Welcome to my little corner of cyberspace. Grab a cookie, set your gchat on "busy", and take a seat. I can't guarantee Tolstoy-like prose, so consider yourself warned...

Saturday, December 26, 2009

Ugh. Here we go, getting all "end of the year reflective"


*Note* First off, please excuse the crickets and tumble weed for the past few weeks. Getting rid of that pesky quarter inch (done. kinda), closing out the year strong in my Actual Job (done) and holiday partying like Clark Griswold (doing) have made sitting down long enough to string a few pseudo-coherent half-thoughts together rather difficult. Some day if the dream lives and this operation goes legit with more than just one writer monkey at the helm, you won't even notice my absence. But for now, suck it. I've been busy. So back to the post at hand.....


I know, I know, December self-reflection. It's so cliche.


But this dose of meditation has less to do with 2009 drawing to a close and more to do with the fact that recently I entered my name in the lottery for this particular self-inflicted torture. As I clicked “enter”, I was struck by the reality of how different my life is now from just one year ago. “Swim across the Chesapeake Bay? Oh you must mean because Osama bin Laden himself has attacked Sandy Point, and this is the one way humanity and America can be saved.”


That is how I would’ve likely responded to that notion a mere twelve flips of the calendar ago.


Additionally, in the days since that particular run of the computer mouse, I’ve been acutely aware of what I’m doing at any particular moment, and I’ve found myself comparing it to exactly what I was doing one year ago. Why? Well, let me annoyingly answer a question with another question: How much does your life change from one year to the next? Really, truly change? If you spent a moment jotting down the things that are true about your life today, place of employment, residence, family, friends, your hobbies, your pets, anything, and compared it all to a list of things that were true about your life one year ago, how much of it would really be different? Our lives are rarely identical from one year to the next, but change typically occurs piecemeal, in one aspect of our lives at a time. As such, even if there is a Big Event, such as a new job/spouse/child, most of the other things we know to be true are still in place. Life is still mostly familiar. However, every once in awhile, a comparison of two lives separated by nothing more than 365 days could not be more striking.

If you were a spectator to my life last year at this time, you would already know that last December my life was one big hot mess. My often-charmed existence could more aptly be described as cursed. The operation had gone horridly haywire, the wheels had come flying off the machine, and the appropriate Google image search would yield this beauty. In short, things were “no bueno”. Occasionally, I would spot someone in my immediate company take a step or two back when they thought I wasn’t looking, presumably to avoid getting struck by all the lightening.


I can’t say I blamed them.


What happened? Well, rewind to Thanksgiving of 2008, when life seemed to be ticking along quite nicely. I had exciting career prospects, a boyfriend who had me smitten, and a rock solid plan to quit this hell hole called Baltimore and go back home to a sweet new crib in Philly, where I clearly belonged. Then December 1 hit, and a big roll of the dice turned up a losing combination. In what can only be described as cinematic fashion, someone turned the leaf blower on the house of cards that was my life. I’ll refrain from boring you with unnecessary detail, but suffice to say by the time the ball dropped on Times Square welcoming 2009, I found myself unemployed, heartbroken and moving into my parents‘ house, exactly what every modern girl in her 30’s dreams for her life.


Oh, did I forget to mention that grandma kicked the bucket that month, too? Even through the tears I couldn’t help but appreciate the comedic timing of all the shitiness. Had my limbs started falling off one by one, I can’t say I would’ve batted an eyelash.


Good times!

I've always said that bad times are a blessing, because it gives the people who love you a chance to flex their friendship muscles and show their stuff. If you find yourself in the midst of a tough spot and you don't find your loved ones elbowing each other out of the way in their rush pick you up and carry you through your misery, then either you've chosen the wrong set of friends or you haven't been a very good one to them. And thus, at very least my friend-picking skills proved rock solid, and once again it became evident how blessed I am with great family, as everyone stood by me like champions. My parents put a roof over my head and food in my cats’ bowls. My sister gave me a spare key to her house in case I needed escape. Dr. Shazam offered her "poo throwing services" and other various methods of creative revenge. I remember one weekend where Becky and Tad, God bless them, dragged me from one holiday party to the next, finally waving the white flag and taking me home as, “oh, for the love of God, she's crying again."


