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  • 22nd Nov, 2007 at 11:56 PM
"Failure is always the best way to learn", according to Kings of Convenience. Well it's a bit late for that, don't you think?

I'm not going to stuff your pretty heads full of useless information about my exam, but it did not go well. And now we're done talking about it. My brain is an absolute mess due to frustration, exhaustion, sleep deprivation and possible malnutrition, but I am glad to be finished (in oh so many ways).

Now then, which day is it today, Thursday? Things I Love Thursday, you mean!

(OK, enthusiasm is giving me a headache. Let's just... not do that right now.)

So I can honestly say that I ain't  feelin' the lurve for very much at the moment. You'll have to make do with three things, as opposed to last week's ten, because right now I just need sleep. Buckets and buckets of it.

1) I love my computer.
You can see him in the photo in my last post - that's my Macbeth right there. Actually, pretty much my whole life as I know it is in that photo: my favourite coffee cup (the perfect shape, size and design for my tiny hands), my previously mentioned Marimekko notebook (it's very pretty, with yellow flowers on the cover) and my all-time favourite poster (which unfortunately belongs to Arne, and will therefore disappear after Christmas), my Sex and the City DVD box set (no explanation necessary) - this is, quite literally, my little corner of the world. Welcome.

2) I love tea.
Yeah, I've become a tea-drinker again; I keep ending up right where I started, and I'm beginning to think that maybe I really am a tea person. Which is a frightening thought, really, seeing as it would totally ruin my hip urban image.

3) I love my friends.
I know, what a cliché, right? But seriously, these are some patient people! Thank you for putting up with me, even when I act like a self-absorbed child. You know who you are. You're fabulous.

Tomorrow I've promised myself a Macbeth--free day, but that means that by Saturday I'll be practically bursting with amusing entry topics. And if not, I still have to introduce you to Basil, my mutant basil. He's such a charmer, you'll love him!

Thief

  • 11th Sep, 2007 at 7:52 PM
I have just done something naughty; I have stolen the sub-heading of another girl's blog. Bad Sjokoladepiken!

But it's so good! I'll give it back soon, I promise.

This might shock you, but I actually have to go study now. 'Sjokoladepiken's favourite things' and 'Because I care, part 2: Pulled together' coming soon to an LJ near you.



Edit: Hooray! I'm getting my money back for the gorgeous black peep-toe stilettos that died after two evenings' wear! I'm so relieved to finally have something that can justify the purchase of my new babies; a pair of red 40s-inspired patent peep-toe pumps with suede detailing and a chrome buckle.

I love being me.




'To you, I am an atheist. To God, I am the loyal opposition.'
- Woody Allen

Pride, prejudice, poppycock

  • 1st Jun, 2007 at 8:55 PM

'It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife.'



Almost two hundred years ago, Jane Austen chose these words for the introductory line of what was to become one of her many celebrated novels. Today I was reminded of it by my old friend, when she said 'You know, Sjokoladepiken, a single guy will never be looking for friendship first'.

This puts me in an awkward position. I'm in a long-term relationship, a happy one, and apparently that is the social equivalent to leprosy.

After a little research, I found out that the rules go more or less as follows:
1) Do not befriend a single guy. It will end in tears and heartbreak, and no, you do not have a choice in the matter.
2) If you do talk to a single guy, you must never seem even remotely interested in him or what he's saying, because he will get the wrong idea.
3) Always be clear about the fact that you aren't on the market. If possible, talk about your boyfriend all the time, so as to not get single guys' hopes up. Otherwise they will assume that you'll leave your him for them if you don't. Duh.
4) We've all seen When Harry met Sally. It's not going to work out, so you might as well not bother.

I'm sorry, did I miss a meeting? If I were single, approaching and getting to know new guys wouldn't be a problem, but now that I'm off the market I have to be careful as to what sort of signals I'm sending out, because all new guys I encounter will think I want to screw them (in one way another)?

I'm not sure about how to phrase this, but I think the most accurate I can come up with is this: Huh?

This makes no sense. Unless, of course, we assume that when a girl talks to a boy, there is a common understanding that she really just wants to have his babies. I mean come on. Seriously? Did feminism just take a really long lunch break?


I know there are at least one or two of you who are thinking 'She really shouldn't be the first one to bring this up', because a couple of my 'friendships' have morphed into something less appropriate. Then again: I've been there, and I've learned two things.

1) You do not want to go to the Land of Parallel Relationships. It's really, really bad, in the humid, hot, natural disaster sort of way. I can't believe the flights aren't being cancelled, because once you've been there you'll never want to go back. Ever.

