Giving Winehouse a run for her money
I’ve wanted to write a meaningful post for the last few days, I really have. But you know that life thing? Well, it gets in the way sometimes. The last couple of weeks have been really hectic because I’ve been busy doing the following:
1. Settling into my last semester as a college student. I browsed the campus bookstore for things I feel obligated to buy before my college life is over (a college sweatshirt, a laptop with my student discount, a college mug) but still, I have yet to feel the pang I’m sure will come long after I’ve walked the stage in my graduation robes. And I don’t mean “pang” as in the good-job-you-did-it kind, I mean “pang” as in, Hey Chelsi! This is me, Life. Now that you’ve graduated college I’m here to welcome you to the real world by punching you in the face!
2. Working on the finishing touches for my Internship’s newest gallery exhibit, which opened yesterday and was a huge success. This involved traveling to all corners of the Bay Area with our Program Director, including places like Ikea (which he had never been to), Target, various houses to pick up art, weird printing presses and post office on top of post office. Also, my eyes are tired from creating outlines in Illustrator for dozens of icons that needed to be resized for a zine, and after having spent several hours cutting six inch pieces of thread from a gigantic spool because the artist wanted to use them to represent clusters of ten people in a community of like, eight hundred thousand, I kind of wanted to die. I know that that’s boring talk and what you’re really wondering is how my Program Director had never been to Ikea, but what I’M wondering is how our trip to Target was only his SECOND time there.
3. Trying to make enough money to pay for bills, tuition, and the three fillings I need for the cavities that are causing my molars to rot out of my head. Whoever decided that getting your teeth fixed should cost so much money is a stupid, stupid person, and I’d like to relay the punch in the face that I’m anticipating from life over to them. The same goes for whoever decided we should have only seven days in a week. I need more like ten. That way instead of using the precious few minutes a day I have to lounge around on things like looking for a better paying job, I could work on my spiral into alcoholism, which brings me to:
4. Partying like a rock star, but not in the glamorous sense. Yes I know the promoters, owners, bartenders and DJs at my club of choice (meaning that basically everything is free) but the fact that I didn’t come home for four days because I was spending as much time on that side of the Bay Bridge as possible in order to go to said club and hang out with friends without feeling the rising costs of gasoline, and DIDN’T BRUSH MY TEETH OR SHOWER for three of those four days, heavily outweighs the free-shit benefit of Celebrity and highlights the disgusting crack-head part.
And while I could seriously write pages and pages about any of these four areas of activity, all I can really think about right now is how one of the chicks in my Thursday night writing workshop is perfectly nice and sweet and well groomed except for the three blonde inch-and-a-half long hairs that I spotted growing from the left side of her chin today. Why would a lovely brunette woman allow such an abomination on her face? Better yet, how does a brunette woman even manage to grow blonde hairs at all? She’s a little obsessed with Japanese culture and at first I considered the possibility that she might be experimenting with some sort of Japanese-man-gene-adopting project, but then I remembered that long hairs growing from moles in the face is more of a Chinese thing, so now I don’t know what to think, and I know nothing except for the fact that looking at her makes me insanely uncomfortable and I’ve never felt so compelled to take a razor to someone else’s face before.
Curiouser and curiouser…
Two days ago I opened the Contra Costa Times and found an article about a company in Japan that provides paid time off for people who've just gone through a bad break up. Adults in their twenties get one day to sit in front of the T.V. and stuff their faces with ice cream and chocolates while they cry into their sweat shirt sleeves, but adults in their thirties get triple the time because the head honcho at whatever company this is (can't remember) believes it's harder to deal with heartache the older you get. If that's true I might just wanna move to Japan, 'cause we all know how difficult of a time I'm STILL having, and I don't think anybody in the States is going to provide a year's worth of paid time off becuase I'm a pathetic piece of crap.
Yesterday I opened the Contra Costa Times again and found an article about a marijuana vending machine. Seriously. Bet you my mom knows about this one already!
I'm almost afraid to go downstairs and look in the paper today because I'm half expecting to find an article about something even more ridiculous, like how If I just purchase the right refridgerator, food can now materialize in front of me like it does in Star Trek.
Okay, I guess that would be pretty amazing, but you get what I'm saying, right?
It runs in the family
Me: Dude, I can't believe Heath Ledger died today.
My Brother: Yeah, that's pretty random.
Me: I'm really saddened by it, man. I liked him a lot.
My Brother: I don't really care. I'd be sad if Christian Bale died, though.
Me: What does Christian Bale have to do with anything?
My Brother: Dude, he was Batman. And Heath Ledger is the Joker in the next Batman, but you know, he's dead now.
Me: Oh, right.
A few minutes pass...
Me: I'd be really shocked if Brad Pitt died.
My Brother: I would too, but then I'd be stoked.
Me: WHY?
My Brother: because then I'd be that much closer to being the hottest man in the world.
