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I’ve been pretty focused mentally on school, and well… ok, TV shows. I never lie to my online friends. I’ve been hoarding episodes of awful reality shows like idiots are about to go extinct. This has caused me to lag on readings and eventually focus mentally on school.

Also, I’ve had life events. You’ve heard of those, right, internet friends?

My grandparents officially “immigrated” as in “went through immigration at the airport” and my grandmother teared up a little. My grandfather is quitting smoking (after 60+ years). I have lost weight.

Basically, what I’m saying is that nothing makes sense.

What does make sense is that, lately, all I say about awkwardness is, “well, I should have been expecting it.”

The first example of this is a recent trip to Gananoque, ON with my Boy. We planned it a week or two beforehand (as I am always doing, and he is always trying to put off) and went on Thanksgiving weekend. 4 days, 3 nights; Sunday to Tuesday. It was supposed to be lovely. And for the large part, it was. The weather was balmy for early October (29C WHAT), the food was fantastical, and the town was just the loveliest little town I ever did see. Reminded me of Stars Hollow.

A few days prior, my father, in his compulsive pro-activity decided that, Hey! Wouldn’t it be great if he, my grandfather and my sister visited the 1000 Islands as well? No. It wouldn’t, I said. You would hate it, I begged. And still, the only hotel/motel/inn they found that wasn’t fully and utterly booked for Thanksgiving was ours. How swell.

The irony that what was essentially meant to be a complete mental and physical retreat from the oh-so-generally-tolerable idiosyncrasies of my family turned into a, Hey – let’s get dinner tonight, all 5 of us, is not lost on me, and hopefully not on you.

However, Gananoque, and the nearby US border, had bigger plans for us. After a night of wretchedly fantastic relaxation, we decided to hit up the States before my spa appointment (it was in the inn, okay? Like 3 steps from bed to nail-bed repair). In hindsight (as most of these things are), we really should have seen it coming.

We drove for a beautiful 15 minutes (when am I EVER that close to another country?!) and reached the strangely prolonged line to the border. But, it’s the end of Canadian Thanksgiving, after all, we thought. So we waited, and waited, and sang songs while waiting, and should have figured out after 30 minutes that when the line you’re in is moving the slowest, the guy in control of that particular line was probably beaten with the jerkface stick. And yet.

We finally roll up, after 45 minutes -Does it usually take this long? I naively ask – and the dude (bruteface extraordinaire) just wallops us with questions, some more expected than others: Why are you coming to the States? How long are you staying? When are you coming back? What do you do? Why don’t you have a job? Where did you get your money? How big is your penis? (Kidding.)

Then, lovely Officer McAssface scans our passports and gives us a slip of paper, while pointing – oh-so-un-fucking-coyly – to Officer McAss V.2 where  there are about 20 cars parked. I mentally attempt to recall whether I have acquired any illegal machines or substances in the past 24 hours, and nothing comes to mind, which, despite being logical, does not make me any less nervous.

“My experience with customs and border control has always been that Americans are nicer than Canadians,” my Boy says. And so my God Complex smirks (I AM ALWAYS RIGHT, I insist daily.)

While walking down the long walkway to the building the man who almost giggled when he took my keys told us to go, I ask whether the Boy thinks they’re going to strip search us. “Hopefully not by someone hot. The ensuing reaction might make them detain us.”

Another goon with a radio and a gun, whose job appeared to be just to open the door for presumed illegals and yell at office workers sporadically and awkwardly about doing fingerprints any slower, told us to shut off our phones before coming in. Okay, I like common procedure – just like in a movie theatre. I think I even saw a twinkle of a semi-smile in his eye, probably born from the hope that he might be able to tackle an old lady for not understanding what a cell-phone was and thus auto-labeling her as terrorist.

