Thursday, May 6, 2021

Degrees of separation

I know someone.

That is to say, I did know someone. Once upon a time. For a year, we shared quite a lot of the same space. I counted him as a friend. I like to think he felt the same at the time.
 
(This is going to be one of those 'when I lived in England' stories, so if you've had enough of those, feel free to check out now, and I'll see you next week.) 

Yes, when I lived in England the first time--2006-2007--I traveled in the same academic and social circles as a fellow called Tom Weston Jones. I won't be surprised if you don't recognize his name, but if you've been watching Shadow and Bone on Netflix, you'll have seen him. I haven't. I got rid of Netflix last year in a fit of economy, and I learned this tidbit secondhand from a mutual friend from our Royal Holloway drama department days. He seems to pop up every so often in the oddest of places, but it's always nice to see him. He's doing exactly what he set out to do, what he went to school for. Most of the rest of us drifted into other lines of work, but he stuck it out and made it work for himself, and it's nice to see.

In 2012, he had the leading role in a BBC America program called Copper. I remember at the time seeing the preview commercials and looking at this one bloke and going "I swear to God I know you", but his hair was just different enough and he wasn't wearing his glasses (okay, maybe I should lay off Lois Lane for being so clueless,) that it took a 'behind the scenes' type promo with his name plastered up next to his face for me to figure it out.

(I may have shrieked in a rather undignified manner, possibly followed by a great deal of something that was certainly not gleeful bouncing, thank you very much.)
 
Tom's had a reasonable run of recurring characters on several shows since then--and yes, I did check IMDB. And honestly? That was a giggle. Not the mean, sniggering kind. It was more the disparity between the serious, actorly head shots and production stills and my memory, because I remember a nineteen-year-old boy snuggling under a borrowed pink blanket dying of man-flu. I remember him playing the sadistic dentist in the musical theatre society's production of Little Shop of Horrors, and how I managed to go see his show, but he didn't make it to mine (I was doing Richard III with the drama society and our rehearsals and runs overlapped,) and I remember having a good pout about it. To be fair, he had other friends in RIII with me, so it wasn't just me who was stroppy about it...but I suspect I might have been the slightest bit stroppier than the others. I remember the time we all put into our performance research project and how he was self-conscious about having to perform with his shirt off and how his leading lady constantly made doe-eyes at him--onstage and off. I remember a game of Wizards, Pixies, and Giants played on the lawn outside the Noh Theatre to blow off some steam when we were all at the end of our tethers with that project. I remember a party at our local pub to which he wore a very silly costume indeed. I remember lunches at that same pub with the big group, or in smaller subsets. I remember one of the modules we were in together (there were three) called The Body as a Medium of Expression or something equally vomitrocious where we both opted for a more realistic and less rolling-on-the-floor-moaning-like-a-sheep-having-an-orgasm interpretation of our monologues. He did Benedick, Much Ado About Nothing, Act II, scene i, "O, she misused me past the endurance of a block" etc. I did Miranda, The Tempest, Act I, scene ii, "If by your art, my dearest father, you have put the wild waters in this roar" etc. The tutor absolutely roasted us, but popular opinion was against him, so that at least was a comfort.

I remember his incredible capacity for kindness. I remember his ready laughter and innate playfulness. I remember his enthusiasm when you got him going on a favorite subject.

We lost touch after that year, and I hold no illusions about him remembering me in more than a foggy sort of "Oh, here's a picture from uni, that was the American girl" way. I definitely don't expect him to remember the details of that year like I do--I have a knack for that kind of recall that is usually greeted by cries of "How in the hell do you remember these things?!" It's just nice to be able to say, "Yes, I knew him once. He was a good human then, and it looks like he's kept up that trend." 

It would be nice to have the chance to tell him that I'm proud of what he's accomplished, and I think of him fondly from time to time, and I'm grateful that our paths crossed, however briefly. As it is, this will have to do. I'll offer it up to the ether for what it's worth.

(And you can all say you have one point of separation from him, now, so...you're welcome? 😜)

Thursday, April 29, 2021

It's a step in the right direction

I'm writing this on a Wednesday evening. We had our busiest day at work today since last year. We processed over five hundred payrolls--between what I'll call six of us because there are five on my immediate team, plus half of someone else's time, plus a sweet kiddo who comes in a few days a week and gives us a hand. We moved over $30,000,000 (that's MILLION) in payroll funds around.

That, friends, is a whooole lotta greenbacks.

It is also a vast improvement on the numbers--both in terms of numbers of payrolls and dollar amounts--we've been seeing for the last little stretch (and a half). We're starting to see our restaurant clients come back. It's slow, but it's happening. It's nice to see.

It's also, frankly, kind of terrifying.

I know there are people chomping at the bit to get back out into the world and reclaim their freedom to move about as they please. People who want to be on planes, traveling the globe. People who want to go to baseball games. People who want to resume their fine dining experiences. I am not one of those people. (But you likely already knew that.) I was already a hardcore homebody when all this nonsense kicked off, but now I'm burrowed in like a tick. Remember that bit in the Disney version of Peter Pan where the Lost Boys find Indian tracks and dig themselves a foxhole in 1.6 seconds flat? Yeah, like that.

Yes, I have been out more in recent weeks than I have in the last year plus, but only to my dance classes which take place at vastly reduced capacity in studios that are probably cleaner than my house. And yes, it has been a freeing experience. It has also been a calculated risk with known variables. I trust the people who run the dance studios to adhere to their cleaning and disinfecting requirements. I don't lick the ballet barre. I do, however, eat with things like forks, which may or may not have been properly sanitized between uses, and may have been previously used by someone who couldn't give a toss about all the staying at home the rest of us have been doing.

Am I really that likely to catch something from a fork that got a half-assed bath? Probably not. I'm sure I'm more likely to catch something from Karen at the next table who thinks she's invincible and can't catch anything if she's wearing a tinfoil hat because, I don't know, 5G or something? Still, though. Not in a hurry to be dining in. I'm not thrilled about the prospect of dining outside, either, though "reduced risk" blah blah blah...

Look. The safest place is at home. With the door shut. And locked. While I'm hunkered down under the bed.

That might be a slight exaggeration. Maybe. But only because I need every square inch of storage space I can get, and that means that I have skinny Rubbermaid tubs under the bed holding things like wrapping paper.

I'm just not ready for the world to be open again. I probably won't be ready for a very long time. Are there places I'd like to go? Sure. Would I like to get to create my own frozen yogurt travesty again? You bet.

But maybe not yet, yeah?

Thursday, April 22, 2021

Weeeelllll........

 So I've got a half-baked thought about something insightful to say using the Orpheus and Eurydice myth as a focal point, but it's been a long week and my brain is mush, so you're getting a pile of giggles instead. Sorry, kids. I'm all out of spoons for the moment. 
















 

Thursday, April 15, 2021

And many happy returns of the day

I had a birthday this week, so I'm giving myself the week off. Happy birthday, Me.

For your enjoyment, Yzma being grumpy:

awesome gifs Page 96 | WiffleGif

Thursday, April 8, 2021

::does best ostrich impression::

So, I've been saying how everything is kind of a lot right now, right? I think I need to take a week or two off. I'm not in a good p...