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Archive for the ‘being social’ Category

Devotchka: May 22 @ Southgate House

Lear: April 5 @ Cincy Shakespeare Co.

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1. Spring comes in less than two hours! A time for thawing…

2. I just took a whole carload of stuff to Goodwill. So refreshing. We laughed about the woman sitting in her (v. nice) car filling out a detailed receipt for her donations. God forbid you just give stuff to the poor.

3. Sold the rest of my cds in the neverending quest to get rid of stuff. Bought two: the new Devotchka and a reissued gem–Jason and the Scorchers. An added surprise with the Scorchers album: though the outer case is the Lost & Found album, the cd actually contains that and Fervor! I’m in alt country hog heaven.

4. The new apartment countdown begins: just over one month.

5. Research essays are waiting…

6. Marshall, Missouri was a success. Highlights include:

Jim the Clairvoyant Dog. This is just a  statue. The real thing could predict the sex of your baby before its birth, pick the Kentucky Derby winner, and understand multiple foreign languages and Morse code. Stare into his hollowed out bronze eyes…

Blackwater, MO

The historic town of Blackwater, MO. This is it. The motto of the town restaurant–Backroads–is “Good Food at the Cross Roads of Some Where and No Where” [sic]. It felt not like a real town, but like a movie set. If we’d been there a week or two later, the Pie Lady and the Telephone Museum might’ve been open.

It wasn’t all nostalgia and psychic canines, though. There was a wedding, a condescending pastor, and some amazing carrot cake. And I now understand Footloose. 1984 is calling, Kevin Bacon.

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Join SW Ohio for Hillary on Election night, 8:00 – 11:00, at O’Bryon’s Irish Restaurant and Pub on Madison Avenue in O’Bryonville.

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Debate Watch Party

Join Ohio for Hillary tonight at Sully’s downtown to watch the debate!

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Debate tonight

Watch the debate tonight at 8:00 on cnn.com (for those of us who don’t have cable TV)!

If you feel like braving the snow and cold, members of Ohio for Hillary are meeting at J. Alexander’s on Edmondson Road at 7:00, and members of SW Ohio for Hillary are meeting at Crowley’s Irish Pub in Mt. Adams at 7:30 to watch the debate.

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It’s Blog Action Day! If you don’t know what that means, click on the ad in my previous post.

Since so many (thousands of) people are going to be writing about the environment on their blogs today, I’m not going to pick from the top issues as I see them: global warming and/or the Nobel Peace Prize winners, and the dangers of industrial farming.

Instead, here’s a short list of simple things you can do to reduce your “carbon footprint” and save a little money at the same time. And I won’t say a word about insulation or planting shade trees, since a majority of my friends are renters without a lot of extra cash.

Hope you enjoy–and do something, too!

1. Use the clothes dryer less.

How many of you live in an apartment building with a tiny, awful, coin-operated washer and dryer? After years of slavishly dropping quarters in the slots for fifty minutes of dry-time (which was always too long or not long enough for my loads of laundry), I said no more.* After washing a load of clothes (a cool buck fifty), I bring them back upstairs and hang them to dry. There’s a whole list of reasons why this is a good idea:

  • Each air-dried load of laundry saves $1
  • The washer and dryer in our building are actually wired to my apartment, so not only do I have to pay the fee to use the machines, but the electric that powers them, too. It’s in the lease. So I also save however much the electricity for the machine costs.
  • Clothes last longer when you hang them to dry.
  • In warm weather, the breeze from open windows dries the clothes quickly. In the winter, dry, furnace-warmed air dries the clothes quickly–and boosts the moisture level in the air.

Not convinced? Look at the great use of binder clips! (Note: Wanda found this all too odd, and gifted me some “Family Values” clothespins–which have been put to use along with Chicky’s gifted binder clips.)

*Well, almost. There’s no room to hang sheets, so they still go in the dryer.

2. Take your own bags to the market and grocery.

I have a large plastic bag filled with smaller plastic bags in a closet, and despite my re-use of them as trash bags, the pile doesn’t seem to shrink. Over the summer, I invested in a shopping bag, with the thought that I must use fewer plastic bags. Now I carry this bag to the market every week, and I sometimes remember to bring it to the supermarket, too. Obviously I’d like to change that “sometimes” to an “always,” but it”s a start.

Fewer plastic bags in your home is a good idea, but it also translates into fewer plastic bags being purchased by stores, and fewer being manufactured. Think about a big grocery trip and the pile of plastic you wind up with when you finish putting the food away. If you take your own bags to the store–whether they’re cloth or paper–you have fewer bags, and you put them away too, for future use. An added bonus to bringing your own bags is that Kroger–and maybe other grocery stores–give you a small discount for each bag, as long as you remind the cashier that you brought your own bags.

When I go to the farmers market, vendors are always eager to put their produce in plastic bags for me, despite the cloth bag on my shoulder. I have to specifically ask them to keep their plastic. Why is this? I don’t know, really, but I imagine that bringing home local produce in plastic bags made from petroleum somewhat negates the local purchase. Cloth won’t save you money at the market, but it’s the better thing to do.

