Sunday, February 8, 2009

Words am I

My friend Tim wrote me this farewell poem upon conclusion of our rhyming contest on facebook:

"So sadly . . . farewellto Corina, of verse and rhyme
For whose wit, no matchcould facebook quite find
Her words, her image . . . evoke elegance and magic
Last seen at her keyboard,waxing not monosyllabic"

My response to Tim:

Tim, this is for you and anyone else who thinks I am missing in action . . .

Words am I

I am a friend for life in times good and bad
A survivor who endures all changes and fads
No need for goodbyes, no sad wistful sighs
For I remain in spirit, in the mind’s eternal sky

I sweeten the lips of lovers
I grease the wheels of war
I voice human hearts in diaries and memoirs

Seek me in scripture, sing me in song
Study me in libraries in tomes overlong
In graffiti-splashed walls and in stories to tell
In truth and fiction and feelings I dwell

I haunt inner places wheres sticks and stones can't reach
I comprise curses and prayers and all manner of speech
I travel across centuries by recorded means
From ancient stone tablets to LCD screens

I’m whispered in rumor and published in news
I’m shared by all to inform and amuse
Dissect me, perfect me, translate, or remake me
But God help those who ever forsake me

I am solemn in promise and jovial in jest
Laden with power in feelings professed
Depending on the aim I wish to achieve
I can seduce, destroy, inspire, or deceive

Handle me with care lest relations go awry
Proffer in good intention and use not to lie
The flesh is oh so fleeting, but words do not die
I transcend time and space, for words am I.

True or False?

25 things that may or may not be true about me:

1. I used to be a guy.

2. I used to be married to a lawyer I met at work.

3. I had a quickie wedding in Reno when I was four months pregnant with my first daughter.

4. I’ve been pregnant five times.

5. I have children from two different men.

6. I had plastic surgery after pregnancy and childbirth ruined my figure.

7. I acted in XXX films before getting a small role in an obscure but mainstream independent film.

8. I used to sing alto in a Christian church choir.

9. I once received a marriage proposal from an author whose book was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize.

10. Present relationship excluded, I’ve been extremely unlucky in love: one divorce, three boyfriends who died of cancer, and countless failed romances.

11. I was in the same 5th grade class as Naomi Wolf, bestselling feminist author. We were both chosen to be in a special program for gifted students based on our IQ test scores.

12. I had a literary agent who dumped me when he couldn’t sell my manuscript.

13. I’m ashamed to invite people to my apartment because I’m the messiest clutter bug on this planet.

14. Of the 7 deadly sins, jealousy is my biggest vice.

15. I fear poverty more than I fear death.

16. I used to be a volunteer crisis counselor at Suicide Prevention Hotline.

17. My parents were restaurant owners but I can’t cook.

18. I prefer food over sex even though I’ve had a triple digit number of sex partners throughout my life.

19. I’m a people pleaser, but I’m an extremely difficult person to please (I hope that doesn’t stop people from trying, because I still adore the efforts).

20. If you have something to hide, then it’s the first thing I want to know about you.

21. I take prescription medication for a psychiatric condition.

22. I’m non-judgmental, unless you judge me first.

23. I’m poly-amorous, but not in a sexual way.

24. I’m tri-sexual (do toys count?)

25. I’m a liar (If this is true, then I’m not lying, if it’s not true, then this is my first lie).

Remember, truth and fiction lie together in the bed of their own making.

Mercury in Retrograde (and its implications for dancers)

My astrologer, Joyce Van Horn, warned me that Mercury goes retrograde from January 10 to January 31, 2009, causing higher than usual chaos in the universe. During this phase, mishaps can multiply as humans and the inanimate world forget how to cooperate with each other.

Mercury retrograde or not, trouble needs no gps tracker to locate me; it targets me with the accuracy of a heat seeking missile. But on Wednesday 1/21/2009, I was even easier game than usual. There I was at the Hilton Hotel in Chinatown (formerly the Holiday Inn), scheduled to perform classical Chinese dance for a community event called CHOW (Chinatown on Wednesdays). Here, CHOW is not a stir-fried dish, but a meet-and-greet networking association of Chinese business owners, professionals, community leaders, local residents, white guys with yellow fever, etc.

