Showing posts with label pirates. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pirates. Show all posts

Thursday, 13 February 2014

Piano Lessons: Part 1

This one time I took piano lessons for 14 years and it was pretty average.

In this story, my mother was flogging a dead horse, and I was a lazy, whiny child.
Let's go back to a time when Captain Planet was teaching me how to recycle and the Care Bears were, well, doing ALL the caring. Maybe the Care Bears should have been recycling too, then we would have stroked two birds with one stick. I was four when I starting taking piano lessons. For the next 12 years (with a one-year (even worse) violin sabbatical) I continued to go to piano lesson every week. Here are some things about it...

That Which I liked:
  • For the majority of my esteemed piano career, I was taught be a lady named Margaret. She lived next door. She was always very kind to me.
  • I started to babysit her child as soon as I was old enough. He was entertaining. He was adopted and I have since learned that he is autistic. He would always interrupt our piano lessons with non-sequiturs, like that kid who likes toytles.
  • One year, he told me he wanted 'cerated-edged scissors and cellotape' for Christmas. What a strange gift. I didn't have the heart to tell him that he was weird, and that most pairs of scissors aren't actually cerated.
  • Babysitting was fun because this family had a nice house and a nice couch, and hardly any work was required of me. Something that I became interested in during this time was figuring out how many Tim Tims was an acceptable amount to eat. I knew I would be given the whole packet anyway, but deluxe biscuits were exciting to me at this time, and it was a question of balance between a) not wanting to look like greedy, and b) being concerned about pack weight on the hike home. 
  • Babysitting allowed me realise just how much I love looking through other peoples' pantries. C'mon. Get with me here. We all do. These specific pantries always featured an abundance of the fancier kind of food, but there was always a shit tonne of cask wine. I guess some people just really like cask wine?!
  • AND they had Sky TV. (Sky TV is my pert little country's name for cable.) More than four channels was a pretty exciting thing and it was there that I discovered Jared Leto and his phenomenal bone structure. 
  • Margaret's husband was super nice. His name was Colin and he was from Jersey. Not like the Jersey-Shore-Jersey, but the Jersey-off-the-coast-of-France-Jersey. Maybe that's where Jersey Caramels are from. Also, maybe not. Colin was one of the few adults in my life who I recall talked to me like an actual person, not just a half person. I even pretended to be interested in golf for him.
  • Wait, this is about the piano?
  • Chromatic scales were pretty. Fucking. Rad.
  • I liked the way my nails sounded when they clicked on the keys. Margaret didn't like this, though. That made me like it a little more, because it was starting to taste the sweetness of middle-class rebellion.
That Which I Hated:
  • Putting effort into something that I didn't find fun.
  • The instability of my later piano career. When I was a teenager, we decided I was bad at the piano because Margaret was too nice. I don't really think that this was true, but after this epiphany, I changed teachers twice. I'll call one of them 'Angry Old Lady' and the other one 'Nice Old Lady' because I actually don't remember their names. Nice Old Lady would always interrupt the lesson to talk to her cat. Nicely. 
  • In a desperate attempt to quit piano, I told mum I wanted to learn another instrument instead. Problem with this was that I failed to realise that the piano is one of the best instruments out there. In a stupid decision, I choose to learn the violin in a one-year sabbatical. I was trying to escape from my increasingly weary thoughts, and I had outright asked mother if I could quit. The only way she would budge was by letting me do an instrument switcheroo. Don't ask why I chose the violin. I can't tell you. Big mistake for both me and the people who had to hear me practice for that full 30 minutes per week.
  • Exams. I hated these the most. 'They' would import these stuck-up old bitches from England to judge. In hindsight, these old people may have been the kind of ladies to buy their grandchildren ALL the icecream sundaes on family outings, while wearing ridiculously big hats, and they would happily reminisce about the bygone age where mail came TWICE a day. But to me, in those soul-sucking examination halls, they just seemed like the kind to hate black people and anything that hippies represent. Even more, though, they especially disliked 'the youth of today'. Oh, and they didn't smile. Ever. The exams would always take place in a very old and very large room. The ambiance was so unsettling and I was a nervous child.
  • I always had my lessons on a Monday and for some strange reason, I would always get a headache on Mondays, like clockwork. It was as if my brain was telling me that the Royal School of Music can. not. fit. inside.
I will tell you more things later! 

Other thoughts from me this week:
  • When the Olympics are on, I turn into a strange person who doesn't sleep. I reach a strange quality of cranky because I'm tired, crazy because I drink coffee to compensate, and happy because I have watched unfamiliar and exciting sports. 
  • There's this thing called Sriracha butter. I'm pretty sure this is just where you grab some butter and some Sriracha and mix with a paddle, but it sounds like it has Jesus-like qualities. 
  • At work the Korean employees have to wear these red blazers. They have epaulettes and little medals, too. It makes me feel like they are in the Royal Navy from the 1700s, and it makes me want to dress all the foreign staff up to look like pirates. 
This is the video I carefully selected for you:



THE END

Liz Tritops 

xoxo






Monday, 18 March 2013

This Has No Theme

So I moved to Korea. I'm in a small-ish city (by Korean standards I'm in the 'countryside'). It's around 90 minutes away from Seoul. I'm teaching English here. 
I hope that this has never been a wanky travel blog and that it never will be. 

With that being said, I will share a few little things from my new life here:

  • The list of ways I feel like a pirate is definitely adding up 1.) I can't speak good. 2.) The fruit and vege situation here points to me getting scurvy.
  • No one runs outside here. People stare at me because I am white, and because I am running. 
  • Portland was like a facial hair oasis. I may not have appreciated this enough. First Korean man I see with some nice beard/moustache/maybe-just-a-bit-of-stubble won't know what hit him.  