We sit down on uncomfortable airport chairs in a corral of Mormons, Russians, frat guys and scientists going to a conference. We wait another half hour, by which point my boredom has so far surpassed my anxiety that I’m thinking about playing Angry Birds on the Boy’s iPod. That probably wouldn’t have been encouraged by Door Goon.

“Arnika and Paalaya,”

“Arina? Paya?”

“Yeah, yeah. You guys. Come on up here.”

Asshole. I’m so not sorry for not being named Sally.

Same questions as the Officer McAssface, and then comes my favourite part of entering the United States to see some trees: “So, if you don’t have a job, how do you afford all these nail appointments and expensive trips?” He asks this to my BOY.

Oh. Lord. I PAY FOR MY OWN DANG NAILS. OWN. DANG. NAILS. YOU SON OF A F-

Sexist nugget of idiocy, you are. Also, this is the cheapest trip that people can go on: we travelled a whole 2 hours away from where we live. It would barely dent the bank account of a 10-year-old mowing lawns for a living, you condescending shit of a human being.

“Oh, okay. Well I guess we didn’t find any guns, narcotics, or dead bodies in your trunk, so you’re free to go.”

I wonder if it was the two fold-away chairs that my parents sit on at my sister’s soccer games that tipped them off about the lack of drugs, or the Subway wrappers. Criminals gotta eat too, I guess, but, oh man, were we suspicious.

When we got through, the trees closing in on the highway seemed to be frontin’ and being all aggressive and shit, plus the roads had tolls. We finally found a free little park area with a lake, sat for half an hour, angrily discussing how the air smelled disgusting and the benches were sub-par and the water probably couldn’t house fish even if it was a caviar factory, and then we got in our car and drove back.

“Hi. Where you coming from?”

“Oh you know, just wanted to come and see a few of the parks on the US side of the 1000 islands, that sort of thing.”

“How long did you stay?”

“About an hour. It wasn’t very interesting. Plus I have a nail appointment soon.”

“Oh. Okay. Have a nice day!”

GOD COMPLEX EXACERBATED. I AM ALWAYS RIGHT but oh was I happy to be back in Ontario, with the pretty and non-aggressive trees and the proper speed limits (miles are for mules) and Tim Horton’s.

sad couple is sad (in america)

I almost cried with joy after seeing the speed limit.

So, that didn’t go as planned, as in, instead of enjoying nature, I just enforced my mental blockade against everything American.

The most recent example of my life being awkward is my family. Comedy empires have been built on it, yes, but it doesn’t stop evolving for Hollywood’s sake.

I don’t know how other people’s families are, but the men in my family are very traditional. Ie. sexist. Ie. they think that women do housework and bear children and listen to the head of the family (a man). You choose whether this is a comment on Russian families, or immigrant families, or silly families. It might not be a comment at all, and it isn’t to me because it’s just my reality.

This past week, after getting back from Gananoque, I’ve been pestered by my dad and grandfather about cooking and cleaning almost incessantly. Do they care that I have 5 books to read before Monday? Do they pay attention to the fact that I work 2 jobs, volunteer and write for free, and study full-time? No. They want dinner, and dinner they want. That is all that matters.

My grandfather has a tendency of coming into any room where I reside and saying, Hozay’ka (woman in charge of the household), What do you have for lunch? Or, What are you cooking? if I am at the stove or in the vicinity of the kitchen.

This bothers me to no small extent, and while I try not to react every single time by forcing him to sit and watch English films about feminism and banging him on the head with Gloria Steinem‘s articles, I often lash out. You want food? There IS no food. Find your own food.

A few days ago, I decided to take a different tactic.

“What are you doing, hozay’ka?”

“Making lunch.”

“For everyone?”

“No, just for me.”

“Oh,” disapprovingly he says “what are you going to do when you have a family?”

“Well, I think Boy will stay home, actually. He’ll cook, clean, that sort of stuff. Probably raise the kids. When I have a family, I will go work and earn money.”

“Oh, hahaha! You’re so funny Arinushka.”

“I’m serious.”

