Archive for August 2007

How I Met Noel: Part One

August 28th, 2007

I never wanted to be famous. Though, I did have an opportunity to launch a prodigious and successful acting career when I was only five years old. Okay, maybe I am exaggerating a little. My mom and I were chosen to be extras in Trading Mom – a movie about three kids who wish their nagging mother would disappear. When they wake up the next morning and find their wish has come true, they go to the “Mommy Market” to buy a new mother. My mom was cast as the “piano playing mom” to be on display in the Mommy Market and I was cast as one of the satisfied kids leaving the Mommy Market with a new mother.

I remember being filmed skipping down an alley while holding hands with a boy cast as my brother and the woman cast as my new mom and I remember being extremely concerned that people watching the movie would know that the boy actor was not really my brother. I also remember it being unbearably hot outside and there was a lot of waiting around, which is difficult for a five year old.

So, my mom and I quit after only one day of filming. Being five years old and not having watched much television or any movies in my short life, I did not realize the opportunity I was sacrificing. Sometimes I wonder if I had known back then that actors and actresses were rich and famous if I would have continued to pursue a career in acting. Because come on, who doesn’t want to be rich and famous every now and then? Remarkably, I had another chance.

When I was fifteen years old, I was sophomore in high school. I played the flute in marching band and I hung out with the artsy crowd. I bought my clothes at Salvation Army, I dyed my hair black, and I refused to wear makeup or shave my legs. I was not popular. Regardless, I was often being told that I should pursue a career in modeling. So my mom thought it would be a good idea to take me to an open casting call she saw advertised on television. I agreed, though I don’t remember being particularly excited. I didn’t think I had a chance.

We arrived at the hotel where the event was being hosted and were ushered into a large meeting room with hundreds of other young girls and their aggressive mothers. Eyes were shifting in all directions, evaluating the competition. Some girls looked ready to compete in a beauty pageant with huge hairdos and layers of makeup, others looked prepared to sell their bodies on the street corner wearing hardly a scrap of clothing. Contrastingly, I wore a horrible green dress purchased from a clearance rack that concealed my entire chest and reached almost to my ankles. I applied lip gloss at my mother’s request, but I still felt out of place. I slouched in the back row, wearing an apprehensive expression that is typical of disagreeable teenagers.

After a brief introduction of the scouting agency, a couple of supposed ex-models were invited on stage to glorify describe what it was like work in the industry, emphasizing how much FUN it was and how many GREAT MEMORIES they shared and how much MONEY they earned and how much bleach leaked into their skulls and killed their BRAIN CELLS! I guess they were trying to appeal to the majority. They finally stopped talking and got to the part that everybody was waiting for. The part where five guys – who were all wearing coordinating black sweaters with jeans that were so tight you didn’t want to look at their crotch but you couldn’t help looking because you were only fifteen years old and you had never seen something that shape on that part of the body before – look at you for about half of a second, make some incomprehensible hand gestures to each other, maybe snap a few polaroids, and then say yes or no.

If they said no, you were finished. Get out of line and go home. If they said yes, you were directed to a table where a woman – who was wearing sunglasses inside the building and sipping something from a water bottle that was most likely a fermented beverage – recorded your measurements and your contact information. This meant that you were invited to Atlanta where you would have the opportunity to meet with over twenty modeling agencies, attend workshops to learn how to walk wearing high heels, and perform in a fashion show at the conclusion of the event.

I waited in line. I watched dozens of girls in front of me get turned away. I listened to their mothers desperately arguing with the scouts that their daughters deserved this opportunity. I felt sweat penetrate my arm pits as I approached the front of the line. I felt their fingers push the hair out of my face and lift my chin. I cringed when their eyes scanned my body. And then, I heard the word “Yes”.

Two weeks later, my mom and I were on a plane to Atlanta.

To be continued…

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I Am An Idiot

August 13th, 2007

I am rarely content with my current state of affairs. I constantly seek change. Whether it is the orientation of my living room furniture, the quantity of cats in my house, or my current career, the grass is always greener on the other side. While I generally enjoy my existing job, I often conjure ideas of how grand it would be to work in a different industry. And almost every week, my delusion is something different. One week, I might want to be a train engineer. The next week, an Egyptologist. Rarely does one obsession prevail through time. With a few exceptions.

One thing I have always been passionate about is math. I love everything logical, quantifiable, and ordered. I even went to math camp when I was in middle school. And the summer before I started college, my boyfriend (now husband) taught me calculus while we waited in line for rides at King’s Dominion. (I know, how erotic!) However, just because I like math, that does not mean that I am good at math.

I started college as a math major with the plan that I would become a math teacher. I had a few great math teachers in middle school and in high school that inspired me. In geometry class in particular, the class where I would sit in the front row with a view out the classroom door so I could watch this one especially cute guy walk by on his way to lunch every day (the guy that I met later that year and is now my husband), my teacher, Mrs. Lasswell, told the best math jokes. My favorite? She would ask us, “What did the acorn say when he grew up?” and after a few seconds of sustaining her goofy grin, she would extend her skinny arms out to either side of her body like limbs, wiggle her fingers like leaves, and say, “Gee, I’m a tree!” Ge-om-e-try. Get it?

Well, I didn’t do so well in my first year of college as a math major. I moved out of my parents’ house when I was only sixteen years old, left my high school friends behind (they were still in high school), and had difficulty meeting people. I didn’t even have a roommate because one of the perks of being in the Honors program was getting a private dorm room. That turned out to be my ruination. This was also the year that I broke up with Eric for one month because, well, I was lonely and depressed. Eric was still in college in a town four hours away.

My grades suffered and by the end of my second semester, I had lost my half-scholarship as well as my status in the Honors program. I moved back home, Eric graduated and came back to Richmond, and I started getting my life back together. After considering several majors to pursue including French and art history, I discovered something called urban planning. I had never heard about it before, but the Dean of the department convinced me that it was important, so that is where I am today. But sometimes, I still have feelings for my first love, math.

Today, I was sitting in a faculty meeting at a school in Mississippi that my coworkers and I helped create a master plan for and I was admiring all of the math teachers, huddled in a corner like they were some kind of gang – the cool kids – when I started yearning to have my own classroom, adorned with posters of the Fibonacci series and xkcd comics. Unfortunately, that daydream ended abruptly when I made an embarrassing math error.

The Head of School was making a speech to new faculty members about how fast the school is growing, referencing last year’s student population – 1,145 – to this year’s – 1,211. I did the simple subtraction in my head, trying to determine how many new students our master plan would need to accommodate. Approximately 800.

Obviously, that is 734 students too many. But I was daydreaming about decorating my classroom and impressing my students with hilarious math jokes, so I wasn’t completely focused at the time. My excuse? I thought 1,211 was actually 2,111. In my head, it seemed right.

Luckily, only two people heard my miscalculation and I recovered gracefully. However, my hopes of ever becoming a math teacher are now tainted with this shameful memory. I think I will stick with urban planning.

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