Saturday, December 11, 2010

Snack Size Denial - 3 for 99 cents

Over the summer, my sister and I noticed these hilarious grocery-poster spoofs in the windows on the second floor of a brick building in Pittsfield and we were wondering whose they were. I finally went back again today and noticed they are pieces from an art gallery called empty set projects by Michael McKay and Monika Pizzichemi.

Some of my favorites not pictured are "Common Sense - 39 cents", "Industrial Strength Angst - 4 for $1", "Sweet Revenge - $10.99 a lb.", "Dashed Hopes - Buy One Get One Free", "Best Intentions - $6.29 a dozen", "Instant Karma - $7.49",

Greetings from Somerville


Typical neighbors! All festive and plastic and bright.


Friday, November 19, 2010

shoe shot

still a pretty Fall here, although any second, it may turn to Brrrrrrwinter




Monday, November 15, 2010

holidays mean family

I have no idea if this was intended to be funny, or even intended in the way that I'm reading it, but I really laugh hard every time I pass it on the way to work. Family comin' to town? Better start drinkin'. Also could be read as "mean family" comin' to town, better start drinkin'.

Thursday, November 11, 2010

I said I was going to upload a photo of this cool Day of the Dead Matroyska doll poster that I bought the other day. Here she is. I still need to get it framed for the wall.

Also at the SOWA Art Market I bought this fun little trivet/tile of the Golden Girls which really ties the room together, does_it_not??
I can't really take a photo of my bedroom because there's piles and suitcases everywhere. But here's a couple pretty pictures of Boston at dusk, from Mem Drive, on my commute home last week.

Monday, October 25, 2010

at last!

here's a couple photos of a trip my roommate and I took to the SOWA Vintage Market on Sunday in South Boston which had lots of flea market stuff and etsy-ish artists. the tea pots are indeed a Mad Hatterish sculpture.

I bought a really cool poster of a Day-of-the-Dead style Matroyska doll, but I'll have to take a photo of that later once it's framed and hanging. also bought myself a tile/trivet of the Golden Girls (!) which is so perfect for midnight cheesecake snacking.

and recently found (finally) flip flop socks in pear-colored Asian bunnies. too cute.

great day today -- Phew.

"Everything is not enough, nothing is too much to bear. Where you been is good and gone, all you keep's the getting there."

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Shug

(Sigh) I didn't even realize how much I loved it until I owned it.

I think I'll name her Shug after my favorite book, A Color Purple.


New place

This is me having coffee this morning in my new super-cozy, modest but furnished apartment and the hilarious mug with a photo of my landlord in his badass teenage years, circa St. Elmo's Fire. IKEA furniture has been delivered, and hopefully I'll have photos up of my new (well, new used) car tomorrow. All is well!
Above is my landlord's dog, Scooby, who is no longer living here but who is so perfectly cute she probably should have had a career as a movie dog like BOLT. She really doesn't like cameras though, this is her protesting.

Monday, October 11, 2010

New Englandy

Nope, not stock photos. This was just a day in my drive around Boston today. It's "parents weekend" in Cambridge and Boston, so the traffic was terrible but the scenery was out in full bloom and everything's especially idyllic with the trees turning colors. You might as well draw in the cartoon bluebirds singing.

I actually got a flat tire as a casualty from pulling over suddenly to take a picture of the Charles below, but oh heck, it was worth it. The white traditional church below is the Battle Green of my first hometown, Lexington, the exact spot where the Revolutionary War started. No wonder I'm such a fiercely independent type.




Sunday, October 10, 2010

kismet

that's Hingham Bay

Things are going so incredibly well in Boston that I'm seriously starting to feel suspicious that I died and went to heaven and it's like in The Sixth Sense where I missed the memo. Pinch me!

These last few days I've been looking for a used black mini and was hoping to avoid the 3 major mini dealerships, and then last night one showed up on Autotrader, which just happened to be at a little import dealer/shop in Cohasset, a small coastal town which looks a lot like Maine. It just so happens Cohasset and Hingham are exactly where I'm thinking we may live. It's expensive down here, but right on the Bay, and you can either take a commuter rail train or a FERRY into Boston Harbor. It's sort of half-way between the Cape and Boston suburbia but is neither here nor there. They have a Stop & Shop, an Old Navy and a Panera but no big ol' malls.

