Aug 31

I first got sick a little over a week ago and have not only got better but I think I’ve gotten worse. I went to the doctor a few days ago but since it had been a full week of being sick the doctor thought it’s best to wait it out. So last weekend, I hung out with Ms. Kim and got her sick. During the week, I had a few lunch and coffee dates during the day and at night I’d work at this part time gig I found. I get home and sometimes I stay up in hopes of catching the boyfriend online. This weekend, I also couldn’t resist dinner with Nisreen, Jesse, and Bing on Friday night; Saturday was a going away party for Daniel and UFC night at Dave and Busters; and TODAY. Gosh. Today I had a birthday lunch I couldn’t skip out on, it was my turn to host our first Ink Spots meeting since the summer, and lastly I had a True Blood date with Deesh and Britney which ended up being a bust that sucked two hours. Gah.

So. Yes. This is why I’m a mess. I know sleep is the best medicine. Sucks because I don’t know if I’d wake myself up coughing like I do most nights.

I just wanted to explain my absense. I usually don’t go more than a day or two without blogging something. My tastebuds are off and my brain is too mushy to write that book review/read a book.

Here are a few pictures from our Ink Spots meeting tonight and one I took with Katambra on Saturday.


With Katambra at Dave & Busters

I’m going to drink a Theraflu and go to bed now.

Other Ink Spots Blog Entries:

- February 23, 2009 – Ink Spots Turns 9 months old and we have one of our best meetings
- January 26, 2009 – Pictures from our Jan 2009 Meeting
– November 3, 2008 – Ink Spots Runs a 5k

Aug 28

After our dinner at Asti, Kim and I wanted to have coffee talk so we walked across the street from Asti to Quack’s 43rd Street Bakery. She used to come here during college to study whereas I’ve never been. I need to come during the day sometime because apparently they have the best latte foam art. I like latte foam art. Instead, we split a chocolate almond croissant and I ordered a hot chocolate. Chocolate croissants are something I love love love. They used to be my medicine for bad days at work or school.


Nothing outstanding about their hot chocolate or chocolate crossiant but they are each inherently comforting and indulgent. Soothing to my soul.


We sat outside to keep our conversations more private. Here’s a picture of the inside from our table.

I’ve mentally flagged this coffee shop in my memory as a shop I need to go back to for my next coffee date. I want latte foam art!

I was originally going to post a book review of Eleven Minutes but am still battling a cold and the review would have been a doozy to write. I will have that up tomorrow instead. I’m now going to dope myself up with newly acquired medicine, shower, and crash.

Other Hot Chocolate Mentions:
- July 13, 2009: Hugo’s fantastic mexican hot chocolate (Houston)
- April 10, 2008: Dylan’s Candy Bar (NYC)
- Feb 28, 2008: Clementine (Austin)
- Dec 2, 2007: Hands down, the best hot chocolate of my life at Chocolate Bar (Houston)

Aug 27

Saturday, Kim and I tried a new to us restaurant that’s been on my list to try for a couple of years now. (Seriously, there is not enough time or money to eat the world.) Asti Trattoria is located on E 43rd close to Duval. We were able to call at around 7 for 8:30 reservations. I note the time because it was way too dark outside for me to use natural window lighting to take pictures of the food. I don’t like to disturb diners with flash. Maybe next time, I’ll go at an earlier time.

It’s definitely a call ahead restaurant, as it’s pretty small and thriving, at least on a Saturday evening. We were seated maybe 10 minutes after our reservations? We had an immediate girl-crush on the tall possibly half Vietnamese hostess wearing a vintagey dress. I say Vietnamese because she gave my last name an impeccable Vietnamese accent that even I’m incapable of doing. So we killed our time imagining what kind of person she was. (According to our fantasy, she decorates her modest apartment with kooky but aesthetically pleasing flea market finds and is somewhat close to her mom who calls often.)

After mulling over the menu, we decided to have the appetizer featured as a special. Fried risotto balls. It was good. I mean, it’s fried risotto balls, how can they not be good? Kim chose the prosciutto and melon salad with olive oil and lemon as her entree. A surprisingly palatable and delightful combination. I chose the White Clam Sauce Linguine which is Littleneck Clams, white wine, garlic and fried breadcrumbs. DELICIOUS. I love shellfish. I was very pleased and wish to go back and try other things on the menu. Truthfully, I’ll be pleased with ordering the same thing again.

A cute quirk, when you order hot tea from Asti, they bring out a tiny teapot and a little box of assorted teas you can pick from. Cute right? I had the vanilla bean tea.

We didn’t have the dessert here like we usually do when we try new restaurants but only because we planned on walking across the street to eat and coffee at Quack’s 43rd St Bakery.

Aug 25

I met Jon and Will together in 2001. They are best friends. They’re pretty up there with me as well. After college, we’ve seen each other maybe twice or so a year because everyone kind of scattered. It was always 2 by 2 though. Today, Jon was driving back to NYC and Will came in yesterday and is leaving today. I missed him yesterday because I’ve been nursing some kind of cold/flu. The three of us met up for a last meal. We picked pho because pho has curing power and would combat my cold and their hangovers. Anyway, we could not for the life of us remember when the last time I saw both of them together. It’s been at least two years.

