Tag Archives: me me me

Honk

A few weeks ago, I was out for a run. As I ran by a field, I happened to encounter one of my worst fears. It scared me so much that I immediately crossed the street to continue running, and even then, I couldn’t stop looking back to make sure I was really safe.

My friends are all afraid of normal things. Snakes. Spiders. Scary movies. The dark. But snakes don’t bother me at all. I kill spiders for my roommate. I can honestly say I have never been truly frightened by a movie—even The Exorcist wasn’t as scary as I expected. And I kind of like the dark.

But my friends probably couldn’t encounter anything while out running that would scare them that much unless it was a potential murderer or a vicious dog—neither of which caused me to cross the street while I was out running that day.

I’m afraid of geese.

Yes, geese. You’re probably laughing now. Most people do when I tell them that. But there’s actually a good reason for it. When I was growing up, my across-the-street neighbors, in addition to a horse, a donkey, chickens, and goats, had geese. And these geese, who had a penchant for making their way up the driveway and taking a stroll down the street, would sometimes chase after people. Apparently, this scarred me for life.

Nothing I can do can help me get over it, either. No matter how many times I tell myself that geese can’t hurt me, I can’t seem to comprehend it. One day when I was walking by the Charles with my friend Nicole, alongside some Canadian geese, she told me to say, “Riddikulus!” (the spell to combat the boggart in the Harry Potter books). That made me laugh, but didn’t really make me less afraid.

And geese are surprisingly hard to avoid. They congregate in fields, by the river—basically wherever there’s enough room and not too many people. Unfortunately, that includes many places where I like to run.

Fear isn’t unusual for me. I am a nervous person by nature. I worry, I over-think, I sometimes make myself sick. It’s a terrible habit, and one I’m trying to work on.

And I’ve actually managed to get over some more rational but also more debilitating fears. For a long time, I was scared of certain driving situations. In C-Town, I did everything I could to avoid going through two areas that were infamous for the accidents constantly occurring there. I also avoided driving long distances. Switching lanes on the highway freaked me out. All through high school, if the swim team was going somewhere far away, I let someone else drive because I wasn’t comfortable.

I was almost twenty-one when I finally decided that I needed to get over my driving fears. Two of my best friends were staying in Boston for the summer. I was at home, forty-five minutes away, and I couldn’t see them because I was too scared to drive. So one day, I got in the car, took a deep breath, and got onto the highway. After doing this a few more times, for increasingly longer distances, I was ready to drive to Boston.

I also used to hate answering the phone. At home growing up, I always let the answering machine get it. At internships I had, I would avoid answering the phone if I possibly could. It just made me nervous, having to be responsible for giving people answers or leaving accurate messages.

Then I had a job at The Publishing Company where I was the first point of contact for the sales reps. If they had a question about anything, they had to call me first. This kind of freaked me out at first. I just wanted to yell, I don’t know what I’m doing! You can’t ask me these things!

But then I got used to it—and I realized I did know what I was doing. I actually could answer all those questions. It was a good feeling.

So I guess there’s hope for me. I’ve picked up the worrying habit that runs in my family, but maybe I really can get over it eventually.

But I’m still afraid of geese. That, I have no idea how to get over. Let me know if you have any ideas.

One Year Later

One year ago today, I graduated from Boston College. Condoleezza Rice was our speaker, which not only caused a lot of protest but led to increased security, so it took literally hours to get everyone into the stadium. I’d been up all night at Senior Sunrise on the parking garage roof, so I kept nodding off during the ceremony. Later, I kept falling asleep and waking up crying.

It didn’t feel like a celebration. It just felt an end. Granted, at the time I didn’t have a job, but I didn’t see graduation as a time to go out into the world and discover new possibilities. I could only see it as everything I’d loved about my life for the last four years disappearing. I was losing my friends who were moving away. I was losing a lot of free time. I was losing Chorale and Liturgy Arts Group and The Heights, and parties and campus events and dining hall food (which I did actually like). And believe it or not, I was mourning the loss of classes. I really loved most of the classes I took at BC, and I was going to miss them as much as anything.

Now, after being out of school for a year and working full-time for most of that year…honestly? My opinion hasn’t changed much. My sister is still at BC. Right now I live within feet of BC with Christina, who was my college roommate for two years. We live here mostly out of convenience, but it’s also been nice because it can kind of lull me into believing that I’m still in college.

