Thursday, June 7, 2012

On Cleaning Your Room


Well, it's that time of year again. Schoolwork has come to a close (blatantly ignores EE and Summer Reading), I'm spending more time at home than not (being social is for chumps), and the dust bunnies and endless piles of used notebook paper have become entirely too much. That's right folks.

I'm going to clean my room.

And upon declaring the beginning of such an intensive journey, I've begun to realize something. Something I've been thinking about for a long time. The world can essentially be divided into three types of people. Cleaners, slobs, and livers.

1) Cleaners- They're those people. You know who I'm talking about. The second you walk into their room you have to double take for a second, because you swear you don't remember the sign signaling a freaking IKEA showroom floor

Please ignore the mess... and the price tags.

Not only do I feel extraordinarily jealous that there are people that really have such pristine rooms, but I get annoyed at the amount of time and effort they put into keeping it that way. And I know what you're probably thinking. It's not that hard to pick up after yourself on a regular basis since it only takes five seconds and blah blah blah. Whatever.

They aren't just putting things away. They're dusting and vacuuming and organizing and interrupting their train of thought every time there's the tiniest thing out of place. And I just don't understand it. It feels... impersonal. Like when people have elaborate dining rooms in their homes that they don't use or how the waiting room in a nice doctor's office always looks awkwardly new even when you know thousands of people have sat in those chairs and flipped through those magazines. If something's your room, it shouldn't be that pristine. Not until your thirty-five with 2.5 kids and a white picket fence. When you're a teenager, or even in your twenties, you should be occupying yourself with far more important things than how even your sheets are or crooked picture frames. Come on guys, you're young. Act like it.

Hey meme, we don't need your existential crisis right now.

2) Slobs- Okay, so when I say slobs, I mean slobs. Like, the kind whose rooms have mysterious food stains on their bed, weeks worth of laundry on the floor, graded papers left over from third grade, and some sort of horrendous smell you can't seem to put your finger on. You may have seen extreme versions of them here:

That's funny, because it's a sponge... I think.

But in a likelihood, you probably have a milder version in your life right now. Maybe they're lazy. Maybe they're too busy with other things. Maybe they insist it's part of their creative process and the clutter around them symbolizes what the inside of their troubled mind looks like (#writerproblems). However, regardless of how or why, the fact that their living space is disgusting is just as unacceptable as having a room that's too clean. In fact, I'm pretty sure it's worse.

I don't care if you spend 80% of your time at school or with friends or riding wild dinosaurs into the sunset. The other 20% still needs to take place in conditions condusive to human life (in which case, avoid the dinosaurs as well). I mean, I'm not telling you to conform or anything

Sanitation is so mainstream

but it's going to be pretty hard to keep your life together and organized with such broken and disorganized space to come home to. Whether or not you're the type of person that sits on their bum and grinds doritos into the carpet all day, you still have to get things done like homework and college apps and eventually bills and taxes, and it just doesn't work if you don't have a system of organizing things. Your room is a reflection of who you are and you need to treat it like you would an adorable puppy.

Take care of your puppy, dammit.

3) Livers

I couldn't resist.

I'm talking about livers as in people. People who, you know, live. Livers take up the majority of the population. They fall somewhere inbetween the Cleaners and the Slobs with none of them being completely Cleaner or completely Slob. Kind of like the political moderates and independents of the room cleaning world


Screw politics. Let's dance.

What's so great about being a Liver (because, you know, I am one) is that your rooms looks simply... lived in. It's not a disaster or anything, but it's not squeeky clean either. Most of your books are put away, but you still have one or two with bookmarks sitting on your bedside table, your floor is clean, but there's a few discarded items of clothing pushed in the corner because you were in too much of a rush to throw them in the hamper. While Cleaners have rooms like term papers and Slobs own spaces that read like jibberish, there's something about the room of a Liver that reads like a gripping story, told by the slight misplacements and shifts in an otherwise uniquely imperfect room. Livers are the rest of us. The ones they don't have a show or store dedicated to. But, like our stories, each one of us is still worth reading.

And now that I've gone on that profound tangent, it's three in the morning and I've accomplished nothing.



Ah, summer cleaning.



Tuesday, June 5, 2012

On Avatar Sequels

Out of extreme excitement and mental exhaustion, I'm about to do something I've rarely done before.
I'm going to curse on the internet. Alot.
Please bare with me.

If you came on here thinking this was going to be about Avatar the blue people movie, you're about to be very disappointed.