Here's a list things that I made. I don't think they are related. Let's not even look for a theme, okay? 

  • Recently I went without caffeine for about a week. I learnt something new about myself: Me without caffeine is horrific. My whole body hurts, especially my head. Even if I actually like you, I don't like you. I will stare at you and say 'I'm grumpy', while squinting my eyes and expecting you to do something about it. 
  • Bananas are actually berries.
  • At my old job, I was trying to sell 'water resistant' things to people by saying they're 'kind of waterproof'. I did this for a LONG time. This doesn't even make sense! 
  • Elephants can stop a rolling apple without bruising it 'coz they have mad foot skillz. 
  • Carpe diem.
  • So there's this thing called breakfast pizza. Maybe you should make it. 
  • Fuck this suggestion:

 
  • Ben and Jerry's can disappoint. A few weeks ago before I left the USA I brought a pint of the Cheesecake Brownie flavour, and I'm thinking 'Well isn't this just going to be yummy! I like cheesecake and brownies!' Then I eat some and the icecream doesn't even taste like cheesecake and there are hardly any of the little brownie chunks. Lesson: If you want cheesecake and brownies, just eat cheesecake and brownies. 
  • Thanks to 'Murica (esp. Portland), I am now quite fond of bridges. Like, bridges are actually really great. 
  • If I ever own a boat, it WILL look like a pirate ship. 
  • Here's a quote from my good friend Paige, and a great philosophy: "I like calluses. If your skin's too soft, you're not doing life right." 
  • Moving and not wasting anything in my kitchen cupboards is a talent that I have yet to master. 
Thoughts from me THIS week:
  • Let's share feelings on brushing your teeth in the shower. Do you do it? Have you tried it? I've tried it, and I think it's warm and weird, and I don't like the toothpaste swimming around my feet for some reason. 
  • Something in life that I dislike is that feeling right before you go to bed where you don't know if you need to pee or not. 
  • I suppose I should try and make you watch some kind of video now. I do that. This is my friend Eli. He does comedy and he's great. 




Thanks for reading! 

I like you all.

Liz Tritops

xoxo


Tuesday, 8 May 2012

Why I Think America is OK

Hi!


I'm gonna write about the USA now. This is not something I will do very often, because sometimes cultural comparisons make people fight-y. Hence why the list is made up of trivial things. I LIKE AMERICA AND I LIKE NEW ZEALAND!!! OK??? 


Here are some things which I like about this place:

  • The butter in the fridge is always soft. How does it do this???
  • Squirrels exist (they don't come out when it's raining though, and it rains ALOT in Portland). If I see a squirrel, I get a point. If I get 10 points in a day, I get icecream. I can get points for other things also. I might tell you about this game on another day. Germans can't say 'squirrel'. 
  • They have these carrots which come in bags and they're baby sized but peeled. Apparently they aren't actually baby carrots, but regular sized carrots which have been put through these machines and they come out much more small. No more cutting carrot sticks!!! 
  • There are many yellow school buses. I guess I knew that they existed, but I always thought that they were over-represented in movies and on the Simpsons and in those books about The Magic School Bus, for some kind of 'yellow school bus nostalgia' effect; but they're actually everywhere. When travelling from Portland to Salem, I saw where the school buses slept, and there must have been around 500 yellow school buses located in one small location! THAT'S HEAPS!
  • Tater tots. They're tasty as. I could write about the food here for years. But all I'm gonna say about this is that now I understand why Napoleon carried them in his pocket. 
  • People who look like they might be trying to be pirates. So far, I have seen many of them. They're either guys with bandanas and pierced-ears, or long hair and beards and cargo pants. Pirates invented cargo pants because they needed all the pockets they could get. I think the mullet in New Zealand is like the pirate in the US. 
  • Homeless people have dogs as pets and they look quite happy.
  • Seeing baseball parks. I don't quite know why I like this so much, maybe it's because they're differently shaped and there's a little mound where the pitcher stands and for some reason I think that's nifty. 
  • There are fewer annoying birds; I haven't seen any seagulls yet.
  • The way that people from some states seem to hate other states. Often it seems irrational. For example: "Nothing fucking happens in Alabama." I'm sure many, many, many things happen on a daily basis in Alabama. Five million people live there. Also: "People in Minnesota remind me of badly smashed potatoes. Lumpy and white."    (I actually kinda hate Florida. Don't tell anyone.)
  • You can keep a snake or a chimpanzee as a pet if you want to. Wouldn't recommend the chimpanzee.  One day, when I have far to much money, I'm going to keep otters as pets. Probably in my moat. They hold hands when they sleep so they don't drift away. This is not a joke. If you click this link, you will die of cute. 



Other thoughts from me this week:

  • I thought that Gatorade was spelt like 'gator aid' and it was a kind of drink that would also aid alligators. To fight or something. Now I feel funny about Gatorade because I don't know what it stands for or what the premise is. 
  • I've always wanted to do that thing where you make the recipes out of the jelly beans on the Jelly Belly packaging. Does strawberry shortcake really taste like strawberry shortcake? I don't know. I don't feel ok about not knowing. 
  • Are guinea pigs really 90s pets? Or is it just that it was the 90s when I was the appropriate age to own a guinea pig? FUCK. 
  • Watch this!

Bye bye. Thanks for reading!

Much love

Liz Tritops

xoxo