The invitation to perform came only the week before, so our group had all of one rehearsal to practice two routines we had far from finessed. For those of you unfamiliar with the form, Chinese classical dance is known for its use of props. One of our dance pieces required us to wear robes with sleeves long enough to drag on the floor. The dance creates a lovely effect when these elongated flowing sleeves billow around the dancer's body like clouds gliding among narrow peaks. These cloud-like sleeves alternatively swirl, swoop, and swish through the air, pale creatures of phantom breath and energy. Keeping the cloud-like fabric airborne in motion is what makes the dance so lovely to watch. Occasionally, the dancers fling the sleeves away from the body, causing the fabric to unfurl, then pull the arm back to catch the end of flying sleeve. On this occasion, one dancer, who shall not be named, tossed the column of sleeve above her head and attempted to catch it on the way down, only to have the slippery fabric slide right through her nervous fingers and drop in a puddled heap on the floor (the sleeve, not the dancer). In that moment, our group of five dancers resembled four flying clouds plus one very embarrassed fallen cloud.

But that mishap was nothing compared to our other performance piece, the long ribbon dance. Picture in each hand a silk ribbon about eight feet long, perfect for waving, twirling, and forming windborne curls. The effect is amazing when seen on a large stage with plenty of room for five dancers to flow around freely. But put those same five be-ribbonned dancers on a postage stamp size portable dance floor, and you’re asking for a silk war. Instead of creating loose, flowing shapes with our ribbons, we looked like we were attacking each other with colorful whips. Not wanting to strike my fellow dancers with my silk strips, I made smaller swinging motions with my arms when turning. Without enough momentum, the ribbon’s circular trajectory was too small for clearance, causing it to twist a few times around my waist. Pulling on the ribbon only tightened the tangled hold. I went from being a ribbon dancer to an immobilized bondage victim. The audience watched me untangled myself from the silken restraint with both hands fumbling and a mouthful of unspoken curses written on my face. By the time I released myself, I completely lost my place in the music. I winged my way through the rest of the ribbon storm. Just so you know, I wasn’t the only who ruined the ribbon dance. The other dancers also looked dazed and discombobulated by the battle of clashing silk. The CD player, bent on its own mischievous agenda, skipped to the beat of its own drunken drummer.

I am partly to blame because I was busy stuffing my face with fried wonton and fried chicken wings before the show when I should have been practicing my ribbon strokes.

And last but not least, there was an unintentional wardrobe malfunction. Not the kind that causes bare boobs to pop out, but the kind that reveals unwise underwear choices. My ribbon dance costume consisted of a sheer silk tunic and matching pants in yellow gold. When I wore this costume during rehearsal, I must have been wearing pale panties in a solid color, because I don’t recall the transparency factor of the fabric. Those pants were not made to be worn with my panties du jour: hot pink boyshorts trimmed in black and embellished with a smirking Tweety Bird. (In case you’re wondering, other patterns in my collection include Disney Princesses, Hello Kitty, and my favorite logo brand, “Miso Hot.”) There was no time to go home and switch panties, so I had two choices: flash a cartoon character known for saying “I thought I saw a puddy cat” or flash whiskers of a different kind.

I haven’t checked the planetary charts, but I’m sure Mercury was also retrograde during a past performance in the fall of 2008 when I experienced another embarrassing panty incident. This time, I played the seductress in a contemporary ballet piece called Hidden Dreams. My costume included a little black dress, black fishnet stockings, and shorts over the stockings for modesty’s sake when I performed certain moves. One section of my choreography included a floorwork move I learned from Chinese dance. When it’s done right, my legs resemble the opening and closing of a fan swiveling back and forth. I lowered myself onto the floor and positioned my legs for a fan-like unfolding. As I rotated one leg into the air into a circular sweep, I suddenly remembered that I had no shorts on underneath the dress, just panties and stockings. How did this oversight occur? During the rush between costume changes, someone yelled out for all dancers to hurry up and assemble for Hidden Dreams. Not wanting to miss our cue, I joined my fellow dancers without realizing my missing costume component. One must give me credit for my professionalism as a performer in demonstrating that “the show must go on.

”What? Don't tell me you’ve never had a bad panty day in your life. Mercury will go retrograde again during the summer of 2009, posing another opportunity to wreak havoc in your life, so watch out for mishaps that lurk in blind corners to nab you in the dark. Or just watch out for me, because I am perennial mischief in motion.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Onomatopoeia

When my friend announced she was joining the group “writers embracing onomatopoeia,” I splashed her facebook page with this loquacious rant filled with phonetic freakiness and frolic:

Onomatopoeia? Hmmm. I dated him once. He's a chump who collects choo choo trains. Psssst. I met him on Yahoo. In the beginning, it was all whoo hoo, ooh lah lah, and hip hip hooray. Whoa! In bed, he was all tah-dah, full of ummmph and ba-da bing. He ooozed charm, but I broke up with him because he had a tendency to buzz, hiss, and sizzle when he was pissed. He is a razzly dazzly snake who slithers and slinks in and out of women's lives, particularly those who wear froo froo tutus. Onomatopoeia was a cheap ding a ling with plenty of ka-ching who didnt buy me bling. He left me feelig punked and zinged. He was a blip in my life who turned out to be a mother*Bleep* Ooops, I shouldn't cuss.

