krayola25




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gain weight (read all 4 entries…)
7 pounds + 8 months ago

Not a lot of weight, but I’ve gained that much over the past 4 months because my beau is a fabulous cook, who loves making rather fatty foods!


gain weight (read all 4 entries…)
i found the trick... 1 year ago

drinking two bottles or more of nestle quick a day – that’s like 800 calories! i’ve been doing this during the work day, and so far i’ve gained a few pounds in the last few weeks.


fall in love again (read all 22 entries…)
i'll try again :( 1 year ago

i got dumped in the most insensitive way last weekend. he’s the same one with whom i clicked with six months ago. he broke up with me via email.

yup in an email. he just opened up his own restaurant and he didn’t have enough time to spare for his personal relationships. he didn’t tell me this in person or over the phone, just within an email – at first. it took him 2 days to confront me about it, but even then he had nothing to say, not even sorry, as he broke my little heart.


ride a horse in mongolia (read all 3 entries…)
hold off for another year 1 year ago

my partner in crime cassandra, is with bun in the oven – which means no horsebackriding for quite some time. i may need to hold off on this for while :(


fall in love again (read all 22 entries…)
it took a long while... 2 years ago

but it’s been well worth it. without getting too sappy, when i discovered that i was now waist deep in it, i almost wanted to cry. happy tears of course. yay us!


cook more (read all 4 entries…)
advanced cooking lessons 2 years ago

my new friend is a chef – and really good one at that. he’s also spoiled me – as i now only like certain foods like butter from vermont or fresh seafood from dean & deluca (pathmark? fughedaboutit) little by little i’m learning something new!


kiss more (read all 8 entries…)
weeeeeee! 2 years ago

every day now, every day.


kiss more (read all 8 entries…)
i realize that i now prefer men sans beards 2 years ago

i was all over boys with facial hair for the longest time, now not so sure, i forgot how nice it is for guys to actually have smooth, hairless facial skin. less ouch.


take a vacation (read all 2 entries…)
of course worth doing! 2 years ago

here i am just laying out.


fall in love again (read all 22 entries…)
les papillon 2 years ago

holy sh*t, regarding this entry: http://www.43things.com/entries/view/684436

les papillon are swarming! :)


fall in love again (read all 22 entries…)
i wouldn't normally do this... 2 years ago

write about my dates that is, but i just came back from the most delightful date. it was too late to call my friends to tell them how actually refreshing it was, so i spoke with the cab driver on the way home and told him how neat this guy was. and i gave him $10 on a 4 buck fare. it was that nice.


be a tourist in my own town (read all 6 entries…)
chinese cowboy 2 years ago

today on the brooklyn bound F train, there was a real live chinese cowboy. how ironic – getting off in delancey, in chinatown. i wasn’t really sure where he was originally from, but he definitely wasn’t from chinatown. he was 6ix feet tall, wearing a black cowboy hat, tapered, unfaded denim blue jeans and black cowboy boots. it was really cool.


fall in love again (read all 22 entries…)
well at least i don't have to endure awkward first dates... 2 years ago

for now that is…


at a sushi restaurant in midtown on friday night, was a couple that apparently were on a first date. my friends and i couldn’t help but overhear them as they wrapped up their dinner and tried to figure out where to go:

HIM: So you wannna come back to my place?
HER (incredulously): Huh? In WESTCHESTER!
HIM: Well okay, then what about Privateeyes?
HER: Okay.


For those not familiar with NYC, Westchester is a suburb outside of the city limits and Private Eyes is a strip club.

We weren’t sure if they were for real or not, but it was totally funny at the time.


take a vacation (read all 2 entries…)
finally! 2 years ago

i truly suck because i don’t take enough vacations – i’m the dork with weeks left over bc I didn’t take time out to schedule them. Well the first vacation of the year is coming! St John’s here we come in April! Thank goodness Cheryl planned it or for sure I wouldn’t be going anywhere anytime soon. I’ve already stocked up on new beachy stuff even though its 30 degrees out here in nyc!


fall in love again (read all 22 entries…)
Now I Need a Place to Hide Away 2 years ago

I just discovered this article from NYT from the huge reader response it received in this Sunday’s edition.

It’s about a different kind of love, not a lover’s love, but a mother’s love, that still ends in heartbreak. The author’s story reminded me of how important it is to appreciate what you have now, because it can all be taken away from you in an instant.


http://www.nytimes.com/2006/02/26/f…les/26LOVE.html

February 26, 2006
Modern Love
Now I Need a Place to Hide Away
By ANN HOOD

IT is difficult to hide from the Beatles. After all these years they are still regularly in the news. Their songs play on oldies stations, countdowns and best-ofs. There is always some Beatles anniversary: the first No. 1 song, the first time in the United States, a birthday, an anniversary, a milestone, a Broadway show.

