Kate's Point of View

The Product of Creative Frustration

Month: October 2011 Page 3 of 5

Hitting my Threshold

I am no longer a moped owner. I feel like I was only a moped owner for about half a second, but technically it was a year. Three rides and one year. I am a little sad, but it’s more the idea of riding my moped that I miss than the actual bike.

I think imposing limits on yourself can be hard but it’s something I do all the time. Perhaps to my detriment. When I go out gambling, I have a cap on how much I am allowed to spend. (It’s not much.) When I go out shopping, I have a breaking point before I think an item is just too expensive. Wonder Boy and I have an amount that we are not allowed to spend without talking to the other person. Working within these self-imposed restrictions gives me order and a healthy savings account.

Last year when I splurged and bought a moped, I did it know it was a good deal and would be a way for me to bond with Wonder Boy, who rides his Vespa around town. I had visions of us scooting down to restaurants, out shopping and to enjoy the weather. When I got the moped, it wasn’t running because it had sat for about 30 years in a garage. I invested some money into the bike and decided that the repairs put the cost of the bike at my spending limit. In other words, I wasn’t going to spend any more money on the moped unless I got some good riding in first.

Last Fall I went on two solo rides and one with Wonder Boy. The trip with Wonder Boy did not meet my expectations. His scooter is highway legal and can go 70 mph. My bike is sidewalk legal and can go 20 mph. Downhill. Uphill I think I capped out at 5 mph. Do you know how embarrassing it is to ride a motorized vehicle up a hill and to be going the same speed as people walking up that hill? Very.

This Spring I was pumped to get out riding again and master riding the moped to work. I got on it and it wouldn’t start. We dropped it off at a repair shop and while the fix wasn’t huge, it was over my previously set threshold. And so I sold the moped.

I’m sad because I really did want to ride my moped into the parking garage at work. It cheers me up a little to know that Wonder Boy always has room for me to join him on his Vespa.

This post originally appeared on Kate’s Point of View. © Kate. All rights reserved.

Beer Cab

Last night I went to check out Beard’s band play and I got a wonderful bonus for the evening – I got to learn about our local Beer Cab. Are you familiar with the concept? It was new to me.

So the beer cab will pick you up and take you from location A to location B for a fee, much like any other cab. Here’s the twist. While you get driven, you can drink beer in the cab.

Legal? I’m not sure. But I am sure that he’s doing okay for himself. As he cruised the bar last night handing out business cards, he seemed pretty confident in his ability to drum up some business.

Photo taken by my brother.

This post originally appeared on Kate’s Point of View. © Kate. All rights reserved.

Kids Having Fun

When I was younger and working on amusement park rides for my summer job, I used to get asked if it was hard to learn how to operate the different rides. I was just laugh and shake my head. But like a magician, I never revealed the secret. Until now! Are you ready for this? Almost every ride I ever worked on operated this way:

Get people loaded, press the button to start the ride and keep holding in the button until the ride stops. Then let go. If you accidentally let go of the button early but it seems like the ride is long enough, fine. If it was too early into the ride, quickly press the button again and just let people have an extra long ride. How long did it take you to read that? 20 Seconds? Because that’s about how long it take to learn how to operate a ride.

There were nuances to what I did. I knew how to clean up bodily fluids from a ride (little kids poop, pee and puke a lot), handle a lost child and convince a parent that I would indeed save their child’s place in line if they would just puh-lease take them to the restroom rather than telling little Johnny or Suzy to hold it until the ride is over.

I entertained myself by enjoying some awesome people watching (in the mean way) and also seeing kids having fun. There was one day at the park sponsored by AAA that was called (or, at least, we called) Orphan Day. That sounds terrible now so I am sure there was a nicer name. But on that day all of these kids at orphanages and in foster care got to come to the park for free. I promise you, they had a blast. Their chaperones, notsomuch. Watching those kids experience pure pleasure, which was painted so clearly across their faces, was wonderful.

I remember one day seeing a little girl ride a child’s version of The Whip. She was clearly undergoing chemo treatments and what remained of her hair just flew in the breeze created by the ride. But she had this big grin on her face and none of whatever else she was going through mattered.