I bought my green bag–made of 100% hemp–as a vacation souvenir, but you don’t have to spend much to find these. I know people who have more canvas bags than they know what to do with, and Goodwill stores certainly have these. For me, finding a bag that I like carrying helps insure that I’ll actually remember to carry it. Maybe you’re not so picky.

3. Walk or ride your bike when you could drive.

This is simple, but it requires a time–and a physical–commitment. Is your bank within walking distance from home? So many times, “going to the bank” is the one errand in a day that causes me to get in my car. There’s a new branch, however, that I can walk to–if I devote the twenty minutes to walking. Consider changing your bank or pharmacy so you can walk or ride your bike there.

4. Compact fluorescent light bulbs.

They look weird and they’re more expensive than traditional incandescent light bulbs. But they’re better for the environment, cheaper to operate, and last substantially longer. They give out good light and produce less heat than incandescents. There’s no reason not to replace your old bulbs with compact fluorescent ones. I don’t feel any need to help out my landlord by creating a more green apartment for him to rent when I leave, so I started with my lamps, and then only replaced the bathroom bulbs that are used often and that are easy to remember to take when I leave.

5. Recycle–but not just cans.

I assume everyone uses recycling bins, but the concept of recycling goes beyond paper, plastic, and aluminum. If you need to buy something, try to buy it used. Go through your closets and cupboards, and if you’re not using things, give them to an organization–like Goodwill–that can. Utilize Craigslist and make a bit of money from the things you no longer use. In the past couple of months, I’ve sold a guitar, two coats, silver jewelry, and some clothing on Craigslist. The money is less satisfying than knowing someone really wanted something that’s just been sitting in your closet. Take your lightly used items to a consignment store if you don’t want the hassle of selling them yourself, and receive a portion of the proceeds. Most of the time, buying new just isn’t worth it. Recycle your things and feel good about commerce.

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Friday Fun

Which one are you?

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ENON!

Let’s go see Enon at the SGH on October 5th! And remember, Coral doesn’t venture out too often, so you know this has to be good. If you need proof, here’s what Wanda had to say about them at Desdemona last year:

“Demented garage rock and pop, played hard, fast, and tight. We couldn’t take our eyes off the lead singer. She looked like a demure, middle-aged Japanese lady, twiddling knobs with her elegant hands. Then she grabbed the mike AND ROCKED THE FUCK OUT. Compelling.”

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One of my summer projects is to get out and do some new things in Cincinnati. Since my list is pretty short, I decided to Google “Things to do in Cincinnati,” and one of the hits on the first page links to a recent article in the Enquirer, “100 Things To Do In Cincinnati Before You Die.”

If you want a laugh, click on the link; maybe the “Before You Die” part of the article title is literal: the list is intended for people who are really about to die. I’ve summed up the highlights below:

  • Artery-clogging food: 18 (the phrase “stuff yourself” appears twice, and there are more food entries not included in this category)
  • Churches (services, carnivals, looksies): 9
  • Reds/Bengals-related: 5
  • Christmas displays/theatre: 4
  • Cemeteries: 2

Other fun facts:

  • The word “University” appears once. (“84. Survey the bulging red brick Vontz Center for Molecular Studies at the University of Cincinnati, designed by renowned architect Frank Gehry.”) There is no mention of CCM or DAAP–the top design program in the nation.
  • The word “College” appears once. (“85. (Quietly) check out the Klau Library at Hebrew Union College in Clifton, one of the most extensive Jewish libraries in the world.”)
  • There is no mention of collegiate sporting events, or any sporting events aside from the two pro teams. Roller derby, anyone?
  • There are no Walnut Hills, College Hill, Clifton, or Northside destinations. This means no businesses from these communities were plugged, either.

And the awards for the most peculiarly worded entries:

  • “9. View the slave pen at the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center. Feel the brutality.” Feel the brutality? After which you’ll immediately want to go eat some chili, I’m sure, and stuff yourself with it, at that.
  • “71. Nibble cold watermelon on the beach at Hueston Woods State Park north of Oxford.” Nibble cold watermelon? As opposed to, say, chowing down on some freshly baked watermelon?

At this point you might be asking yourself (if you’re still with me), “What of it, Coral?”

Well, aside from feeling totally frustrated at the unhelpfulness of the list, I also feel really alienated. Whose values are these? (Duh, the stiffs at the Enquirer.) I’ll never “Walk through every single home in Homearama and shout: “I want this one!”” (#64) or “Dress up like a Parrothead and drink margaritas at a Jimmy Buffett concert at Riverbend” (#76). And the only thrill I get from booing a Pittsburgh Steelers’ fan is entirely personal.

So here’s where you come in, faithful reader(s). Let’s make our own list: “Things To Do Before You Leave Cincinnati,” for you students, transients, and wanderers, or “Things To Do Before You Die of Boredom in Cincinnati.” Help me compile a list comparable in length to the original, and I’ll shop it around the local weeklies, blogs, etc.

Things to Do in Cincinnati While Young and Lively:

1. Publish something about real things to do in Cincinnati.

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