I am on vacation. Get OUT.
June 24th, 2007

I made it to Stray Dime Island. How pretty is it?!
No, I’m at the Barrett Family Compound (BFC, which also stands for big fucking cabin) in New Buffalo, MI, hard at work in the fields of eating, drinking, and developing skin cancer. This is my first official “vacation” all year! I plan on using it to avoid any houeshold duty whatsoever. My dad’ll be like, “Yo, A, how ’bout a refill on ice water?” and I’ll wince and shake my head, “Sorry,” even though I’ll be standing at the sink, spitting cherry pits that don’t belong in the sink into the sink. Or Dee will cry out, “Annie! Cut yourself a phat slice of raspberry-almond danish!” and I’ll glare at her from my perch on the couch, then point to myself with both index fingers with a powerful smirk that clearly conveys: “ON VACATION.” She will then serve it to me with a fork, and I will laugh and laugh, but not hard enough to make my stomach muscles exert themselves, because that’d be like… working.
Apple: The way to really fly
July 7th, 2006
I made friends with a fellow Apple user in LaGuardia airport last week. Our flight was delayed a total of four and a half hours, but instead of telling us that (which I’m certain they could have) right off the bat, the United Airlines representatives strung us along at half-hour increments, changing the estimated departure time ever so slightly just to keep us on our toes and waste our daytime minutes. Seriously, I think that’s what they were after. They probably derived sick pleasure from watching everyone at the gate lunge for their cell phones to update their friends and family with “the latest.”
Even I found it amusing, since I wasn’t using my phone at all, knowing that my dad would be obsessively checking my flight’s status himself. Ha! I calmly oversaw everything from my perch on the floor near an electrical outlet. Check out the plebes, I thought to myself. See them run. Watch them snack. Feel the desperation!
I seem to be one of the few people in the world who doesn’t particularly mind a delayed flight. As long as I have something to read or a gadget to play with, what do I care? If I arrived at my destination city on time, I certainly wouldn’t spend the next four hours reading a book. What am I, crazy? So the delay is almost a bonus for me. A much-needed shot of literacy, like something from the ‘’boosters'’ menu at Jamba Juice.
Not to mention, I love watching people, especially New Yorkers, freak the hell out. Their lives are so important. They can’t just be put on hold for four hours. And yet they must! Airline delays are so democratic. The gates turn into mini Communist blocs. Everyone gets inconvenienced, even though some fliers’ inconveniences affect a lot more people and/or cost a lot more money. As soon as a delay is announced, we are all the same. It’s absolutely delicious to watch some people try to deal with that.
I’m convinced that part of the reason I enjoy delays is because I always manage to feel superior with my calm, resigned, shrug-it-off behavior just after the announcement. I try extra hard to look perfectly composed in the midst of everyone else’s angst. It helps that I usually haven’t slept the night before — it adds a super-special sedated glaze you just can’t duplicate with makeup. My fellow fliers probably notice me in envy. What’s her secret? They want to be me. They want what I have.