So I'm giving it 24 hours to think it over and work out the price, but I am thinkin' this is the mini for me. It's pretty much the same one we rented in Spain.

Hanging out at Panera now, nibbling Greek salad and a "muffle" (a muffin top - wait - Doesn't Elaine from Seinfeld deserve some credit for inventing these?) and thinking about the next thing I need, a used bicycle for Porter and Davis Squares. Car, bike, mattress and TV are on my to-do list.

Interviews are going slowly but at least that's giving me some time to get settled, fingers crossed.

Friday, September 24, 2010

You know that you've got Boston blood when you walk past the former site of Filene's Basement for the first time and literally feel the knife going through your heart. Ughhh. I know they're not taking any more residents, but I think F.B. should get its own gravestone in the nearby old-as-dirt Granary Cemetary with the beautiful crooked headstones from the 1600's. Here lies the final shopping bag of Filene's Basement (sniffle) (sob).

You also know you've done time in Boston when you have trouble to adjusting to friendliness. Last month when my mom was here, she practically took a picture of it when someone "waved her in" during high traffic. She could _not_ get over it. "People now wave here?? That doesn't seem right."

I took a long walk along the downtown parts of Boston yesterday and couldn't get over the changes that resulted from the Big Dig's decades-long work. I always thought it was mainly designed to dig a tunnel and get people to the airport, but in fact, the waterfront/ seaport/ wharf areas of Boston which used to be under the highway are now on the same level with one road, and the highway is acutally under that.

The buildings didn't move, obviously. The highway did. But it's surreal to see it for the first time, when your brain has a different memory of the same things in another context. Especially because for so many years it was partially done with temporary roads and sidewalks with orange cones and scaffolding; you couldn't quite imagine the end result.

Now they've added a gorgeous string of parks through on the road divider named The Rose Kennedy Greenway (above left). Kind of like the Fenway, but pretty and safe. The area around South Station especially is almost unrecognizable. I had to rub my eyes when I saw that there was a small little Farmers Market at the top of the South Station T entrance. And with fresher looking vegetables than I've seen at any Colorado Farmers Market.

In many ways, it's just exquisite and the perfect combination of parks and city -- but the inner stubborn Bostonian in me has to hesitate for a second. Wait, is that really a freggin' merry-go-round between lanes of rush hour traffic?

Thursday, September 16, 2010

'sall Good


Last weekend I went to a super duper fun kids & adults rock fest outside Boston that was put together by the Life is good (® !) folks who, besides making cute t-shirts that hippies of all ages love (you know the Life is good stick figure guy... Jake...he's even in airports now), also raise a lot of money for children recovering from trauma, and specialize in programs teaching these kids how to play 'cause they figure play is a fundamental part of life and good health.

So needless to say, they know how to throw a fun festival. They Might Be Giants brought the house down in the kids' tent while 6 year-olds rocked out on giant beanbags and rubber rocking horses while waving gigantic TMBG foam fingers (for which I was jealous).

The festival was also really well-thought-out as far as practical things, like there was a Tag-Your-Tot booth at check-in for putting a wristband on your kids with your cell phone number, there was a Musical Instrument Petting Zoo, there was a zillion complimentary Wet Wipes at the information booth (duh!) and the food and beverages were affordable ($2 tacos), often organic, mostly local, plus most of the booths were donating 100% of the food proceeds to the cause.

The highlight for me, besides meeting Finn, the Goldfish cracker, was a fairly new artist named Eli "Paperboy" Reed who's from Boston, and if you didn't know better, you'd swear this guy's record came out back in the heyday of James Brown. He is phenomenal -- and I'm still confused about the fact that he's white, but I'm trying to get over it. I hope he'll be at Jazz Fest in the future.

And yet, during Eli's performance, I have to give credit... the entire audience was completely mesmorized by the hearing impaired interpreter who had serious moves. I'm not sure I've ever seen anything like it.