I do love my job, and I’ve met some great people and made some wonderful friends there. But one reason I enjoy my lunch breaks at work so much is that it’s an hour a day I can spend with my fellow broke twenty-somethings—an hour a day I can stop pretending to be a grown-up. I still have an easier time relating to college students than to those in the working world. I can’t relate to anyone over the age of about 30 at all. Or at least to anyone who has his or her life together—has good money, owns a house, happily married, etc. I just feel like I have nothing to talk about with those people.

College ending kind of threw some relationships off-kilter. With friends who’ve moved out of town, our friendships are kind of permanently frozen in whatever state they were in a year ago. In other cases, I’ve been able to re-connect with friends who did stay in the area. College cliques sometimes dictate who you hang out with, so with that factor removed, I’ve been able to rekindle some old friendships. So that’s one good thing, I guess. But college is something I’ll never get back, and I don’t want to keep wondering if I made the most of it, or if there are opportunities I should have taken advantage of or things I should have done differently.

I really don’t feel like I’ve changed much in a year. I can only imagine what that makes some people reading this think about me. Maybe it validates your opinion of me as pathetic or immature, but it’s still the way I feel. I just hope I’m not writing the same entry this time next year.

What Pisses Me Off More Than Anything

I am about to admit an extremely disturbing fact about myself. In this day and age, there are plenty of things to get pissed off about. But the strongest amount of anger I’ve ever felt wasn’t over Darfur or global warming or the war or homelessness or world hunger or cancer or human rights violations. So what was it that caused me to writhe and seethe in the most frightening rage I’ve ever felt?

My computer.

Depending on my mood, “stupid,” “fucking,” or “piece of crap” can sometimes follow “my.”

Here’s my story. Yesterday, I came home, and my roommate Christina, who has a job interview next week, asked me if I’d take a look at her cover letter and resume. I said yes (and, on a side note, said “covah letta” without even thinking about it, thus proving that I can still drop r’s like the best Bostonians) and headed to the computer. Here’s what ensued.

First of all, I should note that on Christmas Eve 2005, I got a computer virus and my hard drive had to be wiped clean. Luckily, I had most of my stuff backed up, but my computer has had all kinds of quirks since then. Among them are its inability to use screensavers, so when I return to my computer after a long absence, there are three possibilities. I might simply have to press any key to return to what I was doing. I might have to hit the on button and then long back in. Or I might have to restart completely. On any given day, it might be any one of those options.

Yesterday it was option b, hitting the on button and logging back in. After that, however, I had to take out and re-insert my wireless card several times before I could connect to the Internet. When I finally did, I logged into gmail. I clicked on Christina’s attachment.

And I waited. And I waited. And w a i t e d . . .

The thing is four and a half years old, and it shows its age by having moments of ridiculous, incredible slowness. This was its worse one yet. After twenty minutes of not being able to open the attachment, I shut down the computer.

And then, of course, I had to wait about ten minutes, as always, for the computer to boot up and connect to the Internet. After clicking on Firefox, I had to wait for that to load. And once I got into gmail and clicked the attachment again…it was s t i l l s l o w.

By the time I finally got the attachment open, it had been about an hour. Yes, you read that right. It took me an entire hour to open one fucking attachment!

I first got this damn thing I’m typing on now in August of 2002, right before I started college. I was thrilled—it was the first time I’d owned my own computer. And for awhile, I was quite fond of it. I made my first mix CD on it. I typed my thesis on it. I wrote the few pieces of my writing that have been published on it. We had a lot of good times, this piece of crap and I.

But screw nostalgia. I can only take so much abuse. I can’t let this thing be like the boyfriend who calls you fat and won’t return your calls and, when you try to call him on it, reminds you of all the great things he’s done for you in the past and then has a couple of good days to try and make you forget.

But I WILL NOT FORGET! Computer, our days are over. I am breaking up with you. I am moving on and becoming a stronger person for it. You’re just getting shoved in the back of my closet.

Seriously, the amount of anger I sometimes have towards this thing is truly frightening. So I’m going to get a new one sooner rather than later. I don’t care if I go broke over it. Saving money is not worth my sanity.

Sure, this might read like an overreaction. But you know what? You wait until it takes you a FUCKING HOUR to open an attachment, and then tell me if you’re thinking about world hunger.

Ode to a House

I miss my house. And yes, Mom and Dad (who I know are reading this), I miss you, too, but that’s not the point of this entry. The point is, I miss my house. And I miss it in a way that few other people can say they can.