2) Stupidity is not an uncontrollable urge; it is a choice.  This specific kind of stupidity inevitably demands a conscious (though often alcohol-assisted) choice from two people. It takes time, effort and loads of practise to really mess things up; it is an art which took me months to perfect, and I'm a really fast learner. This isn't something that just happens. You have to really work at it to be able to include all the nuances of pain, heartbreak, disappointment and misery. It is a talent reserved for a precious few of us, and we keep our secrets close to our breast.


You know The Rules? I've never been a believer in them. I don't have the ability to restrict my behaviour and play impossible-to-get like they demand, and yet my love life hasn't turned out all bad. My 'I'm going to let you know that I like you if I do, and then we'll just have to take things slowish and see how they turn out' approach has to have had something going for it, because now I'm past that bit.

Or so I thought. Every time I've met a nice, interesting guy with friend potential during the last year, even though the ground rules have been there from day one, there's been this 'You don't want to seem too interested, darling, he might take it the wrong way' coming from either my friends og my head. This causes the whole thing to fizzle out into a strictly professional relationship or a 'stop and talk in the street'-acquaintance, neither of which carry any promises so far as a future friendship is concerned. Apparently, once you've found your guy, you're not allowed near any of the others.

I wish we could all trust ourselves and be trusted to stay off the adulterous path, and to be honest with people so that nobody gets badly hurt. Unfortunately my rebelling mind does not exempt me from the norms. I too end up thinking 'ok, now it's his turn to make contact, I don't want to push it'. Since 'everyone else is doing it' I wouldn't want people to think my intentions were anything short of honourable. Things might perhaps possibly maybe once in a few years' time go wrong, and how could we defend ourselves then? I wish this all to be different, but I doubt it will change as long as there are millions of girls convinced that it's more inappropriate to make male friends when spoken for than when not. Ms. Austen had a point after all.

And seeing as Feminism doesn't have the power to do a thing, she is instead taking a long lunch break with her new friend Alan.

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On flirting - part one

  • 29th May, 2007 at 12:12 AM

A loyal few of you might remember a quote I posted some time ago, reading 'Sjokoladepiken; you could flirt with a shoe.'

This came from my close friend [info]aeva86 during one of our many conversations about flirting as a social tool. I’ve been planning to write a full-length entry on the subject of flirting ever since, but only this week have I actually done anything about it: I’ve been sitting at my computer for hours while trying to stitch together first an insightful, witty, quotable and mildly brilliant piece. After taking into consideration the advice that I shouldn’t set such high standards for myself, I swiftly rephrased that to ‘moderately readable’, and yet I failed miserably. So miserably, in fact, that my computer refused to save it. I almost fled Livejournal in search of a less demanding hobby, like Nordic walking, or colour-coordinating post-its. ‘But Sjokoladepiken,’ I thought to myself, ‘you’ve promised yourself you’ll complete this, so you’ll just have to find a way to do so. Remember what Grete said, and write about what you know.’ So, having discarded the whiny, self-indulgent, incoherent mess that could have stained your opinion of me forever, I will instead stick with what I do best: Nonsense.

Ok, now put away that judgmental face, or else I’m stopping right now. Good. Thank you. So let’s back to the flirting and the shoes. Besides being two of my best friends in the world, they are some big-time attention hogs who tend to get cranky when neglected.

First, though, I have a confession to make: I’m not very good at being able to tell when I’m flirting and when I’m not. On the whole, ‘flirting’ can mean so many different things, all depending on whom you ask to define it. Some would say that deliberately trying to seem fascinated by what Nameless Other Person von der Party Full of Strangers is saying (even though you might not be quite sure what exactly it is he’s going on about) is borderline flirtatious, simply because it’s a more deceptive way of handling social interaction than, say, standing silently in the corner so that everyone will understand that you don’t know anyone there (and aren’t really interested in changing that). Then there is the other, more full-on approach: ‘Do you mind of I sit on your lap? I might be a little heavy, but you look quite strong. Would it be very rude of me to ask you to flex?’ You know: sluttiness. There, I said what we were all thinking, wasn’t that brave of me?

At that end of the scale, though, I think we all more or less agree. At the other, more low-key end of the flirting spectrum, you will at one point encounter the very fine line that is drawn between what is called flirting and what is purely a form of socially intelligent behaviour that involves a specific body language with the intent to ease interaction. Not only is this line so thin that it is almost invisible (except in garish changing room light), its position also changes according to situation. It’s like the spring fashion; nobody really knows whether or not the ballerina pump is still hot. Vogue has it on its ‘discard immediately if you want to keep your self-respect through fashion week’ list, but InStyle is for the fifth season in a row celebrating the wonderfully ankle-slimming phenomenon that is toe cleavage as if Audrey Hepburn’s ghost had come back from the dead to tell the fashion editors that if they couldn’t squeeze one more season of hotness out of her signature shoe, she would pay Anna Wintour a visit and let her know that jeans in fact are a real no-no, causing figure-conscious women all over the world to embrace pocketed leggings and formal bike shorts in their absence.

