Monday, December 20, 2010

word of the day


thomas (tho`-mas)
n.
1. an angel sent from heaven in the form of a white-haired, blue-eyed kitty cat.
2. a carnivorous mammal who endures hours of being lugged around by ten year old girls playing dress up.
"just one more hour of playtime and i will be free to sleep and and nag rachael for lunch meat all i want," thought thomas dreamily as she let emma and her friends put knit hats and scarves all over her.

synonyms: tommy, doomy (a play off of tommy), tom cat, t-jiminator, jim, jim cat, and wom. the origins of these names go too far back and cannot be traced. it is reported that thomas responds to all of said names, even wom.

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

no jalepeno ranch

if there is one person that is really getting on my nerves during finals week...it's the guy at the quesadilla stand in the cafeteria. the one who told me they were out of jalepeno ranch. do not tell me that this week. and then when the other guy asked me if i wanted pico de gallo and i said yes, the one guy said "we're out of that too. sorry...i was hungry!" hungry? you were hungry? i'm hungry! and i'm a paying customer! and you don't eat pico de gallo if you're hungry!

ok. that's all. i'm going to study chemistry. satan's pastime. either/or.

Monday, December 13, 2010

the pursuit of happiness

i would like to make a public announcement:

i am switching my major. (well, dropping it really.)

i am going into taxidermy.

let me tell you how i decided that: every day when morgan and i walk out of chemistry, we pass some professor's office who has posing, taxidermed animals up the wazoo. we have the exact same conversation everyday.

"let's go into taxidermy. i don't want to take any more chemistry classes."
"ok."
"we have this conversation every day."
"i know."

we even looked up the "12 easy steps to getting a taxidermy license!"

so. i will not show up for my finals, i will drop out of school, (and by doing so, spite everyone in the medical field who is inevitably crying because i will not be gracing their presence), and i will pursue that little piece of paper that lets me stuff animals with cotton.

Thursday, December 2, 2010

angels and devils on my shoulders

sometimes i just get sick of college life. especially right now, when things are just stressful and not fun and i realize "i do not get a break from this." i know that life is not supposed to be just fun. sometimes it is and sometimes it isn't. traveling is fun. studying for finals is not fun. and that's ok. but right now is not one of those fun times because i do have finals, i am drowning in homework, i don't know how i'm going to get it all done, and then when i do, there are more problems to worry about. like hounding managers to see if they read my application and will maybe possibly kindly have some mercy on me and give me a job? and making other really big decisions in my life that only affect me. those are the worst decisions to make. there is always something to worry about. always something lingering in the back of my mind. and i don't get a break from it! i know, welcome to life, rachael!

sometimes i imagine god laughing at me, blindly stumbling around this maze called life. in the dark. with no end in sight. with venomous demon snakes biting at my heels. and little angels with halos and devils with red suits and fiery pitchforks on my shoulders saying "go this way!" "no, this way!" i'm sure god's thinking "you're doing ok, kid," but that doesn't mean the venomous snakes don't bite and the angels and devils don't annoy the heck out of me. i wish i could smash them into little squash marks on my shirt.

it's ok. i'll get my finals done. i'll get a job at one of the places i applied and if not, i'll keep applying. i'll keep praying and get answers to my big decisions. sometime soon i'll feel reassured about my direction. that thought at least gives me peace.

Friday, November 19, 2010

"such a beautiful place...to be with friends"

my halloween masterpiece

what an emotional HP7 midnight screening. it was emotional for me and the rest of the wizarding community. if you didn't go see it....well, then i don't want a filthy mudblood like you dirtying my URL! i didn't realize i would cry so much. i cried on and off for the whole movie. like, slobbery, wipe-your-nose-on-your-shirt kind of crying. the whole movie and for at least half an hour after we got home. my roommate was seriously getting nervous around me. i don't think i can even handle going to see the last part. i think it may kill me! i'll probably explode out of sheer...harry potter-ness.

RIP DOBBY, THE GREATEST HOUSE ELF EVER TO ROAM FREE!!!!
"such a beautiful place...to be with friends"

p.s. the taste of mountain dew is the taste of homework all nighters and HP midnight premieres and those two things only.


