Seven Things…
One of the people who amuses me the most on twitter, @TBMimsTheThird, tagged me to do the “Seven Things No One Knows About You” meme. Now, there will be some people who know me in real life, not just via twitter or the interweb, who will most likely know some of these things, but I’m trying my best. It’s hard enough to filter through a lot of weird and quirky habits that seem second nature to me now, let alone figure out what is obvious and what isn’t. Also, most twitter folks know few things about me other than my profession, woes involving my diabetic cat, and the fact that I know more than the average person about window glass.
Without further ado, here is my list of seven things.
1. I’m easily embarrassed.
Okay, so the people that know me in real life most likely realize this. It makes me an easy target for teasing, which I generally hate. It all stems from being the youngest of four sisters, the closest in age to me being seven years older. I was picked on a lot, and as a result tend to be very proud of or embarrassed by my highly varied and strange range of interests. I’m terrified to let others know what music I’m listening to (last.fm is quite the exercise for me—I often listen to things in other media players so they don’t show up on the web page). I get all upset when people tell me I’m crazy for liking BSG, or that Gambit is the worst X-Man. It’s always stupid things that concern me the most.
2. I chose my career at age 4.
After long and grueling half-days of preschool I would return home and, on warm days, sit on the enclosed back porch where my mom had set up a high yellow table with a high yellow chair (the type with the fold-down stairs). On this table sat a small black and white tv, the type with dials and rabbit ears. I would sit here and draw or practice my letters and numbers while watching PBS.
On one fateful afternoon PBS featured a program about Grecian archaeology, during which a team was excavating a large stockpile of olive oil storage jars. For some reason these jars excited my imagination, and from that time on I proudly told my teachers that I planned on becoming an archaeologist. By the time I reached college, my family barely made a fuss about the fact that I’d never make any money doing it.
One of the most frequent lines I hear from people upon learning my profession (along with “oh, you dig up dinosaurs?” and “there are things to dig up HERE??”) is “I wanted to do that when I was little.” Well, I did.
3. I used to pray to George Washington rather than God.
Granted, I’m not religious and never have been, despite having been scuttled through the Catholic Church very quickly to confirmation (nuns overlooked my lies for many years; clearly I did not have a Catholic aunt in Scotland named Leia to take my confirmation name from…that’s another story altogether). At any rate, I was born on February 22nd, George Washington’s birthday, and lived next to Valley Forge National Park. American history was always a creepily important part of my life, and I idolized the first president to such an extent that I taped a dollar bill to my wall and talked to it.
My prayers to the first president were mostly conversational and non-political. It is exactly the sort of thing that the real George Washington adamantly opposed, although I wasn’t that much of a scholar to realize that as a young child.
4. I didn’t realize that I was an anxious, OCD-stricken, anally retentive person until I went to archaeological field school at the age of 19.
These were not traits I developed while at college, but problems I have had since I was a small, “pensive” child. I seriously never realized how tightly wound I was until I started doing lab work. I was frighteningly good I was at it, and it served to highlight my compulsive tendencies (I had my first physically debilitating panic attack while in the lab—the reason for me first seeing a therapist).
Despite this realization, it took me a long-ass time to realize that I’m not the easy-going person I always thought I was. I had never interpreted my inability to complete high school assignments on time as the result of crippling anxiety (which it was) rather than cool indifference (which it wasn’t). I also realized that I was a compulsive hand-washer—a habit hindered greatly by the fact that your nails get very grimy when sifting through dirt all day. I had to acknowledge this problem in order to create new coping mechanisms.
5. I have many files of half-written Persuasion fan fiction on my computer.
I have never posted any of it.
6. As a child I had complex food-chewing rituals.
I had to chew particular types of food on certain sides of my mouth. Sweets and things I particularly liked were saved for chewing on the right side of my mouth. I ended up with more cavities on that side as a result. I occasionally notice myself reverting to these tendencies.
7. I generally fall behind reading books and comic books because I’m too engrossed in the plot lines I make up in my head.
I’m no writer, but I do live in a dream world that I don’t like to talk about with anyone. Generally the stories I make up are related to the things I obsess over, whether they are from movies, music, novels, or comic books. My father still calls me Dorothy because I was so obsessed with The Wizard of Oz as a small child that I made my entire family call me Dorothy, carried around a stuffed terrier, and wore out three VHS tapes of the movie itself. I’m much more private about those inclinations now.
The End.
January 13, 2009 at 3:28 am
Move over. Your dream world is hogging up my dream world’s space.
January 13, 2009 at 3:29 am
Love #7. I struggle every day to live more in the real world than in my head.
January 13, 2009 at 4:50 am
#7 is indeed the clincher.
Tightly wound & living in a world that you’re constantly spinning, expanding, re-imagining, and remixing? That’s wonderful! I expect great things from you.
January 13, 2009 at 6:05 pm
Washington will not save the British children. No matter how hard you pray.
Gambit…
Well. You do stand by your man. That takes courage. Oui?
January 14, 2009 at 9:22 pm
I love that you are doing what you said you would do as a kid. So few people ever do that and more should.
January 22, 2009 at 9:54 pm
Murphy likes Gambit too!
February 7, 2009 at 3:29 am
OK, OK, I’ll lay off the BSG and Gambit jokes (for real). I was just thinking before I read this about how much that bothers you. For the record I don’t think you’re crazy for liking those things; I know there’s no accounting for taste, and Washington knows I wouldn’t want someone seriously judging some of the stuff I like.
I think you overstate your tightly-wound-ness. It’s certainly there, but it’s sorta selective. This is my nice way of saying that if you were really OCD (or borderline), your room wouldn’t look like it does