Thursday, December 28, 2006


HOLIDAY RECOVERY AND PREVIEW OF NEW YEAR'S EVE...

Well, this week we've done our best to finish unpacking all of the loot we got over Christmas, although I've still got two bags in the closet that I'll tackle tomorrow. We're going to spend the New Year's Eve weekend with Trevor's step-dad, Jim, and Trevor's grandparents up in Door County. We're leaving tomorrow (he's got the afternoon off and I'll pick him up--right after I stop at Loopy Yarns for their 70% off sale!--and we'll be off!).

I spent the afternoon today with my friend Kate and her new baby, Ella. Ella was a little boogery, but she was still a giggly little bundle and it was really fun to meet her. I made her a hat that was too big for her little baby head, and Kate will send me pictures of her wearing it as soon as their computer is fixed!

(quick digression: "Snakes on a Plane" is coming to DVD soon. I'll be renting that.)

Speaking of renting movies, Trevor and I watched a waste-of-time movie starring our favorite t.v. sitcom actor, Zach Braff, called "The Last Kiss." It was a total dud, but it took place in Madison, so they had a scene on the Terrace, which was exciting. Before that, though, I watched "The Descent" which is a fabulous horror movie. I think even Trevor would like it. He came home in time to watch the "making of" portion of the DVD (called, appropriately, "Beneath the Scenes" [it's a movie about caving in the Appalachian Mountains]) and found it interesting. I might rent it again so he can watch it as well.

Well, I'm off to finish a scarf for our friend Simona. See you all in the new year!

Bork-Power

Monday, December 25, 2006



MERRY CHRISTMAS EVERYONE!

Here's some of the gang sitting down after Christmas Eve at the Bosco's. It was the first Christmas Eve celebration for the newly married Borks (Greg and Paula), and mom and I spent a bit of time teaching Erica to knit. We're passing the torch on to the next generation; it's all very exciting. We'll work with some fun yarn and bigger needles today at Christmas dinner. And speaking of knitting, I'm also including a photo of the first really successful hat I've made! More to come, and happy happy holidays!

Bork-Power

Thursday, December 21, 2006


HAPPY HOLIDAYS!

It's a pre-Christmas post! Trevor and I will be doing a lot of traveling during the holiday season, but luckily it's all in Illinois and Wisconsin, which isn't too bad. We're spending the eve before Christmas Eve with the Power clan out in Yorkville, where we will be exchanging gifts and hopefully playing some games. Then Christmas Eve to the Bosco's for some Secret Santa action, and to the Bork's for Christmas Day, and then to the Madel's for some dessert! A few days later, we're going up to Door County to visit Jim, see the Madels again, and do some holiday decompressing. I'm currently filling my days this week Christmas shopping, visiting friends for lunch and dinner (I was back to Navy Pier this afternoon for the first time in nearly six months--the theater's changed a little, but my feelings about making the career change were sure solidified...) and I'm also doing a bushel full of knitting. I took a photo of my first really successful hat (which I turned into a Christmas present for my friend Roxanna) and I'll post it soon.

The picture above is the finished wardrobe in our bedroom. Although it's containing most of our stuff, Henry has miraculously managed to eat--in the past five days--one remote control, one throw pillow, and one regular pillow. Needless to say, he no longer has free reign of the bedroom, and until he learns to curb his appetite of non-tasty items (reading glasses, yarn, plastic...) he'll be crated while we're out of the house. Trevor seems to think Martin instigates the incidents. I, however, believe he's just a ruiner like his meowing brother.

Sunday, December 3, 2006



HARVEY MAKES AN APPEARANCE:
Finally, here's a picture of our car, Harvey! He's pretty cute and he rides like a dream, and because of my commuting, he's already up for a tune-up at a couple of months old. Next semester, I'll hopefully be able to take the Metra, so Harv can have some more quality time with Trevor on the streets of Chicago!

Last weekend we had breakfast with our friend, Dan, and he and his lovely wife, Simona, met us at IKEA, where we bought an eight by eight wardrobe, which we brought home, and have finally erected! It's beautiful and I'm posting a picture of before completion, and I'll do my best to get a picture of it all finished sometime this week. And this weekend we celebrated our friend Jessica's birthday at the Gold Star, I went to DEPART-ment (a crafty fair) and got some early Christmas shopping done, and Trevor didn't go with me, so I was able to get some stuff for him, too! And we watched old movies, and Die Hard III, and Die Hard II (well, the second one was Trevor, I was in the shower...but I certainly did enjoy number 3!).

It's also my last week of full classes--next week I've got to sit out in Crystal Lake for two evenings to collect portfolios, but then I'm done for four weeks! FOUR WEEKS! I'm going to work on lesson plans, take naps, drink tea, knit, go grocery shopping, take naps, read some books, do Christmas shopping, nap, crochet, write, nap, drink tea, have lunch with Trevor, take Henry to the park, drink tea, have lunch with Grandma, go up to Door County with Trevor over New Year's Eve to visit Jim and the Madels, drink tea, have lunch with mom and look at Greg and Paula's wedding pictures....and on and on...

So, I might jump on during the next week to vent about the piles and piles of student final portfolios I have to wade through for their final grades, but until then...stay out of the cold!

BORK-POWER

Saturday, November 4, 2006


Laura forgot to mention my new bike that we picked up in Madison, WI this summer. I spent a month or so taking the 3rensho (pronounced "san rensho") apart and putting new parts on her...now she's my main form of transportation. You can read more about her here: http://velospace.org/node/1258

Sunday, October 29, 2006


GET READY!

All right, I'm going to try to recount all that we've done so far this fall, since I think July was the last time we updated in full. These will be in no particular order...

1. THE WEDDING: My brother, Greg, got married! This is the wedding we've been celebrating in one form or another since May, so we were terribly excited to have it come and be a huge success, which it was! I started early that morning, getting my hair done with the other 8 bridesmaids, harassing Trevor because I forgot part of my dress at home (it was a sash, and the bride was totally prepared with a spare), then doing some fancy make-up, and finally, taking a limousine 2 blocks (literally) from the bride's parents' condo to the church. And it was on time! It was a Greek Orthodox church and ceremony, and I walked down the aisle while three hundred guests whispered, "That's his sister!" which was totally bizarre, and then I got to giggle while I watched my brother dance around the altar with a wreath on his head while my mother and aunt, and the mother of the bride and the bride's god-mother, hurled rose petals at them. If it hadn't been his own wedding, I think he would have had to leave the church to laugh out loud on the street. But, the ceremony was really lovely, and the bride was beautiful, my brother looked very handsome in his tuxedo, and I held back some tears.
The reception was so much fun. If nothing else, Greg's friends know how to have a party, and they led everyone else in dancing, drinking, and all around merriment. The father-of-the-bride had the country club set off fireworks after dinner; and no ordinary fireworks. Not only did we get to see a top notch fifteen minute show that my Southern cousins said rivaled any town fireworks they'd seen, the finale consisted of a giant sign on the lawn exploding into Greg and Paula's names, all in little sparklers. Seriously.
When Trevor and I had danced our last dance (I coerced him to dance three slow ones with me, which I thought was a success), we took a taxi back to the hotel where we were staying, the Burnham. And it's just about the neatest place I've ever been. It's an old office building that was rebuilt after the Chicago Fire, so it's mainly marble and iron and all Art Deco. They left the office doors on the rooms, which was very neat, and we got to wake up in the morning to a sunny view up State Street to the north, and millennium Park and the theater to the east (we had a corner room.). We really didn't want to leave.
All in all, the weekend was a success: Trevor looked dapper in his new jacket and tie, I was kind of gold, and the happy couple was, well, happy!

2. THE CAR: Just over a month ago, Trevor and I went to the Volkswagen dealership in town to check out the new Rabbit. We'd been talking about getting a new car for a while, so we went to browse. And we ended up driving the car out of the showroom. Yep, we bought a new car! It's a silver two-door 2007 Rabbit, and it's just a button of a car. But it's fast. They gave us some loose change for my one-eyed purple people eater as a trade-in, so I had to say goodbye to her. She's been a good car to me, for nearly eleven years I've been driving her, and not once has she broken down, or ever gotten me in an accident. Trevor took my picture with her before I said goodbye. But on to bigger (not really, smaller, actually) and better! The new car is solid and speedy, has two (count 'em, TWO!) working headlights and two (yep, TWO again!) side mirrors, power windows and power locks, a CD player, and a jack to plug the I-Pod into the glove box! It's pretty high-tech. I've just finally gotten used to fact that after Trevor gets in, he doesn't have to lean over to unlock my door. And because it's a hatch-back, Henry can hitch a ride without having to be in the back seat. Although he's only ridden in it twice. I'm not too keen about his muddy paws pawing up Harvey's nice carpet and sticking his wet snout all over the inside of the windows. Oh, yes, we decided to name the new car Harvey. So, I've got something reliable and nice to drive me to school during the week, and Trevor has something he doesn't have to be embarrassed driving!

