Monday, December 27, 2010

12.27.2010

Dear Rachel Dratch,

It may be self-hating, but I might have to say that Katy Perry's "Teenage Dream" might be one of the best songs of this past year. As I was putting together my end of the year mix I tried really hard to ignore her because of her checkered-gay-for-pay past. But I figure if I can look past the histories of Michael Jackson, Bobby Brown and Whitney Houston to still enjoy their musics, then I can certainly give KP a little credit.

And it's not even that the lyrics are particularly awesome or even good. But she can write a catchy hook (see also Kelly Clarkson's "I Don't Hook Up") and sometimes that's all I need. All this also reminds me of how much of my favorite songs of the past year are clearly those also favored by 12 year olds. I can say that I probably saw this one coming when I saw the Black Eyed Peas in concert sometime earlier this year. And when I also saw Lady Gaga. I do refuse to see Justin Bieber, but I will say "Baby" was one of my most played songs in iTunes this year.

I guess here is where I post my mix:

1. Lea Michele - Don't Rain On My Parade. I know this is from Glee and that show is kind of bizarre and pretty bad, but dang if this song doesn't make me float on air and get my arm hair raised.

2. Katy Perry - Teenage Dream. See above.

3. Justin Bieber - Baby.

4. Rihanna - Only Girl in the World. I dare you to not strut it out when you're walking on the treadmill to this one. Go ahead, wipe that sweat from your forehead because you are working it out.

5. Kelis - Acapella. I have loved this lady since the beginning. Sometimes she can do wrong, but her latest album was oh so right.

6. LCD Soundsystem - I Can Change. This song came on at work all too frequently but not so frequently that I wouldn't listen to it outside of work. I also feel like this gives me some street cred, but it's also highly pretentious. I don't care.

7. M.I.A. - Xxxo. This album was a hot mess and I really wanted to love it. This song made it into the mix mostly because I feel bad for her and her truffle fries.

8. Usher feat. Will.i.am - OMG. I wanted to hate this song when it came out, but it quickly became the song I most secretly wanted to be my ringtone.

9. Beck and Bat for Lashes - Let's Get Lost. I thought this was a song I knew from work when I first heard it during a recent Redbox viewing of "Eclipse". Now I'm not so sure, but the soundtrack of that movie is kind of good and this is the first of two songs from it that made my mixdown.

10. Karen Elson - The Ghost Who Walks. I love fashion and I love music. Hello Karen Elson. She sometimes inspires me to bleach my eyebrows, but they are crucial to my face. This also makes me feel sufficiently indie, which I need sometimes to make my purchases from Urban Outfitters that much more credible. I am indie rock music.

11. Beach House - Zebra. Not sure really sure, but this is definitely inspired by my need to feel cool. But it is a sweet song.

12. Kandi - I Just Know. And this is when I get back to just loving the music I love and not even caring about what other people might think. This chick needs my money because Bravo only pays so much. This song makes my heartstrings strum.

13. Monica - Love All Over Me. This girl I work with laughed one day saying, "Can you believe Monica still thinks people like her music?" And I said, "But girl, I have loved both singles off her latest album. And I tend to buy each album she comes out with." I have a big old place in my heart for Monica and this song is so good.

14. The Dream - Love King. I can thank my friend Lauren for turning me on to this one. We both love The Dream. His albums, his entire albums, tend to be pretty good. And this one involves spelling, which clearly makes me want to sing along and decide who is getting what, sidechicks and all.

15. Rihanna - Rude Boy. I am not cool, despite what I want to think. And I love this song. Give it to me baby, like boom boom boom. This song rocked my world since the summer.

16. Cee Lo Green - What Part of Forever. Part two of my Eclipse jams. I love a song where I can envision models getting their struts on. This songs reeks of a fashion show and makes me want to get up on the treadmill and let those folks know who gots it.

17. Willow Smith feat. Nicki Minaj - Whip My Hair Remix. Y'all, I loved this song in its original incarnation, then to go and add Nicki Minaj, Willow, you better do it! I do not care for Nicki's original/solo songs, but she can spit a hot verse on somebody else's song and I like it.

18. Kanye West feat. Raekwon and Justin Bieber - Runaway Love Remix. This songs reminds me of childhood. I hurt my neck when I was dancing to it after playing it three or four times in a row. But y'all, it was worth it. Clearly, I have no shame and love some Justin Bieber. He's okay on this one. The shining star on this is Raekwon.