Until September 1, 2006, I had never moved. I had only lived in college dorms and in the house my parents had lived in since they got married. So this fall marked the first time in my life I had a different permanent address.

Now, I can’t say enough how much I love my apartment. Great location (near both BC and the B line), lots of space, my own room, even a sunroom and a little porch. And it came with a lot of furniture. The only issue I have with my new place is that the water pressure’s too low for me to take a bath.

But still, I miss my house. You get to know a place when you live there for 22 years. You appreciate its location, even though you’re still mad at your parents for telling you, when you were a kid, that the street is too busy for you to ride your bike (it isn’t). It’s five minutes from your elementary, middle, and high school. Down the street from a convenience store, post office, pizza place, dry cleaner, hairdresser, gas station, and, until recently, video store. Ten minutes from a mall (and the state of New Hampshire, where there’s no sales tax). Two minutes by foot from a waterfall and a set of railroad tracks, across which run freight trains whose noise in the night you no longer notice. Across the street from neighbors who have ponies and chickens, and who used to have goats and a donkey. Close enough to a shooting range for you to joke that your house is one of the few places where you’re equally likely to hear gunshots and a rooster crowing. (When you were little, you didn’t know what the gunshots were and used to imagine that a blackboard had fallen off a truck somewhere nearby.)

And then there’s the house itself. It’s a white house with gray shutters and a gray front porch, and a white lamp post in the middle of its small front lawn. Built sometime in the late 1800s, originally as a blacksmith shop. The houses around it were a tavern, a community barn, a post office. You used to imagine that there were ghosts in it, even wrote stories for school about your house being haunted, although you’ve never seen anything remotely supernatural. The front of the house looks old, but your parents had an addition put on right before your sister was born, which resulted in a long, skinny house. There’s a gray bench on the porch, and a door that is either screen or glass paned, depending on the season. The screen/glass door and the actual door open on opposite sides, which you never thought about until your friend Jenna pointed it out.

There’s a gigantic pine tree on one side of the house. On the other, by the driveway, is a cherry blossom tree. For about three days in April, it blooms into these beautiful pink flowers. After that they all fall off the tree and it looks kind of like pink-tinted snow.

There’s a patio out back, with a basketball hoop from when your sister played basketball. There’s lawn furniture on the patio, underneath the branches of this tree that you think is called a catalpa tree. You used to lie on the lounge chair and read all the time. There’s a toolshed, and a tiny hill, which was great for sledding when you were little. You also used to have a sandbox and a swingset. And behind the house there’s a swamp, and woods that go on for awhile.

You have, like many homes, a living room and a dining room, both of which you never use unless there’s company. There’s the kitchen, the family room (the one with the TV and piano and comfortable chairs—the room you actually use), and the porch, which has furniture but which you more often than not use as a mudroom. There’s a pantry off the kitchen, which you and your sister and cousins, for some reason, used to think was a great hiding place. The basement isn’t finished (which you always hated growing up). You need a ladder to get to the attic, which holds your Christmas ornaments and some random fur coat (?) and has nails sticking out of the ceiling. Towards the back of the second floor are your parents’ bedroom and bathroom. Near the top of the stairs is the bathroom you and your sister use. Opposite the staircase is your sister’s room, and at the front of the house is your room.

And yes—I don’t think there’s anything original I can say about that. Everyone remembers their bedroom most of all. It’s the place where you read your favorite books at night, cried into your pillow, and sat on your floor with your friends in sixth grade listening to Alanis Morrissette’s Jagged Little Pill. It’s where you had a shelf where you put the porcelain angels your grandmother gave you on your birthday every year. Where you wrote your favorite lyrics on the edges of your bulletin board with white-out pen. Where you made a list of things your seventh-grade teachers said over and over and posted it on your bedroom wall. Where you hung a large glow-in-the-dark star you had everyone sign after you got at the Museum of Science when you were there for your friend’s birthday party. Where you opened up your armoire on the day of your dance recital when you were nine and, because you were wearing lipstick for one of the few times in your life thus far, kissed the inside of the door to see the lipstick mark. Where you would go into your closet and turn on your light when you wanted to finish your book and it was past your bedtime. Where you stored every notebook you’d ever owned, with every short story and poem you’d ever started and some you’d finished since you were six, under your bed. The place that, despite your incredible love for your new apartment and your bedroom therein, you still find yourself missing.

Or maybe that’s just me.

Who Am I?

2-4-6-0-1! (Ten points if you know where that’s from).

