Sunday, June 15, 2008

The Happening Didn't

Brit and mom and I went to go see The Happening. The only good part of the movie was when the name Ivan Dumas appeared in the end credits and Brittany and I simultaneously pointed and yelled "Ivan Dumbass!" I laughed harder than I have in months.

I've gotten into Six Feet Under and am on the second season now. All of the acting is SO GOOD. Have also been reading a little and going to the gym a lot. Brit joined mum and pops and me on The Boat yesterday. It was good old fashion Fun Times, plus sunburn. Did I mention that my dad bought a 32 foot boat last year? Ah, to be retired.

This is my last night home. I leave tomorrow at 3 for Seattle. THIS IS MY EXCITED FACE.

P.S. Happy Father's Day!

Growing old just takes practice.

Thursday, June 05, 2008

Do You Have Stairs In Your House?

My grandmother is affectionately known by her beloved spawn as "The Pusher," so styled for her propensity to push food on you day and night and when it's overcast and darling why don't you have a fruit bowl and surely some dessert and I got those Goldfish just for you! If you don't keep a close eye on her, she'll just start making you more food, will you nill you. I have always more or less fit the stereotype that boys are bottomless pits when it comes to food and have never minded that being said of me or saying that of myself. I tell you today friends, I mind it. It has become, in my Ah-Mom's presence, not only tiresome, but borderline offensive. I dare not compare presuppositions on my appetite to the racist, sexist, and other categorical opinions held against groups of people, but I am, for the first time, finding judgments made against my sex and age, and finding them none too shiny. I don't want a damned piece of pie. I just had a fucking huge dinner and I'm god damned full! I don't want to hear about how a boy like me is aaaaalways hungry! I'll tell you when I'm fucking hungry. And I can feed myself for christ's sake!

I got sunburned today. It reminds me of the speech tournament in Salt Lake City where I was irradiated from head to toe and then had to walk all over town in a wool suit. Each step was like a fresh pot of scalding coffee in the lap. And the shoulders. And the back, arms, legs, stomach, and neck. And when I smiled, the face.

OMFG TEH HTMLZ!!1!

BOLD
ITALICS
BOLD AND ITALICS!!!

The Latest, and so forth

Posting has been sparse. Sue me. What have I been up to? Well, I *did* mention I am gradumatated, didn't I? I've been putting around home for a month or so, reading and watching various media.

Right now mom and I are visiting her mother in Charlotte (my favorite aunt, Linda, just walked in and we're about to head to the Olive Garden) for a family-related thingy thing.

I read Chuck Palahniuk's new "Snuff" today. I didn't care for it as well as "Rant". I'm leaving for Seattle on the 16th. We're in Seattle until the 20th, then we fly to New York, then train to Boston on the 24th, then fly to LA on the 27th, and then it's around the world. I am so freaking excited. THIS IS MY EXCITED FACE!

I'm writing this from the cool new Blogger Google gadget, so I may do more postings soon.

P.S., Yes, I know book titles should be italicized, no put in quotes, but the gadget is somewhat lacking in formatting features. SUE ME TWICE!

P.P.S., And I'd have liked to boldify that last bit, but ya know, WHAT CAN YOU DO?!

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Scratch, Scratch

My butthole is really itchy today and I don't know why. The more I scratch, the more it itches.

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

The Subtle Difference Between "Certainly" and "Absofuckinglutely"

The human brain has two hemispheres, three sections, four lobes, and 100 billion neurons capable of performing 100 trillion operations a second. Somewhere in that 3 pounds of bio-electric tissue can be found the subtle difference between Certainly and Absofuckinglutely. Exempli gratia: I was certainly going to graduate when I wrote this post and then spent each subsiquent night staring at my ceiling and pondering the final paper which I never actually turned in but knew certainly wouldn't matter. Certainly. Mmm hmm.

Whereas today after my my final grades were posted, I know that I am absofuckinglutely going to graduate. So I don't need to inspect my ceiling anymore.

This book, the Bible, is too ridiculous for criticism - Thomas Paine

I Beg of You

Please, please, please listen to this On The Media story about Ayn Rand. For the love of God. I am begging you. It's wonderful.

Sunday, May 11, 2008

Mother's Day

Or Mothers' Day. It's 2almost3 AM on the day of and for all Mothers. Ladies, if you're not yet a mother, you might consider the exciting benefits of having a WHOLE DAY to and for yourself. Gentlemen, if you don't have a mother, you haven't been paying close enough attention. Treat your mum right today and every day but today especially. Remember: the wonderful thing about sexual reproduction is, everyone gets a mommy! And every mommy gets a day. Today! Happy Day Of And For Mothers.