Rarely in life do we have the opportunity and/or are forced to start over essentially from scratch, but January 1, 2009 found me sitting in my old bedroom gearing up to do just that. With no job, no mortgage, no spouse, no children, and not even a car payment to hold me down, I really could do anything I fancied. So did I follow in the footsteps of Frances May and Elizabeth Gilbert, blazing my own trail to find love and adventure overseas? Well, no. As a matter of fact, turns out that being unemployed during one of the worst job markets in recent history causes one to lose the gumption to spend even a few weeks pissing through some severance money in Italy. (I’ll have to leave that to the next time I get laid off, sigh.) But over the course of the next few months, I landed a great gig, I bought a cute little postage stamp of a house and dusted off an old love by diving back into the pool. As a result of those three actions, I scan the landscape of my current world and marvel at how few things in my day to day life remotely resemble what was true last year at this time. Where I wake up, what I spend my time doing and with whom I spend that time are utterly different. A few months ago I completed my first triathlon, and two days ago I hopped in the pool to knock out a 4000 meter swim. The notion of either last December would’ve inspired little more than a confused, blank look. Exactly one year from the night Becky and Tad lugged a whimpering blob around Wilmington, I poured myself a drink at a holiday party in Baltimore and toasted a room full of good friends, not one of whom I knew existed one year ago. These are just a few of a seemingly endless list of examples.


To be fair, there is much that remains consistent. My family is the same, I am still the owner of two ornery pets, and my long time friends are still there, even if primarily via Facebook. I still have all my limbs, and once again I have an orange pork chop on my business card. Additionally, some of the changes have been sad ones. There are people who are definitively absent from my life, and the word Edgely is not currently in my daily vernacular. Mad4Mex happy hours are at most a biannual treat instead of a weekly occurrence, and I’m fairly certain my forehand flick is getting worse and worse by the moment, if that’s even possible.


Out of all of this, one of the coolest pieces for me is a renewed respect for the concept of time, something that is so easy to take for granted. If the world has collapsed around your feet, think of what awaits only a couple hundred days out, when you’ve worked your way through the storm. Similarly, if you find yourself in a good place, be sure to appreciate the present, because the leaf blower could be getting gassed up at this very moment, just for you. The beauty of the cycle, though, is that even if two weeks from now you were to find yourself clamoring around, picking up cards off the wet pavement, six, twelve or perhaps sixteen weeks later would likely yield a whole new house of cards, probably better than the old one or, at very least, different in a cool way. Cheers to all that.


Clearly not playing with a full deck,


khop

Monday, November 30, 2009

Pants 1, Khop 1. Final Score: Push.....




I am not going to lie to you.


Internet dating is rough. There are bad dates followed by worse dates followed by dates that leave you wondering just what kind puppy holocaust you spearheaded in your last life. Dates with the guys you hope never call (they do) followed by the rare dates with the ones you hope do call (they don't).


Serenity now!


Most of the time I find it pretty easy to stay upbeat about the hilarity of it all. After all, in what other venue would I have wound up dining with LifeIsShort443, who shared with me a detailed account of his self-diagnosed "abandonment issues" before the first round of drinks hit the table? And I ask you, how else would I have ever crossed paths with HeyItsMe, who's foolproof wooing techniques include referring to the city I openly love as "Filth-adelphia" a record three times in less than five minutes? And dear, blessed reader. Please, oh please, don't get me started about what happens when a good friend in the same metropolitan area who happens to share a pretty good physical resemblance with me also hops on match.com during the same time period. Truly, truly, that topic alone breeds enough material for a series of posts and perhaps an episode or two of "Facts of Life". Of course I would be remiss in not mentioning the fact that I have also met some very cool people, people whom fate chose to bring into my life via a good old fashioned "wink".


However, my heart is not made from tin, and when I am cut, I do actually bleed. Therefore, it is impossible to be immune from the lows that come with online dating. And those lows, boy are they low. On the walk home from dinner with LifeIsShort, my mind was assaulted with visions of married ex-boyfriends, a future with fifty cats and holiday after holiday after holiday of being A-L-O-N-E. Not surprisingly, I wound up working myself into quite a state. It's a good thing the path home didn't include walking across a bridge, because I can see the headline now: "Online Dating Drives Local Girl to Jump: One Meal with "LifeIsShort" Caused Life to be Long Enough".


If this does, in fact, happen, will somebody please take in my fifty cats?


Anywho, aside from the mental trauma, the other morning I discovered another side effect of my online search for love. On Thanksgiving morning I was preparing to head over to my parents' house for a day of American-style gluttony when it happened. Simply put, my pants betrayed me.


