Friday, January 30, 2009

In Case Of...

I knew that I had had too much when I woke up in a cold sweat. Sure, an occasional one every now and then was okay, but lately I'd been swimming in them. At first I thought, "What harm could just a couple do?" But that was before I was brought right to the brink of death. It's not like I was completely unaware of it before. It just seemed that lately, I'd been surrounded. I think it all started with a couple of friends from work. We didn't really have the same backgrounds or standards, but hey, they were nice girls and a load of fun. It began at Sarah's house.

I suppose you never really know who your friends are until you're all sitting together in a living room and there's a lull in the conversation. What pops into your head? Abraham Lincoln? What on earth did I get on my shirt? It was a sunny winter afternoon and Kellyn said, "So . . . I've thought about what would happen if there were zombies. I have a plan." I hardly had a chance to process the ellipses forming in my brain before Sarah followed up with, "Yeah, me too." Apparently I have lived a sheltered life. A life in which I have never had to worry or prepare for the oncoming threat of the evil undead. I never even realized that this was an eventuality that I should be contemplating.
But Sarah and Kellyn? They're ready.



Kellyn's plan involved being on high ground near the train depot (giving her a good lookout for the approaching corpses) and hunkering down. From there, the conversation turned to the best ways of killing zombies . . .


. . . and then Kellyn mentioned she also had a plan in place in case of a nuclear apocalypse. Not being one to ignore valuable resources, their names in my cell phone were changed to "In Case of Zombies" and "In Case of Armageddon".

But this was just the beginning of the zombie infestation. One moment Kellyn, Sarah, and I careened around giant mushrooms playing Mario Kart, and the next I held a plastic gun in my hand and stared at the logo for House of the Dead. You've probably seen this game in an arcade. Blue and red plastic guns, pictures of rotting corpses dripping in green gore, and "Insert Coin to Play" blinking at you. I gave saving the world a mighty effort, but didn't even make it down the block.




I flatly refused to play the next game: Left 4 Dead. Just watching the opening movie was enough for me. Fast-moving shadows. Shrieks in the darkness. Rain pouring down. Frankly, I had a hard time watching them play it. Animated decaying bodies looking to eat you are bad enough, but give them speed and I'm a nervous twitching lump.



I thought the onslaught was over. But then came Christmas.

Aaron and Melanie came over with their presents. He had gifted her with the board game Last Night On Earth: The Zombie Game. A couple days later and we were hunkered around my kitchen table with the soundtrack playing in the background. I was the hunky quarterback; Dad, the sheriff; Arielle, the farmer's daughter; Melanie, the priest; and Aaron . . . the zombies. Fifteen minutes later, all the zombies were in the cornfield and Arielle and I were freaking out wondering what they were planning. It became even scarier when halfway through the game they came out, en masse. Many bullets, wounds, and bursts of panic later, the hunky quarterback . . .



. . . found himself separated and alone in the police station surrounded by zombies and with only a pistol. I almost peed my pants. Luckily, in true horror movie fashion, I was able to save us all and barely escape with my life. I thought at last I could have some peace.

Until one morning, I awoke in a cold sweat.

I had just had my first ever zombie nightmare. I had not had a nightmare in years and certainly not a paranormal one in decades. I remember it was night. The whole family met up in some remote part of Boise on a small, dusty hilltop. Tufts of desert grass moved in the breeze as we sat around a rickety picnic table. We took turns explaining our plans for dealing with the oncoming undead. I didn't have a plan and just expressed my love and that I would miss everyone. Melanie agreed. Slowly, silently, we all rose and went our separate ways. (Side note: Family, if we are ever on the eve of a zombie apocalypse, we are NOT to split up!) I got in my car and I remember having just sheer panic. I had no idea where to go, what to do, and a desolate feeling thudded in my gut -- I knew that there was nothing to do, nowhere to hide.

I pulled out of the house's driveway (location had changed due to the nature of dreams) just as a man in a sports car thundered in, tires screeching. He jumped out of his car and approached me, a crazy look in his eyes. I rolled down my window. "Is it coming?"

"No," he replied in a deadpan voice. "It's already here."

As I drove down the street, it became more crowded. People walked around in a dazed state, clothes disheveled and panic in their eyes. Fear tightened my chest and my heart pounded. They were almost here and I was getting closer.

. . .

. . .

. . .

I woke up. This was one of the few times in my life when a dream continued after I laid back down.