19. Mark Ronson - The Night Last Night. This is the only song worth much on his latest album. I loved his album of covers but most of that had to do with Amy Winehouse and whoever did "Apply Some Pressure". Again, this is a song where I can see folks strutting it out and I have sweated out a number of tortilla chips and mint M&MS to this one. The drummer is the same from Mark's first one and finds his regular job to be with The Dap Kings. You can count on his rhythm to keep you in shape and your face dripping.

This is my music 2010. Get these songs and get to moving thangs.

Jon

Monday, December 13, 2010

12.13.2010

Dear Rachel Dratch,

Because I'm bored and this looks like some old school 1999-era fun, I'm going to fill out this survey from Rodarte's Kate and Laura Mulleavy. I am very much a fashion nerd but this survey is not very fashion-y. Here we go.

Favorite play? I'm not sure if this should count, but I really did love The Color Purple when I saw it on Broadway.

What was your first love? Food.

Favorite language? English!

Who is your most loved character in literature? I'm tempted to say Truman Capote because he put himself in every single one of his stories. Maybe I'll be super weird and say Scarlett O'Hara from Gone With The Wind.

Favorite room? My living room.

Favorite place to read a book? The couch in my living room.

Favorite place in NY? This restaurant we always go to with my friend Maura where I get the most delicious vegetarian eggs benedict.

Favorite color? Blue!

Favorite painter/painting? Would it be weird to say I sort of like Mark Rothko? I like his huge pieces of one or two solid colors.

Favorite thing to collect? At one point I would have had to say import Janet Jackson singles and albums. Right now, it would probably be fashion books.

Favorite mystery? I still have no idea what happened in number two.

Favorite flower? Anything orange.

Favorite sea creature? My first pet, Freddie.

Favorite smell? A mix of whatever the deodorant is and Light Blue.

If I gave you a medal right now, what would it be for? Dealing with the crazies at the mall.

Favorite texture? The tee shirt I have on right now.

Favorite flavor? Chocolate.

What’s the first thing you think of when I say red? Ew, blood.

Night or day? Night.

Favorite villain? Ursula from the Little Mermaid.

Favorite silent film star? Er. Rudolph Valentino?

Favorite artist? Janet Jackson

Molly Ringwald or Ally Sheedy? Ally Sheedy

C.S. Lewis or Freud? C.S. Lewis

Tents or motels? Hotels, with an H. I make too much money to stay in motels. I'm talking to you Days Inn!

Favorite musical instrument? Drums.

Thunder or lightning? Thunder.

Tea or coffee? Coffee!

Wine or beer? Beer.

Lemon or lime? Lime.

Monday or Friday? Friday.

February or December? February.

Christmas or Halloween? Christmas.

Rosemary’s Baby or Hannah and Her Sisters? Rosemary's Baby.

J.D. Salinger or Jack Kerouac? Ew, neither.

Hats or scarves? Scarves.

Julie Christie or Vanessa Redgrave? Vanessa Redgrave.

Marilyn Monroe or Elizabeth Taylor? Elizabeth Taylor.

Cary Grant or Jimmy Stewart? Cary Grant.

Las Vegas or Atlantic City? Las Vegas.

Rain or sun? Rain.

Spiderman or Superman? Spiderman.

Cats or dogs? Dogs.

Ice cream or sorbet? Ice cream!

Beatles or Rolling Stones? Rolling Stones.

Favorite fun fair ride of all time? Tilt-a-whirl.

Favorite sidekick? Robin.

What are the initials of the last person you kissed? Gentleman don't kiss and tell.

What characteristics do you most envy in others? Patience and selflessness.

If you could fly, where is the first place you would go? Tokyo.

Have you ever won a medal or a prize–if so, what? One time at priest camp, we came in second or third for best Bible-based skit. Chew on that.

What is your secret dream? To open my own shop in a place where people will shop there.

Favorite season? I'd say fall but we don't get much of a fall. So maybe late winter.

What is your greatest love? Helping people out.

Favorite currency? Cash money, American dollars.

Favorite city? It could be New York.

Favorite imaginary place? Oz.

Favorite planet? Mars.