But hide from the Beatles I must. Or, in some cases, escape. One day in the grocery store, when “Eight Days a Week” came on, I had to leave my cartful of food and run out. Stepping into an elevator that’s blasting a peppy Muzak version of “Hey Jude” is enough to send me home to bed.

Of course it wasn’t always this way. I used to love everything about the Beatles. As a child I memorized their birthdays, their tragic life stories, the words to all of their songs. I collected Beatles trading cards in bubble gum packs and wore a charm bracelet of dangling Beatles’ heads and guitars.

For days my cousin Debbie and I argued over whether “Penny Lane” and its flip side, “Strawberry Fields Forever,” had been worth waiting for. I struggled to understand “Sergeant Pepper”; I marveled over the brilliance of the White Album.

My cousins and I used to play Beatle wives. We all wanted to be married to Paul, but John was O.K. too. None of us wanted Ringo. Or even worse, George.

It was too easy to love Paul. Those bedroom eyes. That mop of hair. Classically cute. When I was 8, I asked my mother if she thought I might someday marry Paul McCartney.

“Well, honey,” she said, taking a long drag on her Pall Mall. “Somebody will. Maybe it’ll be you.”

In fifth grade, in a diary in which I mostly wrote, It is so boring here, or simply, Bored, only one entry stands out: I just heard on the radio that Paul got married. Oh, please, God, don’t let it be true.

It was true, and I mourned for far too long.

Of course by the time I was in high school, I understood my folly. John was the best Beatle: sarcastic, funny, interesting looking. That long thin nose. Those round wire-rimmed glasses. By then I didn’t want to be anybody’s wife. But I did want a boy like John, someone who spoke his mind, got into trouble, swore a lot and wrote poetry.

WHEN I did get married and then had children, it was Beatles’ songs I sang to them at night. As one of the youngest of 24 cousins, I had never held an infant or baby-sat. I didn’t know any lullabies, so I sang Sam and Grace to sleep with “I Will” and “P.S. I Love You.” Eventually Sam fell in love with Broadway musicals and abandoned the Beatles.

But not Grace. She embraced them with all the fervor that I had. Her taste was quirky, mature.

“What’s the song where the man is standing, holding his head?” she asked, frowning, and before long I had unearthed my old “Help!” album, and the two of us were singing, “Here I stand, head in hand.”

For Grace’s fourth Christmas, Santa brought her all of the Beatles’ movies on video, a photo book of their career and “The Beatles 1” tape. Before long, playing “Eight Days a Week” as loud as possible became our anthem. Even Sam sang along and admitted that it was arguably the best song ever written.

Best of all about my daughter the Beatles fan was that by the time she was 5, she already had fallen for John. Paul’s traditional good looks did not win her over. Instead she liked John’s nasally voice, his dark side. After watching the biopic “Downbeat,” she said Stu was her favorite. But since he was dead, she would settle for John. Once I overheard her arguing with a first-grade boy who didn’t believe that there had been another Beatle.

“There were two other Beatles,” Grace told him, disgusted. “Stu and Pete Best.” She rolled her eyes and stomped off in her glittery shoes.

Sometimes, before she fell asleep, she would make me tell her stories about John’s mother dying, how the band met in Liverpool and how when Paul wrote the tune for “Yesterday,” he sang the words “scrambled eggs” to it.

After I would drop Sam off at school and continue with Grace to her kindergarten, she’d have me play one of her Beatles tapes. She would sing along the whole way there: “Scrambled eggs, all my troubles seemed so far away.”

On the day George Harrison died, Grace acted as if she had lost a friend, walking sad and teary-eyed around the house, shaking her head in disbelief. She asked if we could play just Beatles music all day, and we did. That night we watched a retrospective on George. Feeling guilty, I confessed that he was the one none of us wanted to marry.

“George?” Grace said, stunned. “But he’s great.”

Five months later, on a beautiful April morning, Grace and I took Sam to school, then got in the car and sang along with “I Want to Hold Your Hand” while we drove. Before she left, she asked me to cue the tape so that as soon as she got back in the car that afternoon, she could hear “You’ve Got to Hide Your Love Away” right from the beginning. That was the last time we listened to our Beatles together.

The next day Grace spiked a fever and died from a virulent form of strep. Briefly, as she lay in the I.C.U., the nurses told us to bring in some of her favorite music. My husband ran out to his car and grabbed “1” from the tape deck. Then he put it in the hospital’s tape deck, and we climbed on the bed with our daughter and sang her “Love Me Do.” Despite the tubes and machines struggling to keep her alive, Grace smiled at us as we sang to her.

At her memorial service 8-year-old Sam, wearing a bright red bow tie, stood in front of the hundreds of people there and sang “Eight Days a Week” loud enough for his sister, wherever she had gone, to hear him.