It was the next morning and the family was all back at the house. Miraculously, we were all alive and somehow the whole thing was over. It took me forever to coax the cats out of the tree and back into the house. I caught glimpses in their minds of what they had seen. We began to hear stories of how people survived. One group of gentlemen staying at a hotel were given one of the only keys to the high-rise top-floor king suite. They spent the whole night with the doors locked and the lights off; watching the chaos below from the windows. We all knew millions of people had been killed. I began to compile a list of people to call to find out who had made it through the night.

Ugh. What a vibe to go to work on.

Sunday, January 11, 2009

When Parantheses Ruled the Earth

I am a big fan of surprising people (and I don't just mean jumping at my sister Arielle as she exits the bathroom) (although, that is quite fun).

Last month, for Dad's 29th birthday (ha!), I surprised him with a ticket to see "Walking With Dinosaurs: The LIVE Experience" with me, and on Wednesday we went.

I'll give a slight pause to allow you to turn green with envy.

If you've been living under a rock and have never heard of "Walking With Dinosaurs" (as most of my co-workers do), I'll explain. It was originally a 6-part BBC miniseries (they make the best) about, you guessed it, dinosaurs. It combined state-of-the-art computer graphics (sidenote: where did the term "state-of-the-art" come from?), some wicked cool animatronics, and was done in the style of a regular nature program; meaning it pretended that it was actually filming the animals and just had a voiceover narrator -- no interviews or looking at bones and fossils.

State-of-the-Art Computer Graphics


Wicked Cool Animatronics


The
Guinness Book of World Records says the series was the most expansive documentary series per minute ever made (thank you, wikipedia). I have no idea what that means. The point is that the program was pretty awesome and it got lots of good reviews (including three Emmy Awards, accolades and fruit punch all around!).

So a couple years ago, some people decided to make a live show of it (of course! Why didn't I think of that?); namely, William May (creative vision) and Bruce Mactaggart (original idea). It was all developed in Australia (yay Australia!) and has been seen by over two million people. The show is currently in North America (official website: www.dinosaurlive.com) which brings us to Dad and I at the Idaho Center on Wednesday.

...

It was at this point that Dad and I were both a loss for words.

...

It was just . . . AWESOME, AMAZING, INCREDIBLE . . . ! The show ran about an hour and a half long plus a 20 minute intermission and was basically a history of the age of the dinosaurs. It took you through the Mesozoic era (containing Triassic, Jurassic, and Cretaceous periods) and showcased some of the dinos of the day. Narrating and walking through the whole thing was an Indiana Jones type of time-traveling paleontologist who had an absolutely perfect voice for it. Even the plant life took us by surprise.

The dinosaurs who made the show were (interesting note, spellcheck only recognizes the names "stegosaurus" and "tyrannosaurus"):
  • Allosaurus
  • Ankylosaurus
  • Brachiosaurus - The biggest at 36 ft high and 56 ft long
  • Iguanadon - Just the carcass
  • Liliensternus
  • Plateosaurus
  • Ornithocheirus
  • Stegosaurus
  • Torosaurus - Had one of the largest land-animal skulls, 8.5 ft long
  • Tyrannosaurus - The baby tyrannosaurus was crowd favorite
  • Utahraptor (hee hee, Aaron)



My roommate, Leslie, and her mom were also there (in a different section) and at one point it looked like they almost got attacked by the brachiosaurus. Leslie wanted a shirt that would say, "I Almost Got Eaten By The Brachiosaurus And All I Got Was This Lousy T-Shirt."

Oh, the babies is so cute!


This thing was just gianormous!


Animatronic wizardry



I highly suggest trying to see this if it's in your area (Melanie, Aaron, it's in Salt Lake this week: 14th -18th). Also, y0u should check out a video montage of the workshop where they created everything and a Today show segment where they talked a little about the making of it.

So, yeah. Simply the COOLEST thing ever and I'm TOTARRY glad Dad and I went and . . . I have no words.

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

The Christmas Party Pooped

Oh so sad! So blue! So glum! The Christmas is over.

This year's Christmas was more...eventful than those of year's past. My roommate spent the week on a cruise ship in Mexico with her family. This was excellent as it provided the apartment and me with some quality alone time that had been lack as of late. We desperately needed to get in touch with each other again.

On Christmas Eve Eve (the 23rd), Arielle was supposed to spend the night with me for frivolity and fun and cable tv. That morning on my way to work (driving through the Treasure Valley's version of treacherous snow), I started to slide. Being the girl that I am (the kind of girl who listens to her father's advice), I steered towards the side of the road where there was still a bit of snow that no one had driven in. The sidewalk was right there, but it is quite a short sidewalk so I figured I'd just ride up. I seemed to have mistaken the shortness of my car. I hit it with a nice bang and a jar and then headed onto work. After work, I went home for about an hour, sat my friend's cat for about an hour, filled up on gas...and when I finally parked my car (at least 12 hours since the initial slide) I heard a nice "sssssssssss". Oh dear.

