28 June 2008
Bliss
26 June 2008
Cedar City Day 2
I always eat a tart ($2.00 this year. Shocking!).
I always visit Ye Olde Catholic Thrift Shoppe.
I always get a veggie sandwich with delightful French feta at The Pastry Pub.
I always force whoever I'm with to go to the audience orientations to the plays and to the Greenshow.
But I never go to the seminars. The Festival offers free seminars the morning after each play, and the audience is encouraged to ask questions and discuss the previous night's (or day's) performance with directors and actors. My family never attended the seminars when I was a child, because I was a child. And when I grew up and began attending the Festival without my family, I never attended the seminars because, apparently, I'm an idiot. My parents and I participated in two seminars this morning--a discussion of "Othello" and the actors' seminar with James Newcomb and Jonathan Peck (the actors who play Othello and Iago). Wonderful! There were a few tedious people asking questions in the audience, but overall it was really interesting. The seminars are going on the list of things I always do when I come to the Festival.
Tomorrow: Cyrano de Bergerac, Cedar City's only organic restaurant, and more hating of people who tan topless at my hotel swimming pool.
24 June 2008
Out of Town
Hotel = Functioning Air Conditioning
Life is sweet. (And will be sweeter after I get my tart before seeing "Othello" tonight.)
On the drive here, I was in charge of music. I started with a CD that my parents also own. The next CD was a music group they're unfamiliar with but has a similar feeling to some of the artists they enjoy. The NEXT CD was a music group the parents were unfamiliar with and edgier than their normal musical selections. Soon I will have them listening to thrash metal.
23 June 2008
H V A C
I have a philosophy about HVAC (I have philosophies about most things: Hummers, blogging, foods that can be mixed with pasta, etc.) and it is that the heating or air conditioning in a room should allow the inhabitants of the room to wear the clothes they would wear outside in a particular season to be comfortably worn inside in that same season. Soooo, in the winter, I want to be able to wear my sweaters in the house without burning up because the heat's cranked up so high that it feels like I'm vacationing in the Canary Islands. (A hot house in the winter just makes me cry that I'm not actually in the Canary Islands and raises my utility bill.) And in the summer, I want to be able to wear my capri pants and short-sleeved shirts indoors without digging out sweaters and slipper socks to shield myself from the air conditioning.
Because of this philosophy, I didn't mind too much when I woke up this morning and the house was 78 degrees. But then I baked a pie and it was 80 degrees inside the house. And people were convening at my house for a meeting. And it seemed unlikely that they would feel that 80 degrees was an acceptable indoor temperature. And I had started to sweat. And I was feeling like we were going to have to hold our meeting in swimsuits. So I turned on the air conditioning. And the temperature rose to 83 degrees.
It's cooling off outside now, but if I open the windows, the Box Elder beetles swarm into the house.
It's a hard knock life for me.
20 June 2008
Mix CD
If I were to make a mix CD right now, this would be my playlist of songs that currently make me happy:
As Cool As I Am - Dar Williams
This continues to be among my top 3 favorite songs of all time. Annie introduced me to Dar when we were freshman in college. Good Annie.
Gillian - The Waifs
A Comet Appears - The Shins
Swallow - The Wailin' Jennys
Lloyd, I'm Ready to Be Heartbroken - Camera Obscura
Thirty One Today - Aimee Mann
Librarian - My Morning Jacket
I just discovered this song yesterday in a national library newsletter. Mostly I'm just willing to support any song/book/movie that features a librarian.
My Hands are Shaking - Sondre Lerche
Inner Smile - Texas
It Rains Everywhere I Go - Lynn Morris
Whole Wide World - Wreckless Eric
Song suggestions? Oh, and has anyone read Love is a Mix Tape? I have not but I'm willing to check it out with the smallest amount of encouragement.
19 June 2008
Sometimes I'm a Bad Librarian
This reminded me of a time when I was a very bad librarian. Very bad. A man with many disabilities came to the desk to ask about some materials. Because of his disabilities, the man was almost impossible to understand. He asked me about two books. One was a religious book and one was something that sounded to me like Happy Birthday Four. I had to ask the man to repeat himself several times before I realized what the first book was and when I found it in the catalog, the book was checked out. I offered to place a hold on the book, but the man declined my offer. Then he asked me again about Happy Birthday Four. I really had no idea what he was requesting and I didn't want to keep asking him to repeat himself, so, true confession, I told the man that we owned the book but it was checked out. I was counting on him to say that he didn't want to place a hold, because that's what he'd done with the previous book. But, no! My plan failed. He wanted to hold Happy Birthday Four. So I pretended to reserve it for him. I. Pretended. To Reserve It For Him. That's pretty bad service, my friends. EXCEPT that I spent the next half hour racking my brain for a book that might sound like Happy Birthday Four and finally came up with Harry Potter 4. And I placed the man on hold for Harry Potter 4. And I hope that's what he wanted. And if it wasn't, someone else dealt with it, because the man and I never spoke again. True Story.
17 June 2008
Kilts
In addition to 12,000 bagpipers, there are many Highland games at the Festival. I like the caber toss best. And there are many people who love dragons and fairies and swords. I'm glad they have somewhere to gather and spar and get away from the role-playing games for a few hours. And there are many, many kilts.
Some people look good in kilts.
I don't have any idea who this is, but the picture is in the public domain, so I stole it from Wikipedia.And some people do not.
How Bad My Lawn Is
Stranger: Hey. How are you?
MBC: I'm fine. Thanks.
Stranger: So, I just thought I'd stop by and see how you are.
MBC (silently in head): Do you think we know one another? Because we don't. You don't look even a little bit familiar to me. And you're not selling anything, because it's Sunday and there's a baby in the stroller on the walk.
Stranger: Because I thought maybe you were an old woman living here and needed help mowing your lawn or something.
On the one hand, I'm actually pretty impressed that I have neighbor who would stop by and make sure I'm not infirm and in need of assistance (I DO need assistance with the stupid lawn!). On the other hand, my lawn is so sad that strangers come to the door to discuss it.
16 June 2008
We Got a New One


