Rejection Sucks

Rejection sucks as much at 27 as it did at 16. Of course, what did I know of rejection when I was 16? I was totally cute at 16. I was not the popular girl, nor was I was the girl next door, but man, was I am expert at Niche Marketing myself. I was the smart, sarcastic girl who didn’t care what people thought (pauses to allow self to die laughing at the notion that I didn’t care what people thought. I really think that I believed that I didn’t care) and knew just how to inject the proper amount of that attitude into interactions with boys. There was a short period when I was a bit of a heartbreaker.

A very short period. That, sadly, was clearly the pinnacle of any “Game” I may possess.

Shy-Boy did not respond to my e-mail. So he’s clearly Not Interested. I’m not crushed, but I am definitely disappointed. I’m sure I will be over this sooner, rather than later, but it is one more disappointment.

And not to get all emo and over-dramatic (but clearly I will anyway) but it would be nice if one thing could go right. Just one. Of course, I’m sure if one thing were to go right, I’d want two, and then three, and so forth. But right now I’d settle for one. Right now, I wish that he would just write back and say “Sorry, not interested” because then I could stop wondering about it, but I’m sure that if I were to recieve that email, I’d be upset. Not so much because of WHO is rejecting me, but just because feeling rejected sucks.

I could just really use some good news. I’m sure that the zen like answer to this is that there is good news and good things to be found in everything. Which is a lovely little thought. But not, at the moment, a particularly effective, or useful one.

 

, ,

I Have No Idea How To Date

Sadly, my long standing, unhealthy attraction to aloof, emotionally unavailable (yet incredibly arrogant) men has made me unable to know what exactly to make of a boy who is very shy.

He is very, very cute. And the emails we exchanged definitely expressed an interest. (Yes, yes, I know, the internet, emails are not indicative of future success, etc) But he was (seemingly) painfully shy. Like there were some long-ish, mildly awkward silences. Is that normal? Aren’t you supposed to just “click” if it’s going to work out? I have no idea if he liked me or not. And due to lack of comfortable interaction from him, I’m not sure, if I “like-like” him either.

But he seems really shy, and from what little information I have on him, perhaps his awkward social interaction is understandable.

Or he could just not like me at all. Like, he didn’t so much as try to give me a hug at the end of the night.

And now I have no idea where to proceed. Forget him? Wait and see? Or write an email saying that we managed to do pretty well for two ridiculously shy people and ask if he wants to do it again?

, , ,

That Is Just So Typically Me

I made plans to go to a Monday meeting, with the intent of “running into” Just-In-Case. Partly because when I actually ran into him a few weeks ago, he told me I should. In anticipation of this (and also, just because I felt like it) I fixed my hair and dressed all nice. I wore this shirt, because Keithers described the color (Fantasia Blue) as “I want to have sex with that.” I recieved several compliments.

Just-In-Case, was of course, not there this Monday. Typical. At least my hair still looks pretty today.

The days are dragging this week. I feel like Toni Collette in Clockwatchers, which is a wonderful and very underrated little film. The movie was made in 1997, so while the internet existed (we had it at my house. My family had internet before Al Gore, probably) it certainly hadn’t infiltrated every aspect of the workplace like it does today. There’s one line in it

Sometimes it hits you how quickly the present fades into the past, and you question everything around you. You wonder if anything you’d ever do would matter.

Which pretty much sums up what I feel some days. I was driving to work this morning and it’s already almost March. 2009 was the year of Just Surviving. Last March, I said that I knew it was going to be hard, that “this year” was going to be really, really, really hard but that I would get through it. And now I have, and it’s like “ok, what next?” and while I clearly have some ideas of what I want for “what’s next,” the present is speeding away as I try to make the future happen.

This is quickly veering towards angsty-existential crises territory, where it seems to go a lot these days. I think back on when I was temping, at this time, five years ago. Sure I’m older and wiser, but I am so jealous of my 22 year old self sometimes. And then I remember what it was like trying to get a job just out of college, practically having to beg someone to give me a chance, and well no, I’m not jealous of that, but then again, is it really that different from what I’m doing now? That I’m offering to answer phones and make copies for an abysmal salary just so I can finally work somewhere that I feel relevant?

That was a major run on sentence.

