Sunday, April 22, 2012

Scenes from the Week

I'm with the band....


Hopped on the tour bus with the Drive by Truckers and my old friend Cole. He does as amazing job as their light manager and sneaked us into a fantastic show at the Jefferson. Thanks Cole!


Oh hai junior-year prom date (and Meghan)!


Enjoyed the beautiful mall for the first Fridays After Five--Love Cannon was playing and the place was packed!


Spent the rainy days painting painting painting, and watching Abita enjoy her new favorite hiding spot.


Documented backyard haircuts (Maudie was v. excited)


Fam-dam-ily in action. 


Bought new plants at the farmer's market--I'm looking at you, purple tomatoes! Nom. 



Just got back from dinner at Bellas with Meghan--topped it off with a Dreamsicle martini at Bang. Will most likely go kicking and screaming into work tomorrow. What's a girl gotta do to be a stay-at-home-someone?! Sheesh...


xoxo, Hannah

Paint it Black -- or Nothing at All.

The day I stop scraping paint from under my fingernails, off my floor, and out of my eardrums, is the day I meet my land baron and we buy a mansion that's move-in ready. Someone please remind me that when I do find my fixer-up dream house, I should only buy it if I have enough money to pay some one to fix it up for me. I am on the brink of being finished (painting) in my little apartment -- only the steps left to go -- and I am thrilled. I always say to myself that I love painting... then 4 months into it, I realize this is so not true. 

Anyway. It looks great! You'd never believe it was the same place, and pictures really don't do it justice. There are still some little details needed to make my "office nook" perfecto, but that's the fun part. I know this much is true: the rustic "barn red" is forever gone from this place and it couldn't have happened fast enough.

Before:

Yes, that is green shag carpet! "Vintage" from the 50s. Oh lawd.

During: 


After (well, in the dark):

More paint than you can imagine to cover that mess.
I need to do an entire 'before and after' post to show my little place, but honestly, I can't take a photo that will show  you just how different it is. This place was cave cricket, stank-nasty, concrete central. Now, well, it's still got cave crickets (though not as many, thanks to Abita), but it actually looks....nice. I'll get around to it one day, don't you worry. 

Next up: find a pedestal table for my "dining room." And a barstool for this nook because I'm feeling like a hermit with that tiny chair. Onward and upward, right?!

xoxo, Hannah

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Best Day Evah?

Frolicking in fields. Playing with weeds. Looking at pretty flowers. Sounds about right.

Monday, April 16, 2012

33

It's been five years and I can't help but wonder if every April will feel like this. If the beginning of every spring will have me thinking about how cold I was on that morning--how I waited for the bus outside my apartment and grumbled with my neighbor about the snow falling again in April. How the girl in my Equine Science class went running out of the room, her ambulance walkie-talkie blaring and everyones eyes following her out the door. How John's Mayer's Continuum album will forever remind me of this time -- how it was playing on the vet school's radio when we heard the numbers growing -- three people dead, ten people dead, now twenty and climbing.

The year it happened, I didn't find myself feeling very sad -- I think I was mostly shocked and hazy and overwhelmed with unimportant things, like figuring out which grades I'd be able to pass off as As rather than Bs with the new extension/exception rule they'd granted. I remember being relieved that I'd finish Syntax with a solid B, rather than the C+ I deserved. Relieved.

I remember getting calls and texts from people I hadn't talked to in years--how every person I knew from Louisa, whether I had their number or not, found a way to get in touch with me to make sure we were all here. I remember gathering in Katelyn's apartment with everyone to watch the news and figure out where we were supposed to go, what we were supposed to do, how we were supposed to feel. I remember hearing reports about students' cell phones vibrating and ringing in their pockets while they lay on the floor. This was the detail that stuck with me the most that day. My phone bill was over $300 that month from all the calls and messages I received--how many calls would be on theirs, and did anyone ever listen to those voicemails?

I remember being in a bar at UVA with Rebecca a few days after it happened, after they closed school and sent everyone home for a while. We are sitting in a dark room with throbbing music and Rebecca points out a beautiful girl in the corner, sipping a drink, surrounded by friends. "That's Reema's sister," she says to me. I will never forget seeing her there and trying to comprehend how she must be feeling. A few years later, I see their brother outside Burruss and next to Reema's stone, watch him on TV as he defends gun control. This year, Reema would be 23.

Every year since, I get a little sadder. The more time that passes, the more time I have to think and dwell and realize just how much it could have been me. It could have been me or any of my friends. How different would everything be if that were the case? I find myself thinking about the families of the people who were killed and how sad it is that they may never have another spring that's filled with flowers and sunshine and bliss. They'll never walk across the Drillfield or even drive down 460, past the cow fields and the Huckleberry Trail, without feeling sick or depressed or dead themselves.