Thank you
I recently met a girl who has inadvertently turned my life around. She was hired at my place of business just before the New Year because everyone and their mother wanted to take some vacation time. I wouldn’t say that we really hit it off right away; I mean, she’s a friendly girl with lots of questions about, oh, everything there is in the world, and I love to answer questions so I guess it was just natural for her to enjoy my company. But then when I saw her for what was maybe the third time just before January hit, she hugged me and said, “Chelsi, I’m so glad to have met you this year! You are such a good friend and I feel like we’ve known each other for a long time.” Whoa, right? I wanted to be flattered, I really did, but I’m so uncomfortable in situations like that. With the hugging and the appreciating. Who does that anymore? Anyway, I decided to pass it off as a foreign thing (she’s straight out of South America) and haven’t thought about it since.
Because we work the same position, I don’t see her unless I catch her at the tail end of her shift or vice versa, but even in those short five or six minute windows she’s always eager to play twenty questions or to set up a time when we can hang out outside of work. My schedule between two jobs and TRYING to find an internship is crazy, so I usually have to tell my friends that unless they book me two weeks ahead of time, I can’t hang out. But how do you repeatedly turn down someone who HUGGED you and thanked you for existing? Unless you have no soul, YOU CAN’T. So then yesterday, after sitting on my ass for a good four hours because we had a total of thirty three customers all morning, I decided to give Miss South America a call and ask her if she’d like to get together for some coffee or a movie after I got off. (Does this sound like it’s going to turn into a story of the lesbian variety? Because it isn’t. Sorry to disappoint!) Miss South America was a film student when she was in college, so she insisted that we see the movie Juno, which, by the way, is amazing.
While waiting for the movie to start we talked about how she got her dream job as a Mac Specialist at the Apple store downtown, but shortly after the confirmation she received an e-mail retracting the job offer because her work visa ends in March and they require a longer commitment. It made me think about where I regrettably stand in internship land (at the bottom of the septic tank) but that the opportunities surrounding me are vast. That if I don’t get the exact one I want, the chances of finding something else are still significant, whereas here is this girl who has flown all the way to California in order to immerse herself in a profession that she’s wanted to be a part of for the greater part of her entire life, was accepted into her dream world and then rejected because she’s not a citizen. That’s more than a no, you suck at interviewing, try again somewhere else; that’s a no, you can’t have a job here. Period. Ever. Unless you marry some American guy.
What’s worse is that that’s not even the part that humbled me. The part that made me want to start crying and hug her with my cold and unaffectionate American arms is when she told me that she suffers from a very debilitating disease, and because of that disease, was practically bedridden for two years of her life. When the doctor that had been monitoring her case from the beginning told her she couldn’t possibly do anything for her anymore, Miss South America decided that it was time to seize any opportunity to enjoy life that presented itself, and that’s what backed her decision to see her current holistic doctor and try her luck in the States. Now she drinks her holistic teas and works as often as she can, even though it takes her two to three days to fully recuperate after two five hour shifts, and it seems to be working out well for her so far. She told me the reason she confided in me about her condition was because she feels like we were meant to be friends, and she doesn’t want to lie to someone she thinks may be such a big part of her life in the long run.
Do you want to hug your monitor and cry yet? Because I do. Before this information, I felt like Miss South America’s optimism was really overwhelming. I mean, nobody in San Francisco is that optimistic. We have earthquakes and tons of homeless people and terrible weather and ridiculous living costs and no parking, so it’s a little hard to shoot rainbows out of our asses. A lot of tourists are surprised that we’re not the fun-loving, beach-dwelling, surfer, sunshiney, happy-go-lucky people that they had in mind (for that kind of experience you definitely want to go to Southern California), but Miss South America seems largely unaffected by this. Instead she says “goodmorning!” like sugar is dripping from her teeth and laughs about walking to work in the rain without an umbrella and acts like being sad is just so two years ago. And now that I know she is projecting this unexplainable niceness while constantly dealing with weakness, pain and unbearable fatigue on top of the scum-filled city, I feel like such a pile of trash for ever complaining about anything.
Before we did the whole hug thing again and said goodbye after our movie date, she said something that I think will probably stay with me for the rest of my life, and that is that pity and compassion are two very different things. She hates pity because to her it’s superficial. Someone can feel sorry for someone else’s situation, but it’s fleeting. Often there is no effort or desire to understand it. Compassion involves action, because compassionate people want to fix the situation because of how much they care, even if the only thing they can do to alleviate any stress for the person in question is to act as though nothing is wrong, though they’ll never forget what they know, and will somehow, someway, be forever changed by it. Miss South America says she feels very strongly that I am a compassionate person, and that that sort of detection is very rare for her.
I’m beyond thankful for this assumption, and am rendered almost speechless by it because so much of me feels like I don’t deserve it. I’ve been told repeatedly for the last two years by someone I care(d) for very deeply that I have serious issues. That I’m whiney and needy and annoying and crazy. My defense has always been that I’m just really passionate about the things that I love, and is that really such a bad thing? Isn’t it honest and raw and commendable? Howard Hughes said, “Passion will make you crazy, but is there any other way to live?” and I’ve surrendered myself to this quote and even, on occasion, used it to defend my actions because I simply can’t control the way that I am, the way that I think, the way so much of me is defined by my intense devotion to the things and people that I care for. And now someone I barely know has recognized that about me, and that recognition and approval almost justifies all of my uncontrollable passion-fueled actions and words that until now I’ve come so close to hating.