He came home from the hospital tonight. Madame the Elder immediately began singing "Mary's Lullaby" (over and over and over again) to him, and Madame the Younger tucked her new Ariel Barbie into his car seat for him to play with. Nothing says Welcome to the World like a pointy Barbie hand in the eye. Tuey likes to pat him. And sometimes squeeze his face.
13 June 2008
What I'm Reading
Eating Poetry
Ink runs from the corners of my mouth.
There is no happiness like mine.
I have been eating poetry.
The librarian does not believe what she sees.
Her eyes are sad
and she walks with her hands in her dress.
The poems are gone.
The light is dim.
The dogs are on the basement stairs and coming up.
Their eyeballs roll,
their blond legs bum like brush.
The poor librarian begins to stamp her feet and weep.
She does not understand.
When I get on my knees and lick her hand,
she screams.
I am a new man.
I snarl at her and bark.
I romp with joy in the bookish dark.
10 June 2008
This is My Job
There were several structurally unsound chocolate creations that, sadly, collapsed. Here are some of my favorite uncollapsed projects.
Sometimes being a librarian is rock star awesome.




ANOTHER Birthday


09 June 2008
Bathing Lessons
I assumed it would play out like this:
1. Shave legs
2. Luxuriate in fizzy, British bath
It actually went like this:
1. Shave legs
2. Drop delightful bath bomb into bath tub
3. Yell at the burning pain that is the combination of fizzy soaps and freshly-shaved legs
4. Endure (because a bath bomb is a special treat and there's no way I was getting out of that tub until the pain was beyond endurance)
I won't even go into the part where I was attempting to listen to a book on CD while I bathed but started the CD at the wrong point in the story and set the volume too loud but was then too paranoid about electrocuting myself to try and fix it.
So many lessons in bathing.
I need to move to a country where the women don't shave their legs.
06 June 2008
The Birthday
Another joy this year was a fantastic birthday card a friend sent to me. I tried to take a picture of it, but I'm completely inept at using my camera, and the camera ran out of battery power before I could get a decent shot of the card. I did get an okay picture of the card she sent me on an earlier birthday, featuring the same character--Paco. I think you will love Paco as much as I do. Maybe on your next birthday, you'll get a Paco card too. Or the gift of someone else's comb.
04 June 2008
A Tiny Bit of Complaining

with a heat gun (which sounds wicked cool, but actually functions a lot like a hair dryer).
I wish I had a real gun, because Summer Reading is upon us and the library is a zoo. When my mom or sister ask me about work during Summer Reading, I end up yelling, because there is no other way to express the tension headache that is my job in June. Good thing I have vinyl record crafts to soothe me and no ready access to firearms.
Tomorrow is my birthday. I'm not entirely convinced that I feel good about turning 30.
02 June 2008
Rage Runs in the Family
"Can I punch that kid?" Dad asked.
I told him there was no punching in the library, but by the end of the day I wanted to punch a few people myself.
Must take a vacation.
Tuey and the Lunch Box and the Donkey
Tonight Tuey was trying to destroy things inside the house while Marmot Dad was trying to clean up the kitchen, so Tuey was banished to the front porch with the women folk. Tuey did not feel that his actions justified his expulsion, so he stood at the front door and cried to be let back in to complete his manly destruction inside the house. Being a kind and a sweet aunt, I looked around for something to distract him and saw a Curious George lunch box lying on the cement.
MBC (reaching for the box): Tuey. What's over here? What's in this lunch box?
Sister: Oooh, you don't want to know what's in there.
MBC: What's in it?
Sister: Vomit. (pause) Or maybe just soggy shredded wheat. It's hard to tell. Either way . . .
So, I found some plastic animals instead and we quizzed Tuey on his animal sounds. He recently met a donkey in the neighborhood and does a really amusing donkey bray. He calls the donkey a honkey.