And it’s all the internet’s fault.


I don’t know about you, but I hate it when that happens.


Guys, you’re undoubtedly confused right now, but ladies, you know how this rolls. Life is good, not a care in the world, perhaps you’re even singing a little Debbie Gibson throwback number in your head. One leg goes in, followed by the other, pull ‘em up, go to button - wait. Uh oh. What’s going on here? What should be lose is obscenely tight. Lemme see if some squats will help stretch ‘em out. Crap. It’s wearable, but it’s certainly not comfortable, OH DEAR GOD WHY? [Cut to several moments of uncontrollable weeping.]


Such was the scene in my bedroom Thanksgiving morning, of all mornings, and when I finally peeled myself off the floor, I confirmed via measuring tape my worst suspicions: my ass had undergone a secret expansion of epic proportions, coming in at a full quarter inch above what I term acceptable for ass circumference. (Yes, yes, I do have a predetermined measurement of what’s an acceptable ass circumference. Don’t you? Doesn’t everybody? Hel-LO???) This news would send me into a tailspin on any day of the year, but that day was so much worse. Goodbye, pumpkin pie. Adios, stuffing and sweet potato casserole. Farewell, second meal two hours later. Perhaps next year we will be on better terms.


How did this happen? At first I was stumped. I've been swimming just as much as always and have even been throwing some running in. What was going on here? Pardon my language, mom, but what the fuck?!?!


Then it dawned on me. My week used to go like this:


Monday: Swim

Tuesday: Stay in, cook healthy meal.

Wednesday: Swim

Thursday: Stay in, eat healthy left overs. Rejoice in health.

Friday: Perhaps some happy hour, followed by dinner out

Saturday: Swim. Think smug thoughts about the ridiculously good shape I’m in. Perhaps go out

Sunday: Whatever. Hey Steve, care to go running?


Lately, though, my week has gone like this:


Monday: Swim

Tuesday: Date

Wednesday: Swim

Thursday: Date (sigh.)

Friday: Crap. Another date.

Saturday: Swim. Think smug thoughts about the ridiculously good shape I’m in. Perhaps go out

Sunday: Really? Another *&%$ing date?


What, perchance, would you think the caloric difference would be between those two schedules? I can’t even begin to guess, but you know the result: a quarter inch above acceptable.


At this realization, I stomped into my office and shook an angry fist at my computer.


GOD DAMN YOU, INTERNET, GOD DAMN YOU!


Knowing that Thanksgiving Day serves as the starter’s pistol on the beginning of a month-long marathon of holiday over-indulging, I decided damage control needed to begin that very moment. I’m a firm believer in putting into place conditions that prevent bad behavior and setting up consequences for if it happens anyway. So what did I do? I took out my tightest, most constrictive pair of jeans, defied a few laws of physics and jammed my rear into them before heading off to a day of No Carb Left Behind at my parents‘ house. I wore those horrific things all day as a reminder of that quarter inch and as a pledge to not allow that quarter become a half. I’m proud to say that I made it until 8PM in those jeans, until I couldn’t take it anymore, grabbed a pair of my mom’s sweatpants and collapsed on the sofa. Moreover, I became the first person in the history of my family to actually have some salad with my Thanksgiving dinner, every bite of which was eyed with suspicion and contempt by my loving clan.


This month is going to be a constant two steps forward, one step back situation, a balancing act between enjoying the holidays and getting rid of that quarter inch. You know what the real kick in the crotch irony of it all is? What do you think is the Number One, Never Fail, Reliable as the Sun Rising Each Day method for Khop dropping a few pounds?


Going through a bad break up. Yep, yep, the pounds slide off my rear like water off a duck’s back.


Seriously????


Off to fat camp,


khop

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Internet Dating: Turns out there’s a little bit of asshole in all of us....

As I round third base on one full month of internet dating, I have no shortage of stories and observations. My profile has been viewed almost 2000 times. I have been winked at, instant messaged, “favorite”-ed and emailed. I have been sent one-liner pick ups and encyclopedia-length form letters, both clearly the internet version of throwing spaghetti at the proverbial wall to see what will stick. One potential suitor actually had several friends write references speaking to his “date-ability”, which he provided (not upon my request) for me to peruse at my leisure. I think it’s all because I mentioned in my profile that I can cook.


Think of what the results would be if I could actually take a good picture!