“Oh.”

The next morning, when my mom and grandma had arrived from Russia, he reveals to them the deep rebellion of my nature in hushed tones. “She’s planning to go work and have Boy stay home and clean and cook.” I didn’t hear it, but I’m sure it was murmured conspiratorially, in a manner that suggests that what I’m doing is completely unorthodox and unacceptable. As if I was a moral dissenter to Perfection.

Later that day when I was speaking to both mom and grandmother, I was complaining about how they kept asking for food like stupid helpless baby birds, when in fact they seemed like giant ostriches who would seem to have their shit figured out by 43 and 72 years of age.

“Oh, this morning he told us ALL about how you were planning to subvert the family dynamic. You horrible woman, you.” Cue laughter and my eternal smugness.

Let him believe it, I told them. At least until the Boy comes over for dinner next and gets a variety of garbled Russian questions asked by the worried eyes of my grandfather about his capability to cook food and clean laundry.

-A

P.S. Oh, and there was that time I thought I was being all culturally sensitive and progressive when I found a Farsi movie approved by Sundance playing in a movie theatre in Toronto and invited my Boy and his Mother and it turned out to be a lesbian porno. Fun.

9 days! That’s how long I think I’ve been wrapped up in my head. You know what happened 11 days ago? I had an early morning, and a late night that told me my love was leaving me for 5 weeks in only 7 days. That is Monday-Monday to get everything together and squeeze as much of him into my heart as possible (it’s not possible, he’s already a permanent fixture, like insulation).

We spent a wonderful Friday night and Saturday together (snorting rice and walking in the sun) and he was supposed to call me Tuesday night to tell me he got there okay, and it’s Wednesday night, and I’ve just returned from the soccer game we were supposed to go to together (Toronto FC vs. Dallas FC) and he still hasn’t called.

I’m planning a little panic festival in my head already. My sister has the flu. Bu I went to buy frozen yoghurt the other day after work, just because I wanted to. And the gallery I work for talked to me about putting together an interconnected photography/art/story show. And my summer course is almost done and my friends have started resurging from their depths.

So I am throwing little pebbles across the water, hoping they float.

Sorry this has no storyline, even though usually I prefer it that way. I am trying to cobble this from a few self-esteem issues and a half-dozen mediocre gestures of the utmost importance and a lot of empty space beside me at night. It’s hard to work with things like that. But I’m figuring it out.

-A

Good morning. Anybody else’s head hurts? No, just me then.

I know this looks quite tame in comparison to things that would otherwise make your head pound and your stomach dis-involve itself with you. But this was Saturday night. This was when the love of my life came to my door looking like the fantastic gentleman that he is, told me how beautiful I looked, and drove me downtown to a restaurant he remembered me mentioning a year ago.

The place in the photograph above isn’t it – that’s Rose Patisserie on Yonge. He took me to the Pomegranate. It was phenomenal since, as those of you who know me well, know that I’ve become enamoured with Persian cuisine as much as I have with my boyfriend over the past 3 years. My aloo gheysi was sweet and tart and delicious, and his fesenjoon was great (although his aunt makes it better). Then, we went out for dessert and I (of course) stole his delicious black tea while simultaneously forcing my majoon on the poor boy. It was too sweet though – mind, remember this.

(In fact, the only reason I’m boring you with our delectable details is due to my shitty memory, so forgive me please.)

Sunday (Bloody Sunday) is where things got messy.

Of course, it was Easter, which all in all to my family means the end of Lent. Nobody partook in lent except for my father, but we were all somehow fasting despite that.

Anyway, my parents had invited all of their friends to celebrate meat. And Jesus’ awakening or re-alivening or something. But mostly meat, as far as I (and our dinner table) was concerned. I also invited along some of my friends at random. I thought there wouldn’t be enough food to go around if I invited more, but oh, how wrong I was. I probably could have invited Canada’s army for dinner and still have had leftovers. (I don’t know whether this says more about the size of Canada’s army or our unending love of food).

