You can now reach me at deathspiral@travelcompany.com

So, for those who don’t know/haven’t guess, I work in travel.  We’ll just call my company Travel Company but you could probably figure it out if you paid attention.  Travel Company is a privately owned, small tour operator that runs group tours to weird places.  Being a small company and being as how the nature of our business is strange anyway, I have become sort of used to doing a random assortment of things for the office.  Technically, my job function is internet marketing, but I spend a lot of my time doing data entry for hotel pricing, sending out visa kits for people going to Turkmenistan, calling our Moscow offices trying to get information out of them despite not speaking a word of Russian, looking up airfare, etc.  I’m your girl friday.


The problem is, of course, that I am both competent and quick (when I’m not skyving off to write in Sad Sigh), which means that my job load just keeps increasing.  And it seems like every time we have a staff changeup, I get a new email address (when the IT guy left I became techsupport@travelcompany.com; when the person who did our data entry got too busy to do it, I became database@travelcompany.com; when we decided to start a FAQ project, I became FAQ@travelcompany.com, etc.).  So when 3 people were laid off two weeks ago, it did not surprise me that I was given another email address to deal with some of the overflow workload left by them.

What did surprise me was that I finally counted up the number that I answer every day and I now have 6 email addresses at work.  6.  6!!!!  That essentially means I have 6 different job functions at a company where every job function is super varied since we are small and weird.

So, I guess feeling like a schizo is just part of the hazards of the job.  Write to me!  Really, pick any working email address @travelcompany.com (obviously, not our real domain) and it’s probably me!  There are only 13 employees now.  There’s like a 46% chance I’ll answer.

A txt msg convo

Sad-Sigh fanbase – all 6 of you – Let me transcribe for you guys a text message conversation I had with my roommate, the illustrious J. Lopez this weekend.  Please note that I received the first message shortly after she arrived in West Palm Beach for vacation.

J: Fractured foot.  Have cast.  Spent my day in the hospital.  Woohoo

D: NO.

D: You in fla?

J: Yeah.  But Broke it in new York and sucked it up til I got here.

D: Omg!  How??  Your parents w you?

J: Stepping off the bus at lga.  Felt it pop and almost passed out.  I was alone but now am with my grandparents. Continue reading

Oh Meme-oh, oh my-oh.

So, I Wikipedia’d Meme yesterday, specifically looking for the definition of an internet meme.  Suffice it to say that it led to one of the shameful Wiki Death Spirals that happen once in a while, (you know it… when you start looking up one thing on Wikipedia: Lexicon of Everything True, and then it leads to clicking on a related link or term, and then another, and another, and somehow they always lead back to the US Senate for me).

This particular Wiki Death Spiral went from meme (cultural ideas, symbols or practices passed along in a viral, and evolutionary manner), to internet memes (the hamster dance, &c), to ‘All Your Base Are Belong To Us‘ (I… have no words.  YouTube it.  Spread the meme).  Needless to say, when AYBABTU came out in the early part of the decade, me and many other 19 year-olds thought that the internet could not possibly surpass this genius creation.  This was before Wikipedia itself.  Before blogging, (read: Sad.Sigh), before YouTube, before the Book of Face.  Hell… I’m pretty sure this was even before Muffin Films, (GOD.  Remember those??).  Needless to say, the internet has far exceeded my meager expectations.  (Although, I’m sure we all miss Audio Satellite.)

The point being, I’ve had the techno version of ‘All Your Base Are Belong To Us’ stuck in my head for the last 26 hours, and would like it out, please.

Like Tree Trunks

For those of you not living in the greater LA or NY areas, Barney’s, that bastion of fancy clothings for liberal elites, hosts a semi-annual warehouse sale in which gay things like suits, scarves, designer jeans, and men are on steep discount.  I mean steep.  We’re talking 80%-90% here.  That being said, when the suit that you have your eye on starts at $2,500 in the first place, 80%-90% off starts to seem less like a huge steal, and more like a month’s groceries.  This, however, certainly does not stop me from spending money I do not have.  (Hey!  The President asked me to, so who am I to refuse?  Plus – it gives me the chance to flash my sexytime Barney’s Card.) Continue reading

hello

We just turned 3. And in the meantime I’ve apparently turned 20 again.