Favorite children’s book? The Boxcar Children series.

Favorite candy? Snickers.

Favorite name [and it cannot be your own]? Lyle.

Monday, November 8, 2010

11.11.2010

Dear Rachel Dratch,

When I was younger, I would say that I was a betting man. And by that I mean that I would bet God. I remember always trying to broker a deal so that I could get what I wanted. It was probably all the Catholic school boy in me that gave me the idea that all I had to do to get the latest and freshest Nike basketball shoes was to ask the Lord in prayer.

The betting with Jesus became something that extended beyond prayer. There was a while where I was convinced that I was going to make the basketball team. I had not touched a basketball until I was about 13, but I figured, Hey I can totally do this. I didn't know that the other dudes my age had already been playing in leagues for five years or so. I kept trying to make the team up through ninth grade. That was when I finally threw the towel in. There was no more, "Jesus, if I make ten free throws in a row I will make the basketball team, okay?" I don't think I ever made that many because I wasn't really good. I mean, I could hang when playing against my dad and sister, but against those dudes at school, I stood no chance as a short tub of Country Crock.

My sister and I would have the most insane fights whenever we would ball. I was convinced I was a sort of Dikembe Mutumbo/Karl Malone style guy--I could just throw my elbows any-which-way and she would have to get out of my way. I never really meant to throw my elbows, but she would tell this story very differently. She would often defend against me with one arm across her chest, defending herself from my bows, and the other arm in the air to try and deflect my Sky Hook. We would end up fighting about somebody fouling somebody else, or even, "Can't you please just back the fuck up for a second so I can try to shoot something? This is just play, it's not serious!" And then after yelling this as a ten-year-old, she would hurl the basketball across the street and into the poison ivy laden woods. This was the worst. Neither one of us was particularly outdoorsy, so it was always a real pain to have to go into the woods and fish out the ball. There was some sort of big pipe, too, that would expel gross watery stuff into the woods and it was no fun when the ball landed there.

I never much prayed or made bets when playing against my sister. I mean, I look back on those times and am glad neither one of us ended up with too much damage done. The betting would come sometimes, too, when I would be up on the computer, listening to Janet's "The Velvet Rope," working on my websites, chatting with foreign weirdos in Janet chatrooms, and playing solitaire.

The memories that are left over from middle school and early high school are sort of vague now. Or I have made them vague in my mind to make myself feel better. I would spend hours on the computer before it really became something to do. And I would love to play solitaire. I have loved computer solitaire since the day my parents bought us our first computer and all it had was solitaire and Paint. What could kids do on computers in 1991? There were no programs out, so we just played fake cards and drew weird things. My love of solitaire continued through adolescence and continues today. It is a part of my morning routine most days, sipping on my coffee, playing some solitaire.

I remember making bets with God with solitaire, too. "If I win this game, God, will you please send me a pair of Air Max 95s." I was kind of convinced that God would deliver me some fly sneakers if all I did was ask for them and win at solitaire. Maybe it was the teachers at my Catholic school, or maybe it was just me being crazy, but I thought that if I just asked God for something it would just show up. And this was even as a sort of twelve year old. I never had anything to support it, and I never had any of these things magically appear. But there was a period where I really thought that if I just asked God for something, I'd get it.

They told us that if we were good and did right by other people, and were nice, blah blah, that God would provide. And damn it, I wanted shoes most of the time. I wasn't nice to people with the intention of God giving some sneakers because I am generally a nice person. But I saw it more as a perk of being nice, it just came along with the ooey gooey nice feeling you get. But I knew I had to put in a little more work to make sure God delivered, and I think that's where the solitaire came in.

I'm not sure where I got the idea from, but I still sometimes will make bets when playing solitaire. Well, not really bets but something like, "I will get up and do some laundry if I win this game." Or, "If I win this game, I will get up and get a refill of my coffee." Nothing real serious, and nothing involving God or Nikes. There was just something I took from school that told me that I just needed to do something, anything and God would deliver. We would learn all about saints and good people, and they'd be covering their faces in pepper and doing lots of crying and carrying on, and they got miracles. That translated in my head to become me winning a game of solitaire or making ten free throws in a row, and my miracle would happen, too. And that miracle wasn't curing blindness or making cripples walk. My miracle was a pair of Nike Air Uptempos, and as a crazy twelve year old, I didn't think that was too much to ask.