I guess part of it is that deep down there is still this fear, that maybe This Is It. That all I am ever going to be is a glorified secretary. And while that’s not the worst of fates (or pays) it’s certainly not what I ever wanted or imagined for myself. Maybe I just Don’t Have What It Takes. To do what, exactly, I’m not sure, but for now I use the sentiment broadly. It seems entirely possible that it isn’t going to matter how many carefully crafted cover letters I send out or how smart I am, or how capable I am of doing any of these jobs; I might never get one because of all that is still missing from my resume. And maybe, it’s missing from my resume, not because I choose wrong or differently, but because I am just not the type of person who saw those chances, or opportunities in the first place. David is always pointed out that every ponderance of “what would have been if I had taken another path” requires you to question whether you, being the type of person you are, could have done anything different anyway.

This started out as a lighthearted post. I swear.

It’s funny how doubt hides itself. It follows behind you. It waits in every corner. You never see it coming. But you feel it, on the inside. Maybe it was just that office. Or maybe it was bigger than that, it was all around. A million eyes. Watching. Judging. The whole wide world even. You feel so small.

-Clockwatchers

, , , , ,

Bitch, Bitch, Bitch

Today has gone by quickly. The weather is somewhat dreadful (lots of rain and the wind last night was terrifying) but I don’t find it particularly dreary. What I find dreary is people moaning about the gloomy weather and how depressing it is.  Isn’t it more depressing when the weather is nice and you’re stuck inside? Actually, as an introvert I find nice weather annoying. Because then there’s all this pressure to “go out and enjoy the nice weather.” This was actually do-able when I lived in the city, because walking around Astoria was one of my favorite things to do, but now it’s just like, pressure to go drive up to local park and go for a hike. Maybe “agrophobic” would be more accuarte than “introvert.”

I am only about 10% kidding here. Maybe 15%. I don’t like the outdoors. I am not an outdoorsy person. I like concrete and steel and darting across the street against the light.

I cannot sit still and concentrate on anything. I have to be multi-tasking to get anything done. All my papers in college got done with 3 AIM windows open and probably a couple of websites for good measure.  It takes me forever to write a blog entry because I keep checking my email or going back to the drawing I was making while on hold before.  Same deal with cover letters. I find it absolutely cringeworthy to pound out paragraphs on how wonderful and uniquely qualified I am and how it applies to this particular organization, so I can only stand to write a few sentences at a time, and then I have to minimize the window because it’s just icky.

This entry has been brought to you by the newly created ‘Neurotic Jew’ tag.

Also, lately, in the moments when I’m trying to fall asleep, I find my brain running over incredibly embarassing things I’ve done over the years, including the things that I didn’t have enough sense to be embarrased about then (read: Middle School) but were horrible and I can’t believe I dressed/talked/acted like that. I have no idea why I’m thinking about these things, but they have just drifted out of my memory to torture me. Memory lane indeed.

It is already almost February and I have accomplished exactly one of my January goals. I really need to join a gym and go to the dentist. And kick my own ass.

, , ,

I’m A Total Catch

Last night, I was re-reading (okay, lets be honest, reading) some articles that I saved from my National Security Policy class from grad school. I was taking some notes, because my crazy brain has decided that if I brush up on International Relations, I’ll have a better shot at Libertarian Fellowship. Anyway, as I said to Keithers “I’m watching Degrassi and color coding my international relations notes. Now what man would not want a girl who color codes her international relation notes?”

This is why I haven’t had a date in about a year. And the “dates” I had were not really dates, properly speaking. On one hand, this means the disaster with O-L-B last Thanksgiving was almost a year ago, as was the mini-debacle with Peace. Apparently the mini-debacle with Peace was so cringeworthy I never wrote about it, but the CliffNotes is, I got drunk and made out with a (Libertarian) Muslim who had never kissed a girl before, because anything other than holding hands before marriage is against his religion. The fact that I’m Jewish probably made it even more of a sin against God.

It’s too bad you can spell “Disaster” without “B-O-Y-S.” Anyway, the point is, except for the one time I went out with The Writer in February, the last time I had anything resembling a date was…way too long ago.

If you were taking notes on the four main approaches to U.S. Foreign Policy (neo-isolationism, selective engagement, cooperative security, & primacy) wouldn’t you use four different colored pens too? For example, I used purple for primacy, because purple = royalty, and primacy is basically a desire to be king of the world.

It annoys me that the phrase “king of the world” still reminds me of that cringeworthy scene in Titanic where Leonardo DiCaprio shouts the phrase from the bow (stern?) of the ship. Yes, that movie made me cry (I was 14, but it had nothing to do with Leonardo DiCaprio, who I never found hot) but I always thought that scene was embarrassingly awful.