What I have is a Pretzel Dog.
When I first walked by the Pretzel Time stand on my way to D10, I played it cool. I knew my flight was delayed, and that in a mere matter of moments, I’d be back. I gave a quick glance over the merch and suddenly the clearest thought of my morning popped into my head. I’m going to get one of those pretzel hot dogs, and it’s going to be the best thing I’ve eaten in a week. I was absolutely correct. As usual, at least in terms of things I tell myself about food.
Anyway, back to the Apple user. This really cute red-headed woman sat down next to me against the wall, all excited that she’d found an outlet to plug her Mac into. “I know!” I gushed. “It’s such a privilege, seriously.” I was serious. Of course I was.
Problem: her fidgety power adapter wouldn’t remain plugged in at that certain angle. I hate that, I told her. That’s why I got this new adapter with a three-pronged plug! Blah blah blah. She walked away, dejected, stood in line for awhile. I assumed it was the last I’d see of her.
But no. This incredible genius concocted a solution. “I came up with a plan,” she informed me as she plopped back down. “Watch this.”
I watched, as she proceeded to situate the fabulous display to your right. Then I gaped at her for at least 30 seconds. This girl was my all-time hero.
“I’m so amazed that you just did that. You’re like, my favorite person here.”
Awkward pause, which obviously meant I had to keep speaking.
“Which isn’t really a title of distinction, if you look around. But you know what I mean.”
She did. She gave me one of those wise little smirks that let me know this wasn’t the first time she’d pulled off something this wily.
I asked if she minded if I took a picture of the adapter on the water bottle. “Maybe I’ll put it on my BLOG,” I said, in a really sarcastic tone. I’m not sure why, because I had every intention of putting this picture on my blog, and if a day pass to the LGA wifi network wasn’t so inappropriately expensive, I’d have done it right that second. I guess it was a self-conscious thing. Like if I scoffed at the idea of having a blog, it might mean I didn’t really care about mine. That I wasn’t that obnoxious… yet. She could see right through it.
For the rest of the delay, we happily lorded our iSnobbery over the other passengers, who were all totally jealous that we had outlets and they didn’t. At one point, I saw another guy daintily typing on his Powerbook across the concourse and realized that I thought this person, who looked exactly like myself at that moment, seemed like a huge tool. I was okay with that.
This is how much I love my computer.
Love that dirty fro-yo
April 24th, 2006
I went to Boston this weekend and apparently forgot I owned a camera about an hour in. Our takeout food must have arrived and completely clouded my brain with its deliciousness and low cost. My friends also had an on-demand karaoke channel. That threw me a little off.
I was most excited to be able to order frozen yogurt with “mix-ins” again. This trend seems to be everywhere in the city, not just the neighborhood I went to school in. I’m not talking about that shit you can find at Coldstone Creamery, an establishment which is steadily winning the war it recently waged against all the cool neighborhoods in Manhattan. No, in Boston, certain delis and pizzerias offer about a pint of frozen yogurt or ice cream infiltrated with slivers of your snacks of choice (my favorite combo as an undergrad was York peppermint patty + Oreo) for $3.50… for no specific reason.
The yogurt and mix-ins list, usually on the back page of a fold-out menu, makes me so happy. It’s something so random and unnecessarily gratuitous, but whose existence I appreciate so much. Like olive oil on the table right when you sit down, or the movie Don’t Tell Mom the Babysitter’s Dead. This yogurt/mix-in phenomenon comprises a significant portion of my affection for Boston. I love Boston! So I must like the yogurt a whole lot.
Anyway, I did take two photos and found them both worth sharing.
My friend E. Barrett (no relation) and I hit yet another notch in the “we have to be related” game. It turns out we both keep our digital cameras not in practical, reasonably priced camera cases, but in single pieces of winter handwear. Hers is a colorful mitten that would be well-suited for a giant. Mine is a stretchy purple glove that, as I’m demonstrating in the photo, “expands and contracts with the gadget.” That sounds gross.
Because I’ve received countless taunts from various “friends” about my gloved camera, I had previously assumed that the stashing of expensive electronics in handwear was so delightfully nuts that only I could think of it. I was incredibly psyched to be wrong. Look at us. We’re so proud. We actually look like we’re imploring you to find us quirky and cute. “Hey, guys, check us out! You can’t make shit like this up!”
Another reason we might be related: E.’s mom sends her a lot of ridiculous stuff in the mail. E. and M. were kind enough to pose with two such items: a gigantic calendar and a tiny red computer button that says “PANIC.” These roommates have actually had discussions about how the other Mrs. Barrett only sends her daughter objects that fall into the categories of “oversized” or “miniature.” I find this amazing.
Something else is amazing. Look at the three letters in between my two friends. Indeed.
Baggage claim? Don’t even get me started!
January 16th, 2006
Thought it was high time I posted the first Web-ready pic from my new(fangled) cell phone:

No, but I wish you were! You’re totally cute.
Sorry. I’m not one of those people who goes around bragging about her awesome new phone, if that’s what you think. I hate cell phones. I hate the idea of them. Who needs to be in touch that much? I just can’t get into them; something about my wiring. I like COMPUTERS. Namely this one. Which is what some people blurted out to me in earnest after I told them, years ago when cell phones were getting “really big,” (this happened, right?) that I hated cell phones. It was like this:
Annie: I hate cell phones!
Person: But Annie, you’re like… in love with your computer.
Okay. I don’t really get this. Who makes the connection between normal people’s affection for cell phones and applies them to Annie’s nerdy obsession with her computer (which, by the way, was at that point a grainy Dell laptop that buzzed 23 hours out of the day, the one buzz-free hour being the hour during which I finally shut down the comp and got some shut-eye). And also, in what world does someone else think that I’ll even respond to the ridiculous comparison that she just suggested? Who would hear that and be like “Yeah, you’re right, I forgot I was really into technology. I’m obsessed with my phone now”?
Not this girl!
My new phone is rad, though, and if I was that type of person, I would have bragged about it by saying “my new phone is rad” on my blog. But I’m so above that, so I didn’t. Because:

What? We are.
You could also put a scented candle in there
November 2nd, 2005
I went to Italy. I just reviewed my photos and they’re all of food. If they’re not entirely of food (as in a giant bowl of pesto and that’s it) they’re of my annoying hand holding food directly in front of an otherwise beautiful landscape. I’ll probably insert them on this site at random times, so just keep an eye out and prepare to not get why I would take the photo. Half the time, even I don’t understand my own genius.
I find this genius:
Brussels Airlines. I love it. You get the important part of the tray without having to use the tray at all. The tray always bumps against my thighs and makes me feel large. This way is much better.
Prego!
March 3rd, 2005
I’m off to Italy tomorrow for a week because my family - despite having no Italian blood or really any connection to the country - is completely obsessed with it. I am completely obsessed with the food there, so it totally works out.
Dee says I always pick the best thing on the menu, and she’s right. I do that all the time here in America. It’s very important to me and the character trait in which I take the most pride. But I get nervous about doing it in Italy because I have no idea what anything says. Except I do know the word for “eggplant.”
I could be like my father and revel in my cluelessness by asking the waiter if we could have “zucchini alfredo” as an appetizer. He meant eggplant parmesan. Somehow. The best part about this is that the waiter actually picked up on his twice-removed translation (Italian to English, English to Bill Barrett) and said “Ah! Melanzane! Si, si!” (See? I know it.) Bill’s method might get me some laughs, but I prefer to have at least some idea of what’s going on during those crucial pre-vino moments, because we all know it’s downhill from there.
Meghan’s spotty understanding of the language helps, but we only have time to go through half the menu items at most before order time. When the moment of truth comes, I choose something random, then have these mini anxiety attacks as we pass the menus back to the server because I have no idea if I ordered the best thing. I know. Life sucks. It’s not easy being me.
Hmm. The laundromat downstairs says “7AM - 9PM” on the door. It’s 8:40, and the place is all boarded up. With all the clothes I need to pack (presumably) inside. Maybe life does suck. Shit.
Stealing Happy Hours
December 28th, 2004
A few updates:
–I am now tan, even though it’s still cloudy.
–Despite being sick, I am eating like a fiend.
–Up to 50,000 people may have died in that tsunami, and here I am complaining about phlegm.
–A few days ago, Dee saw a green flash of light when the sun was setting. Apparently it’s really rare and most people think it’s a myth, but if you look directly at the horizon as the sun is setting, you can see it, and she claims she did. So she’s been trying to get us to see it ever since, but we can’t, so now we make fun of her as if she’s into aliens and UFOs. Well, Bill and I do. By that time, Meghan’s about two hours deep into her gym time.
–Somehow, amazingly, we have constant Internet connection in The Unit. This makes for some excellently creepy stalk sessions, during which I sit on our grond-level screened porch and peer out from above the giant Mactop and spy on everyone who walks by. They are jealous of my machine and of my ability to accurately judge people within three seconds. They would love to know what I think. But they won’t.
–Haha - Dee just walked by, waving. She’s excluded from the judging.
–My sister gave me a black sweatshirt with “Villanova” written in pink letters across the chest for Christmas. I never take it off. That must mean I like it. But ew…. pink letters.
–I’ve just decided that 3:15 p.m. is late enough to be considered Happy Hour.
Snob alert!
December 21st, 2004
No! I’m not a slacker! I’m on a family vacation.
Hmm. That’s actually the definition of a slacker. Good sun, strong drinks, free food, pleasure reading (sorry Hal - I’ll write that paper when I get back).

Here I am.
I totally lied. That’s from last year, when I was tan. This year, I forgot my digital camera and I am not tan due to clouds. I’m pissed about the camera. I don’t really care about the clouds as long as I don’t run out of reading material and have to resort to writing the paper that was due Dec. 6. It took me forever to find this photo, probably because it was labeled “annie_vegetation.” What goes through my head when I name my files?
It’s okay though. I have a few funny images from last year that I’ll post sporadically (you know, the vocab word from Clueless) during my stay here.
Wipeout, pre-flight
August 3rd, 2004
Last Thursday on my way to class, I encountered my grad school friends Matt, Maggie, and Zach:
I had a rolling suitcase and a few minutes to spare, so I casually propped it against a scaffolding pole and leaned against (sat on) it to chat with them. But within five minutes, the luggage barreled out from under me and I completely wiped out onto the ground.

Zach managed to capture a blurry “after” shot of me laughing hysterically. I think the people walking by for freshman orientation were really impressed! If anything, I calmed their fears about having to be suave and savvy in New York City. Now they know that there’s at least one person nerdier than them.
Prego!
May 26th, 2004
Ciao once again. After 8 days in Italy, The Deedles and I are thinking fondly of the Amalfi coast with warm memories, expanded stomachs, and fucking huge bottles of souvenir limoncello.
The highlight of the trip, and something I’m considering continuing in America, was my saying “Prego!” to any/every comment made by someone else. I also used it as a catch-all response to questions I didn’t really wish to answer, such as “Isn’t this gorgeous?” or “Did you just fart?” or “Have you seen my sweatshirt?” I think “prego” techincally means something unable to be translated, like “you’re welcome,” or “no problem,” or “spaghetti sauce.”
Here are some digipics from the trip. Hi Dee! It’s your worst nightmare! More embarrassing photos of you on my blog!
My apologies for the lack of gratuitous Annie-eating-eggplant shots this time. There aren’t even any shots of food, period. We must have eaten it too fast. It was fucking amazing.
Oh wow. I actually went into some sort of trance for like three whole minutes just thinking about the food.