3. WORK: Trevor's time at Pettersen has greatly improved since they promoted another assistant to an account representative; the new girl (our friend, Jessica) will be the primary contact for Home Depot, which means that Trevor will no longer be working with them and dealing with their insane antics. A big, fat, WHEW! His job has become so much more pleasant, and he's started learning the ropes about Swiss Colony, one of the studio's oldest clients, from the rep. who's going to retire in May. When this fellow retires, Trevor will take over Swiss, and he's already found them quite pleasant and sane to deal with. It's sort of a relief. Not sort of, definitely. Although we do feel bad for poor Jessica; she's a very nice girl and we'd rather she not have to deal with Home Depot...but as long as it's not Trevor...

4. SCHOOL: Well, I'm around the mid-term point with all of my classes. About five weeks ago, I added two more classes at East-West University to my load. I started later with them because they're on quarters. It's a hugely different experience from the two community colleges; about 90% of the EWU students are black, and a small percent are Hispanic or Eastern European (odd...) and, of course, the fact that they're all city kids instead of suburban kids makes them much more diverse in experience as well as ethnicity. My morning class (7:45 a.m.) is full of terrific kids, ready to learn and pay attention (you can only imagine the dedication these students must have to sign up for a 7:45 a.m., Monday/Wed./Friday class for their very first quarter in college). Now, the noon class is a whole different ball of wax. There are a lot of good kids in there as well, but there are a couple that are used to being the center of attention, and they're young, I don't even think they're nineteen. Also, because it's in the afternoon, they've have a good three or four hours to wake up and eat some sugar or drink something caffeinated, so they're bouncing off the walls by the time they get to me. They're a bit more challenging. But I like them a lot. I've already got one class at McHenry lined up for next semester, and CLC is holding off on the schedule because of contract negotiations with the Union, so I should know about those in another week or two, and before I started classes at EWU, the department chair offered me a third class (which I couldn't take because of scheduling conflicts with McHenry's Monday night class), but she mentioned that if I couldn't take three this quarter, hopefully I could next quarter. Damn straight! Also, there's a full time position opening up at McHenry, so I'm going to throw my hat into the ring. Although it's the furthest away of all 3 schools, if I were full time, I'd be a 9-ish to 5-ish worker, so I'd most definitely be able to take the train to Crystal Lake and the rush hour bus from the station to campus (which I couldn't do this semester because of the odd time of my classes). Meaning no more driving commutes, solid benefits, and a four-course class load instead of 5! Now, of course this is wishful thinking, but you never know!

5. MISCELLANEOUS: Trevor is just now getting over a pretty bad cold (which, by the way, I was not responsible for giving him), so we had to forego a trip to Madison to celebrate our friend Kate's 30th birthday. Instead, we've been camped out, watching movies (scary and otherwise...), doing laundry, and not much else. I bought some candy for my students to bring this week in honor of Halloween, which is exciting. And there was a Halloween Dog Parade in the neighborhood yesterday that Trevor didn't let Henry participate in. Next year I'm making him. And, this weekend is the one year anniversary of us moving into our own place! We're still very happy homeowners, though we haven't done much more home improvement after we fixed the bathroom tiles. The kitchen counter is getting pretty bad (it's made of tiles...awful idea for a counter), so that might be the next to go. Although Trevor matted a bunch of photo prints and hung one of the three up, and he traded one of his prints for a painting our friend Dan did, which is hanging up in the bedroom. It's so nice to have art on the walls; it feels more homey!

Well, I think that's about it! This may have been the longest blog we've posted so far. Next time I promise not to pack it all into one!
Happy Halloweeeeeeeeeeen! Until next time,
Bork Power

Thursday, October 19, 2006

Holy Cheese and Crusts!

It's been much, much too long since we've updated this, and I apologize to everyone! I'll write more later on this evening, but here's a picture to give you an idea of what had been occupying a lot of our time up until a few weeks ago...

Thursday, August 24, 2006


WE'VE DONE IT AGAIN!

With Henry's admirable assistance, Trevor and I have again found ourselves in a Chicago magazine! It's really extended our 15-minutes of fame to a couple of months, and it's so much fun! This time we're in The Real Chicago, which featured my friend Kelli in their last issue--she owns a painting company and they were doing a feature on small business owners--so we're in good company! Apparently you can find the magazine all over the north side, in coffee shops, 7-11s, local bars, etc (that's what the publisher told me, anyway), so pick up a copy!

Other news is that Trevor decided to stay at Pettersen instead of accepting a Studio Manager position at another photo studio. Pettersen was so reluctant to let him go, they countered their own offer 24 hours after they put it on the table! He was the most popular boy at the dance, and it was terribly exciting! So now, we just have to get those Home Depot folks to calm down and be normal and everything will be okay!

We had Trevor's college friend Adam Schizzle-Ottavi visit us for a bit from New York City! It was a lot of fun; we got to all have dinner with the famous Jen Davis before she leaves for YALE and graduate school (yes, I said YALE. She's so Ivy League), which was a hoot and a half, and Adam and I got to eat breakfast at the Flying Saucer while Trevor drank a martini and waited for his flight to leave for Atlanta. Fun was had all around! Also, Adam seemed impressed with the scarf I'm knitting for him, which is good. Now I just have to finish it before the weather turns!

I started classes this week, and it's going well so far! I've had one class each of my 3-hour class, and I'm still worried that I'll never really have enough to fill up an entire class--both times I've been 10-15 minutes shy, and I even did more stuff the second section! I may have been talking faster that day...but the 2x a week class is just perfect, so I'll just have to jam more stuff into the other 2! I'm still getting used to this schedule; it's so strange for me to be home during the day and leave to go to work in the middle of the afternoon. It just feels strange. But it's been great hanging around with Henry in the mornings--we discovered that Eckhart Park up the street has an informal meeting of pooches every morning! It's been great because the park is huge and Henry can run around the entire square block of field like the horse he is, chasing other dogs, being chased by other dogs, or chasing the tennis ball I try to throw very far for him. It's great--20 minutes and he's so pooped he can barely walk home (then he lets me get work done at home because all he cares to do is sleep. Ah, a dogs life!) Also, I've discovered (though I really can't take any sort of credit for it) the Swim Cafe, across the street from the Ida Crown Natatorium at Eckhart Park. I've gotten coffee there the past couple of mornings after our park time, and it's terrific! Great coffee, delicious pastries (I couldn't resist), and a serenely decorated shop that made me feel like I was wading around in a fish bowl. Really, it was pleasant.

Trevor and I are also talking about getting a new car--a Rabbit (newly re-released from Volkswagen)! It's pretty exciting. We're probably going to wait a couple more months to get a 2006 for a bit less $$, but soon enough we'll be zipping around in a little silver Rabbit instead of a one-eyed purple people eater! Although it's going to be really, really, really hard to say goodbye to my purple people eater. I will miss her. A lot. Ugh.

Well, that's about all we've got right now! We'll post more soon!

Wednesday, August 9, 2006


I'M A STAY-AT-HOME DOG MOM!

At least for the time being, and it actually won't be too long. As you know (I think you know!) I quit my job last month and said goodbye to Chicago Shakespeare Theater. I closed the door on my 3.5 years there last Friday (photo above; my friend Andrea made a cake and a lot of folks showed up to bid me farewell.) and for the next two weeks I'm working at home, on my 3 syllabi, preparing for classes to start August 21st. I start teaching at McHenry County College and College of Lake County (fastest commuter in three counties. Literally.) on the 21st, and classes start at East-West University on September 25th. I picked up my textbook for EWU on Monday and it's going to be a very interesting, very civic and globally minded course. I'm really excited about it. Also, I've recently learned of a certain yarn shop that goes by the name of Loopy Yarns, and it happens to be located 1 block directly west of EWU. Interesting. Very, very interesting.

And speaking of yarns, I'm currently working on a lovely grey wool scarf for Trevor's friend Adam, who's coming to visit us from NYC on August 19th. Although it will be too warm for him to wear, hopefully he'll get a lot of warmth from it over the winter.

