Thursday, April 4, 2013

Spring has sprung!

Nothing extraordinary has happened but I have a particularly strong inclination to procrastinate tonight so I thought I would make a post on stuff lately.
First of all, Easter Break was divine. We only had to make up one day off of spring break so we had a good six days off. It was beautiful. I found a new TV show to worship (The Vicar of Dibley with MY MAIN GURL DAWN FRENCH), experimented with the south beach diet which made me feel amazing, especially when I drank water a lot, and just genuinely relaxed. Which I haven't done in a while. Something's always dragging my mind from green pastures of luxury like watching the office or reading Jane Austen to mundane things like homework or cello. 
Second, I've been playing this beautiful piece with a section of my orchestra at school and the choir-it's incredible. All I can do is share it. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QFhSg9xpSMc&playnext=1&list=PLYnjJ5pyi_K_vEcDOplPlBxETxVc3PonV&feature=results_main


Every video will lead to the next or another movement. 4 movements. Sunrise Mass. Incredible..

Third, I am LOVING this sunny weather! My runs are heavenly. I get to the flats of my run, and the sun is shining and there's a small breeze and life just looks so perfect as I jam to Regina Spektor. 



Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Frasier Facts!

So I've been thinking about this for a while. My parents and I usually watch a TV show together before we go to bed every evening, and lately we've been caught on "Frasier" with Kelsey Grammer and John Mahoney. It's a hilarious show, and and the writing is superb. It's about an uppity radio psychologist named Frasier, his producer, Roz (polar opposite of Frasier), Frasier's brother, Niles (also a psychologist), their father, Marty (retired police detective), and his home health care specialist, Daphne (british). The plots are fairly repetitive, the romantic relationships are always short, and the characters are completely stagnant. However, because of the reoccurring plots and subplots, I have discovered a few things from this show.

-The person who rings the doorbell is NEVER who you think it is
-Circumstances ALWAYS get worse
- Children are psycho geniuses who will go to extreme lengths to get a minibike
-All Winnebagos look the same
- All brunettes look the same
-Never assume your friend's significant other knows their dark secrets; most likely they've fabricated something to cover it up and you'll wreck it by expecting an honest relationship
- Jewish people are hilarious arguers
-The tacky dancing santa really never dies, it's immortal no matter how many times you dunk it in the sink behind Marty's back
-Eddie the Jack Russel is just as much of a therapist as most psychologists
-When a jerk just won't be nice, call his mom
-If you are interested in opera, the culinary arts, and do not know who Michael Jordan is, do NOT try to fix a toilet alone
-Always keep your bathroom next to the front door; that way you can shove guests who are unexpected or would create an explosive situation in and they won't be noticed
-Cabins bring out the best in people
-Italians are good lawyers
-British people like privacy
-Never Ever EVER encourage a hispanic radio show owner to follow his dreams; he will most certainly convert the entire station to salsa music and put everyone out of a job
-Food is not meant to be eaten during dinner, merely played with and thrown across the table if one's company displays insolence
-Cocky people end up being humbled
-Only Manly man throw their back out while blowing out the candle in a cupcake


There you go. Hope you learned something!

Sunday, February 24, 2013

The Restoration Of My Sanity

So peeps!
Regional orchestra ended, and all the things I told people I'd get to are now flying up in my face. Some of them have already been tackled (like emptying my overflowing garbage can and bleaching my mustache...did you not know this blog was for the strong stomached?)

Just a little (BIG) synopsis of the whole ordeal:

My life actually wasn't too crazy, I was very "relaxed" about practicing for regionals. My excuse was more that my soul and conscience were being irked every waking second of my life TO practice, TO worry, TO pack, TO get ahead with homework, etc. None of which I did. Whatevs, being lazy, panicking, and barely scraping it are the steps that occur in basically ever process in my life.

We began our expedition to the host high school in a school bus with all our crap and instruments. This was when I started getting worried. There was really nothing at stake for the seating audition, and after that, all I had to do was play and mind my business, but I still was nervous and shaky and homesick. I tried to calm my troubled heart with Billy Joel, but I just got chills and cried. So I wasn't in any better shape than I was before.