Then and Now

This is an amusing "then and now" of Chris and I at his parents' house on the Cape, both times taken with the camera on auto-timer propped up on the car because there was no one around to take a picture. Top photo is Winter 1998, bottom is Summer 2010... I think the house probably changed the most.



Monday, August 30, 2010

Shipping Up to Boston

Just came from a fabulous couple of weeks visiting Massachusetts, seeing extended family I haven't seen since college or longer, and meeting some of my cousins' kids for the first time. The trip was organized around an informal memorial service for my wonderful Grandma Stefie who was always our favorite relative. In life, she insisted that we had better not have any kind of a grand production or spend money on a service after her death, so we simply gathered at the site where her ashes were to be buried, shared some memories, said her favorite prayer, then went out for a delicious brunch in small cafe with a couple of her friends in Pittsfield.My sister and I drove aimlessly without schedule around the cute summer towns of Berkshire County, stopping for ice cream at Friendly's and flea markets and shops. We spent one day visiting our hometown of Lexington, our old house and our backyard, all of which was remarkably the same despite almost 30 years gone by. My dad and I visited the beautiful Clark Art Museum in Williamstown, my parents went to their 50th high school reunion, and our entire family gathered one Saturday at Tanglewood -- theoretically for a symphony concert, but Kristen and I mostly played with our cousins' adorable kids on the lawn. Pictured left is me meeting my little cousin, also named Lara! My grandma would have just adored this.
The second week of the trip was me, on my own, getting re-acquainted with Boston since I never drove a car there before and since the main roads have changed quite a bit in 11 years. I had a couple of meetings with friends who are well connected in the non-profit industry, and several friends of the family suggested that next time I visit, to come and stay with them a week, which was very comforting and generous. The roads were definitely a challenge to learn, especially during an unexpected downpour the last two days. I've learned that street signs are often not posted, mis-posted, or not called what they are listed as on a map, and you need to rely on a combination of instincts ("Hmm, this looks like a big, main road"), landmark directions instead of streets ("Take a right after the brown church"), and a good sense of direction ("If the highway's to the right of me, I must be heading South now"). It really helps to have a resilient car that can change lanes quickly, flip a u-turn in three seconds, and honk or flash brights as needed. Enterprise Rent-a-Car must have sensed this and kindly assigned us a VW beetle, which was the perfect fit, though it didn't exactly camouflage me as a local.

I feel like something big has changed in Boston, though it could just be my now-outsider's perspective. There's a tremendous pride in the city, not just in the Red Sox, but in the buildings and neighborhoods and shops and streets. People really love their city. And there was a friendliness to strangers which almost startled me at times. I was actually approached through the car window a handful of times by strangers who must have seen my puzzled scowling at the map, and shouted from outside "You lost?" then offering to help with a shortcut (of course). This even happened when I wasn't lost but just trying to roam around and... OK, let's be honest, I was always lost.

When we were out in Pittsfield, earlier in the week, my mom mentioned offhandedly that her own mother, who died when I was just three years old, had never wanted any of us to leave New England. She would never have approved of our family moving to California, but we happened to move about a year after she died when my dad got a job there. I never knew that before. It really struck me, because I've been wondering all summer why it is that I'm feeling a strong pull towards Boston again. Probably both of my grandmothers in heaven are working their superpowers on me.

Wednesday, August 04, 2010

Sitting in Limbo

A lot of folks have commented I've been "quiet" since the last post in April. I've been compelled to write many times, but don't know exactly how to write what's going on at this juncture in life because it feels just like that cheezy-but-true song, unwritten.

Since last year when I found myself laid off for the first time, I've been unexpectedly more fulfilled than ever before... volunteering, developing my resume further and further, having oodles of time to meet friends and take the dog to the park, make proper breakfast and coffee in the morning, read books... and meanwhile I've gotten better and better at saving what I have in the bank, and shopping around for better prices on things that I used to just buy aimlessly. In so many ways, the extra time has been a blessing and an opportunity to reflect on what it is that I enjoy and want in life, and all the things and people that I'm so grateful to have. The experience has really been the perfect lesson in silver linings.

