animals. She was sleeping on it to escape her man’s snoring. Everyone hated her manโ€” the neighbors, the mailman, even her sometimes. Thatโ€™s why they were having to move. “Do you want me to help you load it into the truck?” she asked.

Here came the real dilemma. We had paid $60 for the truck to come get this couch. So we could either leave without the couch and lose $60, or we could bring the couch home and try to do something with it. 

We chose the latter. 

After purchasing the couch for $80 instead of $100 (the woman didnโ€™t put up much of a fight), we were the proud owners of a large green (not blue!!) piece of trash. Once it was secured in the bed of the truck (wouldnโ€™t want to lose this treasure on the highway), I got into the passenger seat and immediately started laughing. I laughed for the first 15 minutes of our drive home, literally unable to stop. My boyfriend was decidedly angry about the fact that we had this couch now, and couldnโ€™t get behind my laughing.  

Addy: โ€œI thought that woman told you it was pet hair-free and smoke-free, and it hadnโ€™t been used…”

Me: “She did.” *still uncontrollably laughing*

Addy: โ€œWhy are you laughing??โ€

Me: โ€œThis is the funniest thing to ever happen!”

Addy: โ€œIโ€™m not really getting the humor.”

Me: โ€œWe just drove an hour and spent $60 on this truck to buy a couch from a woman who basically lived on it with all of her pets, and we couldnโ€™t even put the pillows inside the truck so they wouldnโ€™t blow away because they smell so terrible.โ€

Addy: โ€œSo are we going to use this couch?โ€

Me: โ€œOf course not. Iโ€™m not sitting on that thing.”

Addy: โ€œSO WHY DID WE BUY IT?”

Me: โ€œBecause weโ€™re going to sell it to make up for the money we spent on the truck.”

Addy: โ€œAND WHO IS GOING TO WANT IT??”

Me: โ€œWOULD YOU CALM DOWN, I HAVE A PLAN.”

We brought the couch into the house (I regretted this immediately, the smell was overpowering) and vacuumed it. We used a lint remover to try to get the pet hair off. We flipped over the cushions to whichever side had the least amount of stains. I opened all the windows, sprayed the couch with Febreeze, and started taking pictures.

I listed the couch as $150, pick up as soon as possible. I attached pictures of every angle, clearly showing the correct color of the couch, as well as any rips or tears. People with questions could message me (and when they did, I told them a brief summary of the couchโ€™s history: its previous owner was a smoker and had pets. No deception here.) ย 

Within a day, a woman said she was interested in coming to see it. THIS WAS IT.

When the woman arrived, all the windows were open, and I just happened to have just pulled out a baking sheet full of freshly made chocolate chip cookies that gave off a truly delicious smell. 

The woman bought the couch for $150, meaning after renting the truck for $60 and buying the couch for $80, we had made $10.

 I was incredibly proud of myself. 

This success made me want to start buying unloved furniture, turning coffee tables and dining room chairs into something you could love a little bit, for a little bit more money. A new career! Watch out, world!

(This idea was immediately vetoed.) 

Moral of the story: if you need to get rid of something that is genuinely repulsive, try to sell it first. LIST ITS FLAWS. People will still buy it. And it helps to bake cookies while youโ€™re trying to sell it, wafting the cookie scent around the room to distract your prey while masking the smell of cigarette smoke and your desperation. 

An additional note: We did end up finding a couch I was willing to sit onโ€”itโ€™s oddly shaped and soft and beautiful. We bought it from a man named Jerry who has a very clean home and no pets, and who also doesn’t smoke. He also doesnโ€™t own a cellphone, which I respect. A real stand-up guy. I would trust him with my life, probably.