We got to the school, and they lined us up into holding rooms for seating auditions. Where one sits in the orchestra determines (a) What part you play within your section (b) What everyone in the orchestra thinks of you, because the farther back you are, the worse you are at life and (c) If you go to states. I went into my holding room, where I saw all the other cellists warm up casually with 4590843259483 X the talent I had. I was praying and praying to feel better and to do the best I could. I finally just stopped worrying and went into my audition. I went in, and Nana Laura must have channelled Yo Yo Ma into my veins because I did better than the best I had ever practiced, and came out with double fists in the air and shouted "I AM THE MASTER COMMANDER". No, not really. We aren't allowed to talk near the audition rooms in case the judges recognize our voices. But my heart was screaming for joy.

I was seated 10 out of 12 chairs, which was good for a girl who only made it to regions because all the other cellists in her district had the plague or dropped of the face of the earth for some reason. My stand partner was nice. And the conductor was INCREDIBLE. His name was Mr. Jernigan, and he was a spunky black guy who called us "muffins" and "cuzins". He frequently referred to his wife as his "lovely bride" and praised us when the songs we played were "juicy". This guy is like Ghandi plus Bill Cosby plus Eddie Murphy. If it wasn't for him, I would have asked to go home after the first 12 hour rehearsal.

After the little mini rehearsal we had Wednesday night, the host director read off the lists of names on Bus 1. She told us to go pack our things up and be quick and orderly so the chaperones can do their job and get us out and to our hotel rooms safely. We had just practiced from 6-9, and had last eaten at 3, so we were hungry and tired. Once the Bus 1 list got off the stage the lady repeatedly yelled at us to hurry and get to our chaperones, who yelled at us more for not standing single file, for not being in the list order that we heard ONCE, and for talking/laughing/feeling joy. Then, on our way out, the host lady bashed us from the stage saying our 3 minute pack-up-and-head-out made us "epic failures" and she "hopes Bus 2 and Bus 3 aren't as bad". Needless to say, this lady clearly needed to get a smack in the face with a cello.

My roomates were great, our room was small, and our shower rod was shaped like a "U" to prevent us from keeping the water IN the shower and encourage us to make our bathroom a swamp. Also, the lighting wasn't flattering. But we said everything was fine when our chaperones came by for room check, and accepted our rations of orange factory nursery crackers with exhausted gladness. And slept.

Breakfast was at 6:45, and we had 15 minutes to eat and get out before Bus 2 kids got there. The 12 hour rehearsal that day killed me, and we left at 9:30 to our hotels that night.

FRIDAY. DAY OF CONCERT. The morning was beautiful, and I listened to Simon and Garfunkel on the way to the school. I wore yoga pants. The sun was shining and in 12 hours I would be getting this experience over with. We practiced (with a lunch break) till 4, then we had the banquet. There's kind of a ceremony for all the kids who made it to State orchestra. But before that, the chaperones awarded some kids from their hotel room jurisdiction that were especially polite or nice or whatever. All the girls talked horribly about the chaperones when no one was looking, but we were all compliant when we needed to be. A few rooms got rewarded for being polite, and then for being good neighbors, and my roommates (who are the sweetest, more demure and proper people I know) were like, "Oh, good for them.." And I was wishing I'D gotten a reward, the announcers said "And last but not least will rooms 409 and 314 come up." Those were our rooms! "These rooms get the overall best guests award for being polite, punctual and compliant. And if you will notice, there is a commonality among them. These students are ALL from Williamsport. I was beaming in my yoga pants. Our orchestra teacher was beaming as well. We were all pretty happy about it. AND THEN the real rewards of State orchestra kids came up and blah blah blah. Then the concert happened and went well, and I slept. So. There you go. A very thorough and college-ready synopsis of the latest landmark in my life.