Jon

Monday, October 18, 2010

10.18.2010

Dear Rachel Dratch,

I don’t know if I remember when it all started, but I am pretty sure my problems began somewhere around the time that I was a bodybuilder. I have finally taken it upon myself to do something so I have made an appointment with a real, Western medicine doctor. I have tried to fix things through acupuncture. Looking back on that decision, it’s kind of weird to think that I thought it made more sense to go to an acupuncturist than to a regular old doctor. Something about going to this guy made more sense, felt more safe or something. He was just putting needles all over my body, that’s cool! A real doctor would poke and pry and would make me have to literally spell out that I was a sexually active adult who sometimes indulges in too many sweets like Coke Icees or mellow pumpkins.

It doesn’t seem like it’s the Icees or pumpkins that were the ones to drive me to finally go see the doctor. My guts have been a mess for a while now. I don’t remember a time prior to 2004 or so when I wasn’t hold up in the bathroom for a few hours each morning. I remember being late to my Greek civilization class that I slept through every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday because I would get half way to class and realize I was going to die. Then I’d roll up a few minutes after class started, sit in the middle of the room and pass the fuck out. I had the gall to approach my professor about why I got a B on my first paper—I spent a lot of time on it and I was proud. I loved Egypt, come on! She said my sources were too old and newer things had better information. I couldn’t believe my ears. I mean, how much has changed about ancient Egypt since 1945 that my use of actual relics and hieroglyphics to tell Egypt’s origin story rendered my paper a B? Answer me that! She probably caught me sleeping during her class and was trying to prove a point. I guess.

Around the time I transferred up to UNC, I think that was when my belly really started to shiver and shake. Now that I think about it, I had always had a kind of nervous excretory system. It made me a wreck to have to get up out of bed, put on some clothes and shoes, and mosey down the hall to use the shared bathroom I used with the other twelve dudes on my hall. It was embarrassing! So much so that I would get so wound up that I couldn’t sleep and would have nervous pees all night. No wonder I slept in that lady’s class—I had been up all night, crawling the walls, and crawling to the bathroom for a dribble. This made me so anxious that I sought out professional help for the first time. Again, not a real like body doctor but a mind doctor.

The first time I saw a psychologist or something was when my parents decided it would be better if they ended their marriage. I talked to this lady about it for an hour or so. All I can remember is that she offered me a Coke, which I liked, and she had really nice chairs. I knew my mom had been seeing this woman for a little bit and now I could see why. I loved that she asked all sorts of questions about me, how I was feeling, what I was feeling, and how I saw things. I was probably more of a ham than my sister when I was younger, so all this attention from a complete stranger was a little addictive. In fact, it wasn’t until even recently I that I have finally weaned myself off of seeing a psychologist. Their job is to ask you questions and help you feel better about feeling insane. It’s nice.

The lady I saw about my nervous pees was nice, I guess. She was a little fruitloopy and made me feel weird. Thinking about all the different therapists I’ve seen before graduate school, they must have all known I wasn’t really dealing with a crazy bladder and the gotta-go-gotta-go-gotta-go-right-nows and that I was a just a gay dude who didn’t know it yet. But she never let on and would ask me about my caffeine habits and what time I would go to bed. I thought I was the most bizarre person because I went to sleep between two and three each morning. This is what college kids do; they stay up really late doing dumb shit like watching all six seasons of Sex and the City in the middle of the night, or illegally downloading Chicago because I was too ashamed to see it in the theater so I watched it at around one a.m. with my headphones in. I was a complete night owl, but what college student wasn’t? I didn’t think much about that part so I told myself I was crazy and I would worry about not being able to go to sleep or not falling asleep at a normal hour. She didn’t much give me a hard time about it, but her questions and my answers were not necessarily helping me out. A crazy snow storm came one day and drove me to finally seek some actual medical attention.

We don’t get much snow here in the South, but this day was a really heavy snow. And it was the day I diagnosed myself as having diabetes and needed to get some insulin and some anti-anxiety meds. I had my story completely prepared, “Doctor. I get up multiple times through the night to pee and I get very thirsty at night. I know I have diabetes and it scares me. What do you prescribe?” Here is his response.

