Kate's Point of View

The Product of Creative Frustration

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The Importance of Time to Myself

I am aware that what I am about to describe will sound absurd to many parents, who don’t have the luxury of such things.

Wonder Boy and I share a row house. The house is actually quite large in terms of square footage – as big as most of my friends’ houses. But the layout means you rarely feel alone. That and the fact that we’re missing a door. Upstairs we can put a door on our bedroom or on my office, but not both.

A few years ago when I was feeling completely overwhelmed by everything and was talking to someone to help calm myself down, I said I just needed time to myself. “Just do it,” she said. “Why can’t you?”

Such a simple reply.

And so the door was moved to my office and now the occasional overnight guest at our house can just embrace any awkwardness they feel at seeing straight into our master bedroom.

Wonder Boy and I have also instituted personal nights every Tuesday. I call it Kate Night and he calls it Wonder Boy Night. The deal is that we can eat whatever and whenever we want. We generally try to stay out of whichever room the other is in. Other than that, we do whatever we want. Wonder Boy has been feeding his golf obsession. I’ve been sewing. Sometimes reading.

This last week I was so run down. The wildly changing weather is exciting for most but wreaks havoc on my lungs. After our mild winter, I’ve known a plague would descend. My main symptom was laryngitis. But I also found myself hot and exhausted every day by about 4, despite the fact that my job requires almost no movement. I went home and napped pretty much all week. Technically, lots of time to myself. But quality time? No.

Yesterday my general demeanor was nasty. Specifics aren’t necessary, but I hit a point of intensely unpleasant. So I grabbed my grandmother’s silver, sat in the kitchen and furiously polished while listening to This American Life. By the end of the hour, I felt better. And it occurred to me that Kate Night really is an important part of my schedule. Missing it for the week threw off my equilibrium.

I tend to take things very literally. If I want to change things in my life, I create, and abide by, rules. So the weekly Kate Night ritual fits inflexible me. I’m curious how other people get their alone time. Exercising? Gardening? Crafting?

This post originally appeared on Kate’s Point of View. © Kate. All rights reserved.

Mute

I’ve been struck nearly speechless since yesterday. Bronchitis with an asthma mixer. My husband keeps saying, “stop whispering” but I’m not.

Tomorrow I’m going to try and get in to the doctor. My husband has to call because no one will be able to hear me on the phone.

Until then, I’m relying on the lame amount of sign language I remember from grade school and typing messages into my phone or iPad. And trying to balance the fine line between breathing and coughing.

It’s a funny thing trying to stay quiet. We are such noisy creatures. We spend so little time in silent reflection. Without my voice, I’ve spent plenty of time reflecting and forgetting the sound of my voice.

This post originally appeared on Kate’s Point of View. © Kate. All rights reserved.

The Ballroom at the Taft Theater & The Features

Last night Wonder Boy and I went to the inaugural night of The Ballroom at the Taft Theater, ostensibly to watch J Roddy Walston and the Business. While we were parking, we saw Frank the Tank and Easy Breezy walking to the show. They were going for the same reason we were. The Features. And they were fabulous! So, a review in two parts.

The Ballroom at The Taft Theater
I’ve seen plenty of shows at The Taft Theater and I’ve always loved the romance of the building… the intimacy of the venue despite how many people it holds. With the recent closing of the Southgate House, The Taft is smart to be opening a smaller venue. There’s a need in this city for venues where smaller acts can play. Enter The Ballroom.

While the main theater at The Taft is grand, The Ballroom is a lot more VFW hall. The room is in the basement and looks cavernous. Fortunately, the acoustics are pretty great. And because it’s in The Taft, visitors get to enjoy nice bathrooms, which is a feature that few other concert halls in town can compete with.

I’ll be seeing another show at The Ballroom next month and am looking forward to it.

The Features
To begin, it’s worth pointing out that it would hard for me to acknowledge a bad Features show. But, if it was bad I would just tell people it was good. Because it was fabulous, I’ll let anyone and everyone know.

I was happy for The Features when they got included in the most recent Twilight soundtrack, but concerned about future shows. Last night there were lots of teens and the show. Fears realized. But in what I view as a funny F you, the song from the soundtrack was never played. Instead, they played and sang their butts off.

I’ve been seeing The Features play a little more than a show a year for about eight years now. When I saw them open for the Kings of Leon years ago, I knew I’d found my new favorite band. Last night I got to watch other people discover them. “This guy is awesome!” I heard one man say. When the show ended the couple next to Wonder Boy and I just kept exclaiming, “That was unbelievable!” Yes it was.

This post originally appeared on Kate’s Point of View. © Kate. All rights reserved.

St. Patrick’s Day in Athens, Ohio

Last weekend we went to one of my very favorite places, Athens, Ohio, to celebrate the impending nuptials of my sister and her friend. Not to each other. They just both happen to be getting married in the same time frame so we decided to have one big party rather than several smaller ones. Some highlights of the weekend, excluding the obvious ones like eating at my favorite restaurant and experiencing the same happiness I always feel as I coast down the exit ramp into Athens, include:

  • Laughing as my one sister put a fake tattoo on the chest of my other sister’s future mother-in-law
  • Having tears run down my face as one of my brother’s friend’s tried to discretely scoot a miniature, plastic penis off the table before the waiter noticed, only to have it land right in front of the waiter
  • Dancing at the Pub with fishbowls full of green beer sloshing in our hands
  • Creating a tunnel with our hands and making random people dance their way into and out of the bathroom
  • Cheering my mom and brother on while they drank Irish Car Bombs to celebrate my mom’s birthday only minutes into the actual day
  • Having a pubescent group of boys lie to us about their age and basically stalk us in the hopes of getting to dance with a girl
  • My brother winning a bet with his future brother-in-law by getting his mom (the brother-in-law’s) to do a shot of Hot Nuts at Tony’s
  • Watching my sister and my other sister’s future sister-in-law do some crazy dance while standing on top of bar stools

I have several pictures of my sister that could embarrass her. Instead, I’ll just post one of myself. The lighting is pretty terrible, but I’m having a good time!

This post originally appeared on Kate’s Point of View. © Kate. All rights reserved.

Review of Running the Rift … and a Little More

I just finished this amazing book, Running the Rift by Naomi Benaron, that discusses the Rwandan genocide. And it’s horrifying and horrifyingly recent. After reading about something so intense, I think a natural reaction is, “Never again.” But that’s bullsh!t because it’s happened since then and it’s happening right now.

But without being informed about the past, you can’t fully understand the present. How we handle situations now can be informed by how the genocide was handled in Rwanda, the genocide in Cambodia, the genocide in Germany, and on and on.

The Kony 2012 video has been getting circulated a lot and there’s already a very noisy online conversation occuring about the value of that video. Will the video make a difference? Maybe, maybe not. Will people go beyond the video and learn more about Kony and Uganda? Maybe, maybe not. But if people watch that 30 minute video (and when I last checked, more than 80,000,000 people have), that’s 30 minutes more education than they had before.

I hope that the video does have an imact on Uganda because if it does, it lays out one way for people to make a difference. And if the video doesn’t have an impact, it still helps inform us for future situations. Eventually, maybe we’ll learn and “Never again” will be a true sentiment.

Running the Rift was a wonderful book that I can’t recommend enough. You can ead my full review of the book over at BookGeeks.

This post originally appeared on Kate’s Point of View. © Kate. All rights reserved.

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