Day 8 – Your favorite internet friend

Wow, is this a trap? Asking about my favorite internet friend on the internet… where my internet friends dwell?

If we define internet friend as someone who I have never met in real life, I will write to someone I have been talking to more recently and maaaaaaaaaay get to meet one day maybe, if the stars align.

Dear Matt,

‘ello guvna! Thanks for always humoring me when I try to put on an English (or, er, Cockney) accent in attempts to be less threatening (read: more cool) to you.

You’ve been a very good friend to me! You’re a very good listener and also a good sharer, which some people don’t realize is also a big part of a friendship. I’ve really enjoyed learning about you and befriending you, and of course, trying to reconcile the little differences between American and English culture and language.  (And also that the Titanic set sail from the town in which you went to university! Fun facts all around.)

You sent me a whooooooole box of Reese’s peanut butter cups. That was so stellar, you don’t even know. Even though my little brother ate most of them (……) I still felt alllll the love. 🙂

I’m really proud of you. I know the chemistry in university was tricky, but I’m really proud of you going after the culinary arts that you love. Your photos from Shepherd and Dog look so delicious and I hope I’ll get to try one of your wonderful concoctions someday soon!

I REALLY HOPE I GET TO MEET YOU WHEN I VISIT LONDON and thanks in advance for making the trip to London if we are able to coordinate this properly. 😀

Cheerio 😛

Starr

Your “posh egg & bacon”:
Slow cooked soft duck egg with crispy pancetta, smoked bacon foam and soldiers (toast strips in the US)

Storms & Transportation Services

Yesterday, I was able to take the time to pamper my face because we were in the midst of a very freaky storm system. (Weather reports were warning us of a derecho, which is super scary and strikes very quickly.) I doubted we would get the storm, as many others did, because it was quite sunny in the early part of the afternoon.

It suddenly got very dark around 3:30 PM, however, so I slapped on a mask and watched as a sudden torrent whipped through my street. My boyfriend told me that he was in his basement but that the storm had mostly passed for him, so I knew it wouldn’t last terribly long.

My biggest concern was the tornado warning. I have recurring nightmares about tornadoes, so while my curiosity as a scientist really wanted to see one, my fear of tornadoes made me want to curl up in fetal position in my basement. (Neither happened, because I am both a scaredy-cat and also a little proud. XD)

The rest of the day was pretty uneventful until I headed to campus. I left later than I wanted because I have to pay for daily parking and I figured if I got to the parking garage at midnight, I could pay for all of Friday. I got to the garage at 11:55 PM, so I waited in my car for 5 minutes before I went out to the meter machine.

… it wouldn’t let me pay for the day. It only gave me a 15-minute rate and an hourly rate. What. I started panicking a little because the whole point of me leaving late in the evening was so that I wouldn’t have to wake up at 7 AM to pay the meter. I was looking around for a number to call and maybe I accidentally hit the machine?

Because the next thing I know, the parking machine is sounding a car alarm at me, extremely loudly. I was freaked out like you don’t know. I just wanted to pay a parking fee and go to sleep, and now the machine was yelling at me from the roof. Luckily, it stopped about 30 seconds in, but it was really scary for me and I just kind of walked away dejectedly afterwards, knowing I’d have to wake up to pay for parking in the morning AND I was out late trying to avoid that anyway.

This morning when I woke up to pay the meter, I got up to the roof and I saw the transportation services truck going around my parking level. ZOMG I hustled to check that I didn’t already have a ticket and then I paid and shuffled away, staring down the transportation services truck as I did so…

Just thought I’d share. 😛

Lemony Snicket Would Approve

I’m leading an Alternative Break trip this spring (shameless plug asking for donations in return for silly challenges like speed-eating ramen, challenge of your choosing!) and I had two mandatory meetings related to that today. The first was by the organization at 4:00, and the second was my own meeting at 6:30. Both were so we could bang out the final logistics before leaving next weekend.

Since I normally don’t even get back on campus until 6:30, I left work early to take the earliest train back, which would bring me to campus at about 5:00. I checked my saved PDF of the schedule, checked the schedule again on the website, and arrived at the train station at 3:35 PM, ten minutes early for the train. No one was there, but 10 minutes is pretty early, I guess, and I’ve seen the train roll in late.

But by 3:50, I’m suspicious that something has gone terribly wrong. The marquee keeps telling me that the 5:20 train, my usual train, is on time. But what about my train? Isn’t it late?

I go inside the little station to find a phone number to call.

It is there that I see an updated schedule. Not even SUPER recent, but from January.

The first train to leave now leaves at 3:30 PM. I was not ten minutes early but five minutes late.

😦

This was pretty upsetting, especially because I really thought I had taken every precaution to not miss the train. I trudged back to work and then left at my usual time to catch my usual train.

Despite my best efforts, I fell asleep on the train. Just like I always do, but half the time I don’t mean to! I had a late night last night and my morning commute is always very early, so I was sleepy and I knew I’d probably fall asleep. I set an alarm for 6:00 PM, which is a few minutes before we arrive at my usual stop.

My alarm rings, I see that we’re 2 stops ahead of mine, and I wait patiently. I see a stop, and I get ready for the next one.

Somehow… the next stop turns out to be the one AFTER my stop.

What in tarnation?!

I either blacked out when we reached my stop OR I blacked out for the stop before mine and mistook my stop for that one.

Either way, I was stuck going to DC and taking the metro back to school, adding an additional hour to my commute back to school.

Remember, I’m already late missing the first train. If I hadn’t missed my stop, I would’ve been just in time to make it for my second meeting. This is the meeting that I AM RUNNING and IN CHARGE OF.

I dash out the train and to the metro station. I know I don’t have my SmarTrip card on me, so I get in line to buy a farecard.