I'm walking my TWENTY MILE WALK on Saturday for the AFSP. Yesterday, Henry and I did a long walk to prepare (6 miles) and he's too pooped to do much of anything this morning. It felt pretty good to me, though, and I think I'll be okay for the big one this weekend. And if not, my teammate, Audra, told me that there are vans that can "assist" the walkers if they're having troubles. Hopefully it won't come to that, but it's always nice to have a safety net.

And enough about me, on to the Power portion of the Bork Power. Trevor traveled to the ATL this week (we still haven't rented that movie) for work, and did a terrific job of avoiding the shrewish new woman at Home Depot while he was there, so he made it back home unscathed by her wicked sharp tongue.

He's investigating bikes online, and has a bike expert in NYC hot on the trail of a 3Rensho (I think?) that Trevor can get to ride around the town! He really liked a good looking red and yellow model someone was selling on Ebay, but a sniper snuck in and outbid everyone during the last 30 seconds of the auction. Although, this NYC expert (I have just learned that his name is Sasha...) told Trevor that the Ebay bike wasn't a good purchase, anyway, so Trevor lucked out and will get a sweet bike for a good price, with this fellow's assistance. And hopefully soon, so that I don't have to worry about him riding his current bike to work with its terribly suspicious brakes. Even worse brakes than the purple people eater (a.k.a. my car), by the way.

We're still obsessed with Miami Ink on TLC, and are thinking about taking a road trip (in the winter, perhaps) to visit the shop for some new work. Trevor contacted Jay Ryan months ago about designing a new tattoo, but if he's not up to the challenge, I'm sure that one of our favorite television artists can help Trevor out. And it will be beautiful. We have an ulterior motive, though, because Miami is much, much closer to one Miss Rachel Power and we were thinking of jaunting over to Palm Bay to visit Rachel and Letty. Although, if we don't get to see them then, word on the street is that they're organizing a trip to VEGAS next year, and we are SO in! I've never been to Las Vegas and I cannot wait to see it and all of its bizarrity.

We did some investigating on line last night (well, Trevor did, I peeked over his shoulder) into purchasing some lights for the house from Design Within Reach. They sent Trevor a coupon for 15% off a purchase, and there are some lovely pendant lamps we've had our eyes on, so we might get them! And we're still itching to run to Ikea for the new bathroom sink and cabinet so we can finally finish off the bathroom (after we paint and get a new door, that is...), and I'm hoping that we can go the weekend after Adam visits. Fingers crossed!

That's about all of the news that's fit to print for now. I've got to get myself another cup of Joe and buckle down to do some work on my syllabi! It's really exciting. Seriously, I love that I'm going to be in the classroom!

Catch you all on the flip side...

Tuesday, August 1, 2006



Here are some pictures of Henry beating the heat at the dog park. He's not much of a water dog, but he'll go in after a ball. Sorry for the poor quality of the photos, they were taken on my camera phone.

Monday, July 31, 2006




I went on my second Critical Mass bike ride this friday. Critical Mass is a huge organized bike ride that happens on the last friday of every month in major cities all around the world. You can learn more about it here:

http://www.chicagocriticalmass.org/

But more importantly, I got to see Henry's sister Ida there. Her owner rides around with her often on a sort of homemade rickshaw. She was a bit bigger than Henry and calmer, but I still think Henry is a better looking dog ;-)

Friday, July 28, 2006







More, more, more photos!

These are the pictures of the rainforest leg of our Pacific Northwest sojourn!
Portland Pictures!





Here are some of the Polaroids from the Portland leg of our journey: the coffee and food, the Rose Garden, the plastic horses tied up in the street...that's right. Plastic horses tied up in the street.

Thursday, July 27, 2006

Photos of our trip!






All right, so these are the photos from our voyage to the Seattle Public Library, an absolutely fabulous, state-of-the-art facility. They start the Dewey decimal system at the top of their 10-floor building and spiral it town for 5 floors. It's amazing. I could move in there. But I won't.

Monday, July 17, 2006

WE'RE HOME!
After a week of city-hopping, Trevor and I are back home to Chicago, and happy to be off the road. We had a fabulous time and got to see a lot of the Pacific Northwest. We started in Portland, OR, to visit our friends Brenda and Derek (who are actually going to be moving back to the Midwest [Fargo, ND] sometime during the next year, which means more visits!). They took us around to see a lot of Portland's great sites, including:
1. VOODOO DONUT! That's right, the best damn donut shop I've ever been to! They had a donut covered in Coco Puffs, which was delicious. Derek reported that they do occasionally stock a maple bar w/ a piece of bacon on it (not good for Trevor, and actually, not sure if it's good for me...).
2. The Rose Garden in Washington Park which was the best smelling park I've ever visited! They also took us for a drive through the hills in/throughout the park where little bungalows were nestled among the trees. It was amazing, if not a bit steep for my taste (thank god I wasn't driving).
3. Shopping! We went to a bunch of neighborhoods and got some terrific shopping--both window shopping and actual shopping--done. It was great. Each jag was followed by a stop of some sort to get a bite to eat and rest our tired shopping feet. Which brings me to the greatest attraction...
4. The COFFEE (and food, and beer...but, mostly the coffee.). There was an amazing coffee shop on nearly every corner, and each one we visited had amazing pastries and just delicious coffee. B. and D. introduced us to the Americano, which I'd never thought much about before, since Chicago's such a drip coffee-town, but that's more normal out West, and since espresso is their specialty, we tried some and fell in love. Just great. It was most definitely the best tasting vacation I've ever had.
5. POWELL'S CITY OF BOOKS! I saved the best for last. It was the best book store I've ever been to, and I barely got off of the first floor! I got books, books, and more books, and had to jam them all into my suitcase (because of course I overpacked for the trip) and my purse to get them all home. But it was worth it. Trevor only got two, so I really needed to get as many as I did to make up for him! Unfortunately we were interrupted in the rare books section by the idiot doggie day care man, so we didn't get to buy anything old and cool, but Trevor found the first edition of a book we've got at home (one that his grandpa gave him a couple of months ago)--Trevor's is a first edition, fourth printing, and it was so neat to see an edition there in the special room!

Brenda and Derek were so hospitable and we had so much fun with them, so it was hard to leave on Wednesday morning. But Trevor and I gave them some hugs and got into our rental car to head for the Quinault Rain Forest. It was a lovely, if not a bit rainy, drive up. The lodge where we stayed was great: right on the lake, far from everything, surrounded by trees, across the street from some great hiking trails, and it didn't have any televisions or phones in the room. It was really quite nice. After Trevor and I snagged some ponchos from the gift shop, we headed out into the forest to do some hiking. Because of the drizzly weather, we were pretty alone on the trails, which was nice. The scenery was like nothing I've ever seen: lush beyond green, moss growing on everything, waterfalls and small rapids in all of the streams...it was heavenly. After a great dinner at the lodge, a game of Scrabble and some rest, Trevor and I took another hike before we left for Seattle in the morning. The second one was great, too, because we got to see a Banana Slug (they're quite friendly, and photogenic!) and the world's biggest Spruce tree, which was fun! It was very large, indeed. But we left the forest and took off for Seattle, still unable to put down the top on the rental car because of the spotty weather.

We arrived in Seattle in the late afternoon on Thursday to check in at the Moore Hotel in Belltown. The two of us were exhausted, but were made more so because our room wasn't quite ready for check-in. So we waited a while, got irritated, but finally got into the room and out into the city, which is what we were most anxious about. We hit the Pike Place Market for some wandering, grabbed a beer, and headed up to the Fremont neighborhood for dinner. The dinner (Thai food) was great, and the neighborhood was perfect for wandering around, so we hit a couple of record stores (scored some really good stuff...) and then headed back to Belltown to catch a drink at Rendezvous, a bar we'd heard of through a friend of ours (Jeremy Evans, who just got married to my old roommate, Jenn this weekend, which was the perfect start to our vacation!). And it turned out the guy we'd met at the wedding, Keith, was actually working when we arrived, so we chatted with him and, later, his girlfriend Rachel (who turned out to be a book nerd like me, so she was a blast!), and we had a wonderful time. We got free drinks, fabulous conversation, and Portland's smoke-free so we were able to come back to the hotel and not smell like a giant ashtray! It was great. Friday morning we grabbed coffee at Monorail Espresso (per Rachel's recommendation, and she was sooo on the money!), Trevor passed out one of his new buttons to a Seattle biker, who seemed very impressed, and headed up to the new Seattle Public Library. It was GORgeous. Steel and glass everywhere, a Dewey Decimal System Sprial that we walked (haven't we seen this corner before?) and a great gift shop where I went a little kookoo for book paraphanalia. Trevor had to drag me out of there to see some more sights. We headed up to the Ballard neighborhood to see a book store that turned out to be closed due to renovations, which kind of stunk, but the area was a lot of fun for more wandering, so we hung around for a while. I tried a Seattle style hot-dog at a gourmet frank stand (they had veggie dogs for Trevor!) which included onions, mustard, and cheese. Quite tasty. We had a great dinner later that night at a fancy but comfortable restaurant where we had a great meal made with all organic ingredients. My friend Brian (an old Chicago Shakespeare buddy who's moved out to Seattle to tour w/ his singer/songwriter sister Rosie, but who's going to move back to the Midwest in the fall.) met us out for a few drinks, and it was great to see him. By the end of the night we were pooped, but not too pooped to wake up and grab some breakfast from the Crumpet Shop at the Market! They were delicious, as was the tea, then we took off back to Portland. And the weather was finally nice enough to put the top down on our convertible!