I relay all this only to illustrate the veritable ocean of single members of the opposite sex the new internet dater is suddenly plunged into. After months (who are we kidding here, years) of famine, wondering where all the single men are and suspecting they are on the verge of popping up here or here, I’ve finally figured it out. They are not, in fact, on the verge of extinction. No, no, they are busy running around town, collecting those “date-ability” references for their online dating profiles from their friends.


Why didn’t this occur to me before?


One key observation I’ve made as an internet dater is that there’s an awful lot of poor behavior going on here, on the part of everybody involved, myself included. I’ll give you an example. Somewhere roundabout Week 2, yours truly got stood up. I mean, the Classic Stand Up. There I was, politely refusing the bartender’s inquiry as to if I wanted anything, trying to appear busy texting nobody on my cell phone, finally ordering, drinking and paying for that drink. After thirty minutes, I got up and left.


Asshole, right?? Well, yeah, I should say so!


Were my feelings hurt? Nah....you gotta know someone before they can hurt your feelings. If anything I was annoyed because I had come home from the gym and had to do the whole drying of the hair/ reapplication of the makeup thing instead of lounging around in sweats for the remainder of the night. Plus, I wasn't exactly shocked that he didn't show. I had already started to smell a rat, as my efforts to confirm via email that morning had gone unanswered, even though his profile indicated he had been online later that day. Also, if I’m honest, my motivations in agreeing to go out with him in the first place were more professional than personal (he claims to be in the line of work I’d like to go into someday). Uh-oh, wait a sec. Dating someone with the ulterior motive of professional gain isn’t very nice, is it? Doesn’t that kind of make me an asshole, too?


Wait, it gets worse. Many a time I have made excuse after excuse for a guy who is clearly trying to blow me off. I rationalize; I hand out benefits of doubt like a flight attendant hands out peanuts. If grasping at straws were an olympic sport, I would have a trophy case of all my gold metals. Seriously, no one can top me in this.


“Perhaps he lost his phone and got into a car wreck and found out his grandma died all this afternoon? Clearly, I should withhold judgement until I find out.”


Oh wait, no. That’s what I would’ve said in lives past to the tattoo-covered bartender’s demand that I hand over the guy’s phone number, so that after my departure he could call and let my date know just what a fine lovely lady he’d passed on.


How did I respond to this request? I think it went something like this, “Yeah, sure. Got a pen?”


Doh!!


So what the heck is going on here? We’re standing each other up? We’re giving out each other’s phone numbers to tattoo-covered bartenders? Isn’t the point of all this to find someone to be with? This isn’t the warm and fuzzy, loving, caring stuff that breeds long-lasting relationships, you know.


Best I can tell, there’s (at least) three things going on here: vermin, vacuum and volume.


Vermin:

FACT - There are plenty of normal, reasonable, well-intended people, trying to meet someone special on the world wide web.


Buuuuuut......


FACT - Internet dating sites are also a perfect utopia for creeps and crazies. Card -carrying members of the Jerk Store Club and those with lists of issues longer than, well, long. In real time, these folks are often pretty easy to size up, and within a few minutes it’s possible to faintly see the scarlet “NOT DATEABLE” tattoos on their foreheads, peaking through the layers of stage makeup. The signs are much harder to initially spot, however, when all you’re working with is an online profile, some photos that may or may not actually be of that person, and some emails that, who knows, may have been painstakingly crafted to disguise all that crazy. The result is that internet daters are at risk for investing days, weeks or months only to wind up diagnosing the same terminal prognosis that may have taken all of 30 seconds to arrive at if they’d met this person IN line at the “Singles Safeway”, rather than ON line through “match” or similar.


Turns out I’d had a vermin run-in myself only a few days earlier, and my disappointment and frustration over that no doubt partly fueled my decision to hand over my stand upper’s phone number to a total stranger. Is it an excuse? Oh no, not at all. But it is part of the explanation.


Vacuum: Assuming the spouses from whom we’re hiding our online adventures never find out, our poor behavior seems consequence-free. We don’t have common friends. We don’t work together. I’m not going to see you when I roll in to swim team. Your cousin isn’t going to glare at you from across the Thanksgiving Dinner table for screwing over her friend. In short, our day to day lives are in no way impacted if we shit the bed on this one, aside from theoretically missing out on someone great. But even that is strictly theoretical. In reality, we are no worse off tomorrow than we were today.