But seriously, who am I? And why do you care? I’ll try to answer the first question as best I can, but for the second I can only hypothesize. My guess is that you’re willing to test my theory that I do, in fact, have something to say. And I appreciate that.

So: my name is Katie. I am a May 2006 graduate of Boston College, where I majored in English. Last month I got a job working for a publishing company that I’ll just call The Publishing Company (TPC), since I’m a little paranoid about blogging about work. It only took me two months out of college to find a job, but it felt like forever. So far, I love it.

I grew up forty-five minutes north of Boston. Just last week, I moved out of the house I’d lived in all my life into an apartment in the Boston area, closer to work. I’m living with my college friend and her brother, and so far, everything’s great. At least, it will be until I run out of money.

So, what do you need to know about me? Well, I was thinking about it, and I realized that most of what makes me me can be attributed to the fact that I have lived in Massachusetts my entire life. I fit so many of the Massachusetts stereotypes (except the bad driver one. I’m a nervous driver, but not a bad one). So, here’s what you can know about me based on where I’m from.

Massachusetts is home to some of the most diverse, unpredictable weather in the world. I wouldn’t call myself unpredictable, but I’m definitely diverse. My interests are many and varied (see my profile).

Stereotypically, I am Irish Catholic. While I do not consider myself terribly political, my politics are generally pretty liberal, as Massachusetts is a famously liberal state- and, I’m proud to say, one that legalized gay marriage. My personality, however, is very conservative, which is fitting, because Massachusetts is actually pretty socially conservative, if you think about it. After all, the Puritans did come here, and even now, you can’t buy liquor in the grocery store (which my friend from California thinks is weird) and you can’t smoke in bars (which is great for those of us who hate smoking, but…kind of an oxymoron). Anyway, I’m not a big drinker myself. I didn’t drink at all until a few months before I turned 21, and I never drink to get drunk.

Massachusetts residents, I’ve found, have this weird stay-in-one-place mentality. Maybe because the state is so small and population-dense. I hear that in other parts of the country, people drive hours for a soccer game and think nothing of it, but here we complain about driving thirty minutes. And a lot of people who grew up here won’t leave- including almost my entire extended family. My mother and my grandmother both hate the weather here, and when I asked them why they wouldn’t move, they replied, “Because we grew up here!” Although I laughed, I do understand that. I am kind of a homebody. Although I’ve flirted with the idea of moving to New York, it’s hard for me to imagine cutting ties with this state.

I walk really fast and am very impatient with people in front of me who don’t, which I’m told is a Massachusetts thing.

Massachusetts is home to about a million colleges as well as Boston, the best college town in the world. It’s also a state that places great emphasis on education. I myself am pretty smart- not a genius, but smart. I always got good grades.

Massachusetts has also been home to many great authors, including Alcott, Hawthorne, Emerson, Thoreau, and Dickinson. I taught myself to read in preschool and haven’t stopped since. I read everything I can get my hands on- classics, chick lit, kids’ books, mysteries, short stories, romances, you name it. I also love to write fiction and non-fiction and I would love to be published. Writing to me is like sleep- technically, I can live without it for awhile, but it’s damn uncomfortable when it’s not there.

I am a Red Sox fan. From that, it follows that I am extremely loyal, not abandoning the team even after the disastrous 2003 playoffs. In my own life, I am loyal to everything and everyone I love. I don’t abandon people who need me, and even with stupid little things I’m very loyal- like, it takes me a long time to admit that I have a new favorite movie/TV show/musical artist, etc., because I’m still loyal to whatever I liked before. It also follows from being a Red Sox fan that I am an optimist. I had faith in a team that suffered an 86-year dry spell, and I now know that optimism pays off in the end.

For my interests, check out my profile. Other things you should know about me?

I have a sister two years younger than me and a large, very New England extended family.

I drink hot chocolate like most people drink coffee.

I collect quotes and write them out in multicolored spiral “quote wheels.”

My favorite color is purple.

I draw stars everywhere.

I’m kind of a girly girl.

I love taking baths. It’s killing me that the water pressure in my new place is too weak for baths.

I love animals but don’ t have any pets.

I suck at anything involving hand-eye coordination. I love swimming and running, though.

This past summer, before I was hired at TPC, I had two jobs, one at BC and one slightly off campus. It was the first summer I didn’t work at a swim and tennis club in my hometown of which I’ve been a member since I was six.

And I’m picky about food, movies, and men.

I’m sure you’ll learn more about me as I continue to blog. Please keep reading!