“You probably don’t have diabetes but I will run the necessary blood tests to see if there is some kind of deficiency or malnourishment coming from your extreme Chick-fil-a diet and all those evenings of eating your dinners alone in your room. I’m not sure what’s causing you to urinate so often, so we’re going to run some tests. I am going to need you to pee in this jug for the next 24 hours. Every time you need to go, I need you to pee in this jug. That means you must take it everywhere. And it must always be cool so I’m going to need you to keep it in a cooler. I’m going to need you to take this jug so that every time you pee you pee into it and carry it with you in cooler and take it everywhere with you for the next 24 hours. Then we will see.”

That was devastating. Everyone else I knew could easily get some kind of medication from doctors for all kinds of ailments. I once actually hurt my back doing some kind of heavy-ass squat at the gym and they did give me some muscle relaxers that would knock me out. Other than that, no doctor would ever give me anything. Instead, I get the pleasure of carrying a jug of piss around for 24 hours. I took this in stride and took the jug home with me. In a fit of rebellion, I decided to not let anything stop me from doing my regular thing. I braved the snow enough to make it home to my mom’s house for the weekend. If this jug has to go everywhere with me, then I may as well show it a good time.

I brought that pee jug everywhere including the gym, the mall and Outback Steakhouse. My cooler was navy blue so it complimented everything I wore and I liked getting the weird stares from people when they saw that I wasn’t carrying a bag but a cooler when I was scarfing down my Blooming Onion. Every single time I went to the bathroom those 24 hours I used that jug. It was all very anti-climatic when I took that jug of piss back to the doctor only to find out that I didn’t have any Diabetes and that my jug came back clear of anything. That was so insane to carry that cooler of a jug of piss, and for what? I got no peace of mind. I did however stop seeing my therapist. I blew her off, she was doing me no good.

All around this time I thought I wanted to get muscle big. I started out just working out with a friend. He got huge and I wanted in on the action. During my senior year of high school I lost probably 20 or so pounds when I gave up soda and dessert for Lent. And I also may have only eaten peanut butter sandwiches and water for lunch, and worked out for at least two hours every other day. I had lost some weight and I wanted to get some muscle mass. My friend got kind of hot and I wanted to be hot, too. He was doing protein shakes and a couple other weird things that the beefhead at GNC recommended, and without much thought, I had my own cups and blenders ready.

My sophomore year wasn’t too insane. I was lifting more weight than ever, and drinking three or so protein shakes a day. My post-workout meal consisted of a 12-pack of nuggets and a chicken sandwich from Chick-fil-a. I didn’t know this at the time, but your body can only handle so much protein before it starts to spit it back out. I was getting bigger, yes. But my body was starting to react against me. Most of my meals became protein fests. I would go get my to-go box from the cafeteria, fill it with chicken and a little bit of rice, and head back to my on-campus apartment where I would down all the chicken while I watched Friends reruns. This is also when I became a Friends superfan. I didn’t have my actual friends when I was in college, so I would always come back to the one friend I could depend on: television.

The protein parties would always be paired with some sort of television watching. If it wasn’t a Friends rerun, it was probably Sex and the City. I got on that train way late in the game—I started watching it by watching the last episode. I had no idea what happened or why any of this was important so I had to start all over again from the beginning. So many nights it was just me, Carrie, and some chicken nuggets.

I didn’t necessarily get the ripped, cut-up muscles I was looking for but I certainly did get bigger. I’ve never been a size large, even during my fat days, but I was convinced that I needed to wear a large to accommodate the forthcoming muscle. I looked husky, but not in the husky-section kind of way; more like a guy who had some heft, some meat on him. I knew I was only wanted to get bigger. When I transferred schools for my junior year, I decided I wanted to get bigger. My muscle friend was at the new school and I of course wanted to live with him. He decided he wanted to join the bodybuilding club, and I was right behind him.

To be in this club, I clearly needed to gain more muscle. My body went into overdrive when I added twelve pills of various purposes, two weight gainer shakes, and more protein shakes to everything else I was doing. I was eating way more food and even drinking milk, just to make sure I got more protein! I was spending hundreds of dollars each month in hot pursuit of a hot body and all I got was three or four hours on the toilet each morning.