I have this strangely familiar sensation that I’m losing focus. I was going to talk about what separates flirting from other behaviour in said grey area. Uhm, moving swiftly on:

I suppose the best way to determine what is and isn’t flirting is to look at the intention. While a lot of your everyday conversation-enabling behaviour is in the best interest of the majority, genuine, non-ironic flirting is always purely selfish. Not necessarily in a bad way, but it is: The flirters want something from the flirtees that they don’t believe they would get without a little pulling of strings (cue disapproving frowns). Some flirt to get laid. Some would bare a thigh for a free drink. Some, like myself, usually only flirt for the sake of the extra attention that enables you to have a conversation with a stranger that is more interesting than for instance one about the weather. So why is wanting more and actually doing something to get it so very, very unacceptable? People do it all the time, and more importantly, this happens on both sides of the ‘magic divide’.

Let’s think: Is flirting worse than, say, sucking up to the boss in order to try for a raise? Or telling a story at a party which is strictly speaking a slightly tweaked version of what actually happened? Aren’t these things just your basic Survival Strategy 101? What is it one does that is so immoral, or gets that is so undeserved? Does a little sexual tension really throw people off that badly?

I am the first to admit that there are times and places where flirting is out of the question. It is wrong to flash cleavage to the spotty fourteen-year-old in the supermarket to get a discount on peaches (so to speak). Your friend has recently dumped her boy, and you bump into him at a party: You want to stay far, far away (and fully clothed), even if he is the super-hot flex guy. There are plenty of situations where flirtatious behaviour would be mortifyingly inappropriate, you know, NATO conferences, funerals, that sort of thing. I have to point out this one small detail, though: People know that.

People also know that ending up as the wallflower is, frankly, a terrible waste of talent (and hairspray).

 

To be continued…

Quote of the day (so far)

  • 16th Dec, 2006 at 3:50 PM
Me: What should I wear to Eva's birthday party tonight?
Arne: Something really unexpected. Like whipped cream.

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13th Dec, 2006

  • 4:54 PM
Nothing but memes until after exams. I think.
Shit, I'm nervous.




[1.] What did you do in 2006 that you have never done before?
Get a full-time job. Move away from home. Move in with a boyfriend. Argue with him. Gain some sense of the value of money. Cut my hair short on purpose. Have an orgasm (I'm a tough one). Get over it.

[2.] Did you keep all of last years resolutions?
I can't even remember what they were, so I'm guessing not. I suspect 'become a better person in all conceivable ways' was on there, so...nah.

[3.] Have you any resolutions for next year?
Not any that I've finally decided upon. Stay tuned, for I can guarantee that they will be blogged. A few to start, though: Write more. Spend less uncontrollable amounts of money on silly little things (this worked really well for a while this autumn, but then it went straight back down again). Be a little less of a spoilt brat. Be a little more of a funky sex kitten.

[4.] What countries did you visit?
Uhm....Vestlandet? Ooh, and Portugal and Sweden. Been a slow year.

[5.] What would you like to have in 2007 that you didn't have in 2006?
Ambition, or motivation, or preferably both. A ZOP diploma. A plan.

[6.] What date in 2006 will remain etched in your memory?
March 20th. August 6th. More things went on in my mind in those few months than in the whole of last year, but it turned out really, really well.

[7.] What was your biggest achievement of the year?
Making a couple of independent decisions, and sticking with them.

[8.] What was your biggest failure?
Not changing the slightest by way of study routines etc., relating to this exam I keep mentioning...

[9.] Did you suffer any illness or injury?
 Not physical, no. Mental growing pains, yes.

[10.] What was the best thing you bought?
A fantastic coat. The perfect work shoes, and my first wedges. Tickets to Iron&Wine/Calexico. German dictionary.

[11.] Whose behaviour made you appalled and depressed?
EsHo's 'self-righteous-bastard'-ness, VaDa's puzzling neglect and MaGa's drunken alter ego. ArMo's general self. More than anyone's, though: my own.

[12.] Where did most of your money go?
Rent. New coat. German course. Lingerie and shoes.

[13.] What did you get really really really excited about?
Flat-hunting and everything connected to it. New friends. My new-found ability to be aware of the contents of my bank account at all times. Haircuts. New shoes. Thoroughly lovely boyfriend.