I’m sure I should do something like laundry today, or figure out how to prepare for my second phone interview, but the former probably won’t happen, and the latter, I really don’t know what I can do.

, , , , ,

This Week Flew By

I suppose that I am attempting NaBloPoMo (hence why I have posted hurried things all week) but now that I’ve said that I will likely FAIL. I know it’s NaNoWriMo, but I don’t write fiction, so it’s not really my thing. I HAVE participated in NaNoWriMo in varying capacities before, but those are some long-ish stories and had very little to do with the writing. (Read: they had to do with a boy, usually)

For whatever reason I am not particularly concerned at this moment with the fact that I have not heard from the Libertarians (I’m pretty much resigned…this doesn’t change the fact that I will cry at official rejection, but at this particular moment I’m in a “life will go on” sort of mindset) or from the State of New Jersey. Maybe someone has been slipping Xanax into my Red Bull.

The Yankee Parade is today. The only reasons I wanted the Yankees to win over the Phillies was North Jersey pride (South Jersey, which is a different country, goes for Philly) and because of how much Red Sox fans hate the Yankees.

Almost the weekend. I have no plans, although perhaps I will watch more of the West Wing. I never watched it in the original run and have no idea about what happens throughout the series (AND DON’T TELL ME) so its like an entirely new show for me. I’m only about half way through the first season, and it’s amusing how dated some of it is – it’s very, very Clintonian.

, ,

Does This Count As A Grudge?

I heard the news this weekend that Derek Jeter broke the record for all time hits by a Yankee. (More accurate: “a lot of people had the news about Jeter in their facebook status.”) My reaction was “Whatever. I hate Jeter.”

Now, I grew up in suburban New Jersey and I HATE Boston and the Boston Red Sox, but I have never been a Yankee fan (indifferences wins, usually) and  I have always hated Derek Jeter. The reason I hate Derek Jeter is purely contrarian.

I was in middle school when Jeter was a rookie, and he was the new guy in town, and all you heard about was how he was So Hot.

There was this girl in my grade, I’ll call her Kasey. I did not like her. I don’t really remember why other than the boy I had a crush on seemed to pay her a lot of attention. I’m sure there were other reasons. I got picked on a lot in middle school and disliking people was a defense mechanism, of sorts.

Anyway, Kasey was known throughout the grade for her huge crush on Derek Jeter. I was quite the self-righteous little 8th grader (I probably deserved to be punched in the face) and already thought that crushing on Derek Jeter was stupid, but because Casey had a crush on Derek Jeter, is moved from stupid to despicable. Not that I ever said anything beyond the lunch table that I shared with my loyal band of nerdy boys and not like I was doing anything more valuable with my time, but it was the principle of the matter.

So, nearly 15 years later, I don’t like Derek Jeter, because some girl I didn’t like was very vocal about her crush on Derek Jeter.

Clearly, I am the principled one in this situation. I stick to my ideals, damnit!

, ,

I Used to Want to Be Joey Potter

So this window has been sitting open for like, 2 hours now, and I’m reading other people’s blogs, in the hopes that it will inspire me. Because I have nothing to say. Doing nothing for days on end kills brain cells, I think.

Read the rest of this entry »

,

Bring Me The Head of Alexander Graham Bell

Some people are afraid of heights. Others are afraid of spiders.

I am afraid of talking on the phone.

I am awful at it. Either I lose my train of thought and stutter, or I panic and start talking too fast and don’t make any sense.

Just the anticipation of having to deal with phone calls that I am loathe to deal with makes me sick with anxiety. Sometimes, it even drives me to the verge of tears. I have tried every trick there is to get over it, and nothing has worked.

And then, I sound like a crazy person, because it’s a phone call, grow up, get over it.

I don’t think I’ve always hated the phone. When I was twelve, I was content to spend hours on the phone with N.A; we had mutual crushes on each other, and I cannot tell you what we talked about for all those hours, but I know I thought it was important enough to campaign for my own phone line. My parents said I could, if I brought up my grades in Spanish and Math. Therein lay the dilemma – I couldn’t get my own line and spend unlimited time on the phone until I brought my grades up, but I certainly was in no place to bring my grades up when there was a boy who wanted to talk to me on the phone.

Luckily, he lost interest in me, I got straight As the first marking period of 8th grade, and I got my phone line.