Volume: The final piece to this pie is the sheer volume of potential dates one is exposed to via the interwebs. As described above, in the month I have been doing this, a literal swarm of men have flooded my inbox. However, I am no beauty queen, nor do I come close to being the best thing to hit Charm City since sliced bread. In fact, I appear to be a dime a dozen, as a search for ladies in my demographic and geography yielded page after page after page of results. Although I’m sure very few of those women include photos of themselves wielding large, high-powered nail guns - perhaps that’s my secret.


Anywho, I believe that the vast numbers involved result in a distinct loss of humanity. We aren’t people anymore; we’ve become commodities, unremarkable, indistinguishable, and completely interchangeable. The opportunity to meet new single people no longer resembles a small town airport with only one plane leaving each day. No, internet dating air drops you smack in the middle of the main terminal in JFK. It’s ok if I miss this flight; there’s another one leaving in forty five minutes. Similarly, it’s ok if I burn a bridge here or there; I can always refresh my search and “wink” at someone new.

Lesson learned? Well, usually for me a little bit of awareness goes a long way in helping me correct an identified behavioral issue. That being said, I will make every effort to not allow my frustrations to compound and manifest themselves as creative revenge.


That is, unless the guy really deserves it.


My dad always says that there’s an asshole on every corner. Which means there are four at every intersection.


In cyberspace, at the intersection of “Going to Hell” and “Mind Giving Me a Ride?”


khop



Monday, November 16, 2009

Is "Blog Hopper" a term? If it wasn't, it is now!

Yes, yes. Please join me on The Soused Chef for this week's missives. My beloved Cassie extended a gracious invitation to guest blog about gooey cheesy alcohol-laced awesomeness.

Getting hungry just thinking about it.

Back next week!

khop

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Reason #652 Why Dating Is Rough: The Bad Boy


Let's see, what do I know about you so far? You're a jerk. You're opinionated, wildly arrogant, just a hair creepy, I suspect disrespectful, and who knows? If I date you for any length of time, perhaps I will find myself cut up into little pieces and stored in your freezer.

(I'm sorry, but that last one is just a baseline assumption that is necessary for anyone one meets on the internet.)

If you were only those things, it would be so easy to just walk away. And by walking away, I mean clicking on the icon that sends you a pre-drafted Dear John email, letting you down ever so gently.

After all, you do realize, don't you, that you are stealing time away from the SEVENTY THREE other men who have thrown their names in the Khop Ring in the ten days since I've burst onto the Charm City internet dating scene? Of course you do. You wouldn't have it any other way.

For research purposes, I googled the question, "Why do women like bad boys?" and came up with this hit on "Self Growth.com". And even though the dude who wrote the article is trying to sell me a five-part mini-course on flirting with women, I have to admit, he's not all that far off.

How so?

Challenging and Adventurous? Check, aaaaand Check! You've got my attention, partially because I know that at any moment I could lose yours. This is interesting to me, as while I suck at actual chess, I quite enjoy a mental game of it. You take liberties with me in our conversations, pushing the limit of what's appropriate. You're cognizant that you've walked right out on a limb, and you're interested to see if and at what point that branch will break, landing you flat on your ass and at square one with someone else. Why are you not concerned about that happening?

well......

Confidence and Indifference? Check! Check! Your online profile gives a veritable middle finger to the main stream, and based on my preliminary observations, this is fairly reflective of how you live your life. You're not terribly fussed if I throw up my hands and you see the back of me walking away. In fact, in the event that happens, you'll have already convinced yourself that it must be due to a character flaw in me, not you, God's gift to women.

My friends and loved ones are undoubtedly reading this, shaking their heads and thinking, "Please, Khop, not again. We've done this with you before. Please settle down with a perfectly nice, perfectly bland boy. She's got all these choices, and who does she gravitate to? The jerk off."

Come on, give me a little credit.

First off, I'm giving good playing time to the others in the que, lining them up and spitting them out as fast as one who has a full time job, several hobbies and other social commitments can. In fact, I have two dates on the books, three pending, and the other night I had "drinks" (see, I'm learning!) with a perfectly nice gentleman, who unfortunately turned out to have a very elitist world view, not to mention slightly crossed eyes.

[Note to cross-eyed men out there: I beg of you. Schedule an activity for the first date: bowling, skeet shooting, cow-tipping, anything, so that I'm not sitting across a table from you for two hours, having the mental dialogue, "Sweet Jesus, this guy has crossed eyes. Don't stare. Wait, you need to make eye contact. Do I have eye contact? I'm not sure. Crap, what'd he just say??"]