Onomatopoeia will zoom through your life and then bang! It's over, kaboom, zilch, kaput, leaving you to feel zonked. I had an ah-hah moment when the lighbulb in my head went ding and I knew it was better to be lah-de-dah about the whole thing. Awww, don't feel bad for me. One less luggage to chug. Onomatopoeia is a hiccup and a sigh in a life otherwise filled with hooplah. However, as sure as dogs bark, cats meow, ducks quack, chickens cluck, doves coo, turkeys gobble, cows moo, sheep bleat, horses neigh, and pigs squeal, I still babble about Onomatopoeia as I listen to the tick tock of the clock and wait for the phone to ring. Should I beep his pager or click "send" to text him? Or knock on his door? How do I hush the pitter patter of my heart?

Shhhh, don't tell anyone, but Onomatopoeia's brother is Mr. Wham, Bam, thank you Ma'am. He toots his own horn, but he's more dud than stud. He huffs and he puffs but he creates more ow than wow in the whoopie wiggle. You'll feel a boink before he falls over with a thud and a thump. Then he zips it and poof, you hear the roar of his car engine, the screech of tires crunch over gravel and the honk of his car horn. Eek! He misses the toilet when he tinkles. It's icky when he farts and burps, so don't forget to gargle after smooching with this troll looks like one of the oompah loompahs from Willy Wonka's chocolate factory. He was a stuttertutterer who mumumbled when he spoke, warbled out garbled melodies, giggling and guffawing after guzzling too much booze.

Please don’t think my chirpy chants mean that I've flown over the cuckoo's nest. Aaaargh. I deserve to be whacked and slapped for chiming in with these cheap chuckles, ha ha, that comprise my amateur jingles. You'll think I'm a jerk who's gone beserk if I don't quit these quirky quips. I've squiggled too many boo boos to jiggle out of this conundrum. My life is otherwise hum drum and ho hum. Boo hoo. I'm done now, so you'll hear not a peep or a squeak out of me.

Saturday, January 10, 2009

A Stalker's Life

If you think a stalker’s life is one-dimensional, think again. Few people appreciate the complex multi-tasking required to fulfill a stalker’s role. Here are some tips for effective stalking:

Stalkers need a paying job with flexible hours. They must be available at a moment’s notice to eat at restaurants not of their own choosing, watch movies they would otherwise not see, or go to stores where they have nothing to buy. Whether you’re crashing a formal party or digging through your victim’s trash and recycling bins, stalking is the most exhausting job you will ever love.

Stalking is not cheap. Prepare a budget for the necessary tools of the trade. You’re going to need a cell phone plan with unlimited minutes for all those long messages you’re going to leave on your victim’s voice mail. I recommend signing with the same cell phone provider as your victim so that you can take advantage of in-network, mobile to mobile calls. Other necessities include: a car with tinted windows, binoculars, a camera with telephoto lens, sunglasses, hats, wigs, and reading material to make you look busy when you’re sitting in public places. You might also want to hire a stylist to help you create different looks with your wardrobe, hair, and accessories. No respectable stalker wants to be caught in the same disguise twice.

In the old days, stalking was looked down upon as unskilled labor. Nowadays, stalkers need to be tech savvy enough to hack into computer systems and use spy-ware. Not to mention all those burglar alarm systems they have to learn to disable.

Stalkers need to stay in good physical shape. They never know when they need to jump over fences, rappel off rooftops, or run from the police. A stalker never leaves home without a first aid kit in case they get injured on the job.

No one understands the adage, “home is where the heart is” more than a stalker. Relocating to new cities on the trail of your victim is an expected part of the job.

Contrary to popular opinion, stalkers do possess social skills. The best ones use their charm to gather intelligence by chatting up their victim’s friends, family, neighbors, hairstylist, manicurist, personal trainer, even the mailman.

When stalkers feel frustrated by obstacles or slow progress, they relax by prowling Facebook for new victims to add to their friends list.

Stalkers are not needy for praise and recognition for a job well done. They understand that stalking is its own reward.

So far, I’ve mentioned financial stability, technical expertise, agility, versatility, endurance, commitment, and resourcefulness. How many people do you know who have all these qualities, plus love in their heart? Friends come and go, family members can disown you, and mates can betray you, but your stalker is the one person you can count on to love you forever. Have you hugged your stalker today?