[14.] What songs will always remind you of 2006?
Mercury Rev: Goddess on a highway. Anna Ternheim: I'll follow you tonight. Regina Spektor: Us and Samson. Bjørn Kruse: Elements.

[15.] Compared to this time last year are you :
[A] Fatter or thinner? Pretty much the same, I think. A tad fatter, but I also allow myself to eat chocolate now, so it's ok.
[B] Happier or sadder? Happier. Much, much happier.
[C] Richer or poorer? Richer, even though that makes absolutely no sense.

[16.] What do you wish you'd done more of?
Gone for walks. Read. Had tea with friends. Kept in touch with people. Relaxed. Phoned my grandparents. Studied. Written proper things.

[17.] What do you wish you'd done less of?
Obsessed over hopeless issues. Cried. Worried. Complained about my job, my boss, my inadequacy and other people's clothes.

[18.] How will you be spending Christmas?
With my family at mum's place. Spending a lot of time alone, writing (crossing my fingers).

[19.] Which LJ users did you meet for the first time?
[info]Well... None that I hadn't met in real life first. But I got to know a few of those a lot better than I did before.

[20.] Did you fall in love in 2006?
Not in anyone new, but a second and a third time with someone old.

[21.] How many one night stands?
None. Oh, come on, you know me; I'm not a tart, I'm a flirt! A tarty flirt. Ok, I'm a flart.

[22] What was your favourite TV show?
I've hardly watched tv since I moved away from home. Gilmore Girls, maybe? Although even that was pretty dull towards the end. I've grown quite fond of Grey's Anatomy, though.

[23.] Do you hate anyone now that you didn't hate this time last year?
Not any more. Appalled and depressed is more my style.

[24.] What was/were the best books you read?
Hm, God I can hardly remember what I've read this year. I loved Få meg på for faen. Platform was great, and just what I needed at the time. Silk was beautiful. Eats, shoots and leaves was very, very entertaining. About a boy was sweet. But I think either Platform or Få meg på. Coin flip. *flip flip flip*
Platform. Jesus, how that book screwed up my mind...

[25.] What was your greatest musical discovery?
Anna Ternheim (hardly my discovery, but a discovery that meant a lot to me).

[26.] What did you want and get?
Happiness.

[27.] What did you want and not get?
The Oxford English Dictionary. I'll shut up now.

[28.] What was your favourite film this year?
'Tristram Shandy'? Or maybe 'Das Leben der Anderen'. Or maybe one of those that are slipping my mind right now. *slip*

[29.] What did you do on your birthday and how old were you?
I went to lectures. It snowed. Ice fell on my head. I got a haircut. I bought coffee. I felt sorry for myself. I hung out with MaMü. I spent time with boyfriend person. It was a really, really bad day. Oh, and yes, twenty. Big girl.

[30.] What one thing would have made your year more satisfying?
Something resembling a plan. Something resembling a lasting change in my lazy attitude towards schoolwork, avan though I know all too well that that's not going to happen unless I do something to make it so. Also: People sticking wround.

[31.] How would you describe your personal fashion concept in 2006?
Spring: Bag lady, or 'student' as they call it. Jeans re-enter my closet after a period of absence.
Summer: Romantic and shiny. Ballerina pumps and flowery skirts. Turquoise dress.
Autumn (and still going): I don't know, sexy librarian? And lots of happy cleavage on weekends, hoorah!

[32.] What kept you sane?
Friends. [info]sootpigdog for quite a while. Boyfriend on my spare time, MaGa at work. Tea, my red slippers and lj.

[33.] Which celebrity did you fancy the most?
Steve Coogan and Kate Winslet, tied. Runners up are Natalie Portman and Jarvis Cocker. Yummy.

[34.] Which political issue stirred you the most?
The whole Middle East thing and the Iraq nightmare are both just exhaustingly, horribly stuck. Loads of domestic issues fronted by verbally challenged politicians. I'm best at not getting involved.

[35.] Who did you miss?
My brother. Then there are the other fifty people.

[36.] Tell us a valuable life lesson you learned this year?
Loads of cliché standards, like 'love comes in all shapes and sizes', 'the most precious thing you have is your friends' etc. I keep learning those lessons a little better, but never quite well enough, so I don't think they count. I have learned, though, that you should never judge other people, and never make assumptions about them and their tastes, values etc. I'm starting to learn a few things about myself that can's be put into words right now, for fear of jinxing the process. I've learned that people don't, in fact, disappear if they don't mean to. I've learned that there loads of people in the world who have no idea of how good they really are, and that's a lesson I'd like to learn again and again and again.