All the money I was spending was literally going down the drain! But I didn’t care. What ended up being the final straw was this stuff that guaranteed to get more blood pumping through my veins when I worked out which would help me lift more weight. It was fizzy and full of caffeine. At this point in life, I was not a coffee drinker so I was not used to the effects of much more than a couple cans of Coca-Cola. This shit had me bouncing off the walls. My legs would be heaving during class; it was all I could do to try and keep calm before I could get to the gym. And I didn’t understand why I couldn’t sleep! I bet the stuff was a legal version of speed. I was insane. Oh, and I was super angry!

The bodybuilding club was something else. As a homosexual, I would say this is probably the gayest thing I’ve ever been involved with. We were required to workout as a “team” or whatever at least three times a week. And we didn’t even work out at the regular, nice gym. We worked out in the old-ass, stinky gym where everything is left over from the 1970s. I convinced myself that it was cool because it was all “throw back” or something. It was just old. In addition to the workouts, we were supposed to have our pictures taken once every two months or something. We would then meet as a group and discuss our bodies in front of each other and others told us what they thought. I’ve always had a negative self-image, so this was a little stupid of me to be involved with. It was like all my fears come to life: a bunch of dudes sitting around in a room telling me that my body looked like shit. I didn’t get the worst of it—there was one guy who commented on the perkiness of another’s chest. That was weird. I was told I had great calves, which I knew! They were and are a source of pride for me. I figured if everything else wasn’t going to get super huge, I could at least have massive/beautiful calves. When the president of the bodybuilding club told me I needed to do more cardio, I almost snapped his posing strap! You don’t know my life buddy, and that is the wrong thing to say! I’ve never had an eating disorder, but that is not to say that I haven’t considered it. I once tried to go all day on just a Jamba Juice, but that only lasted through lunch.

I didn’t have many friends to begin with, and all of the added testosterone made me even less pleasant to be around. And I was shitting my brains out each morning. I was really unhappy! Oh, and my body was not at all what I wanted it to be—I was a nugget when I wanted to be a spring chicken.

The next semester, I quit it all cold turkey. No more. I decided the body I wanted was skinny. It involved way less insane eating and no gross shakes or pills. I also thought it would help get my body back in order, that quitting all the bad things would give me a semblance of a life I hadn’t known—one without huge bags of Chick-fil-a and mornings of peace and quiet. I was done with the bodybuilding club and their mess. They never really made me feel real bad about myself, but they weren’t helping things. And it was just so weird to be working out in the basement-y gym with all that old equipment that screamed Silence of the Lambs and my skin was well moisturized, thank you!

That spring I kind of spiraled downward. I didn’t bathe much and my hair was insanely huge. After all those pills and shakes, and uppers, it only made sense, I guess, that I needed to come down. But my body has never really been the same. In fact, I think my stomach has only become more sensitive. I guess it all started when I decided I wanted to get huge, but I don’t really know.

My appointment with the real doctor came and went. He was insane. It was the first time I had been to the doctor in four years for things that were not psoriasis or scabies related. He asked me about farting and crapping, and then told me I was probably pretty normal. So you mean to say that all of the chicken, shakes, and pills really didn’t do much other than make me an angry, husky, dirty mess? He drew some blood to test things out, but I haven’t heard anything yet.

My body will probably never recover. Or maybe this is just how I am. I tried to get the doctor to connect my shits to my use of Accutane. He Google’d it and told me I had nothing to worry about. Maybe as an American, I sometimes buy into the culture of fear. But my fear doesn’t involve terrorists or bombs. I’m scared of fat deposits and pooping. It could be worse.

Jon

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

9.29.2010

Dear Rachel Dratch,

Today was the first time where it has been the most appropriate to wear a jacket outside. I have even taken to wearing a hoodie with the hood over my head while I am writing this. The weather has been super hot for the past three months. In those three months, we have received nothing but fall/winter clothes at working, making me long for colder days and nights full of hot chocolate and those weird smelling blankets that sit in the closet for the other nine months of the year.

In preparation for the coming fall, I have been stockpiling the chic since my birthday in July. I bought my first leather jacket, my first pair of boots since childhood when I mentioned in passing that it sounded like I was wearing high heels and wasn't allowed to wear boots ever again, and my first leather bag. As a vegetarian, I'm not sure how I can rationalize buying and wearing animals, so I don't. I just wear them and not eat them. In buying these things months in advance of the cold weather, I have been dying inside with the desire to put them on and wear them out in the world. I bought a couple hoodies in June and made myself wear them when I was in San Diego in July when the weather hovered around 70. It didn't matter to me--I wanted nothing more than to feel real cozy.