All that said, I'm getting eager to start work and find a company where I can stay a long time! The past year was a mix of not-quite-right job offers, short-term positions, and a little freelance work thrown in, just to keep me on my toes. The last few months I've found myself at a loss for inspiration to stay in Colorado, so I've started to look for work elsewhere and hope I'll have news to share on that by year's end.

At this moment I'm very actively sending out resumes, but starting to feel a gloomy hovering question of whether my life will continue to be patchwork of different jobs - five years here, two years there, three months in Europe here and there. : ) I've always liked patchwork, but I'm also a tremendously loyal person and I miss having a company where everyone knows your name (). That, and I'm longing to have what some of my friends have -- five or six weeks of vacation saved up, "perks" like dental insurance and a matched 401K.

Everything's a big balance, so I probably won't have a chunk of time off like this again for many years, but I hope the memory will last, and that it's taught me not to take for granted the dog, the coffee, the understanding boyfriend, the cheap rent, the occasional four-day weekend with friends and family, the sleeping in. Meanwhile -- if any of you have job leads, send 'em along! Online resume: www.linkedin.com/in/laratherrien email: larasueg @ gmail . com

Thanks for all the positive thoughts and stay tuned!

Sunday, May 09, 2010

I soooooo like New Orleans

Let's start with the obvious. I've always liked Harry Connick, Jr. (before he was a movie star!) and really, love anything swingin', especially old hot jazz. "With Imagination" has been on my good mood mix since my mixes were true mix tapes.

For as long as I can remember, people have told me I would love New Orleans and I've always been dying to go. I didn't even know exactly why, other than the city has a personality and flavor that I knew you had to experience in person. I finally went this year for Jazz and Heritage Fest and already can not wait to go back. I'd love to go every year.
People who know me were right: I just love it there. The color, the character, the buildings, the friendliness of everyone, the sweet iced drinks, the catchy swangy music everywhere you go... it's all so loveable and charming. I think if I had gone there for college, I would have stayed. My nickname is "LA", is it not?Chris isn't too mad about blues, jazz, funk or cajun so I went to New Orleans with my dad who had never really experienced the city either. For us, Jazz Fest was an absolute ball and staying in a bright pink guest house just a block off the French Quarter (in the now HBO-publicized "treme" neighborhood) allowed us to walk around beautiful, historic areas and take in live music and creole food in the evenings without needing a car.

I don't think I would have ever thought of "heritage" as being something witnessable, but Jazz Fest's longer title "and Heritage" really suits it. There is so much Louisiana culture represented in this fest. It has incredibly maintained individual flavor and features tons of local acts at what could have become another overrated Bonaroo or Coachella. I definitely got the heritage as well as the jazz (and blues and gospel and funk... there's a tent for everything) and I really took in a mix of each stage along with enjoying the bigger "names" Jonny Lang, Dr. John, Blind Boys of Alabama, Black Crowes.

The sense of hospitality you get in LA can be summed up by this story: About a year ago I heard a woman on the radio named Ingrid Lucia (right) who sounds a lot like the singer from Squirrel Nut Zippers, old style jazz. I visited her web site and noticed she was raising money for a future album, so I made a $20 donation in exchange for receiving the album when it comes out. She personally sent me an email thank you note, which I was already pretty surprised by.

When we got to New Orleans, I saw in the newspaper she was playing a small club on one of the nights, so Dad and I went to go see her in a little place called d.b.a. that seems to hold maybe 100 people. During her break she mentioned her new album had just come out that week, so I went up to the stage to say Hello, and she recognized my name from our emails and gave me my copy of the CD right there and then. Ingrid also managed to "slip in" to Jazz Fest when another act was canceled (due to the volcano), so we were thrilled to see her twice. I highly recommend her albums and will be sure to include her on mixmas this year~!

Needless to say, I came back from Louisiana with a huge grin and a fistful of CD's you can't find in Denver record stores. Also the obligatory coffee and beignet mix. Below is my favorite stage at Jazz Fest, the Fais Do Do, which featured Cajun music, unintelligible lyrics and tons and tons of fiddles.

No one informed me about bringing a glittery furry umbrella (to dance with, of course) ahead of time, but next time I'll come prepared (see the umbrella procession by the stage, below).