Second, employing Stephen Covey's highly effective Habit #5, "Seek First to Understand", I'm in the information-gathering phase here, trying to assess what I'll find once I peel back the layers of this bad boy's onion. Is there depth and kindness there? Do we want the same things out of life and relationships? How similar are our values? Or, at the end of the day, is he just your run-of-the-mill, garden-variety asshole? I think it's fair to say that I've demonstrated that when the answers come back negative on those big questions, I politely turn and look elsewhere. I just can't bring myself to give up the hope that I can find someone who wants the same things I do and will treat me the way I deserve to be treated, while at the same time catching my interest in a manner that I can only describe as intellectual catnip. In essence, I'm rooting for Bad Boy, but I'm not afraid to cut him from the team if he's not up to par.

Besides. Thus far, he's given no indication that he's poly-amorous. Sadly, given his recent competitors, that puts him far in the lead.

Just call me Sookie,

khop


Sunday, October 25, 2009

Reason #237 Why Dating Is Rough: www.oh-here-we-go-again.com


Great news, readers!


No, no, it's not another Soup Swap.


For I, dear khop, have decided to take the plunge to dating, inter-web style.


What prompted this turn of events, might you ask? Probably not what you’d think.


The other morning I woke up in pain. A very sharp pin prick of pain on the left side of my upper back actually woke me from my slumber. I put my hand back there and felt a very big, very hard lump. I thought, "Well, here it is. The way I'm going to die. From a cancerous tumor on my back."


Sigh.


When I got out of bed to peer in the mirror at this thing that was going to kill me, I realized that it was not, in fact, a tumor.


Horray!


It was a big huge nasty back zit. Did I mention how badly this thing hurt? As I contorted my body in attempt to get both hands back there to pop it, I thought, "Well, here it is. The way I'm going to die. From breaking my neck in attempt to pop my own back zit."


Sigh.


The fact that my untimely death could be entirely avoided if only I had a significant other on hand to pop said not-tumor sent me plummeting into a deep depression, very sad George-Michael-Bluth-Charlie Brown-like.



Verily, verily, this was not the best morning ever.


So I decided to do something about it. I’d been meaning to give Charm City interweb dating a try for a while, and things seemed to be calming down lately. No soup swap, no pending granite installations, no triathlon weekends coming up, why not? Any way I looked at it, it was a win-win situation: best case scenario, I find the man of my dreams, my veritable “one”. Medium case scenario, I get the ego boost of having a few irons in the fire, even if nothing materializes. Worst case scenario, I consider the whole thing research for my pathetic little rag.


I’ve dabbled in the world of internet dating before, a few times in fact. The first was several years ago with Match.com while I was living in West Chester, PA. Like the sprinter that I am, I lined up four dates in one weekend. By the end of Date #4, I was thoroughly burnt out and spent the next several months getting the shakes whenever I found myself in the same room as my computer and staunchly preferring the company of my cat and my Tivo.


Ever the optimist, I gave things another shot a few months later with Neil Clark Warren’s shop over at eHarmony. And while I do see distinct advantages to the particular brand of madness he claims is in his method, I struck out over there, as well.


About a year or so later, in a moment of curiosity, I took a gander through Match.com again, and made this little discovery. And until now, that was that for me and lovin’ on the world wide web.


Why start this all up again? Well, for the reasons I explained above, namely back zit, irons in fire, writing material, et cetera, et cetera. I am in a new city, so there is a whole new batch of mens out there waiting to “wink” at the khop. Who’s to say my luck won’t be different this time around? Plus, there are plenty of people I know, cool, normal people, who have found dating success at the swipe of a credit card and a few clicks on the keyboard. So why can’t I? With renewed optimism, I fired up my shiny new MacBook Pro and started surfing away.


Look out, Charm City web daters! Here I come!


So far, I’m six days in, and I have four post-it notes chock full of observations, so if nothing else, my quest for writing material has certainly been successful. I’ll relay one or two now and save the rest for later posts.


First thing’s first: The Handle.


In this uncertain life, I’m sure about very few things. One thing I am rock solid on, though, is that like your child’s name, your internet dating handle must be chosen with extreme thought and precision. When thinking through potential handles, you must consider all the ways it could be contorted to make you look lame, creepy, uninteresting, or just plain weird. This is not only critically important in your attempts to attract quality members of the opposite sex, but also so if (no, when) your friends find out about your quest for online love and track down your profile behind your back, you’re not forever referred to as “Ladyluver” or, ahem, one hot chick.