Tolerance is just another word for low standards - John Peterson

Monday, May 05, 2008

Things I Fucking Love, Vol. 6

NOFX. Fucking punk rock.

Saturday, May 03, 2008

Major Fucking Milestone, or Something

My first grade teacher, a surviver, due to oversight, of the Salem Witch Trials, once consoled my parents that, "some children just aren't 'readers.'" This was poor solace to the man and wife who had seen their young son climb over furniture, stand on his head, throw fits, lap the house, and do just about anything to avoid a book. Ink was like holy water to this hell-spawn. Just not a "reader." My second grade teacher, an angel of the Atlanta public school system, advised my legals that I had what modern medicine called a "learning disability" and required special education. "Special" in the "air-quotes" sense of the word.

So I was taken in the second half of my second grade year to the "special" trailer to meet with the "special" teacher and read cardboard-paged books printed in primary colors. I was also tested. There were intelligence tests, Rorschach tests (inkblot cards), and the kind of psych tests that get you prescription medication. And I was given prescription medication. Ritalin for my newly discovered ADD, then something stronger for my still more newly discovered ADHD (the 'H' is for "hyperactive"). After much poking and prodding of yours truly, my parents were handed the good-news/bad-news diagnosis of "gifted dyslexic." The "gifted" meaning I was in the right 99th percentile of one set of tests, the "dyslexic" meaning I was in the wrong 99th percentile of the other.

I was enrolled in the Schenck School, an area institution specializing in alternative education methods for unique little people such as myself. I attended Schenck for two years: third and fourth grade. And would you believe it, they made a reader of out of me! I still remember the first book book I read. It was about a haunted house. I sat in my mother's lap, slowing deciphering words at a time, then memorizing what I'd read for fear that I'd be unable to duplicate my feat.

My eager expectations of rejoining my unspecial friends in the fifth grade were interrupted by the news of our move. It was nothing to me that Minnesota public schools lead the nation by a litany of metrics. I was not a radically satisfied customer. Recourses, however, are few when one's age teeters on two digits. So fifth grade was to be at a new school in a new state. Provisions were made, through my mother, for both my "gifted" and my "dyslexic." I was enrolled in the high-potential group which met several days of the month and did high-potential stuff. I also met with the "special" services lady every so often to make sure I was doing well. And I was. In fact, remarkably well for one in so many exotic percentiles as I.

I then moved on to the newly constructed middle school where I did less remarkably well. I may have my years turned around, but I seem to remember doing alright in 6th grade, very poorly in 7th, and not quite as very poorly in 8th. Then came high school and its gentle, precipitous decline of scholastic performance, culminating in the spectacular Senior Plummet. I was able to retain my honors ranking by special dispensation of the principal, thanks to the saintly lobbying of my mother.

And then college. I began this blog in my sophomore year, 2005, by which time I'd already managed to fail a class. F. Not D- or F+. I went on to fail four more classes (though one of those I had stricken from the record, clever me). I was also under the shadow of a looming D when C's were all my academic probation would allow (cleverness saved me there again and inspired this post). And there were the three separate occasions on which my parents declared that they would not finance the remainder of my academic disaster (each occasion a successively nearer miss).

I have told my friends and I have told my mother and I have told myself that I hate school. That school has been a painful difficulty from the time I was tantruming my way out of Pat The Bunny. That I'm just not a "student." That my 99th percentile "gifted dyslexic" brain and the modern academic complex are simply insoluble. That a life in academia has whittled away my patience. And that I am bursting at the seams to spread my wings and begin my life. That is what I tell everyone, including myself.

Thursday was my last day of class ever. I wish I could say that this blog post has been simmering in my brain for the last day and a half, undergoing draft and re-draft, the way one obsesses over conversations past, waiting for the perfect words to capture the auspice of the occasion. The truth is, Sam just sent an email asking when I graduate. I was explaining my itinerary when I realized that this last Thursday was the end of a 17 year academic career. That it was anything more than a widening of my Tuesday-Thrusday availability.

I usually like to end my blog posts with a sarcastic remark or ugly quote. Today I'm going to end with advice which is intended as an allusion to the Temple of Apollo at Delphi and not The Matrix: Know thyself. Knowledge is not knowing your times tables or your spelling or your European history or your advanced biology or your prepositional logic or your polymorphic object oriented computer languages or your Stanislavsky technique or your Twentieth Century feminist existential philosopher/playwrights. The most difficult thing in life is not doing what you love, but knowing what you love. Most people grossly misunderstand themselves and have the worst sort of misconceptions about what they love. This ignorance is a sure cause of much sorrow. Know what you love, and never forget it.