So we cruised back down to Oregon, finally found their inconspicuous airport, and made a quite spacious flight back to Chicago.

Whew! It was such a fun trip, and Trevor's got some great pictures. I hopefully got some good shots, too, so as soon as I develop we'll post some up here!

Well, it's off to bed before work in the morning! Until next time, True Believers!

BORK-POWER!

Sunday, July 9, 2006

VACATION, VACATION!

Well, as Trevor and Henry sleep beside me, I wanted to write a quick blurb about our vacation tomorrow!

It's a much needed one, let me tell you, especially after this weekend. Some close friends of ours (my old roommate, Jenn, and her brand spanking new husband, Jeremy) had their wedding this evening, which I was honored to take a part in. I read a passage from Plato's Symposium (which Trevor helped me pick out)--the Aristphenese speech about human nature and love. The ceremony was just perfect: personal and lovely, and they both looked gorgeous. They had Chicago-style everything, including pizza and beef sandwiches for dinner, Goose Island beer to drink, and a Hancock Building-shaped cake with blinking antennae! It was so much fun, and I got Trevor on the dance floor for one dance, which was a thrill. The best man, Bryon, gave the most touching speech I've heard, and the couple danced like pros to their first official two-step. The whole thing was great, but after the work week, the rehearsal, and the wedding--and all of the working we've been doing since our last vacation in July of '05!--we're more than ready for a little r&r.

So, we're off to Portland, OR to stay with our friends Brenda and Derek (though this will be the first time Trevor meets Derek, which I'm so excited about!), the Lake Quinault Rainforest in Quinault, WA, and Seattle (to visit the new library, among other things [a crumpet shop and a bar whose owner we just met, and a Thai restaurant we got a tip was spectacular....so much!]).

Until we get back, have a wonderful week, and we'll be sure to send you all postcards!

Bork POWER

Sunday, July 2, 2006

SO MUCH TO WRITE, AND SO LITTLE TIME...
That's how I feel right now! Trevor and I are on our way to the movies to see Superman (whoohooo!), so I only have a few minutes to write. But the news over the past weeks has been a lot, I feel. Trevor's been swamped with work and has gone to Atlanta twice since we last checked in, but he doesn't have to go again until August 7th, which is really nice. But the most exciting news for him is that he just got a BUTTON MAKER! He's been making 1" buttons all over town and shows no sign of slowing down. So far he's made me a couple of roller derby buttons and a Steve Zissou button, and made the entire Team Zissou collection for our friend John! I was pretty jealous because the collection included two Jacques Couteau buttons in addition to the whole gang. Though, just thinking about it now, his set did not include Cody, the three legged dog. I'll have to talk to him about that.

And I have some pretty giant and exciting news: I'll be soon giving my boss two weeks notice and in August I'll be teaching full time! I've picked up five classes (pretty full load, I know) and three different community colleges (East-West University downtown, McHenry County College, and College of Lake County [where I did a teaching internship three years ago...seems like a lifetime!]). So my last day at the theater will be August 4th, I'll take some time off to get myself organized and nail down my syllabi, and then I get into the classroom! All the courses I've taken on are English composition courses, pretty basic stuff and there should be a lot of the same elements in all, which is nice. I'm just excited and terribly nervous! But, mostly excited.

And Trevor and I are planning our vacation to Portland, OR, and Washington State to see the Lake Quintault Rainforest and Seattle!
But more on that later....it's movie time!

Monday, June 19, 2006



WHAT A SUCCESS!
The weekend was chock-full of pre and post party events. I cooked most all of the day on Saturday in preparation of feeding 30-something people at our barbecue Saturday night. The party, a fundraiser to get together some $$ for my 20-mile walk in August, was a huge success! The attendees contributed a total of $579, which is so generous and fabulous for just one night! Though we narrowly avoided a near-hurricane early in the evening and we had to shepherd everyone down to our tiny house while the storm passed. It never actually rained on our buliding, even though we saw the wall-o-rain headed our way from the south. Who knows, maybe the gods knew we were trying to have a party for a good cause... I wanted to thank everyone who came for being so generous, and for eating and drinking, and just having a good time! The clean-up afterwards wasn't bad, either, which is always the worst thing about a party, so we were very happy about that! Although the recovery process took me all day (I slept until about 4...) and finally got rid of my post-party headache after dinner with Mom and Dad Bork to celebrate father's day. Delicious tapas. And I gave Dad a book on Patton I'd found at the Printers Row Book Fair, so hopefully he'll find some interesting tidbits in there on his favorite general!

Trevor spent his between-party-preparation time watching World Cup games, of which I hear there were a few good ones! Ghana did very well, and the U.S. tied someone else...he'll have the details. But while I was chopping up onions and peppers for the salad on Saturday afternoon, he kept shouting "GOOAALLLL!" which tipped me off that he was watching some exciting matches.

I got the scoop on the Power's recent trip to Ireland, and it sounded great--beautiful weather and time spent with the Power clan and Fran said they got to almost everything on their sight-seeing list, which is quite an accomplishment! And Mr. Power is starting a new job next month, which he's happy about, and he's got some time off during which he's going to start working on our bookshelves (yahoo!) and visit Rachel and Letty down in Florida, which all sounds very pleasant if I do say so myself.

So, now I have to get rid of a cold I caught over the weekend, and go kick some homeruns at our kickball tournament tonight! Until we meet again, this is Bork Power signing off!
(to see more pictures, check out Laura's Photos!)

Sunday, June 11, 2006




SUNDAY, BLOODY SUNDAY...
Was the song we were singing as we rolled up to the Cicero Stadium to watch the first bout of the Windy City Rollers' new season. Our friend Kelli is on the Double Crossers (her name is "Terra Fye") and they kicked some major butt. It was great. We'd never been to a roller derby bout before, and man, those ladies were flying! They cruised around this flat rink trying to knock out each other's Jammers (the girls that score) before they could make it to the top of the pack. The Double Crossers were winning at half-time and Trevor and I decided to call it a night. We wanted to get back home to Henry, and it's a school night after all!

Trevor spent Saturday and Sunday hanging out with his brother Sean, watching the WORLD CUP! Apparently, the Mexico/Iran game was great (Mexico won, and the goalie on Iran's team brought flowers for Mexico's goalie, whose father just passed away. I thought that was just lovely.) as was the Germany/Costa Rico game. And Ecuador won on Friday, so our friend Linda, who's Ecuadorian, was thrilled! There are more games through the week, but the U.S. plays tomorrow, which is terribly exciting. I'm going to try to listen to it at work, and Trevor--who's going to be on his way to Atlanta to see Home Depot--will try to catch it in the airport bar. Let's hope they kick some Czech rear end.

We're also having a fundraising party next Saturday for the walk I'm doing for the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention. So far I've met 25% of my goal (thanks to Aunt Carol, Shannon O., and a special thanks to mom and dad!!), and hopefully the party will inch that goal upwards. I went to Target this morning after dropping Trevor off at Sean's house, and picked up a few party supplies. I've got to figure out the bbq menu, as well. I love throwing parties!

Well, that's about all we had going on this weekend. Trevor went to a party Saturday night at his friend Brian's house, but I was an old lady and fell asleep watching television. I'm knitting a choker for my co-worker, Roxanna, so I'm going to sign off to finish that. Until next time, true believers, this is Bork-Power, signing off.