My first time around, I was stumped. I didn’t want to use any overt name identifiers (unsafe) or my initials (lame). I didn’t want to typecast myself as a “frisbeegal” or try to come up with a clever dating-themed name. In the end, my first attempt was so unfortunate I struggle to even relay it here. The formula I devised was:


cat’s name (oh how I cringe at this, yes, yes, major clue as to why I am single) + year of birth + best frisbee throw/heckle = world class handle.


The sum of this particular equation was Lulu77huckit. (This account has long since been killed so don’t even bother searching.)


Not very far into this foray I realized that my math was a bit off.


To me, cat’s name plus year of birth plus best frisbee throw/heckle equaled Lulu77huckit, but to the average West Chester internet-dating male, the equation probably went something like this:


Lulu77huckit = this girl has a weird first name + year of birth + did she just say “fuck it”? As in, "Fuck it, I guess I'll try internet dating?"


And even after clarification, the BEST this equation would ever amount to was:


Lulu77huckit = this girl used her CAT’S name in her handle? + year of birth + frisbee? you mean like frisbee football? Is that a real sport? I thought only barefoot hippies played that game?


I never was particularly good at math.


This time around, after very careful deliberation, I think I picked a slightly better handle. I’m not going to relay it here; however, if you are any good at internet stalking at all, you should be able to find it on your own without too much difficulty. I am aware that there is some time-sensitivity to the name, as it refers to me being new in town, but I’ll cross that bridge when I come to it.


I am excited to report that I have been outdone, though, in terms of unfortunate handles, as the other day I was “winked” at by “Lone Ranger seb”. Because of the lack of underscores or spaces, though, it took me quite a bit of time to realize that his handle was not, in fact, “Loner Angers eb”.


Good luck with your anger issues, s.e.b. I wish you all the best with that.


Undoubtedly more soon,


khop

Sunday, October 18, 2009

The Anatomy of a Soup Swap


If you've been thinking to yo' self, "Self, I do not have enough soup in my life," well then perhaps, just perhaps, you should throw a Soup Swap.

wha??

Don't worry, I shall take this opportunity school you.

So without further ado or fanfare, I give to you:

Khop's Guide to Soup Swapping, 1st edition
(see legal disclaimers below*)

What is a soup swap?

Simply put, a soup swap is a party by which each person brings an agreed amount of soup for tasting and trading. Ever been to a Christmas cookie exchange? I personally have not; however, it is important to note that if you do decide to have a soup swap, you should throw out that example when explaining to others the concept of the swap. This will put them at ease, because apparently everyone on the planet (except for me) has been to a Christmas cookie exchange. In fact, I only learned about Christmas cookie exchanges when telling people about the soup swap.

Just how much soup we talkin', Khop?

There are no set rules, just the ones you set. I went aggressive and made the entry criteria 7 quarts of homemade soup, which is, excuse my language mom, a shit-ton of soup. The average soup recipe makes about 2 quarts, which meant that most of my friends who agreed to participate were probably cussin' me at some point in the past few weeks as they realized they had to make yet another batch to yield enough soup. There were a couple folks who rolled into the swap looking a little shell shocked, but I'm not gonna name any names.

So how does this work?

1. Pick a date far into the future, because unless you roll with a crowd that can cook massive amounts of soup on a dime or you've thrown one of these before, you're gonna need time to recruit people to drink the soup-flavored KoolAid on this one. I think my initial invite went out about two months in advance. I've pasted a copy of my facebook invitation to give you an idea of the details:

Here's how the swap works:

1. Choose your favorite FREEZABLE soup recipe (cream-based soups do not freeze well). Chili is acceptable.
2. Make enough soup to COMPLETELY fill seven 1 quart containers. (Note, this will likely require you to make 2 - 4 batches.)
3. Divide soup into seven NEW 1 qt gladware-type containers. (ie, disposable, b/c you will not get them back, but you will get 6 replacements and you will get to take the tasting quart back home.)
4. Label each quart with the type of soup and whether or not it is vegetarian.
5. Make a bunch of copies of yo recipe.
6. Grab a bottle of wine and/or a tasty appetizer to share and show up at my digs!
7. Upon arrival, you will get to pick six numbers, one for each round (the 7th quart is for tastings). Your number for each round corresponds to your draft order.
8. Taste as many soups as you like! Starting promptly at 5pm, we will hold a 6 round soup draft.
9. Collect as many recipe copies as you like.