Funny how an almost complete stranger can right your way of thinking after someone you thought you knew inside and out managed to bend it all out of shape.
WHY AM I SO LAME?
So, we all know I’ve been on the hunt for an internship in the art department for a while now. I thought I found the one I wanted back in December when I interviewed for it but, as it turned out, the girl I was supposed to be replacing decided to stay and I didn’t vibe as well with the gallery director as I thought I would. It’s not that there’s anything wrong with her; the problem, of course, stems from me. I have horrible interviewing skills. HORRIBLE. Yes I have a good sense of humor and yes I can hold successful and interesting conversations with people and yes I can write well and yes I can apply all of those skills into one cohesive and relatively entertaining project like this website, but sit me in a chair in front of you and tell me to tell you why I think I’m worth your time and I turn into a complete moron.
Yesterday I had another interview for an internship position at an arts organization in San Francisco and I’m just going go ahead and admit that I want the job more than anything. In addition to gallery work they handle literary, dance, theatre and music programs as well. It’s like a smorgasbord of amazing things and there’s nothing more that I want than to build an artistic foundation with a place that treats creative outlets as something that’s just as life-sustaining as food and water, because that’s the way I feel about it. And it gets even better because the people that work there seem really cool. I didn’t get the weird vibe during the interview that I got with the last gallery and it was just a more pleasant experience overall.
However, getting back to that bad interviewing trait of mine, I’m going to keep my expectations low about the turnout of this one because when asked what I hoped to gain from the experience I think I replied with something in some inaudible dead sea language and then stuck my head up my own ass.
I wish I could just sit down and say something like, Hey people, my name is Chelsi, I love art and I want to dedicate my life to it and to helping others discover their love for it as well. I’m a hard worker, a great multi-tasker, and I’d be more passionate about helping you and being immersed in a community like this than anyone else I can think of because art is my life. –And then have them say in return, Chelsi, you’re hired.
Also, right after I thought I couldn’t turn into more of a rambling idiot than I already had, the interviewer asked, Do you have a website? To which I replied, Yes, to which she then asked, What is it? To which I then said something in Hebrew.
Website? WHY DIDN’T ANYONE TELL ME I WAS GOING TO BE ASKED IF I HAD A WEBSITE? I couldn’t possibly say, Yeah, it’s girlsarestrange dot com and if you’d like to find out what a complete freak of nature I am and then please visit it. Instead I paused, almost threw up and in my strange Hebrew-like mumbling, insisted that it wasn’t a site that exhibited my web-design skills (because it really doesn’t) and was just a simple, silly project.
As I practically ran out of the building, I called my friend Arwen and instructed her on how to make my entries private because I’m sure the likelihood of them googling me out of curiosity is pretty high. I mean, I’d do it if some weird girl came in and interviewed and turned into a gigantic sweating pig at the mention of her activities on the Internet. Can you imagine how horrifying it was to think of them finding this website and reading the entry I posted a while back about clam voyaging and oh, jesus christ. I should just crawl up into a cave and die, right now.
But here we are, back on track and public because, well, the thing is, a while back I asked one of my old teachers to write a recommendation letter for me, and the end goes like this:
"As I have followed Chelsi’s college career closely, I have seen that young woman struggle against a world in which the soul is so often left out. Through perseverance she has succeeded and now she wants nothing more than to surrender herself to her artistic impulses and show the world the kind of magic she’s capable of. When I speak to her I see a woman who sees things differently, and in many ways better, than the rest of us. I believe very much that she will provide an invaluable asset to the first organization willing to give her the chance."
I'd like to think that this is true and I want to keep it that way, so, GAS (which is in many ways, an expression of that very soul of mine) stays and hopefully I won't be blacklisted. We'll see.
One year ago today

This is a photo of me and my friend Arwen (yes, like the Arwen for that one trilogy that isn't at all popular whatsoever) from our trip to Sin City last January. In Vegas we shook our jelly like madwomen and thanked the lord that it's legal to drink on the streets because it was motherfucking snowing. Recently there has been talk of going back because:
1. My twenty fourth birthday is approaching
2. I'm in desperate need of a vacation
3. I have no problem with supporting my growing dependency on alcoholic beverages
4. Seeing perfect sets of tits is cool
5. You can drink on the street
6. You can drink on the street
7. You can drink on the street
Dubya Tee Eff
To all the art organizations that haven't responded to my intern applications,
I WANT TO WORK FOR YOU. FOR FREE. ARE YOU ALL SOME DAMN IDIOTS?
F-R-E-E LABOR.
LKJSAEHFKJHSGDIFOJKLSDJKF.
Regards,
Chelsi