I Like It When Entries Come Full Circle

I need an auto-complete; still haven’t found an apartment, written my Dallas essay, or cleaned my room.

 

I spent Sunday night laying about, reading the first four books of the Little House on the Prairie set and eating sushi. 

 

I spontaneously took the train to Ridgewood on Saturday and went to see Brenty. We went to Hillside for ‘quality time’. Our wacky drive was a creative way to Jersey City (Last exit off of Route 4, and then drove through Fort Lee, Edgewater, Weehawken, etc. I believe it’s the Weehawken area where things get creepy; it’s ALL condos and little Sim City enclosed communities along the Hudson. I am sure they are outrageously expensive. Also, that is where Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr dueled. (Note to the younger-wiser-sibling: It is unclear whether they were dualists.)

 

I am reading “Inventing Japan: 1853-1964” because it is only about 200 pages, and I hope it will make up for the fact that I never, ever paid attention or did the reading for the Japan part of “Comparative Politics of India and Japan” two years ago. I remember lots of stuff about India, (SHINING INDIA) but nothing about Japan other than never mix sake with any other alcohol and, regarding the Jews “you guys are alright, but…”

 

I really, really hope to find an apartment tonight, because I want to go out for Czech food with my co-workers tomorrow. Mmm, Czech food. And Czech beer. I adore Eastern Europe! Blah, blah, blah, debate about whether the Czech Republic is still “Eastern Europe.” You can’t take the Government major out of the girl. Which is why I’m going to grad school, for which I should be writing an essay. …and full circle!

, , , , ,

Protected: Much Like Billy Joel, I Do Walk Through Bedford Stuy Alone

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:


, ,

Man, Rejection Sucks

And thus, a weekend Blitzkrieg is in order. I’m on my own for the Second-Great-NYC-Apartment-Search this weekend because Dan is in Philly. And so I’m off to Clinton Hill and Bed Stuy. Here’s hoping the G doesn’t suck too much.

,

Protected: Waiting Here With Hopes The Phone Will Ring

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:


, ,

Protected: In The Key of Irrational

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:


, ,

Protected: If This Works Out, I’ll Have to Change My Journal Name

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:


, , ,

Eeek! And pretty literature.

It’s the day that all December applications are due, and all of mine are officially in. I do have to offer up a giant “Fuck You” to Columbia University for their asinine policy of not holding themselves responsible for a huge problem with their online application that froze the recommendation pages, so professors couldn’t upload their recommendations. (This was discovered on Monday. Their basic answer for me was “Well it should have been in already” I am ALL for sending things in early, but if the deadline is December 15, submitting something on the 12th is perfectly acceptable. They didn’t do anything to inform applicants that the system wasn’t working, nor are they accepting documents that get their late as a result. When I checked this mornign, the problem still hadn’t been fixed. (This has apparently been a problem since last Wednesday. I found out about it on Monday. This is plenty of time for them to have informed people to send things by regular mail) So, fuck you Columbia. You should be using Embark like ALL THE OTHER SCHOOLS USE FOR ONLINE APPLICATIONS BECAUSE IT ACTUALLY WORKS.

Grrrr. Anyway. The applications are in. They are out of my hands. Cross your fingers for me.

I’ve just finished Ignorance by Milan Kundera. It was a lovely little novella. What I adore about Kundera is the way in which he seamlessly blends philosophy into his narrative. He is nothing short of lyrical. He uses very little dialogue. He captures a train of thought

This guy I used to know was mildly befuddled by the way my mind worked. The way it was never quiet, keeping me away as it delved deeply into each topic is jumped to – because his mind worked so differently. So one night, when I couldn’t sleep, I just wrote down a train of thought. I used a lot of parenthesis for the asides, in many cases double sets of parenthesis. There’s no way I could explain to someone the way I think. I had to show it by writing down what I was thinking. That’s what Kundera does. There’s very little action, and even less conversation. But you understand so well what’s going on, and why the characters are doing things, because you’ve read their thoughts. This isn’t a unique device, but the way in which he wields it is so insanely…evocative. I don’t necessarily remember the characters names, or the details of the plot, but I remember the asides.