I think about Cho's family and how horrible they must always feel. I wonder if they leave town every April, or if they have ever visited Blacksburg since. I have mixed feelings about all the slogans that cropped up after it happened--Live for 32. 3.2 for 32. I remember when someone placed a thirty-third Hokie Stone outside of Burruss and how everyone was offended by it being there. Should we really be insulted? We can't change what's happened -- what's the harm in acknowledging that his family has been affected, altered, ruined, too?

I get a little upset every April 16 when people who weren't there--who won't or can't or don't understand--go about their day without even thinking about what happened. Without even remembering. What if that had been me? Does it only take 5 years to be forgotten?

It's strange to visit Tech and be surrounded by students who weren't even there when it happened. They know the facts. They've seen the interviews. They wear the T-shirts (Hokies United, right?). But they'll never really get it. They'll never really understand or have that feeling that creeps up every time a freezing wind blows across the Drillfield or every time they see a fading neVer forgeT sticker on someone's bumper. They won't have that little nagging heaviness that sets in this time of year--the one that sneaks in and tricks you into feeling mad, sad, off. They won't have a go-to answer when someone asks, 'Were you there?' or 'Did you know anyone?'.

And part of me is glad that they won't. On a sick, twisted, selfish level, I like that I was a part of Tech when this happened. I am grateful that I was there then and I am here now to remember what it felt like and how beautifully the entire community--Blacksburg and beyond--responded to the aftershock. It brought me closer to my school, made me appreciate everything a little more. It's a weird kind of nostalgia. But, it is always here and thankfully, so am I.

Sunday, April 15, 2012

My Weekend through Food

It all started on Friday afternoon.

Happy hour on the balcony: pony Coronas and icy Jomos
Then, on to Bang: mango red-pepper martinis and kale tortellini and miniature crab cakes.
Woke up: omelets and honey lattes. 


Washed it down with: gatorade and a little mud.



Recovered with: a gigantic dinner thanks to mama Suzanne and company. 
Celebrated our Warrior-dom by: watching a little Matilda and sipping some of these:


This morning, nommed on: Bodos and and Cafecitos at Hot Cakes. 

Topped it off with: Pomegranate Rice Cakes (mmm...?) and some Humpback Rocks.


Another great weekend gone sooo fassstttt. T-20 minutes until Abita (aka Party Cat aka Satan) is on the move again. Sharpening my slicing knives as we speak....

xoxox,
Hannah

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Wedding Reception, Anyone?

On Friday, I met a group at Mt. Vernon for some touring and beautiful weather. This teacher is one of my favorites--super friendly, dedicated to his students, always positive and looking for ways to make his kids have a better experience, appreciative, etc. They're from California and were being eaten alive by allergies... I guess it's a small price to pay for blooming cherry trees, farm animals, and some left-over dirt from Mr. Washington. 

Spent the night with Caroline and went back downtown on Saturday to explore and soak up the cloud-free skies. Plus, I've been dying to check out the US Botanic Gardens because everyone has told me that it's a "lame" place to send my groups. Let me just say this: every single one of my groups will be visiting the gardens from this point out! I don't know what everyone's thinking--this place is gorgeous. It's a gigantic greenhouse that's sectioned off into different climate zones and plant types. There's a jungle. There's a desert. There was entire exhibit on rare orchids. I could have stayed forever. As Caroline pointed out, "not everyone likes plants as much as you," but I don't see how this can be ignored. It's right next to the Capitol, so no excuses, people! If I had a million dollars, I'd rent this place for a weekend and hold an amazing party. Everyone would have little orchids in their drinks and there'd be hidden benches for people to sneak away and smooch (maybe I just want to recreate Eileen's wedding). Garden party, 2012-style.

Before we hit up the Gardens, we grabbed lunch near Eastern Market at Tortilla Cafe. $7 for empanadas and yucca and plantains!? Yes please. We ate in the grass and it was heavenly.


Botanic Garden what what!

This is where I started to die/melt of happiness.


Happy Lady, obviously.


Finally made it home after being away for three days. Luckily, I wasn't forgotten and managed to fit in some quality Abita snuggling. Thanks again, Dad, for watching her this weekend (and not letting her escape/get eaten by coyotes...)

Back to the grind in the morning, but I'm waking up to fresh roasted coffee, planted peppers, and new magnolias out my front door. Spring in Virginia is where I always want to be.

xoxo,
Hannah