Friday, June 9, 2006

BOOKS, BOOKS, AND MORE BOOKS!
I figured that I should catch you all up on last weekend before we embarked on this one! Last weekend was devoted mainly to books. I went to the Printer's Row Book fair Saturday and Sunday (Saturday, my friend Lisa and I went for a few hours, and Sunday, Trevor, Henry, and I went for another few hours), and both trips were terribly fruitful. We found books for ourselves and books for lots of other people--a book about Patton for my dad, a book about poker for Trevor's brother Sean, a hard cover Bluebeard (Vonnegut) for Trevor, and then he found another one for himself on Sunday (Wampeters, Foma & Granfaloons)! Henry didn't find any books for himself, but he sniffed a lot of them, and may have licked a couple, too. I also have grown my collection of first edition Stephen King books; it started as a whim when I was working at After-words, and has apparently become a collection I have. I think I'm up to about ten, three of which I found at the Book Fair. Since the man has written over thirty novels alone, and about five other short story collections, we'll see if I eventually need another King-only book shelf.

And speaking of books (what else!), I've finally gotten over the halfway hump in Infinite Jest, the 1066 page book I'm reading by David Foster Wallace. It's easily the most brilliant thing I've read, which is terribly exciting. And I'm worried that I'll have withdrawl when I've finally finished. I'll let you know.

We also got to hang out with my friend Brenda and her sister Sarah over the weekend. Brenda is a singer/songwriter (check out her link in the margin!) living in Portland (we're staying with her and her husband on our trip next month!), and her sister just finished getting her Masters in Cinncinnati in music and is now heading to Italy for a while. They recently lost their sister Jennifer to suicide, and the show Brenda did Saturday night introduced some new songs she'd written about that. It was an emotional night for everyone, and so good to see them both. And the subject now brings me to the closing topic for the post:

I'm doing a 20-mile walk to benefit the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention (see link in margin--again!) in August, and Brenda and her family are a big part of why I'm walking. Suicide and depression are also, unfortunately, an issue in my own life, and I'm happy to be participating in such an important event. If you're interested in pledging for my walk, you can do so through the website, and we're also having a BBQ next weekend to do some fundraising!

Well, that's all for this week; more to come after this weekend of Ikea, a party on Saturday night, dog-parking it with Henry, and who knows what else!

Bork-Power

Friday, June 2, 2006





SWAP-O-RAMA!
It was a fairly successful Book Swap last night. The Chicago Reader held their first of its kind at The Hideout (which, I realized after eavesdropping at the bar, is owned by a guy who teaches at Jones College Prep, which is one of the schools that visits Chicago Shakespeare Theater, AND it's one of my mom's alma matters!). Although the Swap was a bit cramped, there was some pretty good stuff on the tables. I picked up a few paperbacks, including the orangest copy of A Clockwork Orange that I've ever seen, and even though we already have 2 copies at home, the neon sucked me in and I had to put it in my tote. Among my other tote stuffers were the last book Charles Dickens was writing before he died (a mystery! the book, not his death), a paperback of The Little Friend by Donna Tartt (which I've actually read, but decided to give it another try, to read it this time for the language and characters rather than for the mystery I so erroneously read it for the first time around...FYI if you're a poor sucker looking for a good murder mystery, she never tells you who-done-it. After 600 pages. I could have punched her in the nose. It was two years ago and I'm still mad about it.), and a few other odds and ends. Our friend Jessica got a few interesting things, as well, and after the swapping, we left the Hideout to meet Trevor and the Hunters for some eats at the Handlebar. Delicious.

This weekend is the Printers Row Book Fair, which means that the piles of new (new to us) books on the counter and table and book shelf at home will only continue to get higher. After coming back from Door County last weekend with books from a great little shop we found, and from Trevor's grandpa's library, the stacks were big enough. But after last night, and what I can only hope will be a fruitful trip to the Book Fair tomorrow and Sunday, we may bury ourselves in books! Not a bad way to go, really!

Well, we'll keep you up to day on the weekend, so until then...

Tuesday, May 30, 2006


SECOND POST IN ONE DAY!
It's kind of a miracle, I know! The picture is a way belated photo from my brother and his fiancee's engagement party on May 6th. For the rest of the riotous account, check out the "Laura's Photos" link!

IT'S A GIRL!
We have tons of news and lots of pictures to post, but the most fun is that my friend Kate just had a baby girl! Her name is Ella Grace and she looks just like Kate, even though she's about four days old. Kate and her husband Jim are doing very well and hanging out with the tiniest Meudt!

T. and I also just got back from Door County, where we spent the weekend with Jim, Trevor's step-dad, and T.'s grandparents. It was a relaxing trip: we ate a lot of food (including some amazing Door County Cherry ice cream at the Yum Yum Tree), watched some movies (The New World was tremendous!), got some books from Mr. Madel's soul-lifting library (I could spend the rest of my life in there and forget to ever leave), and just had an all-around great time. We'll post pictures as soon as I get them developed (it was an all film and Polaroid weekend--no digital).

More to come soon. Hope everyone had a great Memorial Day weekend!
Bork-Power

Monday, May 8, 2006




PARTIES AND PLAYS...
...were all the rage this weekend after Trevor and I finished work Saturday afternoon at 1 p.m. and 2 p.m. respectively. We had a quick Burger Baron lunch and an even quicker disco nap before THE ENGAGEMENT PARTY for my brother and his soon-to-be wife! (pictures to come...) It was a big fat Greek affair (sorry, I couldn't help it, but that's the only one I'll do, promise) at Paula's parents' place: 100 people and tons of Greek food and delicious Italian cakes and two families colliding on the 16th floor of the Edgewater Hotel. Quite an affair. There was a Greek Orthodox priest there to properly bless the engagement ring, which was pretty neat. No dancing, though. That, I guess, they'll save for the wedding.

We saw the new Don DeLillo play, Love Lies Bleeding, at the Steppenwolf last night, which was fun, and Mr. D. stood right next to us in the aisle, then sat across the aisle from us for most of the play. We were tempted to get his autograph for Trevor's brother Sean (huge fan), but were a little embarrassed. We could have stalked him down at the after-party, but we opted instead for a quiet night in of pizza, knitting, and Inside the Actor's Studio: Law & Order. Damn straight!

Speaking of knitting, I've almost finished my third and final scarf for the Power gals going to Ireland (well, the Power and Duerarte gals). I'm finishing up Fran's striped scarf, and as soon as it's finished I'll start making wristlets (well, first I have to figure out how to knit a button hole...complicated, I know.)

Well, that's all for now. We'll have some more info later this week after tonight's kickball game and hopefully some grilling on the rooftop tomorrow night if the weather holds! Hope you're all well...

bork-power

Tuesday, April 25, 2006


HOLY PROCRASTINATION, BAT MAN!
Well, it's been a good month since our last post, and we've had a few developments, most namely in the house. Hopefully you've checked out the photo of Henry standing stately in front of a wall of blue tiles...which are our NEW SHOWER TILES!! Whahooooo! They're finished, they're blue, and we love them! We got a new shower curtain, and all we need to do is paint, get a new sink and cabinet, and clean up the floors. Still a lot, but the biggest job is done, and I'm so happy! Jenn and Jeremy helped us out (i.e. did 98% of the work [Trevor chiseled out all of the old tiles, and I cleaned the mortar and the grout from the tiles...everything else was Liming-Evans work]). It looks great, and we'll have more pictures of the "finished" room hopefully in the weeks to come!

Speaking of the Liming-Evanses, they got their Jeep stolen about a month ago, but it was recovered this week! Apparently it'd been used to steal computers, so they've got a bit of fixing up and cleaning to do, but it still works and they're privately mobile again!

News from the Borkster wedding front, I'm officially a bridesmaid (exciting!) and am going to meet my future sister-in-law to try on the dress. It's a lovely dress (wait till you see Paula's gown, though, she's going to knock Greg out!) but it's strapless which means a tattoo unveiling will occur before the wedding to prepare Grandma Bosco so she doesn't pass out at the church. She already would "love me a little more if [I] took out the nose-ring," so I'm curious to hear her reaction to the tattoo. But my cousin Michael just got the family crest on his upper arm, so who's to say what her reaction will be!? She might want one of her own! Well, that might be a bit far-fetched, but you never know...

We used our rooftop grill for the first time ever on Sunday! We made veggie burgers and it was terrific. As soon as the weather gets a little bit warmer, we'll have a bbq up there and invite you all! We're thinking the middle or end of May; we'll let everyone know.

