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The Stephanie Experience Featuring Homer

Saturday, November 25, 2006

Happy Thanksgiving

I hope you had a happy Thanksgiving holiday. In addition to a tasty Thanksgiving dinner, Zach and I also experienced all the fine dining Toledo has to offer (Tony Packo's and the Elbo Room). And! I got to see a Christmas tree do a little light show in time to the Lemon Pipers' "Green Tambourine". I've been around the world, but that was the first time I've seen that! (not sure what song that is? Listen to a snippet here.) While I'm thinking about Thanksgiving, here are some things I'm thankful for:

-For friends
-For family
-That Stampy behaves more like a person and less like a dog
-That I love Homer just as much, even though he behaves more like a dog and less like a person
-For my job
-That Zach takes the trash out in the evening and makes my coffee in the morning
-For control top panythose
-That I have a coworker I can be completely catty with
-For my health
-For Woodchuck cider
-That Zach doesn't mind my having a "high maintenance" budget for the upkeep of my hair and complexion
-For my opportunities to travel
-For people who are moderate and tolerant
-That Eddie and I were close growing up
-That I love to read
-For strangers who compliment my bag or my hair
-That I can drive a stick shift
-That my parents always trusted me
-That Texas A&M beat t.u.! Whoop!
-To have a moment to stop and think of why I'm thankful
-That God is everywhere, if you only look hard enough

Sunday, November 19, 2006

Wish List

This is my Christmas wish list post for the family, so I don't have to send out a mass e-mail with a Word attachment. Mass e-mails with attachments are, like, so 1998. If you're not my immediate family, you can stop reading here... that is, unless you feel like buying me something.

Friday, November 10, 2006

Krakow

My trip had an inauspicious start. When I got to Dulles, it turned out I had no e-ticket. No e-ticket, no paper ticket. Well, I did have a paper ticket, but it's probably still sitting in a travel office somewhere, and nobody had bothered to tell me. A call to my travel agent squared all that away and got my e-tickets issued, but I was nervous about further ticket fiascoes for the rest of the trip. During my Paris connection, the woman at the counter didn't help my mental state. She would ask me for information, respond by frowning at her computer screen, ask me for more information, and then frown even more exaggeratedly at her screen. Every time she did this, I thought "Oh my God, I don't have a ticket! I'm stuck here!" It worked out, though.

Once I got to Krakow and checked into my hotel on Sunday, it was already dark, so no sightseeing for me! Too bad, because I had a list of places to see and things to buy. It was such a short trip that I almost didn't get any pictures at all. We had a driver/van rented all week to take us to meetings and such, and he was under contract for a full 12 hours each day. We only used him in the morning on Wednesday, so at lunch another teammate and I borrowed him to drive us over to the Wawel Castle to take some pictures. He didn't understand English, but I used my Pictionary skills to show him that I wanted to go across the river to take some pictures of the castle. I'm not fluent in anything but English, but damn if my universal pantomime skills aren't getting good! My attempts at Polish were never acknowledged, for reasons I can't explain. I would say thank you ("Dzinkuje"), and nobody ever said "you're welcome". People just pretended like I didn't say anything at all. Was I accidentally saying "your mother's a whore"? Maybe they were just embarrassed for me and my mild mental retardation.

The food was the highlight of the trip. I ate pierogies a couple times, some great vegetarian couscous, and a latke (a lot more like hash browns that I'd remembered). The latke was supposed to come with cheese and "game". I asked the waiter what kind of "game" it was, and he said bacon. So I guess pigs are considered game in Poland! I also ate chicken livers and used lard as a spread for the first time. My weight-loss regimen is completely screwed, by the way. The restaurant with latkes had a "rustic" theme going on, meaning everything was covered in animal hides. The rough-hewn benches we sat on were covered in pelts. I noticed toward the end of dinner that the texture and color of the pelt I was sitting on looked exactly like Stampy's hair. I asked the waiter what kind of pelts they were, and he said "either wolf or dog"! I guess it's possible it WAS an old english sheepdog.

On the flight home, a coworker and I connected through Vienna. While we were waiting, an elderly woman walked up to Mo (my coworker) and started prattling on in German. Mo didn't initiate this conversation, so I could see that her patience was wearing thinner each time she had to say, "I only speak English". Finally, a younger woman came up and pulled the old woman away, apologizing that she was confused, and that Mo "looks like someone she knows". Mo looked at me and said, "I look like someone she knows?!?!" Mo is a large, gruff-looking black woman who has dreadlocks and was wearing a do-rag. Even in America, Mo doesn't look like anyone else I know!

My small collection of pictures is here. Also note that I modified the lists to the left of the blog, so there's now a link to my Flickr sets. Do widzenia!