The evening started out nice and humble – everyone came just late enough for my mom to finish primping (although I had my hands in a bucket’o'pork). Hello’s, how are you’s, etcetera. We poured the wine, the whiskey, the vodka. Everyone was proper nice to each other (despite the conundrum of both my friends and my parents friends and my grandfather being there at the same time), which, to be honest, I was kind of expecting. Everyone’s old enough to handle themselves by now.

Except me, obviously. I’m only 21.

But I’m a nice, mature 21. Kind of-ish. Most of the time, anyway. Ok, rarely – but I am when it counts!

The point is here that in my drunken sleep of this night past, I’ve stumbled upon a fantastic idea to document my 21st year. A re-learning process of sorts. Because I’m smart, but I’m still dumb quite often – enough to be 21 legitimately, I think.

What I’ve decided is this: over the course of the upcoming year, I’m going to write 21 little tales about the most important things that I already know, but hope to reaffirm, in the desire that this time they’ll stay learned.

I think tomorrow is a great as time as any to start with the lesson I learned last night:

You can’t outrun the lessons you’ve learned. (Alternate title: Drinking strengths and weaknesses are DNA’s fault, not yours.)

Always yours, A

PS. Paya, please don’t ever leave me to fend for myself.

PPS. Thank you everyone for last night, again – I MUST have done something right in a past life.

I can’t not share this song with you guys.  I found it on hypem.com which is well, a popularity contest between obscure remixes and bands.  It’s based on wicked music blogs with um, ballin’ style.  And lots have free downloads if you follow the links. YEY. Anyway, this song is called The Altered Beast by Ghost Train (Poka Remix). On repeat, guys. Like, mind-exploding repeat.

click me to listen

You know, I’m still fascinated by people who aren’t plugged in to their passions. Like – I feel like I know quite a bit about the magazine/writing industry for my age (I don’t want to throw up from patting myself on the back or anything), but I do! I RSS like a million magazines that I could potentially submit work to, I read these magazines, I follow writers and writing job postings on twitter and I write for a job “ezine,” as well as keeping up to date on trends and skills that I should stay current with. I have a tagged writing folder on my internet tabs that deal specifically with contests and other money-grabs. And yet, I haven’t applied to many of these things, submitted any work, or given much thought to any of them. I know I could, and if I put the time in I’m sure I could score SOMETHING (perhaps even with money in the deal!), but I don’t. Maybe not having a stable job will force me to be more pro-active about this stuff.

The reason I bring up this obsessive mindset of mine (which I’ve had ever since having a giant panic attack in grade 11 after missing the university fair and “not being in the know” about things I wanted/needed to know for my future), is that I kind of get on my boyfriend’s case about it a lot. I read a lot of blogs where girls either appear as these perfect, ethereal companions or they acknowledge their weaknesses and self-mock in order to humanize it all.  Personally (I don’t know how I could impersonally prefer something, but just deal with my cliché for a sec), I prefer the latter. I’m mad imperfect, just not about knowing stuff that will eventually help me get ahead.  My boyfriend is also imperfect, but in a different way. I always push to know more about whatever I’m stepping in to and he.. I don’t know what he does. I can’t fully say yet, I don’t think. Either way, I should probably climb off that really tall horse of mine and let the dude do his thing.

It’s just funny because I always talk to people about doing this and doing that, and I’m at the point where I’m tired of being scared of working on things and sending them out. I’m tired of not getting rejected. At least rejection is progress. At least rejection is experience. Knowledge is, yes, incredibly helpful and I’m sure (or hoping) that it will make my path more cobbled with nice, Italian marble, but in the end, nothing will help me except sending out work, getting my name published, getting my words published, and getting my portfolio looking like a nice, multicultural lasagna.

That metaphor didn’t exactly do what I wanted it to, but I want to commemorate its strangeness and remember it forever, so I’m forced to leave it there.