So as we were saying our awkward “see you later in a few months or maybe next year”’s, Will said, “Maybe we should take a picture or something.”

We didn’t have anyone outside Pho Danh to take the picture so we set it on a window ledge. Jon didn’t want to wait a full 10 seconds for my self timer which left us to work with 2 seconds. Here’s the first take.

Lastly. Here’s a better shot of Mr. Crazy Hair.

Aug 25
Sodade
icon1 Linda | icon2 on the nightstand, savory | icon4 08 25th, 2009| icon34 Comments »

Not only is Sodade the closest coffee shop to my apartment, but it also has the best chai latte I’ve had. It’s the only thing I ever order at this coffee shop. I was frequenting coffee shops everyday last week. I’m not quite sure how you pronounce Sodade. I should ask next time I’m there.

This is one of my trips. You can see the date of this visit on my journal. Jon needed a coffee shop with internet to do some work so I suggested what was most convenient to me, hee. I actually finished Eleven Minutes on August 21, 2009. I just haven’t gotten around to writing the book review yet. It’s soon coming.

Here’s a picture of the interior and Jon and our laptops. Jon’s on his way back to NYC. No more day time play buddy for me.

Aug 24

Yesterday, Ms Kim took me to see Wicked as a birthday gift. I was kinda poopy but I thoroughly enjoyed every second of it. Neither of us have read the book. It was nice to see an explanation for the ruby slippers, for the Cowardly Lion, the Tin Man, the Scarecrow and finally of course, how Glinda and the Wicked Witch came to be. If you have a chance to see this show while they’re on tour, I HIGHLY recommend that you do. I already wish to see it again.

It was nice to see the Bass Concert Hall in Austin after the renovations are done. They now have a cafe, a TON of lounge areas, art gallery, and nice furniture. They also opened up the entire front side of the building with windows. I snapped some pictures of the newer, brighter, Bass Concert Hall.

Aug 22
bad timing.
icon1 Linda | icon2 still-frames | icon4 08 22nd, 2009| icon32 Comments »

The fun hasn’t even finished this weekend. It’s only Saturday. I still have dinner with Kim and drinks and then Wicked tomorrow and dinner and fun. I woke up today with a lump in the throat and am now coughing, drippy, hot, and mopey. I got the malaise.

Aug 21
Juan in a Million
icon1 Linda | icon2 Austin, savory | icon4 08 21st, 2009| icon34 Comments »

Before Alan left for Korea, he watched Man v Food obsessively. There’s a Juan in a Million episode that made my mouth water with nostalgia. I used to come to Juan in a Million in college many mornings before many nights out. It’s the perfect morning after meal. I have fond memories of Juan in a Million’s Don Juan. Here’s a short teaser of Man v Juan in a Million.

Jon’s in town for a short week from NYC and he was craving some Juan in a Million so we went yesterday for lunch.

Of course we both each got the Don Juan. He’s never had anything else there as well. Don Juan: A secret combination of potato, egg, bacon and cheese in a deliciously hot tortilla all for $3.60

We struggled through but both were victorious. I used to be able to do 1.5 of these orders without a problem back in college and Jon claimed the same thing. We’re getting old. :( At age 26, I now wear eye cream and struggle through one Don Juan.

Here you see Adam Richman of Man v. Food. He ended up not beating the skinny Asian record holder near the top of the winner wall but they added him to the wall as the celebrity record holder. Aw. What a consolation /pity prize.

Aug 21
Halycon
icon1 Linda | icon2 Austin, birthday, savory | icon4 08 21st, 2009| icon3No Comments »

The first time I stepped into Halycon, located on 4th St, downtown, was summer of 2005 with Kym of Je Mange. I think we only had coffee that day and read and journaled, like we did many days that summer. Through the following years, I go occasionally to eat the table top smores. Actually, I remember the last time I went, Chris had accidentally blown a fireball into my face while we were making smores. Anyway, when I went Tuesday night to catch the tail end of Katambra’s birthday celebration downtown, I decided to opt out of my usual table top smores and ordered their banana walnut crepes. Jon and I split it and devoured it. Look at how glorious it is? This makes me excited to experiment further next time I make crepes on my own.

I swiped Halycon’s picture of their smores off their website.

Related Sweet Crepes Blog Entries:

July 12, 2009 – Banana Nutella Crepes
May 12, 2009 – Crepe Cafe in San Fran
May 13, 2009 – Honey Honey Sweet Cafe & Crepery

Aug 19

The last time I was in Houston, I borrowed the Alchemist and A Long Way Down from Kim’s library. Kim and I have shared a few books in our time. We read Fear of Flying in 2006 (my excerpts from my old blog here) when she was still in NYC. We had Romantic Movement and On Love. We also gave up on A New Earth around the same time. So when Kim recommends me anything, I usually end up liking it. We have a large area of overlap when it comes to our literary palate.