Right before my very eyes, the front passenger tire gave up. I called Dad, who told me to call my Home Teacher and call him back. I called HT Trevor, who was out Christmas shopping and said he'd be by soon. I called both the tire places that are only minutes away from me and they said that since it was 5:30 they had stopped taking requests, but since it was just a flat if I could get it in by 6, they'd take care of me. I did fail to mention to them that last time someone looked at my tires they said they'd have to go soon. So I knew they'd want to completely change 'em out. I managed to get my spare out and started changing the tire (ripping my new coat in the process). I got my spare on and just had to tighten the bolts so I called off my Home Teacher. And then, with only a couple minutes to spare before 6...I broke off one of the bolts. This was just about the straw that did me in.

I called the tire places and was told I'd have to wait for tomorrow when they open at 8am. I have to be at work at 6am. I called Dad, who told me to call my team lead, Roxanna. Roxanna's husband answered the phone (very nice man, I've met him before) who said she was taking a nap. I did try very hard not to sound incredibly pitiful and weepy, but a little seeped through because he said that if it was an emergency he could wake her up. "(Sniffle, choke) Oh no, that's fine...nevermind." Dad ended up coming the rescue. He volunteered to drive all the way to Boise at 5 in the morning, take me to work, and then drive all the way home so he could take Mom to work as well. My fun night with Arielle was ruined. My Christmas was ruined. My car was ruined.

I drove the car over to the tire shop, and walked my most pitisome and tear-stained self home. Then Roxanna called me back, "Mark told me you called and sounded upset but wouldn't tell him what was wrong." She was duly empathetic.

After being taken to work on Christmas Eve (THANK YOU DAD), I planned a ride home with a friend. During the day, the tire place called and said they'd have to replace my front tires. No surprise there. Then they called a little later to say, "We're all done and you can come pick it up! We close at 1pm today." Here was a problem: I don't get off work till 2pm. We were quite slow at work so I was 99% sure I would get off early, but still there was that 1%. With gracious help from Roxanna, my temp agency representative, and my supervisor...it all got figured out and I was off with a friend by 11am driving to get my car. I immediately headed to Nampa for Christmas Eve (Making sure to bring my work clothes since I had to be back at 6am).

Christmas Eve was a blast. Grandma Ison and Aunt Lora Dawn joined us (along with Arielle's friend Amanda). We had our traditional Christmas Eve Pizza (but left none for Santa this year), acted out the Christmas Story with the cloth/bean nativity said made by Mom & Dad when they were newlyweds, read about the Ingalls Christmas in "Little House On the Prairie", and prepared for games. By this time, the snow that had been promised to us all day was getting quite boisterous and proud of itself. Grandma and Lora Dawn left around 9pm and at 10pm Dad decided to call it quits. The snow had just been getting more and more unruly and instead of spending the night, it was decided that I would head back home to Boise. Oh weep, oh gnash. Oh ruinous night. Once again, Dad came to the rescue and and this time let me follow him all the way to Boise and then drove back to Nampa, getting home by midnight.

Realization: Within the 200+ movies my roommate and I own, none are Christmas movies.

Friday, December 19, 2008

Painting Away the Hours

I'm currently working at an IT helpdesk and it has led me to the following self-discoveries:
- I cannot become a morning person. As far as I'm concerned, early mornings are something best seen at the end of late nights.
- I hope to NEVER work a 24/7, open-every-day-of-the-year job again. I can't tell you how depressing it is to have to go to work on the holidays.
- Having to work on the holidays when it is extremely slow can lead to some interesting new hobbies.

I'll explain about the hobbies. I always bring a book to work and usually some music as well, but on those really slow days sometimes they don't suffice. And since my internet access is limited (or rather, is supposed to be...shhh), I can't surf around and look at Cake Wrecks all day. So I have discovered the joy of the Paint program on my pc. I've played Battleship with coworkers, done add-on drawings with them, and made a short series of hamster drawings (I'll talk about that in some other blog). But my most prolific venture has been one-panel cartoons. Usually they're quite silly and several are really only funny to me.

Here's one I did this Thanksgiving.



"Santa Baby" by Chanel

Thanks to some iTunes karaoke and a headset with a microphone...I recorded this last year.


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