Since then, the phone has been a primary form of communication (in high school, before AIM was the standard, and WAY before texting), a form of connection, (in college, to my friends who were far away) and a form of torture (carrying my cell phone around, willing it to ring when I was hoping that HWSNBN would call me.) But in college, other forms of communication became more important. AIM meant I could talk to several different people at once. Email was more convenient than picking up the phone. Making and recieving phone calls just fell out of practice.

It wasn’t until after college that phones started to make me nervous. I was temping at a company that to this day, I have no idea what they did. My job was simple: answer the phone, direct the calls. That’s it.  Sometimes they let me put labels on files, but as a temp, I wasn’t allowed to do anything real.

Anyway, for whatever reason some of the people at this company (engineers? technicians?) were often recieving Important Phone Calls, and the person on the line would request that I page them. I’ve always hated the sound of my own voice, and having to do this several times a day was cringeworthy. Then there was the time — it was my first day actually – when I mistakenly dialed the number for the head of the company just because the delivery guy had his number on the receipt. Luckily, his assistant picked it up and explained what was what. In my own defense, I was only 21, barely out of college and naive to the fact that if someone’s extention is 01, then they are probably pretty important.

In search of health insurance, I did manage to land a full time job. Actually, they didn’t hire me at first. They hired Charice. But poor, unknowing Charice got promoted after two weeks there. As she said once “I sold out. Rachel got hired.” I was still a receptionist, except now I was a receiptionist with health insurance. It wasn’t too bad. Mostly, I just directed people to customer service.

Then I got promoted. It was awesome! It was to a job I actually wanted to do! It was more money! And I wouldn’t be tied to a desk, which to me, was at least 50% of the appeal.

The Friday before I was supposed to start my new position, my supervisor’s boss, without even bothering to pull me aside, told me “oh by the way, we don’t have the money to pay you. So we can’t promote you to that position.”

I was crushed. While it was probably a good thing (it motivated me even more to finish my grad school applications) I felt totally stuck as a receptionist.

By then head of my department liked me. He knew I was smart and felt bad about the whole promotion debacle. He started giving me projects. At first, I was happy at the chance to prove myself and I accepted the admin role in spite of the fact that the new title didn’t come with a bigger paycheck. And the fact that my extension was still 0, I was still tied to a desk, and there were beginning to be mumblings about my phone mannerisms.

It was May, because it was right before my birthday when the suggestion box had a note in it, for probably the first time in its existence. “The receptionist” (it read. not even my name. Just “the receptionist”) is a black hole of despair. would it kill her to fake some charisma ” While this incident is retrosepctively hilarious, I got written up and went on a quest to find out just who the hell cared whether or not I smiled. (the answer: 40 something washed up wannabee opera singer. I got him back though.)

It only got worse from there. Two years later, at the Job-That-Wasn’t, I had to make a lot of phone calls, to people who I could barely understand on the phone, on topics where I had no idea what I was talking about. Additionally, there were times when I was supposed to “pressure” people into getting things done. Mind you, Job That Wasn’t was a tiny company and I was on the phone with Big Important Company that could have cared less about my request, but that did not mean anynoe in my department understood any better why the request was going to take the standard 24 hours.

The last guy I dated refused to call to make plans, instead preferring a barrage of back and forth text messages. That was a little extreme, even for me. But that also didn’t mean my heart didn’t pound wildly whenever I decided to grow a spine, call him, and call him out for being kind of a jerk. (I have regretted most of these phone calls. Don’t keep the phone numbers of people you used to date in your cell phone)

Really, the phone has never done me any good these past few years. All it has done is given me the means to call boys that I shouldn’t call, given me a cell phone that I feel lost when I don’t have, and given various Powers That Be a means to torture me.

When you think about it, texting is kind of like a more advanced form of telegraphing. So clealy Thomas Edison had it right and Alexander Graham Bell ruined everything.

, , , ,

Like Iron Filings

So there’s this friend of a friend that I’ve met a couple times. Let’s call him Scott. I met him through this girl I’m acquainted with. The three of us had dinner together randomly one night. You see where this is going, right? 

I liked him immediately, not in the like-like sense, but just in the ‘he’s good people’ kind of sense. And actually, I have a hard time grasping that his name is Scott. He looks like someone else I know, and I keep thinking of him by that name instead.  Anyway, from dinner out that first night, it was very clear he has a girlfriend. 

But anyway, Scott is nice, and I ran into him on Saturday night, and we have mutual acquintences. So we were all standing around, doing the typical suburban stand around outside and  attempt to make plans, and he’s like “You don’t want to go out do you? You want to go home? ”

And he is right that normally this is my MO, to slink away home, and to get fed up as the girls stand around endlessly debating the next set of plans. 