A Long Way Down, written by Nick Hornby who also wrote High Fidelity and About a Boy, opens with 4 strangers who have all decided to kill themselves on New Year’s Eve in London and they so happen to pick the same time and building rooftop, kind of intercepting each other’s plans. What ensues is a series of misadventures that keep delaying their respective suicides. From entirely four different walks of life the four make a very odd quartet. Jess is a loudmouth, shameless 18 year old who antagonizes everyone she speaks to; Martin is the celebrity talk show host who just served time for sleeping with a 15 year old girl; JJ is an American ex band member who also just got dumped by his girlfriend; lastly there is Maureen who is a religious, timid, inexperienced middle aged woman with a severely disabled son. At a moment’s glance, the only thing they have in common is the desire to die. They hardly like each other yet their union is remarkably solid. Individually, as well as generally, they are so dysfunctional it’s hilarious with moments of unexpected sentiment.

There you have it. Please consider using my Amazon link if you decide to give this book a try, which I recommend to those who find that life, even when it’s bad can be hilarious in its absurdity.

I find that the more quotations and excerpts I pull out of a work correlates with how much I enjoy it.

Excerpts

What I’ve come to realize over the years is that we’re less protected from bad luck than you could possibly imagine. Because though it doesn’t seem fair – having intercourse only the once and ending up with a child who can’t walk or talk or even recognize me- well, fairness doesn’t really have much to do with it, does it? You only have to have intercourse the once to produce a child, any child. There are no laws that say, You can only have a child like Matty if you’re married, or if you have lots of other children, or if you sleep with lots of different men. There are no laws like that, even though you and I might think there should be. And once you have a child like Matty, you can’t help but feel, That’s it! That’s all my bad luck, a whole lifetime’s worth, in one bundle. But I’m not sure luck works like that. Matty wouldn’t stop me from getting breast cancer, or from being mugged. You’d think he should, but he can’t. In a way, I’m glad I never had another child, a normal one. I’d have needed more guarantees from God than He could have provided.

I was beginning to realize an important truth about suicide: Failure is as hurtful as success, and is likely to provoke even more anger, because there’s no grief with which to water it down.

Why did we persist in the pathetic delusion that this relationship was in any way viable? I’m not sure. When I asked Penny what the big idea was, she said merely that she loved me, which struck me as an answer more likely to confuse and obscure than to illuminate.

“You’re seeing someone else, aren’t you?”

Seeing someone else? How on earth could that explain an of this? Why would seeing someone else necessitate bringing home a middle-aged woman, a teenaged punk, and American with a leather jacket and a Rod Stewart haircut? What would the story have been? But then, after reflection, I realized that Penny have probably been here before, therefore knew that infidelity can usually provide the answer to any domestic mystery.

I’ve been cheated on a few times by more than one person and I can related to jumping to conclusions instinctively because of your past.

There was a breakup coming, you could smell it, and no one was saying anything. And it was for the same reason, which was that we’d taken things as far as we could, and there was nowhere for us to go. That’s why everyone breaks up, I guess: bands, friends, marriages, whatever. Parties, weddings, anything.

How do people, like, not curse? How is it possible? There are these gaps in speech where you just have to put a “fuck.” I’ll tell you who the most admirable people in the world are: newscasters. If that was me, I’d be like, “And the motherfuckers flew the fucking plane right into the Twin Towers.” How could you not, if you’re a human being? Maybe they’re not so admirable. Maybe they’re robot zombies.

True fucking that!

But being alive seemed worth the price of a round of drinks. Being alive seemed worth celebrating. Unless, of course, it wasn’t what you wanted, in which case… Oh fuck it. I wanted a drink anyway. If we couldn’t think of anything else, then me wanting a drink was worth celebrating. An ordinary human desire had emerged through the fog of depression and indecision.

Hear, hear. I like to celebrate every thing even the dark things. I remember I used to celebrate monthsaries of surviving a bad break up. Every month I made it, I went out and partied. I have a friend who celebrates the anniversary of his own stabbing.

We all spend so much time not saying what we want, because we know we can’t have it. And because it sounds ungracious, or ungrateful, or disloyal, or childish, or banal. Or because we’re so desperate to pretend that things are OK, really, that confessing to ourselves they’re not looks like a bad move. Go on, say what you want. Maybe not out loud, if it’s going to get you in trouble: “I wish I’d never married him.” “I wish she was still alive.” “I wish I’d never had kids with her.” “I wish I had a whole shitload of money.” “I wish all the Albanians would go back to fucking Albania.” Whatever it is, say it to yourself. The truth will set you free. Either that or it’ll get you a punch in the nose. Surviving in whatever life you’re living means lying, and lying corrodes the soul, so take a break from the lies just for one minute.

There you have it. Please consider using my Amazon link if you decide to give this book a try, which I recommend to those who find that life, even when it’s bad can be hilarious in its absurdity.

Related Blog Entry:

August 3, 2009: 500 Days of Summer & Alain de Botton
June 17, 2009: Book Review: The Alchemist
April 5, 2008- Romantic Movement excerpts
Mar 24, 2008- Romantic Movement and On Love excerpts

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