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Posts Tagged ‘Personal’

  1. Ode to my killer heels

    February 5, 2012 by host

     

    Black High heel Mules Mortons Neuroma

    “You shouldn’t wear high heels anymore.”  The podiatrist delivered this devastating blow with a self-satisified sniff, barely glancing at my stricken face.

    I replied with something akin to, “ARE YOU FREAKIN’ KIDDING ME?”

    Now that I had the Dr.’s full attention, her demeanor became more consoling, her tone…almost maternal. Suddenly I was more than just another foot in her face; I was an exposed metatarsal who needed coddling.

    Since about the age of four, I’ve had an innocent habit of sitting on my right foot, simply because it provided an elevated comfy cushion. Over the years this harmless peccadillo of mine has  morphed into an angry pack of inflamed nerves between my third and fourth toes that flares up, willy-nilly, without any warning whatsoever. By ‘flares up’ I mean a sensation of being stabbed with an ice pick between the toes.

    It doesn’t happen often–only four times in the past year–but the last time it happened, I looked around for a nice place to die.  I was outside, near the Washington Monument, but it seemed too grandiose for me. I’m not a former President, or even a non-voting member of Congress. So I hopped along on one foot, like a tortured contestant in a sadistic game of hopscotch, to the nearest metro stop, which happened to be somewhere near Virginia.

    No-heel shoes are almost as bad as high-heel shoes for me, so in the future I’ll be sticking to 1-2 inch platforms with good arch support. It’s like being punished without ever having committed a crime; like being condemned to wearing gray sweatpants in a world filled with brightly colored sarongs.

    All things considered though, this couldn’t have happened at a better time. I’ve never really embraced  the platform-front shoes that have become so popular these last couple of years. They remind me of the Frederick’s of Hollywood heels worn by the transgender fishwife hookers I used to see on Manhattan’s 9th Avenue while on my way to classes at The New School. Not a style I care to emulate. And, truth be told, for the past few years I’ve only worn heels when absolutely necessary (weddings, etc…). Silently and without any conscious decision on my part, I’ve evolved into a woman who cares more about comfort than style. The only logical explanation is that someone put an evil curse on me, probably in Greece.

    But indulge me in moment of frivolity as I close this chapter of my fashionable footwear life with a requiem for some of my towering flights of fancy from years past:

    Thank you, back-zip BCBG boots, for passing me off as a Femme Fatale. Sorry about that incident of trailing toilet paper at the Kennedy Center:

    BCBG Black high heel Boots Mortons Neuroma

     

    Thank you, Italian Milano boots, for your sharp and pointy tips that, in a pinch, could serve as lethal weapons. The way the world under-estimates me has always been my greatest weapon:

    Pointy Italian Boots

    Thank you, Brian Atwood Daisy Dukes, for lowering my IQ by 50 points with a single glance at your stone-washed denim and red tassels: yee-haw, ya’ll. Wish I’d gotten more than one wear out of you, I don’t care how ridiculous I looked:

    Brian Atwood ankle-tie sandals

    Thank you, German-bought Fornarina stilts, for adding five inches to my stature and making me feel like a Teutonic Valkyrie. I was once the tallest person in Malaysia thanks to you:

    Fornarina High heel wedge sandals

     

    To my understated Chanel’s and Vaneli kitten heels: you’re not going anywhere.  They’ll have to pry you off my cold, dead, feet.

     

    © 2012, Ithaka Bound. All rights reserved.

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  2. Goat finds freedom in an unfree world

    January 22, 2012 by host

    Baby goats

    While scanning the week’s news events, I came across this:

    A longhaired goat that ran away from a Minnesota nativity scene on Christmas Eve is finally back home after being on the lam for 25 days.

    The errant animal, named Curley, turned herself in when she wandered onto the farm owned by Tony Loomer and family, near Fergus Falls, Minn.

    After laughing for a good while, I wanted more information.

    Curley was probably innocently volunteered by her owners to serve in the adoring spectacle of the nativity, but I couldn’t help wondering what went through Curley’s mind just before she made her bid for freedom. It’s clear that standing there, serving as a representative of something she couldn’t even guess at, all those eyes glaring at her, Curley decided she was having none of it.

    I’ve written before about my wish to have a goat farm. This desire was ignited while talking to a farmer who explained to me that goats were extremely social animals. “You can’t have just one goat,” he said, “because it’ll die of loneliness.” This instinct endeared goats to my heart because it manifest something that’s true of most living creatures. Vulnerability and frailty are beautiful qualities to possess, in humans as well as goats.

    Years ago on a hike through the Swiss Alps, I ran across a goat-herder leading his herd down the mountain. As I passed them, the first goat in the herd began to follow me and I soon had the whole herd following me up the mountain. Clang, clang, clang went their little bells. Endearing.

    Curley was found half-frozen and starving in farmer Loomer’s herd. For Curley, freedom meant the comforting company of her own kind. Home is where she most wanted to be. Her owners were practically in tears when they learned that she had been found. In other words, the perfect ending.

    © 2012, Ithaka Bound. All rights reserved.

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  3. Happy Holidays

    December 22, 2011 by host

    Christmas in California

    Whichever holiday you celebrate, may it be a happy one!

    © 2011, Ithaka Bound. All rights reserved.

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  4. Gabi

    May 9, 2011 by host

    My niece Gabi, who was born fearless.

    Gabi

    © 2011, Ithaka Bound. All rights reserved.

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  5. Any given Friday

    March 20, 2011 by host

    clock-time-stands-still

    Any given Friday, you might be sitting in a cubicle, wondering if there’s more to life. Your best friend might be lounging in a coffee shop, working on a crossword puzzle. Across town, your sister might be yelling at her kids to stop chasing the cat. In another city, your mother might be preparing tea for your father.

    Any given Friday, a siren might sound and the ground might start shaking. Another siren might sound, warning you to seek higher ground because the water is coming.

    There is no siren to announce the radiation, just endless warnings to stay indoors, even though you no longer have an indoors.

    The waves take everything you’ve worked so hard for, but you barely even notice because all you care about — now and forever — are the mother, the father, the sister, the children, the best friend.

    Your life might change forever, on any given Friday.

    Red-Cross-Washington-D.C.

    The American Red Cross had me on standby for possible deployment to Japan to help with the relief effort, but it looks like the Japanese are handling the situation. If you’re looking for a place to donate, click here.

    Kids-in-music-program

    This past Friday, I had a great time volunteering as an event photographer for music programs in D.C. public schools.

    Children-in-music-program

    Children-playing-instruments

    During my morning Starbucks run, I saw a woman reading a book titled How to be Rich by J. Paul Getty. It seems to be a topic of great interest to people so I thought I’d add my two cents. If you’re an American who would like to be rich, click here:  volunteermatch.org

    © 2011, Ithaka Bound. All rights reserved.

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