Because I live in the South and have lived in the South all my life, it is sometimes deep into other region's winter by the time it gets even the slight bit cool enough to warrant puffer vests (which I am pulling today to air it out as it has been sitting in the closet where we keep the dog food since I last wore it). It seems like the first opportunity to really turn it out with the fall hits is always Thanksgiving. It's always too warm to think about the big time fall clothes, the ones previously only worn while I strut it out in my living room, until then.

For me, Thanksgiving is also the first if not only time I get to see my extended family every year. Like my fall clothes, I spend a lot of time and money prepping for this. Thinking about seeing my family can make a guy crawl the walls. When I was younger and my mom would spring a trip back down to Georgia on us the day before we had to go, I would get so anxious about the car ride and not being able to stop to pee that I could not sleep. I would down several teaspoons of liquid Benedryl and tie a t-shirt around my eyes all in attempt to get sleep. The thought of not being able to readily access a bathroom and having to be in a sort of confined space for what would seem like days (but was really only eight or so hours) was often too much.

For Thanksgiving, though, I could prepare because I knew it was coming. I would load up on the Benedryl well in advance of going to sleep, and even sometimes go out with my friends the night before the drive so I could just come home and pass out after all those Sex on the Beaches--those awful fruity/peachy drinks you get if you're Carrie Bradshaw or before you realize beer is much cheaper. I would also prepare by thinking about what I was going to wear to make sure I was the most amazing looking of the grandkids and the cousins. If you looked awesome then no one would have anything crazy to say to you because your new jeans and blue ostrich shoes spoke for themselves.

It isn't always the lack of being able to hit up the bathroom or the being in the car that would make me a little nuts. It was also the thought of having to explain why I left graduate school to work at the mall or the thought of telling my grandma that I wouldn't eat her stuffing because she used chicken broth to make it and I was now a vegetarian. I used to eat all kinds of meat, mostly chicken. Turkey would also work. So the first Thanksgiving I rolled up to as a veg was a little weird when I only had Patti LaBelle's macaroni-and-cheese and some yeast rolls on my plate. But I was prepared for the carb fest by going to the gym because I knew Thanksgiving was coming. To avoid having to explain, well, pretty much anything about me, I engage in the following techniques to divert attention and to look awesome.

Clearly I prepare for our annual Thanksgiving gathering by first devising the most incredible and multi-layered outfit that allows for maximal costume changes. If the clothes are my armor, then I will wear as much as I can to deflect the crazy rants on lost retirement and the calls for liquor shots from my grandma. The next two go hand-in-hand. I would say that to make an impact at Thanksgiving, you should probably do two-a-day cardio sessions at the gym and buy smaller clothes. I love when my family comments on how skinny I look and that I need to gain weight. Nothing is worse than being in on a conversation about your uncle who has really let himself go since he became friends with Krispy Kreme and Natural Light. But if you're in great shape, your smaller clothes will only accentuate that and keep nothing but praise coming your way. This also helps avoid explaining your decision to sell pants instead of teaching at college. I just like pants, okay!? They're better than college students and they don't require that I grade papers. And they're pretty. But I could never say that to my family, not until later when they're falling over and I'm sweating away my beauty because I am forcing myself to wear my new lambswool sweater.

I almost wonder if I sometimes am using my clothes as a nerve pill of sorts. Sweaters as Clonopin, maybe. They help me prepare for the anti-climatic meal that doesn't result in anything beyond an aunt losing her shit because her daughter is a brat. They make me feel good, too. There's something about the warmth and coziness of fall and winter clothes that we don't get when we dress for warmer weather. We throw everything on in the winter in an effort to just get through the cool, the cold, the ice, and the darkness. I’m not saying Thanksgiving is a dark winter, but sometimes those family gatherings can be a little dramatic and cold. We try to look as good as possible through winter while we wait it out to get a little warmer. Only for the cycle to start over again--whether we're trying to make it to Spring or to make it to the day after Thanksgiving.