Trevor hasn't had to go to Atlanta for the past couple of weeks, which is really nice. He got to visit my kickball game last night, which made him realize how much I need to practice and how much he'd like to be on the team. I hope he'll play in the summer league. Henry's a bit of a hyper-active mascot, though. He spent most of the game trying to get at the big yellow kickball through the fence, and the rest of it eating sticks. Not much of a cheerleader, but we'll work on it.

That's about it from the Bork-Power camp! I'll keep you more up to date as the week continues...until then, True Believers, happy End of April!

Monday, March 6, 2006



Good morning, Chicago!

Here's Henry overlooking our great city from the building's rooftop deck. It's a great space and we'll hopefully be able to enjoy it more once the weather improves. Which I've really been yearning for as of late; I'm usually not a hot weather person. I like a cozy sweater and some brisk autumn breezes, but the past few weeks I've been missing summer terribly. Right now, the idea of sitting in the sun on the roof with a lemonade and a Wodehouse novel is ungodly appealing. Soon enough, I guess.

But speaking of reading, I've just finished 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, and it was pretty damned exciting! Trevor asked me if Nemo finally turned into "[one of the] greatest villain[s] in literary history" as his book had referenced, but I don't think he quite made it there. He was too human, even if I didn't understand his motives. But he did some awful things, and maybe someday we'll find his manuscript floating off shore of an island in the Pacific. If we do, I hope I'm on the beach sipping something out of a coconut when it washes up. (see? warm weather again!)

Trevor finished his book, too. The Jonathan Ames collection he was reading kept him laughing to the very last page. But now that he's finished that one, he'll be keeping up with our 'sea' theme and got The Perfect Storm and The Old Man and the Sea. I guess we'll 'sea' which one he starts first. Ha! 'Sea'! God, I'm good.

T. also just got back from Atlanta. He had a good meeting with the Home Depot folks, brought back two of the catalogues Pettersen shot for--a faucet book and a fan book (they both looked great)--and he brought me back a bobblehead! It's fabulous and goes perfectly with my collection! His name is "Homer" (I didn't name it, honestly...), and he's got a hammer and a tape measure, and he's wearing an orange Home Depot hat and smock. He's pretty great.

Also, my friend Jenn, who's getting married in July, asked me to read something for her wedding! It's a huge compliment and I'm honored to be a part of their celebration. But I get to choose a passage myself, so the next few months will be super Jenn and Jeremy focused. I may have to spend some time at the library researching them.

Paula--my FUTURE SISTER-IN-LAW (it's really just too exciting that I'm going to have a sister-in-law!)--is going to do her own research this Thursday to pick things out for the wedding registry! She's into picking their new stuff, and Greg's interested in shooting the scanner gun and all of the bar codes on the glasses and pots! They're a perfect match! At least we'll finally be getting rid of Greg's Harvest Gold dishware. It's about 30 years past due.

It's so exciting, though, because I get to focus on fun, gorgeous new dresses to wear to all of the upcoming wedding-related events! Engagement parties and showers and rehearsal dinners! Where's a girl to start shopping?!? It's almost too much to handle. But I think I'll manage (I've actually already started brainstorming. Surprise, surprise.).

Well, until next time! We'll have some new book news, GregandPaula and JennandJeremy wedding news, more story news (I don't have any new updates, but I've just finished a Stuart Dybek short story that was truly inspiring, so maybe I'll channel some of my own Chicago thugs for my next piece; I've done it before!) Have a glorious hump day, all you people!

Monday, February 27, 2006


FROM CHAPTER FOUR...

The man stared at Nando’s chest, then opened his mouth and let out a soft sigh of recognition as he nodded heavily. “Yes,” he said. He was missing a few teeth. “I remember now. Your name, hijo. What is it?” He held out his hand for Nando to shake.
“Reyes. Nando Reyes.”
“Nando,” he said. “Strong name. I had an uncle Nando one time, long ago.”
Nando was light with the handshake, but the man’s hand was oddly firm and tight like a thick knot of rope. “What are you doing these days, old man?”
“Not a lot. I come here to talk with my friend Javi,” he said, nodding at the bartender, who looked up briefly, then went back to reading the Progress Times. “Other than that I don’t do much business no more. Old huesos. Old bones, you know?”


That's a teeny tiny excerpt from the long piece I'm working on. It's been shelved (in my computer) for nearly a year, and I finally dusted it off to work on it. I'm kind of excited and wanted to share it with you all!

We're also anxiously awaiting our tile delivery. We had breakfast with our friends Jeremy and Jenn this weekend--they're the ones who are going to help us install our tile. So everyone's on the tile truck! It's a very exciting truck to be on.

The weekend was nice and relaxing. We watched a terribly depressing, but oddly intriguing moving called The Weather Man, starring Nicholas Cage. Trevor described it perfectly as a movie without a climax, which reminded him of the movie Cage's character in Adaptation wanted to make. The narration in TWM also reminded T. of Adaptation. It was odd. Likeable and horribly awkward at the same time. I don't know if I could recommend it. But maybe I could. Or not. You be the judge.

We also filled up on some Arrested Development, Season One, which made us laugh quite a lot. I made some pancakes (for breakfast) and we ate our Hawaiian pineapple, and we went to the dog park, and we got a fabulous new RECORD CABINET! For all of our vinyl and our turntable; we found it at a store where the owners had found it at an estate sale. And we got it for under $50! What a steal! And now our records are neatly alphabetized (and alphabatized within their musical genre; sorry, I can't control myself.).

Hope we'll have enough action later for a mid-week post. So far, it's been a spaghetti dinner, listening to the new Two Gallants record (marvelous!) eating Girl Scout cookies ('carmel delights, a.k.a. samoas). I can't ask for more out of a Monday night!

Monday, February 20, 2006


HAPPY BELATED VALENTINE'S DAY, EVERYONE!

That's right, it was almost a week ago today that Trevor gave me chocolates in a heart-shaped box, something I wanted for Valentine's day, because what says "I love you, Bean," more than candy? NOTHING!! Although, much has happened since the candy giving, so I'll try to catch you up on all of it!

Trevor found a great neighborhood bar; he fell across it (not literally) while walking Henry one day, and suggested meeting our friends, the Sturdy Voogds and the Segars there for a drink on Wednesday night. It's called the Chip Inn (which reminded me of the Come Back Inn of Madison fame...), and it's the perfect Wednesday night corner bar: pool table in the back and Yatzee on the shelf, Goose Island on tap, and a very friendly bartender slinging suds. Jessica schooled Simana in billiards (or was it the other way around?), the boys talked about computers, art, and politics, and I relaxed and drank it all in. And Dan and Simana, fresh from Hawaii visiting Dan's sister, brought us a pineapple and chocolates! More chocolates! It was heavenly! Other than that, however, the week didn't hold much for us, other than some really crummy weather.

Later, though, Trevor and I had a quiet and cozy weekend. Even though it was freezing cold outside, we braved the weather on Saturday afternoon to meet John Sturdy at Uncle Mike's for lunch. Although Trevor, John, and I all have actual Uncle Mikes in our respective families, the Uncle Mike's we went to is a little restaurant on Grand and Paulina, where I had a B.L.T., Trevor had a tuna salad sandwich, John had a breaded perch sandwich, and we all drank some coffee. It was very pleasant. After lunch, Trevor and I went back home to be warm again, and John had to, unfortunately, ride home on his bike in the -1 degree weather. Back at the homestead, I finished my physics book, Trevor took a nap, I took a nap, then we ate dinner. A huge success, really, and plenty of napping does a good Saturday afternoon make! Although it was too cold to take Henry to the dog park, Trevor took him to the studio late Saturday afternoon so he could run around and chase Trevor and John on scooters. While they were getting their exercise, I was watching a horror movie my friend Jasen lent me called High Tension. Eww, and what a gooey and scary, and GROSS movie it was! It was so much fun, and that makes two really enjoyable horror movies this month (read the Hostel post for the other...), so I feel truly lucky in the genre in 2006. Let's hope we only go up from here.

Sunday, Trevor and I did little more than nothing. Although we had breakfast at the Breakfast Club, then went back home for more napping, then puttered out to the suburbs to see the Bork parents for dinner at La Tasca, everyone's favorite tapas restaurant. It was delicious and we all filled up on olives and scallops and potatoes and sangria and caramel flan. It doesn't get much better. Mom and Dad Bork were both very excited because they're leaving for vacation tomorrow, and are terribly happy about the warm weather they're going to encounter in Arizona. We'll brave the below zero weather here while they're living it up in the sun, hanging out at the Grand Canyon, and doing whatever it is you do when it's warm and you don't have to go to work (i.e. having a wonderful time.)

