Sports writer - Grant writer

Category: Non-Sports Posts (Page 1 of 4)

Loud Music: Songs For A Plane Ride

I’m flying Friday morning. I happen to be one of the world’s worst flyers. The only way I can get through flying is by listening to music and either drinking just enough beer to make me sleepy or taking Benadryl.

So I’m compiling my list of the songs that I’ll be blasting in my attempt to make me forget I’m on an airplane. Below I’m listing a few of the songs that made the list – each picture links to where you can purchase that specific MP3 through Amazon.com (where I buy all of my MP3s.) And through midnight on Thursday, June 30th, you can get $2.00 worth of MP3s for free through a current Amazon promotion. Free music, and you won’t have to pay a massive court appointed fine to get it!

Loud Music, Michelle Branch – Michelle Branch’s new single hopefully signals the end to her country experiment of the last few years. Not that she was bad at it (because she wasn’t), but that genre has gotten way too saturated. I need some angry, Are You Happy Now? era Michelle Branch, and this rocker delivers.
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The Blog Challenge and A Commencement Week Playlist

Flickr image by user alexkerhead

When I was trying to start working out more, a friend told me that the key to beating laziness was to work out everyday during an extremely busy week. That would provide the motivation I needed to do it everyday regardless.

Much like I had with working out, I have fallen off the wagon writing wise. I have let work consume me to the fact that I become stymied writing wise when I get home every night. Sure, you occasionally get uber-prolific posts like my gay marriage and hockey post and my “blogging is writing” manifesto, but nothing consistent. And frankly, it’s tanked the writing career I was developing. Continue reading

The Dilemma

This is a non-sports post, but a Rochester one.

The school district I grew up in is facing a dire budget crisis in every school. All schools and most departments have been given unrealistic budget figures for the next school year, and are looking at the massive reduction in educational services to meet those figures.

My high school alma mater, School of the Arts, is gaining a lot of publicity for its fight against these budget reductions. In an article in today’s Democrat and Chronicle, they claim that approximately half of their arts funding will need to be cut, as well as reductions in the AP and honors courses that they honor.

I attended the school from 1994-2000, from 7th-12th grade. I initially applied as a dance major, but my vaulters physique (square and broad shouldered) and my disintegrating knees quickly led me to creative writing. But the school did much more than teach me how to write with grace, but challenged me academically and taught me the social graces blue-collar teenaged me was sorely lacking (look people in the eye when you speak, dress appropriately, when hobnobbing with your much more gifted, educated and wealthy classmates and their families, don’t let on that your dad was laid off again and doesn’t own a car.)

So to hear that the school that taught me so much and made me the successful person I am today could lose the core of what makes it special is heartbreaking. But despite the Facebook invites and pleas to stop the cuts and “save our SOTA,” I can’t lend my voice solely to the cause.

My little brother – the one who was born a month after I started my first year at SOTA, the little baby and toddler I would proudly carry around the school on Open House nights – is a sophomore at East High School. He didn’t get into SOTA, though he applied and had two sisters as alumna. He has some problems with learning, difficulty with test anxiety, problems with reading comprehension. He is still an incredibly bright student, a polite and caring person, and possesses the same Canadian biting sense of humor that runs in our family. He was blessed to be in a special program at East that finally got him on track academically and made college a possibility – when my parents were told that it wasn’t years before.

That program, Rochester Matters, was cut last year.

My little brother is still working hard, still at East, and still wants to go to college. But his school faces massive cuts too, ones that will devastate the 1714 students that attend the school, who are mostly from homes around the poverty level in some of Rochester’s worst areas. They are cuts to programs that provide vocational training, that help decrease class size, honors classes, remedial classes, classes for those with borderline learning disabilities.

Besides my little brother, my mom, aunt, cousin, and best friend’s mother all work in the district, and see first hand how budget cuts affect students everyday. My mom, a elementary lunch lady since 1988, serves most of her students their only meal of the day. She knows this because they tell her so. My aunt, a school secretary, has had to deal with students and parents from her school being murdered.