This Thanksgiving I will hopefully pull out some of the cold weather gear I've been sitting on for the past five months once the temperature takes its seasonal dip. Maybe they're armor to defend against the wind chill or the room elephants we all have whenever our families get together. But let's face it, if you bring out all the stops and are dripping in amazingness and not turkey gravy, you'll be fine. Fall clothes will keep us warm and stylish, but like Thanksgiving we are ready for it to be over after a while. Then the cycle repeats, it gets warmer and all we can dream about are sweaters, snow, and our drunk grandma.

Jon

Saturday, August 28, 2010

8.28.2010

Dear Rachel Dratch,

A friend of mine revealed that if he were to win the lottery he would need to buy a mansion to house all of the scented candles, lotions, and soaps that he would buy because he loves them. He loves them! I think I kind of completely understand.

When my sister and I were younger, I swear she spent a period of her life hold up in the bathroom playing with different products. She'd have out the hard soap, the liquid soap, the shampoo, the conditioner, the detangler, the mousse, the gel, the hairspray, the mouthwash, the toothpaste, the Triaminic. She would be mixing and messing with all of these things, putting the final mix into some sort of spray bottle and call it her concoction.

This wasn't something she did in private, either. She'd be up in the bathroom, door wide open, wasting all kinds of money just to get something that smelled pretty and minty. I think she'd sometimes attack the Windex and the 409 just to make sure that if she were to ever put this thing on her body that it would also degrease and shine.

I wasn't jealous of her work when she would do this. But it does kind of make me think about my own love of face and hair products.

I don't know if I would buy tons of candles and soaps, but if I were to win the lottery a la Bow Wow, you better believe I would have the most expensive hair and face on earth. I love a good conditioner and some creamy gel to smear into my mane when I get out of the shower. I love to get a good scrub on in the shower with some kind of face wash that also contains teeny-tiny rocks that exfoliate and ultimately rip my old face off leaving me with the fresh skin of a teeny-tiny baby.

There was a phase recently when I was plat-num blond. My hair is naturally quite dark so it took some work to get up to the level where I wanted it to be. It wasn't just the dying part that was high maintenance, but the upkeep was also something that was high maintenance but also fed into my love and desire for doing my hair right. I would ask people that came into the store where I work what they did to maintain their platinum glow, or what they did to get it looking so good and natural. Nothing I did seemed to work to get it nice and soft.

My hair is already kind of crunchy and coarse and the bleach I covered it in did nothing to help it. I would go three or four days without washing it to see if some of my natural head oils might get it just a bit softer or more natural looking, like maybe some of the wave I get when my hair gets longer might return from the nuclear winter I set in motion the day I went blond. But I never had such luck.

So not washing my hair didn't work in getting my hair any softer. I would get all my hair products together and just mix them up in my hand when I got out of the shower. In the same vein as my sister, I was attempting to make a cure-all for my head that would make my hair amazing looking and take away its brittleness. Well, kind of like my sister's concoction, all I got was a head full of greasy yet hard feeling hair that only looked like a mess. It did not work and did not smell minty.

Also during this time, I tried all kinds of different shampoos for color treated hair. I had special purple shampoo that fake blonds are supposed to use to make your color last. You needed to leave it on for at least five minutes before you could rinse it out. I take quick showers and this was just too much! I had read on my T-Gel bottle that the color of the T-Gel could cause bleached hair to change colors, and I spent too much money on my hair to be fucking it up. So I went a few months with no T-Gel. This meant that my psoriasis sort of came back in a bad way. I bet you didn't think I was going to drop that bomb--I have psoriasis!

It eventually dawned on me that maybe this bleached out beauty just wasn't a good look for me. My hair was such a giant dry and flaky mess--Head and Shoulders couldn't even work me out. Right before my sister graduated from college this past May I decided it just might be a good idea to just buzz all the blond and start over. No products, no special shampoos (save my T-Gel!) this time around. Just regular old sort of that weird gray/brown dude colored hair that only seems to affect men. It's turned out pretty good, my hair.

Sometimes I like to think about my sister and her crazy mixing up things to get your hair, body and mouth right. And then I think about how Gillette just ripped her off with their new thing for guys that does everything but buy you a razor. I guess sometimes we're onto something and we don't even know it when we're kids.

Or you're a grown ass man and you just need to do something about your dandruff!

Jon