Be well, do good work.
- Scott

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

More Birthday Fun

My birthday is a holiday!
http://www.break.com/index/fck-the-earth-day.html

Remarkable Coincidence

The Dinosaur Comic for my birthday:
http://www.qwantz.com/archive/001209.html

Birfday

Dear Blog,
Steven worries that I neglect you. Better than abuse you, I say! There, there. Papa's back.

What I've been up to lately (in roughly chronological order):

  • I went to Boston with Baily to visit the Novell peeps. Aaron let us crash at his place.
    this.Friends["abock"].Esteem += 5; //I keep my friends in a hashtable
  • Our show opened.
  • The folks came by to see it.
  • Michael can down from Boston to see the show.
    this.Friends["mhutch"].Esteem += 20;
    this.Friends["abock"].Esteem *= 0.1; //Esteem is a double
  • Folks and Hutch and I went to see Pattie Stewart in Macbeth.
  • Show closed.
  • And now it's my birthday.
That's pretty much everything that's happened in the last howeverlong. I'm 22 years old.

"Time to die!" -Roy

Saturday, March 22, 2008

Things I Fucking Love, Vol. 5

Tikibar TV

Friday, March 14, 2008

Who do you want answering the phone?

I spare no expense for hobos. Literally. Any request of the form, "spare some _____" will get a big ole "I'm too busy with my own thoughts even to pretend I didn't hear you" look out of me. If I ever did have the kind of money where I could just blow it on the homeless, I would instead use it to buy them copies of Atlas Shrugged. Anyway, the other day I was heading through the Fulton St. subway station when this guy at a pay phone asked me, with convincing earnestness, for a quarter. "Here," I think, "is a man in a pickle. A hard working Joe who is caught without any change and clearly needs to place a phone call. No surprise: with the prevalence of credit cards, it's not a wonder he hasn't got a quarter. And his cell phone could be out of juice, or in his other pants. This is a man," thought I, "who needs only to make one quick, urgent call. He certainly isn't looking for a leisure quarter or booze money, and he certainly isn't without a home. He could very well be calling his home. I have a quarter. I will give this tragic hero my quarter. Here you go, noble sir, MAKE THAT CALL!"

Several days later, I saw the same man at the same phone asking for quarters in the same "this never happens to me, I can't believe this is happening to me" tone of voice. He was a very clever hobo. I did not give him a quarter and he called me a faggot. I suppose we all adapt.

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Gone Bananas!

I don't eat bananas. They are just one of those fruits I never ingest under any circumstance ever. From the time I was born until about a week and a half ago, I had eaten exactly no bananas. Which brings us to a week and a half ago. We were teching our shows and I was all of a hungered. Then Pat, one of our freshman lackies, proffered me a bit of a bite of his banana. I informed everyone within earshot that I never eat bananas at all because of 1) their stupid taste, 2) their gross texture, and 3) I don't like the banana-flavored runts (for the same reasons I don't like bananas). I forget what happened next, but it involved me eating the banana. I know!

Flash three days later: I come in for strike and inform every Caroline Counts within earshot that I am all of a hungered. WHAMEE! She whips out a banana. BIFF! I peel. *GRODY BANANA NOISES* It is gone.

I am now averaging a banana a day. My new director, Ian, is even getting them for me. I guess I've...

Gone Bananas!
A farse in three acts
by S.T. Peterson

Sunday, March 09, 2008

Things I Fucking Love, Vol. 4

90 minuets of Christopher Hitchens eviscerating a rabbi.

Saturday, March 08, 2008

Metapost

I made the observation about Ian and me (including my history of subconscious impersonation) no less than three times today, to different people. When you tell the same story three times in a day, you know it's time for a blog post!

Post

A long-known fact about myself: when I'm around certain people, I begin to behave like them. For instance, when I am home, I act more like my dad - mannerisms, patterns of speech, &c (I am especially like my dad when I interact with my sister). Also when I'm around Sam, I act more Sam-ish than usual. The director of the play I am now in is crazy. I mean, craaaazy. KARAYZEE!!! I'm running out of text formatting options and I'm concerned that you're still not catching my drift. The man is... well, ok. Crazy. You get it. Ok, so, today I find that I am begining to behave like Ian (that's his name. Ian.) when I'm in rehearsal. Which is craaazy. But also awesome.

Tuesday, March 04, 2008

Fruit Distribution

This is an eyeball estimation of the fruit distribution in the dining hall's fruit bowl:



This is inversely proportional to my appetite for each of the above fruits.