I can’t say I try to emulate him, because I was writing in a long-winded, descriptive style long before I read my first Kundera novel (The Incredible Lightness of Being, which is simply beautiful) but it’s always nice to find an author who has perfected the art of the overwrought. Kundera has also “literary zinged” me, hardcore.

Zing! (Of the Literary Variety)

, , , , , ,

December 13

I’ve already lost the hat that I so smartly purchased, and this was the wrong morning to be without a hat. I am probably going to be reduced to buying an “I ‘Heart’ NY” hat from one of the touristy vendors by my office. It will probably cost $12. Yay Midtown-Tourist District. I’m at 52nd and 7th, so I’m mere blocks away from Rockefeller Center and the awful, awful tree (stolen from Wayne, NJ!) and Radio City Music Hall and the area is simply teeming with stupid tourists.

I really hope the MTA goes on strike because

a) It won’t affect me

b) I enjoy chaos (which is very un-Hobbesian of me!)

c) I like the fear-mongering in the media. Especially because it is also supposed to snow on Thursday

I am drinking disgustingly bad coffee that I bought at the kiosk downstairs. However, the bad coffee is kind of growing on me, and it does its job.

Also, I am a walking Ann Taylor ad today. Except for the functional footwear.

Apartment drama continues. I go back and forth between really, really wanting to stay in my place and wanting to just move and not deal with the increased rent/lease hassle, so I am making lots of phone calls and playing with budget numbers, and being all Type-A. And Brent would make my life sooo much easier if he would get over his “I don’t want to live with a girl” nonsense.

Grad School

, , , , , , ,

Protected: I Need An Apartment To Move Into

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:


, ,

I Live Across the River on the Jersey Side

I wasn’t planning on even considering a move until September. I had my cushy temp job, that paid me well, and was allowing me to save. And then I realized how doable it was. I decided that, if I was going to do stupid secretarial work, I might as well do it in New York. And I might as well move there. Plus HWSNBN has been telling me for months that I should move there.

So with very little knowledge of NYC neighborhoods, I set out to hunt for an apartment. I ignored Manhattan completely, thinking I could never afford it as I did not want to live above 125th street. (I have several friends who are Manhattan snobs who attest “Manhattan ends at 125th street”…one purist insists “Anything above 96th street is the Bronx.”).

Just Rachel 129: you live in brooklyn heights now, right?
asterphage: yeah, but this place is for chumps
Just Rachel 129: why is that?
asterphage: this housing place sucks more over time
asterphage: and rich folks areas are never any good
asterphage: the restaurants are mild and overly classy, the stores are uninteresting
Just Rachel 129: what’s a non-chump neighborhood in brookyln?
asterphage: i don’t really know
asterphage: practically anywhere is decent
Just Rachel 129: i mean, i’d love to live on the lower east side, but i’m not a rich trust fundie
asterphage: also it’s unbearable down there
asterphage: i wouldn’t want to live over by the shitty little overpriced designer shops and expensive little cafes and crap
Just Rachel 129: upper manhattan seems like it sucks
asterphage: why would you even look at uptown? even if you could afford it? uptown is for middle aged professionals who are afraid of things outside their life, and for people who are raising families

With a bit of research I found Park Slope and Williamsburg were considered cool places to live in Brooklyn, and Astoria in Queens was also quite nice (I never did get out to Astoria, I probably should have).