Tuesday, November 16, 2010

i'm in love, i'm in love, and i don't care who knows it!

i have a love affair with the earth. i could spend all my time with it and never get bored. we are in love. me with the earth and the earth with me. we are so infatuated with each other that we give each other silly compliments like "mother nature, you are looking lovely today" and "rachael, i am giving rexburg this gorgeous sunset just for you." sometimes i under-appreciate it and i always run back saying "i don't know what i was thinking! the tv just has a way of luring me in! will you please forgive me??"....
....and it always does. because our love is strong.

most of the time i just feel like the earth wears the pants in our relationship. i need it more than it needs me. and i just think it is so mysterious and elusive. i never know what it's thinking! it doesn't talk very much. but it's always there.

have you ever read the alchemist? it's a good book. one of the main themes is the soul of the world. i totally think the earth has a soul, a spirit and it kind of freaks me out at the same time that it enamors me. it's alive and you can just sense it when you're surrounded by nature and you can hear the wind blowing, the river flowing, the grass growing. (alright, i only said that last one because i coulnd't pass up the perfect rhyme...pretty good, huh?) but i do think there is something magical about the earth. when i sit still, i can hear, or more likely, sense the earth's aliveness. when the earth is loud, like during a thunderstorm, it's alive. when it's quite, like during a silent, peaceful snowstorm, it's alive.

some of my best memories are when i am camping far away from civilization. it's cold, dark, the crickets are loudly harmonizing, the mountains are wisely looking down on me and i feel so ridiculously connected to the earth. not coincidentally, it's almost always when i feel the closest to the spirit. i can't be bothered with worldly problems when i'm in nature because nature is so....un-worldly.

today, i got out of my car after my new self-defense class (i'm stoked, by the way!) and there was the most beautiful sunset spilling over the mountains and some great second coming clouds. and the temple was right there, right across the street from me, next to this sunset, and i just stopped for a minute and stood in the parking lot and said a prayer of thanks, which i don't remember to do very often. and that was one of those moments when i remembered my sometimes-forgotten love affair with the earth.

but instead of bringing the earth flowers and chocolates, instead of giving it a back rub after a long day of work, i think it just wants me to appreciate it and remember it's existence. gosh, i love a low maintenance relationship.

love: we're so in it.



Tuesday, October 26, 2010

i left my heart in india


i wrote this narrative for my english class and it made me miss my faraway india :)

Bangles

Grandpa was absolutely right when he said the smell would hit at about 6,000 feet altitude. I plug my nose and think that it must be the airplane food, but then I remember that chicken doesn’t smell like this. In fact, nothing smells like this. I would rather stick my head into the kitchen trash can than smell this. The pilot announces that we’ll be landing in New Delhi shortly and I’m torn between home and here, fear and excitement.

It takes me a minute of staring unperturbed and groggily at the rat-infested sidewalk to realize where I am. I’m in India. It has always been a fictional destination in my mind, one that I never thought I’d actually see. Am I really here? The last nine months have been a whirlwind of preparation for this humanitarian expedition, in which I’ll be teaching in an orphanage in the little town of Chamba. Since February, I have raised thousands of dollars, written press releases, sold my pitch to businesses, and planned medical workshops. Planning to go to India is one thing. Being here is another.

The next day is our first real encounter with the city. The smell hasn’t left my nose but now I realize what it is: burning heaps of trash. Everywhere. I see a dog, a cow, and a monkey all eating from the same pile of garbage. I’m sure this is the first time I’ve seen a man pee right in the street. There are several tents on every street block and I peek in one to catch a glimpse of a family’s life, like an open book, in their haggard faces and few possessions. Children, young, barefooted, and dirty tug at my sleeves and put their hands out to sell me a necklace or ask for money. I know they don’t work for themselves; human trafficking is a way of life for many children in India. When the sun goes down, we spend some time shopping in Old Delhi before our overnight train ride. The loud music, the crowded streets, the grabbing hands, the lustful look in the men’s eyes scare me enough to wish I’d never seen this place. I cuddle up with my blanket on the train while drunken Indian men slur in Hindi in the bunk next to me.