Among about a million billion tourists. During rush hour. Goodness gracious.

I finally get to the machine. “SMARTRIP ONLY”. WHY?! I get into another line, even longer. At the front of this line is a group of Chinese people who seem very confused and, more importantly to me at the time, very slow. I offered them help in Mandarin and helped them get on their merry way out of the line.

Of course, as soon as I get on the metro, I realize that actually… I do have my SmarTrip with me. At some point in my life, I decided not to be a complete moron and put it in my wallet. Genius.

I make it to school without a hitch after that point. It’s 7:15 and I’m running to my meeting. I get there just in time to see the last person leaving and my co-organizers cleaning up.

After all that, I completely missed both of my meetings.

Needless to say, I am not a happy camper. Even catching up The Big Bang Theory isn’t helping things much.

(Shameless plug: It might cheer me up if you helped donate to my cause! I’m curious to see how many people would donate just $1. Don’t be freaked out by them asking for your address and stuff; they just like sending thank you letters to you afterwards.

I definitely WILL do something when I reach $200, so leave a challenge suggestion when you donate!)

21 and Over?

I didn’t drink at all until I turned 21.

At this point, it’s difficult to articulate why. I know why I didn’t drink throughout most of my college (and of course through middle school and high school): I was very confident in my ability to have fun at a party without alcohol, I didn’t want to pay for alcohol, few of my friends drank, and I’ll be honest, I definitely had this sense of self-righteousness where I judged people for drinking, especially if they tended to drink in excess.

And let’s be real, it’s college, so they usually did.
(Also, I’m pretty embarrassing on a regular basis. I’m a bit frightened to know how much more embarrassing my behavior would be if I was under the influence of alcohol.)

IDIOT DRUNK FRIENDS

Combine the illegality of me drinking with my aversion to risks and disobeying the Man, and I would actually get pretty frustrated with people telling me to drink. Was it worth the risk for me to obtain a fake ID? Just to get into a bar and not drink? Because wasn’t I already a lot more extroverted sober than any of these friends were tipsy or drunk?
Not even a little bit.

Why I decided that I would start drinking when I was legally permitted to… is a different story. Trying to resolve the cognitive dissonance, I guess the illegal component is definitely gone. If a party is busted, I’m not going to be underage and therefore I cannot get in trouble for being present or even for drinking. (This was a huge fear of mine every time an RA or, worse, the cops knocked on the door of a party I was attending, even though I never drank at any of these parties.) Also, since I have such a late birthday, it means that almost all of my friends (in my class and up, I don’t party with no young’uns) have already turned 21. Whatever rebellious notions that most young adults have to stick it to the Man and, as studies show, result in serious binge drinking before the age of 21 was magically dissolved by everyone turning 21. Yes, a lot of my friends still get pretty shwasted, even if they’ve been 21+ for years now. (You know who you are! :P)

Regardless of the reasons why, I have started drinking a little now. My tolerance for alcohol isn’t piss-poor, as I thought it would be. I’m fair-skinned, prone to blushing, and my mom tends to glow after half a glass of wine, so I was sure I’d be a big ol’ red-faced Asian. Luckily for me, I’m not, and since the taste of alcohol still puts me off a lot, I have not come anywhere close to approaching my limit, so I don’t have “fun” stories about that either.

I have, however, noticed immediately the difference with which I am treated now that I drink at parties. The first party I noticed this with was a graduation party I attended in December. It was a lot of my friends that I didn’t really hang out with very much – my cooler Asian friends. I never really went to any parties with them before, but it was really nice to just sit and spend time with them outside of the events we had at school. It was also pretty innocent because we were at the grad’s house, with his parents and younger sister present But at some point, someone insisted that we start drinking the abundance of alcohol that was available. I didn’t have very much, but I noticed a difference in my interactions with my friends at the party and also subsequently after. I’ve been invited to a New Year’s Eve and Superbowl party since by these friends, and I am almost positive that I would not have been if I hadn’t been drinking with them a little before Christmas. I know that if I don’t go hang out with them in the near future, I probably will stop seeing these invites.

I hung out with some of my old hallmates last weekend after I made a reappearance into their lives and they were just like, “Wow we’ve never seen this side of you before!” I never hung out with them freshman year, and I wasn’t acting differently from how I usually act at parties (i.e. dancing before everyone is drunk and a general embarrassment to myself) (dishonor on my cow). I drank with these friends and they were very nice to me. I’m not sure if they were nice because I was drinking or because they were drinking… They never saw  “this” Starr getting low to Flo Rida (side note: I’m a big fan of getting low) and the East Side Boyz.

After these parties, I thought long and hard about why this is. It’s not like I’m acting particularly differently from how I do normally. Why is it that me having half a beer suddenly makes people so nice to me?

It occurred to me lat night that maybe I seemed standoffish or even… “threatening” by denying drinks. Did people perceive me as self-righteous and judge-y when I denied drinks? Probably. And I am guessing that people don’t like hanging out with uptight chicks who are judging them for letting loose and having fun. I say “threatening” only because I guess it’s a camaraderie thing; if someone isn’t partaking in this social bonding activity, it comes off almost as rude. By me not denying their gesture of kindness, I seem like less of a b*tch, for lack of other words. (I gave up swearing for Lent, so I will not be typing or uttering curse words.)

It’s interesting because I know that the only aspect of my behavior that has changed is my answer when people offer me a drink.

But that one little change has made quite a difference.

I guess this will make for a slightly different social experience for my last semester of college. I went to one of our local bars for the first time this past weekend. (Well, after happy hour, anyway.) It was fun seeing so many people I knew, and I get the feeling that those people will treat me a bit differently now that they’ve seen me as part of the bar scene.