(and he didn’t say it in a judge-y way; there was one other night when both of us were cranky that no one could seem to make plans and just gave up and went home)

But tonight, the girls weren’t around, it was just Scott and a few other guys, No ulterior motive, just wanted to go out for the sake of going out, because I am anti social as hell. 

Dinner was uneventful, good food at Blue Moon, listening to some other guy preach, and having Scott apologize to me for having to listen to it. On the ride to my house we were just talking about work and I said something about wanting to go to law school, and how it will be a lot of debt, and he said “You never know, with Obama we might all wind up being able to go to school for free.” 

And I said “That’d be nice, but I don’t go for universal education. I’m a Libertarian.” 

And

(Wait for it) 

He said “You are? So am I!” 

Head, meet desk.

, , , ,

Protected: Drama of The Lamest Variety

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


, ,

So I’m watching “My Boys,” which is surprisingly good for a half-hour TBS original series: premise female sportswriter has all male friends. It’s actually quite cute and has good dialogue. As a girl who grew up being one of the guys, and yet reveling in some of my girliness, I find much of it very realistic. Except she’s totally into sports and I’ve never been a tomboy.

Anyway, I thought this line was perfect:

“So you gave your number to a guy you were not remotely interested in, and then YOU called HIM and asked him out?”

I think Brenty has probably said extremely similar things to me.

On second thought, lets go to the AIM log.

Just Rachel 129: i’m going out with [nice] Libertarian boy again tomorrow night
NascentIgnorance: i was going to ask about that
NascentIgnorance: but figured no news is good news
Just Rachel 129: no, no news is technically bad news, in the sense that i’m pretty sure he’s too nice for me
NascentIgnorance: oh right
NascentIgnorance: he doesn’t treat you badly or make believe that he doesn’t like you
Just Rachel 129: well hey, at least i’m going out with him again
Just Rachel 129: and giving him a chance to prove that he can be emotionally manipulative and infuriating
Just Rachel 129: plus his voice kind of annoys me, it’s too enthusiastic
NascentIgnorance: oh you need something droll and fatigued
NascentIgnorance: you should ask this guy if [way too inappropriatete]
NascentIgnorance: maybe then that’ll get something going
Just Rachel 129: it’s too late; he already calls me before midnight and wants to hold my hand in public :-(
NascentIgnorance: well what do you expect?
NascentIgnorance: you went out with him because he reads the economist and probably voted for badnarik

, , , , ,

Reason #48,511: Proper Shame

“…and so yeah, I’m an idiot,” I said, punctuating the end of a long exposition of something dumb I did.

“Yes. You are definitely an idiot,” Brent agrees.

“I know! And I have like, the need to keep repeating it, because it’s like, I know I’m an idiot and I don’t want you to think I don’t know I’m an idiot.”

“Well, your problem is that you didn’t see how this would turn out.”

“Actually I did,” I confess. “I was just being consciously naïve.”

“Consciously naïve?”

“Yeah, like Cassandra in “I Capture the Castle.” Actually, last summer was consciously naïve, this was just more like, ‘I know exactly what I’m doing, and I shouldn’t do it, but whatever.”

“You really are an idiot,” Brent says, shaking his head.

“I know!”

“Why do you tell me these things?”

“Because, I know they’re like, shameful, and I can’t NOT tell you, and I know that you will agree with me that it’s shameful.”

“Right. I tell you it’s shameful. And give you more reasons why it’s shameful,” Brent says helpfully. “I bring a fresh perspective to the situation.”

“Exactly!”

, , ,

Once, I Cried Over a Seinfeld Episode

A couple of weeks ago, I was watching “Love, Actually” with Evan. Evan and I don’t see each other that often, so he still kind of buys my tough as nails image. And then there’s scene, where Andrew Lincoln shows up on Keira Knightly (his best friend’s wife) doorstep and tells her “To me, you are perfect, and my wasted heart will always love you.”

And, I get all teary eyed. Because he walks away, whispering to himself “Enough. Enough now.”

And then Emma Thompson calls her husband out on cheating on her and yells “you have made my life ridiculous,” and I lose it, because Emma Thompson is awesome and her voice is all raw, and then she has to pull it together to meet her kids. So, I cry. Again.

“You are such a sap,” Evan tells me. “Is this why you won’t watch movies with other people?”

Read the rest of this entry »

, , , , ,


Better Tag Cloud