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March 27, 2006

empirical evidence

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What happened at the Magik Markers show was throbbing, humid, dangerous. The back of the Oasis was hot hot hot. Not desert hot, like an Oasis should be, but really muggy, or as they say in some parts of the world, "close". It was really close. Then these kids who were tripping on shrooms or something started tumbling, and kind of kicking people in the face, which was weird enough but it was already weird that we were sitting down, beers being grabbed out of the way in emergency measures, guitar thrumming a line you would bounce to if bouncing were an angrier thing. Elisa stumbled into the crowd, into a confused goth man, into a fight, into the tumblers, who started hitting each other for pleasure while the goth man grew convinced Elisa was out for pain. ("I think he didn't get it," I said to her later — "Do I?" she responded.) One of the tumblers split her pants, Elisa stopped wanting to play, and a guy sitting next to the stage took the front grill off of an electric fan and started putting his face in it. It was all high-level noise and low-level anxiety, a film of moisture, microphones flying, a boot to somebody's back, lost watches and regretted sweaters. I thought I was going to get hurt. I hope they come back soon.

March 18, 2006

Upholding Society one Middle Finger at a Time

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It's not a shocking statement to say that among my social circles (and my adopted countrymen in general) I'm considered more on the brash end of the scale. I prefer "straightforward", others may prefer the more explicit term "rude". Secretly I like to think Canadians enjoy having a mouthy American in the group. Like I always say, who else is going to send the food back?

That said, I've been trying for some years now — well, let's start with my column in the eighth grade newsletter — to establish myself in the tradition of the world's finest etiquette columnists. Though my use of the plural there is a bit disingenuous: I don't think anyone comes close to Miss Manners, and I don't really bother reading anyone else these days. Her biweekly column and amazing legacy of books are imbued with not only a staunchly proper code of conduct but a beautifully humanitarian set of ethics. Etiquette, Ms. Martin taught me at a young age, is not in fact a set of rules established to alienate economic classes unfamiliar with the proper use of cocktail forks, but rather, when used correctly, is society's great unifier. Manners include rather than exclude; they teach by guidance and example rather than admonishment, they smooth over awkwardness rather than create it, and most importantly, they dictate that we must each respect one another. It is this respect that keeps society from entirely running off the rails, people extinguishing their chewing gum in one another's hair, cussing at little kittens, et cetera.

Although Miss Manners is my hero, I will admit that my own personal sense of right and wrong tends to swing more towards the indignant, "what the fuck?" variety — and I'll concede that the niche market of snarky etiquette delivery does have a certain cache.

But even I of the shouting-you're-welcome-behind-your-back school was surprised to have the tables turned the other day when, upon the subway, I was "your welcome'd"! That's right — I took a seat and the woman who had "let me" squeeze past her — because she'd selfishly chosen to sit on the outside seat of a two-seater — sneeringly said "you're welcome" to me as I took my seat. On public transportation.

Had I been in a movie and tried to squish my way past someone towards a more premium seat, or perhaps had I even felt I had brushed her or entered her personal space, I would absolutely have said "pardon me!" as I walked past. Heck, I'd do it even after tripping over the knees of a family of twelve at a baseball game for the tenth time that inning. But to be chastised with saccharine for not asking permission to get into a seat that someone had deliberately made difficult to access (she sat down seconds before me)? That's a new one. The thing is, she clearly thinks she's making the world a better place, too, by going around letting me know how rude I am. I've known for a long time that the whole "leading by example" thing is better than correcting, but, you know, since I'm always right I figured it was at least a little more okay when I did it. But I think I'm going to have to go back to the drawing board with the whole reforming society thing. Or, you know, sharpen my elbows up some.

March 03, 2006

chilaquiles!

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Near as I can tell from the internets, "chilaquiles" means basically any dish with soggy tortilla chips. Here is mine:

Ingredients:
3 corn tortillas, about 6" in diameter. (If you don't have these, use Tostitos, taco shells, whatever). They can be stale.
1/3 cup green taco sauce
2-3 Tbsp green onion, sliced
2 chipotle peppers, sliced
1/3-1/2 cup old cheddar cheese, grated
Pickled sliced jalapenos, to taste (I used about 6, and diced them)
1 Tbsp butter
3 large eggs, beaten

Soak the tortillas in the taco sauce for at least 10 minutes, then cut or break them up into strips or chunks. Heat butter in frying pan or skillet until pan is greasy. Add all ingredients. Cook until delicious. Eat!