You then understand why I can’t fight just for my alma mater, a relatively small school that serves a relatively well-off population in regards to the other high schools in the area. Everyone is facing unfair cuts. And my dog in this fight is my little brother. I may have been picked as “Most Political” and “Most Likely to Plan Our Class Reunions” when I graduated from SOTA in 2000, but I can’t pick SOTA over the other schools that are working with some of the most underprivileged in the city. I do hope SOTA gets their funding restored, but I hope East, #52, Franklin and others do too.

I worry that my stance – and putting said stance out here publicly, something I’ve debated for weeks – will alienate me from the teachers that made me who I am today. But I can’t partition off one issue from the much larger issue. And sometimes, you have to side with your family. I want my brother to go to college, and my family and friends to keep their jobs.

On Losing Your Voice

Since I was a little girl, I’ve been plagued with sore throats. Since ninth grade, those sore throats have included bouts of laryngitis. My voice either takes a vacation completely, or it turns me into a dead ringer for Peppermint Patty – so much such that my father would ask me at least twice a day to say, “Hi, Chuck.”

In college, a nurse at Binghamton University’s Student Health Services once recommended that I drink plain pineapple juice whenever I suffered from a bout of laryngitis or a sore throat. She explained that pineapple juice has a lot of vitamins but low acidity, so it was better for a sore throat than high-acid orange juice. The nurse had heard the advice from a vocalist, and had been dispensing it to suffering college students ever since.

Who treasures their voice more than a singer? I figured the advice had to be legit, and it was.

Since then, I always keep a six pack of pineapple juice cans in my refrigerator. Recently, I’ve found a combination that works even better than pineapple juice alone: pineapple juice and green tea. I drank a glassful of it the other night when my throat felt like the Great Chicago Fire and I could barely talk. I headed straight to bed after downing a glass of this mix, and woke up with my voice back full force and no sore throat the next morning (unfortunately, the rest of the cold still had a hold on me full force.) Coincidence? I think not.

I mix a can of pineapple juice with green iced tea. Trader Joe’s makes an excellent unsweetened green and white tea mix, and that is what I’ve been using for this mix.

I fill my sports glass of the moment with ice (today’s selection: a 1980s Buffalo Bills – Coca-Cola glass), pour in the entire can of pineapple juice (you don’t have to use the whole can, but try at least half), and then top off with the green tea.

Volia! Down this, and you’ll be chatting up your friends, significant other, or in my case, your cat, in no time.

 

“The Hackneyed Line of Dreams Coming True.”

I understand what you are trying to do, American Idol. You’re trying to do what anything on the edge of being irrelevant tries to do when they see the black hole coming – throw all the tricks to keep oblivion at bay.

Not that I ever watched American Idol. I don’t think I’ve watched a single episode in it’s enitirity. I’ve stayed away from America’s Got Talent, dropped So You Think You Can Dance after two seasons (they only had me because of my years at the little dance school on the corner), and a few days ago, only made it five minutes into Live to Dance without turning back to hockey.

That withstanding, I was getting dressed for work one recent morning when another American Idol commercial came on, the topic of which was along the hackneyed line of dreams coming true.

But wait. Who said singers are the only people with dreams of something more? Where did it become that singers, dancers, fashion designers, cooks and hair stylists were the only ones that had dreams that deserved fulfilling?

What about the millions of use who are tone deaf, have bum knees, can’t sew, can’t make anything involving something as fancy as to include cream freche, and would probably nip an ear if we tried to cut someone’s hair? Do we not have dreams that deserve fulfilling?

Now I’m not saying that we need an America’s Next Top Accountant, because that, along with many other things, would be bad TV. And I’m not saying everyone’s dreams can and should be fulfilled. No matter the number of self-help books we buy, inspirational Twitter accounts we  follow, and kick-in-the-seat quote of the day calendars we keep on our desk, not everyone will find their dreams fulfilled.

I don’t think I’m saying anything but gosh, doesn’t it sometimes seem like singers are the only people that can be plucked from obscurity, put on television, and made famous?

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