I’m pretty sure you get what I mean anyways, so I’ll just leave it at that.

ALSO:

BARBARA STREISAND

PS. I am still waiting for my watch (my soon-to-be-baby) to arrive via UPS. Bring me my baby!

PPS. It is my last day of work at the bar. This might get me out of my February Funk. I have high hopes.

I’m going to try this “Post a Week 2011″ thing, because I’ve been slacking pretty rabidly in blogging for the past couple of months.

I remember I had a time when I would get a lot of hits (aka 3 a day) and be so excited when people came and commented on my blogs (mind you, this number was big for me), and now, I’m just not starting any thoughts in people’s minds. So that won’t fly no more.

So I decided to try this challenge. I’m not good with timelines or deadlines or anything that has to do with me getting things in on time, except in school, but I’ll give it the good old I’m-trying-to-improve-my-life-so-its-not-so-sad-in-the-Canadian-winter attempt anyhow.

I also started going to the gym.  Just like the rest of the North American populace after the new year.  So far I’ve gone once, but I’m going tomorrow as well.  Start easy, keep building – that’s what I keep hearing about people with routines (also with murderers, but that’s a story for another time.)

Now that I’m talking, I might as well do a bit of promotion.  For example. My boyfriend recently realized his life goal (after I’ve been telling him what it is for the past two years, but you know what they say about powerful men and their women…) which is to be… someone who talks.

I know what you’re thinking.

You’re thinking, “good catch, Arina!”

But really, that’s what he’s made for.  He talks really well, and I’m not just saying that because he talked me into going out with him.  He is a smart-as-Gates dude who knows so many things about trains, traffic, politics, cars, soccer, electricity, physics, and a million other random shit that it’s hard for me to keep track of his words sometimes (ie. I deerface when he talks for 45min+ about the fascinating world of German trains.)

HINT: The best part of that link is that it’s not a deer.

Anyway, so he needs people to listen to him, which is why I’ve forced Twitter upon another poor, hapless soul in my acquaintance. I’m sure he’ll love it once he actually starts using it.

This will make him start using it.  I swear to Jeebus it will.

Speaking of which, have you guys seen Religion Pigeon?

Cuz you totally should have by now.  I mean, what are you missing in life if you’re missing such epic memes?

I still don’t understand what memes are by the way, nor do I understand how to say the word, although if you click on the little megaphone icon here, you should understand that it sounds like a mee-m. That’s kind of uncool.

I always pronounced it me-me, like you’re really egotistic in a baby voice sort of way.

Way cooler, right?

Anyhow, I would update you about school but basically I can summarize it in like two words: essay prep.

It’s also been mad cold lately (-24 C at night!) and I’ve been severely under/over-estimating the temperature EVERY MORNING I LEAVE MY HOUSE thereby resulting in either a really frozen bitching me, or a nice, steaming hunk of me waddling down the sidewalk in an attempt to get home as fast as possible, but not sweat any more, so I can strip and lower my core body temperature to normal.

I’m also going to Russia in a couple of week FOR a couple of weeks.  That matters very little to you.  Except that I’m hoping to post some pictures from the trip here when I return.  I should also have posted my Cuba pictures up on Flickr but I am not only an asshole, but a lazy, kind of constipated one that likes to work once a week at most and then just sit all puckered for the rest of the six days.

Oh and I quit my job at my bar! My last day is the 8th and I am as thrilled as a world-renown ornithologist would be if he saw an Alagoas Curassow in like, China, or something.

Peace out gangsters, see you on the flip side (next week, hopefully)!

May the world bless you with ice cream cakes and strange teas.

-Arina

PS. I totally should be reading Henry James right now, or Herman Melville; but fuck those guys, I have Teen Mom 2 to watch.
(I can’t believe I just admitted to that, but I’m sure several of my friends will appreciate my admission, since that’s the first step to recovery…. right?)