Saturday, December 15, 2012

The REAL (and completely cliché but totally perfect) meaning of the season.

So this past week (2 weeks? 3 weeks? 2 days?) has been like a hurricane.

A hurricane...of singing. And homework. And responsibilities. And unfortunately, not a hurricane where winds take you up and help me fly. That did not happen.

I went to the white house last weekend to sing for tourists with my choir. It went really well.

 It was pretty great. The house smelled like pine, on account of the horrendous amounts of pine decorations and trees. It was grand, but crowded with lots of decorations. I feel like a very hatable critic when I say that I wish the atmosphere was better. The decorations were gawdy, and the actual historical pretext items were few. I wish it had been more tastefully, classically beautiful, decorated. It just seemed like  bunch of rich people saying, "THESE DECORATIONS ARE PRETTY AREN'T THEY?" With repeated, "HUH? HUH? HUH?"'s.

Then the next day, went to church, left early, played with a quartet at a restaurant, then came home and caught up with homework and online christmas shopping. Monday, I had a gig at the Genetti during school. Tuesday, I had a gig after school. Wednesday, I had a  YW meeting at 5:30, seminary at 6, mutual at 7. Thursday I was free. Friday I went to watch a movie with friends (not the hobbit), then went to Dunkin' doughnuts, then went ice skating. Today, I went to the mall with a friend. All in this week, I've been asked to formal, been in the newspaper, failed an English quiz which my teacher gracefully exempted from my grade already, played a school concert by a combination of musical performance and marathon sprinting from one end of the stage to the other during the blackouts in between sections, achieved a %100.8 in chemistry, and talked to a lady in a shopping line about her deceased great dane who weighed 100 pounds.

It's been quite the FIE-asco.

I've been slowly losing the motivation to do anything, and tonight i've just felt burned out and completely drawn of christmas spirit. I watched this though:

http://www.lds.org/media-library/video/christmas?lang=eng&start=13&end=24#2009-12-42-what-shall-we-give

and felt a little better.

This week, (well, all weeks I would love to be this way but especially this week) I've decided to be kind and cheerful and gentle and patient. These are the qualities I need to work on, and as i watched the video I realized that the reason I feel dreadful is that these qualities have not been present in my persona the past week or so because the spirit of christ has been kicked out of me the last few days because the spirit of perfectionist christmas shopping and performance caroling have overstayed their welcome. THAT WAS THE MOST RUN ON SENTENCE I'VE EVER HEARD I CAN'T BELIEVE MYSELF WHAT AM I DOING WITH MY LIFE OMYGOSH.

I hope everyone realized this, and doesn't overlook the cliché meanings of this time of year. They are only cliché because they create the kind of holidays people want to repeat. :)

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Winter and its sucknificence.

I'm having an internal struggle!
I'm sad because I'm losing motivation to run (treadmills are hellish and outside is brutal), and I feel myself slipping into bad dietetic-al habits... Which means a lot of my self respect, energy, and motivation for other things is crashing through the floor.  Through september and october I WAS so good, and I FELT sooo good. Plus, there is the trip out to Utah looming over me (the destination will be awesome, I'm just worried the journey will cause the pennsylvania coppersmiths to celebrate christmas in a car on the side of the road somewhere in Iowa). Also, I need to buy presents and ALL OF A SUDDEN my mind is blank, and then the 5 music groups I am involved in (Symphony, Strolling Strings, Les Chanteuses, Concert Chorale, and District orchestra) are speeding up and I'm stressing myself. But the problem isn't the stress. The problem is that I deal with stress by downing gross (in both meanings of the word) amounts of chocolate and feeling worthless. HAHA.

On the other hand, I'm happy because it is Christmas time and my favorite people are all around me and  I'm starting to like playing my cello again and christmas food is delicious.

I'm a'stressin' somethin' furce.

In other news, I found a YouTuber who's videos make me glad to be alive!

OLAN ROGERS, MARRY ME.