***

Our jeep makes its way down into the small town of Chamba, nestled deep into a valley at the foot of the Himalayas. The mountains are carved with rice terraces, like shallow green stairs and look especially majestic with rhythmic Indian music pounding in the SUV. I’ve been half way out the window snapping pictures for the past six hours, like an excited puppy with his tongue hanging out of his mouth. It’s taken me almost a year- plus forty eight hours of travel time- to get here and I’m trying to drink everything in. I notice houses dangling over the ledge of the mountain, possibly in danger of crumbling and falling into the angry river below. As we get into the heart of the town, I realize that it’s surprisingly charming in a way I can’t place. Every building is old and decrepit. A cow meanders through the main street. Dozens of kiosks showcase brightly colored scarves and bags.

The first run-in with my particular orphanage can only be described as somber. A couple of splintered wood planks here, a rusty piece of tin there. It seems to be leaning to one side and I’m almost afraid my breath will knock the whole structure over. Two small children run out, giggling and holding hands. “Namaste,” we say, and they can’t seem to stop giggling shyly. We make the rounds of introductions and stutter simple Hindi phrases we’ve learned. There is not an Indian child in sight that is not absolutely beautiful. They are exotic and dark; I want to reach out and touch their smooth milk chocolate faces. Although rotting at the gumline, their teeth look magnificently white against blackened complexions. It’s the eyes I can’t get over, though. They are large, white, glassy orbs with a twinkle and brightness that only comes with this kind of innocence and simplicity. Their irises range from light speckled gold to deep black. The ones my age look twenty years older, a testament to the difficult lives they’ve known.

The orphanage mistress takes us down the street to the school where we will be teaching. We’ve been warned in advance, but I still can’t stop the knot from tightening in my throat when I see the orphans under the stairs. They can’t afford uniforms and therefore aren’t allowed in the classrooms. No uniforms, no paid teachers, no school supplies except a piece of slate and chalk. These are the kids I’ll be teaching.

I have a pit in my stomach as we drive home and realize what a spoiled brat I am. A house in America, a car, a family who takes care of me, the gospel, an education, a list that doesn’t end. I suspect everyone else in the car is thinking the same thing. I imagine my mom serving a home-cooked meal in Salt Lake. I imagine cold lentils and curry served here twice a day.

The days go by quickly. We teach, we play, we bond. The language barrier is not an issue; we’ve discovered the universal language of physical touch. We share more hugs, kisses, and high fives than words, but this seems to melt the ice in a way verbal communication can’t. One day, the mistress tells us the girls are musically gifted but have no instruments, so we buy them instruments in town on our lunch break. They squeal and hug us and put on a show. I feel truly happy and can’t stop smiling. Giving feels contagious. We give them shoes, hygiene kits, and school uniforms. They give us more hugs and an enthusiastic “Dhanyavad!” We learn the government deems them unworthy of “higher education” and therefore has given them no hope for a future. We tell them we love them. They tell us in broken English that they will come to America someday. On the second to last day, we sing them Phil Collins’ “You’ll Be in My Heart” and the last chorus is sung in Hindi. We start to cry because they were only words until now. 17 year old Pushpa says "Don't cry, we have happy life!"

On our last day with the girls, we give them each a set of bangles- a dozen metal bracelets that sparkle and jingle when you walk. They don’t want to keep them for themselves; they want to share with us. Little hands shove bangles on our wrists, even though I have bought enough to last me a lifetime. They have nothing, and by nothing I mean the clothes on their backs, but they are quick to share. It’s not hard to see that they are more content than us, the privileged Americans. Something clicks in my head and I realize bangles don’t make them happy. Is that what makes me happy? I learn something about contentment from these orphans that sticks with me for a long time. We go back to the hostel and give almost all of our clothes to the cooks and their families.

I leave Chamba and I am the same spoiled eighteen-year old that I was three weeks ago. But I better understand these people as they have let me glimpse into their simple and happy lives. Etched in my head are those beautiful smiles, bright eyes, and dirty hands that have shown me the value of inherent happiness. And I’ve never felt better. I’ll go back someday.

***

Two days later, we are in Jaipur and it’s Thanksgiving Day. I eat a Cliff bar and two fruit leathers for dinner. It’s the best Thanksgiving dinner I’ve ever had.