Older generations look upon ours with scorn. They say we’ve been brought up with the expectation that no matter how little effort we put into life it is our right to become rich and famous by our late 20′s. Which, in my case, is somewhat true.

I’ve never been able to give much thought to my future. When I was a teenager I figured I would die by 25 and so lived life accordingly, giving little or no effort to bettering myself or developing talents and instead indulging my every self-destructive whim. Then when I was in college for film production I couldn’t figure out what on earth I was doing there or what I had in common with any of my peers. I went to some classes, others I skipped entirely. I received a smattering of knowledge in various subjects that I’ve failed to find any applications for in real life thus far.

It wasn’t until I drunkenly slammed my volvo into the back of a parked car ten houses down from my parents’ house in San Jose over winter break that I really started thinking about actions and consequences and the future. After all the minor scrapes with the law I had had in my adolescence I suddenly had an actual criminal record, albeit a rather benign one in the grand scheme of things.

Bicycling to and from school in L.A. at the age of 20 gave me a lot of time to think about what was in store for me next. Most important was the humility I gained from the experience. I no longer lived under the delusion that I was a free-floating rebellious independent thinker who was only in school to buck the system and party. I was in reality a spoiled kid from the suburbs who acted recklessly and without any regard for the people who consistently supported and funded my life. I traded invincibility for introspection, braggadocio for meekness. What was I going to do after graduation? Was I even going to graduate? If I wasn’t the devil-may-care kid I’d thought I’d been then who the fuck was I?

Somehow I pulled it all together and was able to graduate in 4 years plus one summer course. I even received an A on my final film, even in its (still) uncompleted state. The challenge of attending and graduating college that had dominated my life since junior high had been met. Suddenly I needed a job and a car and a place to live. All my wasted hours and unpreparedness that had preceded this moment came rushing in at once and I was totally at a loss of what my purpose was.

Through a friend I took on an office job at a commercial real estate firm where all the employees were young affluent white males that waxed idiotic about their latest gym stats and conquests. I made $10 an hour. I shaved my head and felt like a sellout and a peon. But strangely more like a real person. I started getting in shape and even quit smoking for a while. I was able to afford rent and food and nothing else.

I spent two and a half more years in L.A. working at meaningless office jobs for a pittance, scraping by week after week with no idea how to escape the rut I had dug myself into. That’s when I decided I had to move. As soon as my lease expired in L.A. I packed up a uhaul and moved to San Francisco. I had few friends and no leads on an apartment but I had a job lined up working on photo sets so I had a start. I found a place to move in, and then an even better one. After months and months of long grey days alone in my room I finally made some friends. Then I joined a moped gang. Suddenly I was having a blast. I was making $20 an hour plus tons of overtime, which allowed me to reinvent myself with new styles and furnishings. I was 25 going on 26 and it seemed like the world was opening up to embrace me and I was excited about all the opportunities that lay in store.

Jesus I’m rambling. This is definitely a “skim” article for all of you, I’m sure. I know I personally loathe really long personal diatribes aired on the ‘net. Plus this is supposed to be sad, right? Who cares if I pulled myself miraculously out of aimlessness and despair? Didn’t we all go through the same process after school?

Well, here’s the sad part. I’m 27 now. Years of smoking and drinking under the warm summer sun have started to catch up with me. I’m definitely not a kid anymore. I guess I’m a man, for all that that means. I’m a smoker again. And a drinker. I wake up every day to a body covered in tattoos depicting the highs and lows of my life thus far. There will never be a day when I don’t wake up to these, until I don’t wake up anymore.

Out of pride and anger I resigned from my full-time job with benefits. I was labeled a fool, and rightly so, but the daily misery was taking a toll on me. After years of progress the future once again looks uncertain. But the clock has never stopped ticking, and now I’m finding myself late in the race.

Sad. Sigh. I spend my days trolling the internet, scrounging change for a daily cup of coffee, moving my car three times a day to avoid tickets I can’t afford, smoking through haggard coughs behind the dripping eves of my front porch, and spending what money I do have on frivolous dates and old friend alcohol to keep me sane yet depressed, with company yet alone.

It’s good to be back.

mbw