And, that was our weekend! Try to control yourself from getting TOO excited, I know, it's a lot of stuff to wrap yourself around: napping, eating, napping some more. Where do we get our energy? Why, napping, of course!

I also persuaded a friend of mine to give J.D. Salinger a second try. Ryan, a work pal, had only read The Catcher in the Rye, a favorite among young, rebellious adolescent boys, but it didn't do much for him when he read it as a twenty-something. He kind of thought Holden was a punk. And, let's face it, he is. But I told him to give Franny and Zooey a shot (it's my favorite ever), which he read in record time and thought was fabulous! He's back on the Salinger train and will read his Nine Stories and the R.H.T.R.B.C. and S.A.I., which is terribly exciting, and I can't wait to hear his thoughts on them all! Myself, I just started 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea. I was spurred on by Trevor, who's reading the newest book by Jonathan Ames, and the Verne novel is referenced. It's been in my collection for a number of years now (I dug the slightly cracked copy out of the giveaway box at my old job working at after-words) but hadn't yet read it. So, needing something new to read after finishing my book, and being torn among the HUGE stack of Wodehouse that Trevor's grandpa sent me last month, the new Lemony Snicket, and two new short story collections, I had a muse. And his name was Trevor. So far the book is great (big surprise there...), and I'll let you all know how it turns out as Nemo travels to the ocean's depths to find the scariest creature known to man. Seriously.

Until next time, friends, have a fabulous last week of February, and, time-permitting, take lots of naps!

Sunday, February 12, 2006


TREVOR MAY OR MAY NOT HAVE RABIES...

But we'll get to that in a minute. First up, Friday night was a lovely cap to a busy week. Trevor met the Sturdy Voogds out for a drink and I got frustrated trying to track down his Valentine's Day present. The silly employees at Borders (it's okay, he already knows it's a book of some kind...) seem to have liked the product I put on hold Wednesday night SO much that they replaced it with a decidedly sub-par book on the hold shelf, perhaps hoping I was a blind, nerve ending-less child, and wouldn't notice the difference in size, texture, and quality. But alas! I am NOT such a child, and noticed the difference right away! (well, as soon as I paid for the phony book and walked away from the register. But I did NOT exit the store! Ah-hA Borders!) But to my chagrin, and to some lucky employee's, well, luck, the one copy the store still had in their computer couldn't be located by the lovely girl helping me out (it had probably been stuck in the paperback romance section under some Nora Roberts new releases by the same sneaky employee that now has it on his shelf). So, Saturday afternoon, I located the book at yet another Borders (one that didn't screw me over) and picked it up after work.

But before that, at work, I had a library appointment with a woman named Kate, who came in with her husband from Albany, New York: he had to attend a lawyerly conference all weekend, so she took advantage of our theater and watched both shows (Much Ado on Thursday night, and Macbeth on Saturday morning). She teaches 11th and 12th grade Brit. Lit., so visited our library to get some good class activities to take back with her. And thinking about her now, I wonder if she and her husband made it back to NY all right; Trevor's friend Daniel in Brooklyn told us they've got about 2 feet of snow out there! Lucky East coast. All we've got is cold.

While I was at work Saturday, Trevor and Henry went out to the dog park, got dirty (well, Henry did), and picked up a Valentine's Day gift for me. All I want is candy in a heart-shaped box; anything else is just gravy. And hopefully, it's chocolatey gravy!

We had the Sturdy Voogds over for dinner last night, and it was a successful second dinner with friends. We pulled out the table leaves, Jessica got to see our "new" furniture (last time she was here, we'd just moved in, so neither the couch nor my rocker were here yet), and we ate some pretty tasty pasta shells, which I stuffed myself (with riccotta, basil, onions, and love). After dinner, we went out to Pressure, a billiard cafe in Roger's Park, to see the S.V.'s friend Mike do stand-up comedy. And he was damn funny! His bit involved tigers at a Vegas magic show, so how could it NOT be funny? Although we can't say the same thing for the guy following Mike (the "headliner"), who stunk like a fish decomposing in a field in August. Pee-eww. But Mike made us laugh for twenty minutes, so it was worth it. And we walked past an "Authorized Lego Dealer" (no joke) on the way back to the car, had a beer at the Ten Cat, then went home to bed (well, Trevor fell asleep and I stayed up eating Ritz cracker sandwiches and watching A Fish Called Wanda.).

Today was a relaxed, food-focused day. We went to breakfast at a place called Jane's. It looked like the North Shore burped up a restaurant in Bucktown: the food was great, but we were certainly out of place among all of the rich-looking, thirty-somethings and their impeccably dressed toddlers. It was a terrific space, though, with lofted ceilings and exposed rafters, like an old barn. Even the ladies' room was decorated with Laura Ashley-like floral wallpaper and white painted paneling. Someone should have been churning butter in the kitchen. But the stereo system was playing some sort of new age techno that didn't fit at all. Just like us! But, I ate apricot apple pancakes, Trevor ate banana bread French toast, and we agreed that both meals were delicious. We'll never go back, but the eats were great.

Now, on to RABIES!

After breakfast, we stopped by the house to get Henry, then meandered up to Wiggly Field, our favorite dog park. We'd been there for about half-an-hour, had met some nice people with some swell dogs, and Henry was having a blast: chasing, being chased, tumbling around. It was great. Until a woman showed up with her undercover hell-hound. The dog was quite fine for the first ten or fifteen minutes he was there. He was a muppet-looking terrier of some sort, and he was getting on well with all of the other guys in the park. Until a sweet, chubby Weimaraner apparently looked at the terrier sideways and caught the brunt of his temper. And of course, our good natured Henry popped in the fray to see what all the fuss was about, and that was when the terrier went Cujo. Seriously. Henry yelped horribly as he ran backwards from the terrier, and the dog wasn't letting up. Trevor tried to grab our guy out of the way, but of course Henry was excited and struggling, and before he got Henry off the ground, Trevor was bit by the terrier. The woman finally got a hold of her Cujo and removed him from the park. Apparently the dog had also ripped through the jacket of the Weimaraner's owner, in addition to poor Trevor's hand. A helpful Huskie owner got a bottle of water for Trevor to wash out his wounds, and a pen and paper for me to write down the terrier woman's information. Trevor's hand is sore, but his cuts stopped bleeding, and we think he's okay. But we'll give him some homemade rabies shots anyway. Just kidding. When we got home, he took a much deserved nap with Henry and Martin, I baked some shortbread cookies and did some laundry, and all was right with our world again.

And that's all of our exciting news. Happy Valentine's Day, everyone! And wish me luck that Trevor likes his Valentine (it's the two year anniversary of our first romantic contact, Trevor's "anonymous boy" Valentine stuck between my two volumes of Sherlock Holmes' mysteries! Well, first romantic contact if you're not counting a conversation about the Thai vampire movie Aswang as romantic. And I guess I'm not.)

Saturday, February 11, 2006


The week flew by--as usual--and the weekend is upon us. Again! I'm off to work this morning and Trevor and Henry are going to hang around and do guy things, like go to the dog park, watch t.v., take a nap, read a book (we're teaching Henry to read. It's a process)... Wait, I like those things, too. I'm going to have to SERIOUSLY reevaluate this whole working on Saturday thing.

I would like to dedicate this blog entry to my friend, Lisa, who braved one of the bloodiest horror movies made in the past few years like a trooper. Lisa, her boyfriend Josh, their friend Ben and I saw Hostel on Thursday night. And my GOD it was fabulous! It's the second film from Eli Roth, a young writer/director who is so obviously smitten with the horror genre that you can't help but love what he's doing (even if some of the post-collegiate male banter referencing homosexuals [insert offensive slang term here] and "railing" ladies should have been cut from the script). It was truly the most original horror film I've seen in years--terrific character development and a great story. And Lisa sat through the whole thing like a trooper! Only jumping into Josh's lap a couple of times, and watching the bloodiest scenes through her fingers (probably thanking god all the while that she still had fingers to look through, unlike some of the poor saps in the film...).

We're going to have dinner tonight with our friends, the Sturdy Voogds (John Sturdy, Jessica Voogd) before heading up to Rogers Park to watch some stand-up comedy--their friend has a show and apparently the Onion and the Reader are reviewing, so we'll want to laugh a lot, and avoiding booing and hissing at all costs (remember that awful red-haired woman on Seinfeld who booed Jerry on stage, then, after Jerry returned the favor at her workplace, got upset, ran into the street, and a taxi [or was it a city bus?] drove over and severed her pinkie toe? Talk about horror!) So we'll be sure to stick to laughing, as long as they're funny.