Please note:
- Store/restaurant-bought soup ain't got no place at this swap. Cheaters will be heckled and thrown out of the draft. (But then potentially get picked up by the Philadelphia Eagles, sigh...)
- If you can't cook or don't dig on soup, feel free to come by to witness the soup drafting frenzy.
- Out of towners, feel free to plan to stay the night at chez khop.
- RSVP is a must!! Also, closer to the date, please be sure to post what type of soup you are bringing (and if it is vegetarian). It helps avoid too many duplications.
- If you are unable to attend, but are desperate to participate, you may draft by proxy, either by sending a representative or by dropping off soup ahead of time and trusting (yikes) me to draft for you. Note, the goods must be delivered in order to draft. No soup, no draft.


2. Talk incessantly about the soup swap to anyone who will give you the time of day. Throw the term "Soup Draft" around a lot, as it gives your event "street cred", you know, because drafts remind people of football and thus are cool. Demand explanations from people who claim they cannot come, and attempt to heckle them into changing their plans. Brother's wedding? Oh for crying out loud. Wouldn't you rather be swapping soup? Don't hide your disappointment and disapproval if your attempts prove unsuccessful. It is ok if someone comes if only to shut you up about the whole thing.

3. Pick an afternoon and bang out your 7 quarts.



If applicable, curse the fact that you don't have a significant other who will do the resulting dishes.


4. As the date approaches, bug people to post what kind of soup they are bringing, so as to avoid too many duplications. There were THREE people talking independently about bringing Thai Pumpkin Soup, but thankfully only one did. On second thought, it would've been nice to have a duplicate on that one, as I wasn't able to snag one myself.....

5. Note with glee how many people begin referring to the upcoming swap in their FB status messages, regardless of the tone of or number of curse words contained within the actual message.

6. On the appointed day, free up all available counter space, slap a sign on your door and wait for shit to go down.

7. Swappers will begin to arrive to stake a claim on counter space and begin warming tasting quarts.
TWO MAJOR LESSONS LEARNED:
1. Have beverages and all other foodstuffs out of the kitchen. Unless your kitchen is bigger than mine, which is entirely possible, if not probable, all available space should go to soup display.
2. Kindly request that anyone who is able should heat their tasting quart prior to arrival, and insist that tasting quarts do not arrive frozen.

As the people and the soup flowed in, near pandemonium broke out as sixteen swappers tried to stake out a counter spot, defrost/ warm the tasting quart, set up a display of any necessary toppings, grab an app, and pour a drink in my 13' X 15' kitchen.

The words I think you're looking for are "fire" and "hazard".

8. People will begin to mill about to taste, as Squeaks would say, all the soupy goodness. As we are living in the age of the great swine flu, provide lots of dixie cups 'n ladles 'n stuff to facilitate hygienic tasting.


9. Once substantial tasting opportunity is had, hold a drawing for draft order. You can do this any way you like, but I chose to have people pick a number for each of the six rounds. For example, my picks ended up being:
Round 1: Pick 2
Round 2: Pick 2
Round 3: Pick 13
Round 4: Pick 4
Round 5: Pick 14
Round 6: Pick 9

10: Draft Away!

The following were the choices at this event:

Deb's Spinach Chicken Tortellini
Cassie's Fiesta Soup
Dov's Creamy Potato Soup
Ilana's Potato Zucchini Soup
Michelle's Peruvian Chicken Soup
Traci's Thai Pumpkin Soup
Megan's Lasagna Soup
Josh and Carisa's Middle Eastern Lamb Stew
Squeaks' Vegetarian Lentil Soup
Lindy's Sante Fe Soup/Turkey Chili
Fran's Tomato Corn Chowder
Jenna's Matzo Ball Soup
Kate's Caramelized Onion Soup
Melinda's White Chicken Chili
Khop's Butternut Squash Soup
Becky/Jackie's Thai Chicken Noodle

Mad props to all y'all's soup making skillz!!!

11. Afterwards, some heartfelt karaoke is undoubtedly called for.


Thanks, all swappers and guests!

Sushi Dan, take note: THIS is the kind of swappin' I'm into....

khop

*If by reading this, you are now inspired to hold a swap, you are legally obligated to invite me. Just sayin....