I try to remind myself of those moments when I’m having days where I feel like a robot just churning through tasks. We all have them. But I used to have a job that could have pretty much been replaced by a robot (I mean, pressing a button?!?) and there was still this small part of it that made it all worth it.

This post originally appeared on Kate’s Point of View. © Kate. All rights reserved.

What I’ve been Checking Out This Week

Here are some of the things I’ve been checking out this week.

  • The Huffington Post featured this collection of old wedding photos and I love the, especially this one.
  • Rachel Devine takes some beautiful photographs of kids. I like this picture in particular because the kids aren’t even in focus and their spirit is captured perfectly.
  • Have you seen ANIMALS TALKING IN ALL CAPS? It’s hysterical.
  • A lot of cake and cookie decorations just look … hard. These brain cupcakes seem totally doable.
  • I know so many nerds. So many. But do I know the King of the Nerds? If only I could be so lucky… 
  • Although I hope I don’t have to redo a kitchen for a long time, I really love this kitchen makeover included a little place for the household dog.
  • Wonder Boy turned by on to Lana Del Rey and … WOW. I definitely recommend checking her out – especially the song Video Games.

  • I think we’ve all seen that crazy cat girl’s eHarmony video. It’s entertaining, but this remixed one is even better!

This post originally appeared on Kate’s Point of View. © Kate. All rights reserved.

Squids, the Number Six and Self Esteem

When I got my first job, it was because my parents made me. I remember being obstinate and emotional about the whole thing, neither of which were unusual for 16-year-old me. My parents drove me to the amusement park for my interview and I remember it being asked semi-serious questions considering the job took no skill. Despite creating drama over the issue at the time, getting that job was one of the greatest things that ever happened to me. (Hear that mom and dad? You were totally right!)

I read a lot about the importance of the jobs people have in high school and the role those jobs play in future career goals. That might be true, but my summer jobs didn’t lead to my current career choices as much as they did to my current social skills. I grew up in a town where you had to drive to go do anything. I went to a small-ish all girls high school. My social circle was small and my social life was pathetisad. When I started working I met boys and people from other schools. My world expanded exponentially. I also worked 60-hour-weeks with a bunch of people my own age. That concentrated grouping of teenagers spending so much time together led to adventures, stories, romances and lots of fun. The job was boring – we had to create our own entertainment.

One of my favorite memories was working at a ride where kids could wheel themselves around a small train track using a handcar. Working the ride pretty much just meant we kept kids in a line and went out to push kids who got stuck along the track. My friend T and I used to use this time to play the game “Rate Yourself” where we would pose challenges such as, “Rate yourself on looks on a scale of one to ten compared to everyone we can see now.” Sometimes we would do comparisons to people on their way to the water park. These were always flattering for us. I remember being asked to rate myself and quickly concluding “I’m a ten.” When else in your life do you get to have such confidence?

Another goofy memory I have is from working a ride featuring Jabber Jaws that we referred to as Squid. No one liked to work this ride except for me so I worked it a lot. It was stupid but kids really got a kick out of it. It was in the middle of the kids area of the park and you were removed from other rides. The only way to get other works’ attention was through hand signals. We’d hold up six fingers when we had to go to the bathroom, or just ask to take a six. (In loud places I sometimes still do this, but no one understands.) Once while working squid I cut up my middle finger on the ride pretty badly. There was quite a bit of blood and I needed to see a first aid station. I tried to get someone’s attention and keep blood off of my beautiful polyester uniform. The end result was me waving my middle finger all over the place. T was my supervisor at that point in time and he walked over with this horrified look on his face. I was completely oblivious to the hand gesture and just trying to keep my cool in front of a bunch of kids while my hand was dripping blood. When I saw the look on his face, I saw my hand and realized what I was doing and pretty much ran from the scene, partially for first aid but also from embarrassment.

Isn’t it funny the memories that stand out from your past? The things that stick with me aren’t huge events, just small details that make me smile.

This post originally appeared on Kate’s Point of View. © Kate. All rights reserved.

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