[37.] Quote a song lyric that sums up your year...
One?! Jeez, no single song lyric that I can think of right now can sum up my entire year. The past six months, though, it has to be one from an I'm from Barcelona song:
'I don't care, let's pretend that it's Sunday'
'If you yould save me from the ranks of the freaks who suspect they could never love anyone...'


This is my favourite thing in the world. The hours before anyone else bothers to get out of bed. Tea; big pot, big cup. Sitting on the couch with my back against the armrest, and it's raining again. Music that is more silent than the room I'm in, erasing the sound of passing cars on wet paving and the voices of the three or four people that have walked past with their dogs and children.

I've figured out that I've yet to become one of those people who, when asked, describe their lives as 'oh, just another week at the office'. I can hardly remember the working hours, seeing as they're all more or less the same and very, very uninteresting. On the other hand, I can recall in perfect detail what's been going on from the second I've left work every single day this week. It seems my brain shuts down during those eight hours each day, and I'm pretty sure that's a sign that I'm bored to pieces and wouldn't be able to cope in any other way.

'All the feelings you've got for me are like you were a dog. Oh what a feeling for a dog.'

I've caught a cold, and that means:
- I have virtually no sense of humour, and also my memory of all the bitchiness I was planning on using as a cheap entertainment strategy has somehow escaped.
- My throat is killing me.
- My head feels like an extremely heavy ball of cotton wool.
- I've been sleeping in funny positions all night so as to keep warm in new, creative ways, so today I can barely move my neck.
- Just writing this is taking me ages.
- And all that yummy rhubarb tea is wasted on my dysfunctional taste buds.

Anyone who can't guess what's next? Oh c'mon, try. Yes! Of course! Another list! My never-failing plan B. I'm so predictable.

'She was lying on the floor counting stretch marks, she hadn't been a virgin and he hadn't been a god, so she named the baby Elvis to make up for the royalty he lacked.'

'Things I learned yesterday' (working title: 'Liz goes all Oprah on you'):

- I NEED to see Anne Ternmeim next week. I need to. No two ways about it.
- My German stinks, in the words of Mark Kermode, 'more than a very stinky thing indeed'.
- I don't care that the cheesecake at Bacchus always tastes the same, because it's always so freaking good. Oh, and avoid the Chianti. Bah.
- I can actually get away with wearing a miniskirt, if only just barely. That was really on Thursday, but it needed saying. I'm finally at peace with the lower half of me, and I've been waiting for this since I was twelve.
- Being caught singing Christmas carols in the restroom in mid-November can be pretty embarassing. And also kind of funny.
- The bras from La Senza are SUCH a wierd fit. Corset-like push without the lacing, made from material that's so synthetic that you break out in a rash just looking at it (would make for lovely Christmas decorations, though). I'll never feel comfortable defying gravity like that, but at least now I know that I can.
- The new friends you make are so much more random when you're out of the whole school system nightmare, and I love this, but it's also a bit of a tough cookie. There are some really lovely people out there towards whom I experience this massive tenderness that can't be explained, let alone expressed without the usual number of misunderstandings. All I can do is hope they don't disappear from my life like they sometimes have done.

'And I need your loving like the sunshine. Everybody's gotta learn sometime.'

Still to come: My wishlist for Christmas and another rant about work people. But first, breakfast.

I HATE seagulls

  • 25th Jul, 2006 at 11:59 AM
And just when I thought I was safe...


I get hit by a seagull! A bloody seagull!

Honestly, I haven't been so startled in a very long time, and Heaven knows, I'm jumpy. I was eating lunch, reading my book and listening to music, and all of a sudden a I have a beak in my face and wings, WINGS, FLAPPING on my head, and in my mouth, and ugh! And it steals what it can of my food (which, incidentally, was centimetres away from my mouth), pecking the stains into my white skirt, pecking, before swooooooping down to the ground, looking at me, gloating. It was HUGE, as big as me, and possessed by something really bad, like Satan or Tom Ford. By then I was covered in mackarel and tomato sauce, so it looked like I had the flesh wound of the century on my arm, and the half of my sandwich that the bird failed to get a hold of landed face-down in my library book, which was squashed together when the bird came acrashing.

Listen, you fucker, you may have got my lunch but you'll never get my dignity!

In five minutes I swear I'll be laughing at all of this, but until then, I quote Bree van der Kamp: 'Well, you've OBVIOUSLY never tried to remove a cheese stain!'

Best compliment of the day:

  • 18th Jul, 2006 at 11:50 AM
'You make cheap hairspray smell good'

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