That evening I gathered all of my Beatles music — the dusty albums, the tapes that littered the floor of my car, the CD’s that filled our stereo — and put them in a box with Grace’s copies of the Beatles’ movies. I could not pause over any of them.

Instead I threw them in carelessly and fast, knowing that the sight of those black-and-white faces on “Revolver,” or the dizzying colors of “Sergeant Pepper,” or even the cartoon drawings from “Yellow Submarine,” the very things that had made me so happy a week earlier, were now too painful even to glimpse. As parents do, I had shared my passions with my children. And when it came to the Beatles, Grace had seized my passion and made it her own. But with her death, that passion was turned upside-down, and rather than bring joy, the Beatles haunted me.

I couldn’t bear to hear even the opening chords of “Yesterday” or a cover of “Michelle.” In the car I started listening only to talk radio to avoid a Beatles song catching me by surprise and touching off another round of sobbing.

I TRIED to shield myself from the Beatles altogether — their music, images, conversations about them — but it’s hard, if not impossible. How, for example, am I supposed to ask Sam not to pick out their music slowly during his guitar lessons?

Back in the 60’s, in my aunt’s family room with the knotty-pine walls and Zenith TV, with my female cousins all around me, our hair straight and long, our bangs in our eyes, the air thick with our parents’ cigarette smoke and the harmonies of the Beatles, I believed there was no love greater than mine for Paul McCartney.

Sometimes now, alone, I find myself singing softly. “And when at last I find you, your song will fill the air,” I sing to Grace, imagining her blue eyes shining behind her own little wire-rimmed glasses, her feet tapping in time. “Love you whenever we’re together, love you when we’re apart.” It was once my favorite love song, silent now in its White Album cover in my basement.

How foolish I was to have fallen so easily for Paul while overlooking John and George, to have believed that everything I could ever want was right there in that family room of my childhood: cousins, TV, my favorite music. But mostly I feel foolish for believing that my time with my daughter would never end.

Or perhaps that is love: a leap of faith, a belief in the impossible, the ability to believe that a little girl in a small town in Rhode Island would grow up to marry Paul McCartney. Or for a grieving woman to believe that a mother’s love is so strong that the child she lost can still hear her singing a lullaby.


meet up with people i haven't seen in awhile (read all 5 entries…)
H. 2 years ago

j’adore mon ami H.! He’s part of the original posse who all met up back in 95 and I still count him as one of my closest pals. He’s happily living in SF along with his hottie lawyer wife and they’re starting up their own business. I miss him! He puts up with all my crazy boy stories ; ) He totally ratted me out to the cute brit barman at Schillers last night! Sometimes I want to move out to SF just so we can all hang out again more often. Sigh, if only my life’s plan could accommodate that.


fall in love again (read all 22 entries…)
danny and annie 2 years ago

yesterday morning as i was getting ready for work, NPR replayed one of their most popular StoryCorps audios:

Danny and Annie

This couple has been married for almost 28 years, and their love story is so sweet and inspirational it made me cry. the most tender moments that danny likes to look back on are when his wife asks him the most mundane of questions (“wouldn’t you like some ice cream right now?) it’s those little things that he says still stirs his heart. sadly, danny passed away yesterday from pancreatic cancer. that morning NPR played a more recent interview with the two, now that they know that Danny is dying. Listening to them finish each other’s sentences, you can almost feel the depth of their love for each other. Their happy life together was the result of honest communication, compromise and devotion. I felt really sad that annie was losing someone she cared so deeply for, but she was also so grateful to have experienced her life with such a love, and that would give her the strength to get through this difficult time.


gain weight (read all 4 entries…)
this week 2 years ago

too many “liquid dinners” this week because its fashion week. but during the weekend i was pretty good –
at home
> 2 fried eggs
> 1 cup of rice
> macaroni and cheese (yes kraft kind, the whole box)
> 1 can of chunky soup
> 2 ensure shakes
brunch at bubbys
> 3 swedish pancakes with blueberry compote
> chocolate milkshake
> 4 slices of bacon
dinner at komodos sushi
> gingerale
> 7 pieces of sushi
> cucumber roll
> 3 peppermint patties

although my friend siobhan reminded me that i don’t really finish my entire entrees.

i have to go to a dept store to weigh myself, i refuse to buy a scale.


fall in love again (read all 22 entries…)
back in the saddle again... 2 years ago

ok, i realize i can’t accomplish #2 Thing , without somehow trying for this too, so i’ve put myself back out there again…we’ll see


go into shopping exile (read all 4 entries…)
yay! 2 years ago

ok i lasted through january – and all i bought was a cover for my ipod and jbl speakers (with a gift certificate, natch!). so i can say i’ve done this – my only allowances for spend this month was for food and art (music can count).


Entries
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