Until next time, True Believers! I'll try to explain thermodynamics based on my physics book. Yeah, right. Wish me luck with that. HA!

Monday, February 6, 2006

They’re Engaged! They’re Engaged!

The Borkster popped the question, and he and Paula are getting MARRIED! It’s such great news, and Trevor and I are actually a part of the story!

It happened after they left us on Friday night: we went home to sleep while they went out to—honestly—play Connect Four (!) have another drink, then eat pizza and get engaged back at Greg’s house! They woke up all of the parents that night to tell them, and apparently Mr. Nichols had spent two sleepless nights wondering when it would happen! (Greg had asked for his blessing on Wednesday night, but waited 48 hours to actually ask…) So, the wedding’s on, and I couldn’t be happier to have Paula as my sister-in-law! I’ve never had a sister, and it will be very exciting to make it official (since Paula’s already been like a sister for the past three years.) But guys, is too soon to ask you to have some kids so I can guy baby toys? Yes, it probably is. I’ll wait until next year to start asking…But the wedding has been tentatively set for September 30th of this year, so we've all got to get into super wedding mode!

Other than this EXITING news, the weekend was pretty low key. Trevor and I spent our Saturday morning at Chicago Shakespeare Theater watching Macbeth, which was a bloody fun-fest. Roger Ebert was in the audience, and during the Q&A with the cast after the show, he eked in the last question about the curse of Macbeth. Pretty dull question, really, especially since the legend is explained in the program. But he got his question in, and Trevor (with a MUCH better question about the fate/free will aspect of Macbeth’s encounters with the Weird Sisters, didn’t get to ask his. Ebert, you stink!)

Well, that's all of the news on the Bork Power front! Until next time...

Sunday, February 5, 2006


THE PARTY'S OFF!
Last night Trevor and I had quite a pleasantly surprising night. We took a journey to my cousin Michael's birthday party in Lincoln Park. But we got there and noticed a suspicious lack of young Italian American guys hanging around; actually, there was a lack of everyone. Except Borks. There was me, obviously, and there was the Borkster, sitting at the end of the bar, as if he was waiting for us. The three of us ordered a round of drinks while trying to figure out where the party was hiding. Eventually (it didn't take us long) we called my Aunt Carol (Michael's mom) to figure out what the heck was going on. The party was cancelled. Apparently, Michael and his girlfriend Karen broke up, and since she was the one planning the party, they'd cancelled it. Well, we didn't quite know what to do except wait for Greg's girlfriend Paula to meet us there, order another round of drinks, and get the hell out of there!
Next stop, the BIG ROCK SHOW. The four of us got to Davenport's, the site of my friends Tim and Scotty's mock-rock concert. We had to walk through a karoke piano bar to get to the back room, where the show had already started. But we caught up quickly. Because it ROCKED. CLTV was filming it for a piece on Tim and Scotty, which was pretty exciting, so the four of us made lots of noise, clapped really loud, and laughed and Tim and Scotty's bizarre shenanigans. By the end of the show, Scotty was in red leather pants, proudly sporting a lightening bolt painted across his sad little sunken chest, and I was laughing so hard, tears were forming in the corners of my eyes. Greg and Paula had a good time, too,
So, the four of us finished our drinks at the bar before Trevor and I left. Greg and Paula were off to the Beechwood Tap, a good choice to grab a low-key drink and play a game of Connect Four, and we went home to fall asleep. It was great to hang out with the two of them, and even though the night wasn't quite according to plans, it exceeded our expectations.
Until next time!

Friday, February 3, 2006


Hello, all! We've had a whirlwind of activity the past week, and we're not about to stop. It's been mostly work-related: the theater started student shows yesterday (of Macbeth), which means 1,000 kids come in and out over a five hour period, and I'm trying to smile and say hi to all of them. No wonder my cheeks hurt. It's a little crazy and I have another 3 months of it to look forward to! Trevor is getting ready to head back down to Atlanta after the weekend to show the Home Depot folks what a REAL photography studio can do. And tonight we're going to my cousin Michael's birthday party, then on to my friend Tim's rock show. A BIG rock show.
Then, the show has its public opening tomorrow, so Trevor and I are going to that. I have to greet some students before the show, so he can see me in action before we hunker down for some serious blood and guts in the Scottish Play.
And Henry is still Henry-ing it up! I'm telling him all about the science I'm learning in my new book, The Physics of Superheroes. It's a pretty awesome book, although when I excitedly told Trevor that the speed of light is 186,000 miles per second, he already knew it. So, I didn't WOW him as much as I would have liked. Also, he already knows cool information about superheroes, so the stuff I'm trying to tell him about The Flash, he's not impressed by, either. I'm going to have to find something he doesn't know about to wow him with. I wonder if he knows anything about underwater basket weaving...more on that later.
Well, folks, that's all for now. We'll be back with some new news soon!

Monday, January 30, 2006


Well, it's been about a week since our last post (I'm not counting the one that Trevor so rudely stole from Sara and Michael...) and a few things have happened.

We DID, indeed, go to the theater with the Hunters, which was a lot of fun, and I got to see a theatrical adaptation of stories by one of my favorite authors, Haruki Murakami. It was quite a fantastic experience, though one that's not for everyone (Trevor wasn't as thrilled about it as I was). Holding true to Murakami's style of magical realism, the adaptation included a giant frog (aptly named "Frog") who has to do battle with an earthquake-causing worm that lives under the surface of Tokyo. Hmmmmm. Interesting, right? Riiiighhht. But, if you're into that sort of thing, it's terrific and you'll have a great time.

We're also thinking about planning a trip to visit some friends in Portland this summer, which would be great for us, especially since Trevor keeps throwing out the idea of moving to the Northwest. So we'll see how he likes it, and we'll get to see Brenda and Derek at the same time!

I OFFICIALLY finished Anna Karenina last week, and, man, what a draining book. Not just the length, because it's a really fast-moving story, but the "railroad scene" as my mom so delicately put it, was a bit hard to handle. The fun thing was that "Frog" in the Murakami play referenced it, causing me to laugh out loud quite inappropriately during the show. Such is life. At least I wasn't a theater candy crinkler (ahem, mrs. bork...). I haven't written my thank-yous for all of my literacy supporters, but they're on the way, except to Linda, who's leaving TODAY for Equador. We'll miss her for the next couple of months, and when she gets back, she'll get a big hug and a really belated card. Again, such is life (as a procrastinator).

Henry got a bath this weekend, too, which is nice for everyone. Well, the product is nice for everyone; the doing is a bit slippery for Trevor, who had the honor of giving this particular bath while I was at work on Saturday. But now we've got a squeaky clean pup, which is great. And he looks even more handsome, if that's possible. It's not. We'd be blind if he was more handsome than he is. (I'm a ridiculously braggarting dog-mom, I know, and I don't care. you all know he's one handsome fella.)

Trevor and I shopped for tile this weekend, too, but found that the tiles we really like are a WHOLE lotta dough. So we're going to shop around a bit more, pushing the project further and further still into the new year. But if we can make the shower lovely without breaking the bank, it would be nice. We'll see, and we'll keep you all posted with further, truly exciting developments. We DID get a drill, though, which is so exciting in it's own right, so we got to hang my knives (Christmas gift from Trevor) and our cute little Mac airport (we FINALLY hooked up the DSL, so we're online at home, too!), and we'll have it on hand for other hanging projects. Quite fun.

Well, that's all the news that's fit to print about the Bork-Powers now. Until further installments....

Wednesday, January 25, 2006


For the past few weeks Laura and I have been talking about going to see some theater in the city. And for about three months we've been talking about seeing "After the Quake" (a play based on 2 short stories by Hakuri Murakami) at the Steppenwolf Theater. Well, we sucked it up, made a plan and did it last night and as a bonus our friends Sara and Michael were able to come along! This was our third time at the Steppenwolf and we've yet to be disappointed. We had a great time, the play was amazing and well adapted from his books (or so I was told by Laura and Sara).
Afterwards we all went out to Danny's...Michael has been hearing about Danny's since they moved into the neighborhood but have had the hardest time finding it for some reason. They had been looking for a good neighborhood bar that's close by...I think it's their favorite from what they've seen. Anyhow, after some good conversation about fishing boats, literature and dog modeling we were ready to call it a great night...thanks guys see ya soon!