Here are some links to his masterpieces of comedy.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cZO9tMetxno
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YCFSqFHwZko
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F9u-lfDCDws
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ji6HQJOM_lc
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H_GYnzZa2pc

Enjoy.

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Back to Routine.

Today was remarkably good. I felt cheerful as soon as I hopped out of bed (literally, getting out of the bottom of a bunk bed is no easy feat; especially when you possess the coordination of a drunk bear). Everyone was discombobulated and unaware of their surroundings, but I was glad to be back to routine. 


Here's some pictures/videos you might be interested in. 




                                  This is my "i'm only smiling because this might be the last photo of me alive" face







Monday, November 26, 2012

The Thanksgiving Fiasco.

I don't want to give this link to people and just have one boring blog post about beginning my journey to blog-dom (and also I don't want to get off this computer when there are three hideous dialectical journals for english staring me in the face), so i'm going to describe the latest events of life: THANKSGIVING. NOM. NOM. NOM. 

This was the first thanksgiving my mom and dad and I have ever spent apart, because of the brilliant new baby child that recently joined the coppersmith ranks, my mom flew out to help kate and henry (my sister and brother-in-law) over the holiday and coo and swoon over this child to her heart's delight. On the other hand, my dad and I drove up north to visit his cousins and aunt and console the little hole where mom usually is with seafood and guns. 

My dad and I dropped mom off on the Saturday before Thanksgiving, and watched her go with sorrowful eyes. Our momma had left us to our own devices! We survived, though. We figured out how to make pasta.

The Wednesday following, Dad and I and Bertie set off to first pick up his Aunt (and her long haired daschund), and then go to the small New England village the cousins live in. 

The drive was horrible. I had motion sickness and Bert got me all furry and I forgot my earbuds to listen to music or watch movies on my laptop. I was SO ready to get out of that freaking car. 

We got to the house, and set all the dogs free, and I met the two chihuahuas of the house, Stewie and Pinot (as in Pinot Grigio, the wine, for all non-alcoholics that are reading this),who turned out to be the best entertainment while I was there. 

That night, we sat and visited. Thursday, we went to a state park for a walk with the dogs and then came back to the house and visited. I later got to ride my cousin's husband's motorcycle. It was great, but I was shaking for about an hour afterwards. Then we ate thanksgiving dinner and watched the cousins play video games. I enjoyed myself, and was delighted to get plenty of videos from mom of the bambino doing perfectly normal baby things that somehow I could watch for ages due to their cuteness. Then Friday, my dad and my cousin's husband and I went shooting and I shot two pistols, my dad's shotgun (which left me with a beautiful blue and purple souvenir on my hip due to its vicious kick), and a rifle. (My dad was nearly tearing up the whole time-he has been waiting to see me handle a gun since I first proved myself a true rough-houser by knocking his jaw out while being tickled when I was twelve.) It was alright. I was eager to get back to the dogs. And the food. ;) Then we went to a museum devoted to the history of New England's whaling industry (they had some nice lamps on display) and came back to the house for a seafood fest. I had lobster for the first time, and thoroughly enjoyed it, and made my dad proud by eating an oyster (which act will not likely be repeated in the near future). We followed that with the Big Bang Theory and chocolate chip cookies, and then went to bed. I was pretty happy, until I woke up and spent half my night kneeling by the toilet promising myself to never combine seafood and chocolate ever again till the day I die, and hating myself for enjoying either delicacy in the first place. That morning, we packed up (I ate a modest, puritan breakfast of toast, not willing to repeat any events of the previous night in the car with two dogs) and left. After dropping our aunt off, we went to the airport to pick up mom. Dad sent me in alone, I got briefly lost in the elevator, found mom getting off her plane, and we FINALLY proceeded home. I was glad to be home, and now today is the last day we have together before returning to our various prisons of work and discipline.

I hope all your thanksgivings were unique and wonderful, and you enjoyed family and food with wild abandon, as I did. 

I also send my condolences to anyone who has to return to work or school. Just put Bing Crosby on shuffle, and carry on, folks. ;)