Eh, same difference.

This is about the friggin awesome Nickelodean anime series that made my life worth living in the fucked up years of middle school. (Actually, that's a lie, but the time from 5:00pm to 5:30pm on Tuesdays was pretty nice). As a budding preteen nerd, Avatar: The Last Airbender was the best thing that had ever graced humanity as far as I was concerned. Like, ever. If you haven't had the complete and utter pleasure of viewing the four season long masterpiece, here's a recap.

 Water, Earth, Fire, Air

There's a fucking boy in there.


Adventure time!

My feet have eyes!

Fuck you brother.

Oh it's on.


Daddy doesn't love me.

Yay, I'm the favorite child.

Raaaaaggggeeeee

Fuck.

And they lived happily ever after.

Okay, so, there's obviously way more to it than that, but that'll have to do for now. Basically, the bald guy is Avatar Aang, who controls all four elements, and he goes on to save the world and then marries Katara, who can control water. And people loved this concept so freaking much, that after it ended (to the tearful dismay of my younger self), they decided to make a sequel.


A sequel that kicks major ass.

Feminism Bitches

The Legend of Korra takes place decades in the future after Aang has passed on. The new Avatar, Korra, is out to master air as her fourth and final element and does so under the watchful eye of Aang's son, Tenzin, in the supposedly utopian Republic City. As the series progresses however, it is pretty damn obvious that things are far from perfect.

I watch you in your sleep

There's a movement lead by king creeper above to capture all benders (people who control an element) and "purify" them of their powers to supposedly "equalize" the playing field for nonbenders.

Well, gosh, that sounds familiar.

So it's up to Korra, Tenzin, the chief of police, and some eye candy

Hey there... I like your scarf.

Most adorable flex ever.

 
I cause love triangles.

to bring Republic City back to peace and solve these growing tensions.

Oh, and did I mention this is all in a Steampunk/Gilded Age motif with Jazz in the background, choppy old movie intros, just a hint of victorian style, and oodles of noodles of industrialization?

Well I did now.

And with only eight episodes up so far, I suggest you catch up now while you still can. Trust me, you won't be sorry.

On Starting a Blog

This seems appropriate

I'm a firm believer in the idea that what goes on the internet is there forever. It's permanent. There's no erasing it, no undoing it. No taking it back. It's out there for the entire world to read and judge and interpret however they wish. That's the main reason I'm doing this blog. Because sometimes you need a place you can be heard and felt by everyone, or at least everyone who reads this. And right now is one of those sometimes.


The other reasons for taking on this here project have very little to do with my deep need to connect with the universe and very much to do with objectives more often affiliated to sanity.

Reason 1: It's summer, and I'm an extraordinarily unmotivated high school student who aspires to be the next great American playwright. But to do that, I really need to be writing everyday. Like EVERYday. Because practice really does make perfect. And since diaries seem too personal and are condusive to hand cramps, I thought slapping away at my keyboard for a bit each night might be a nice substitute. Yeah? Yeah!

Reason 2: I'm also in a fierce competition with some friends of mine...a competition only I know about. They've also started a blog. A really clever blog about theatre (which I love) and their thoughts on the subject. And it's so very witty and wonderful and a large part of me is bummed that I was never included in it.

Basically, I'm the kid in the middle: Blue.

Which is silly. I don't need to be included in every single activity my friends choose to partake in. That's clingy and... gross. Quite gross actually. And the whole thing was probably based on some sort of conversation I just wasn't there for, so I really have no reason to be bummed at all. But I'm feeling mildly green about it none the less. So, I thought I might combat it with taking initiative all on my own and being my own blogger. Because I refuse to be the least bit clingy or the least bit gross

Reason 3: I want to finish something. I want to finish something that isn't schoolwork or a chore or a job. Because I feel like everything I do is either wasting time doing nothing or being productive on someone else's watch. But not this time. I want to make something just for me and follow through with it for nothing outside of my own happiness. This is likely a symptom of my involvement in the IB program.

True Facts

IB is this international program in high schools similar to AP with different testing requirements as well as reflected community service and a myriad of various prejects, essays, and various scheduling restrictions. Yay.
You see, normally, I'd be writing this up for CAS hours in hopes that I'd fill one of their various "I'm a normal person" requirements. But not this time. No write ups. This project is mine and mine alone.

And on that lovely note, I have an econ class and many hours of post-midnight Legend of Korra waiting for me

So summer, friends, motivation, world...
Bring it on.