Just Rachel 129: i’ve been going to a lot of roommate interviews. they are incredibly depressing
Just Rachel 129: picture a job interview, only more like middle school
asterphage: wow, that sucks
Just Rachel 129: i’ve been to a few cattle call style open houses, and several others where i was interviewed and given the “tell us about yourself” thing
asterphage: that’s really fucked up, the cattle calls
asterphage: the interviews are fairly reasonable i guess
Just Rachel 129: i think they are, except when they’re mean to you
Just Rachel 129: “why do you think we should want you to live with us”
Just Rachel 129: and then they smirk at each other
Just Rachel 129: and then you know they’re making fun of you the second you leave
asterphage: if that happened
asterphage: i would be like “go fuck yourself, this place isn’t nice enough for me to deal with smug assholes.”
Just Rachel 129: right, i should be more confrontational
asterphage: i mean jesus, what kind of people are these? lower east side pretentious hipsters?
Just Rachel 129: all in park slope, so far

This went on for about three weeks. I looked in Park Slope, and Williamsburg, Beford L-stop. Williamsburg seemed great – it’s on the water and most of the buildings have roof access so you get pretty views.

But again, the people were total assholes

asterphage: this is why anything that is cool sucks
Just Rachel 129: like, my attitude is, these are the neighborhoods i might like to live in so i’m searching there. if i find roommates i can hang out with sometimes, great. if not, we’re all adults and we can be civil to each other.
asterphage: right, at some point though, does it start to seem like maybe the people in these neighborhoods are not the kind of people you want to be around?
Just Rachel 129: it does
Just Rachel 129: i love williamsburg, bedford stop, it’s on the water, it’s so nice. but everyone has been a total asshole
asterphage: did i not tell you that hipster neighborhoods are so not cool
asterphage: williamsburg = fuck dat

So I went back to what had been my plan last February, before I was even seriously considering a city move. I would look in Jersey City. The apartments in the Jersey City financial district are new, and clean, and have normal people living in them. It’s not NYC, but it’s on the PATH. It’s on the river for good walking at night.

Just Rachel 129: i’m looking at apartments in jersey city, because i’m not hipster enough for brooklyn
Just Rachel 129: brooklyn = lots of people like hampshire students
ZGoTenksZ: hippies
Just Rachel 129: hip-sters
ZGoTenksZ: what’s the difference?
Just Rachel 129: hipsters shower
Just Rachel 129: i’ll probably wind up remaining true to my jersey roots & move to Jersey City
ZGoTenksZ: so? you’ll get a bigger place for same money
Just Rachel 129: i don’t know. i want an NYC zip code, cuz i’m shallow
Just Rachel 129: but jersey city is probably better for me than brooklyn
ZGoTenksZ: why?
Just Rachel 129: the people there are professionals and not hipsters
ZGoTenksZ: so…go to jersey city then
ZGoTenksZ: you pay less tax

(and we all know how I feel about tax!)

And then Saturday morning, I stumbled upon the perfect apartment. A small room on the third floor, with a normal roommate. He just wants to find a quiet, sane person, because his good friend from college is moving into his spot in late August, and she wants a female roommate. “I got hundreds of replies to my ad,” he told me on the phone. “And yours is one of the only one’s that I’m answering.”

Sitting in Starbucks, taking that call on Friday, I was pretty sure this was going to be the apartment.

Just Rachel 129: i’m moving to jersey city in august. It’s not manhattan, but you can’t beat the commute, and I can stay true to my jersey roots
Five tenn: hell yeah…and babe, you are a jersey girl.

Yes. Yes I am.

, , , , ,

As LJ as My Witness I Will Find A Job and Apartment

I am in “single-minded focus” mode right now. Which means I’m obsessive about my job and apartment search. It only occurred to me a few weeks ago how possible it was for me to move to NYC, and now that I know I can do it I’m impatient to make it happen as soon as possible. I have job interviews. I’m meeting with potential roommates. I wish I could be of the “Manhattan or nothing” school, but I am not. Still not sure which would be best for me, as there are pros and cons to both. I would love to live on the Lower East Side, but unless I stumble into a miraculously good deal, it’s b&t for me.

But yes. Tomorrow begins my insane job interview schedule.

And that is all I have to say. When I get in this, forgive the term, mindset, I’m too busy acting to think.

 

, , ,


Better Tag Cloud