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Thursday, November 08, 2001

My apologies--it's been days sinced I blogged, primarily because every ounce of energy was poured into the dreaded (but incredibly fun) Harry Potter party I put on November 3rd. I'm just now beginning to recuperate. I especially want to thank Zabet and her hubby for helping me with the remaining backdrops for the houses. They both did a great job, especially by incorporating previous artwork into their scenes--creating starry windows for Ravenclaw and googly-eyed snakes for Slytherin. The kids had a blast, the parents were very happy, and those of us who made it happen crashed afterwards flushed with success.


Anyway, over the next few days I'll try to get back on track. One good thing is that I've now gone to my DBT class several times and after an intitial emotional response, I'm discovering that it's rather soothing. I was still on a major adrenaline rush all Monday and didn't relax until some point during the therapy session. It is almost like a life skills class. We've been practicing mindfulness (finding inner peace, trying to balance between the emotional and reasonable sides of the mind, and doing things one at a time with our whole attention--which is really hard for me. I have trouble eating without reading, listening without drawing, etc. But it seems to be working to a point. My memory of the last couple of weeks seems stronger than it has been recently, for example. The whole point, really, is to live your life rather than coast through it reacting to things that may or may not be real. So often I think I know what someone is thinking, feeling, etc., and my fear of abandonment/rejection/criticism means I take things way too personally, which only makes a situation worse. So, for now, it seems to be making sense.


Favourite thing that I've seen all week: Buffy, the Musical. Yes, our intrepid vampire slayer and her friends have shown that they call also burst randomly into song and spill their deepest emotional angst. (Hmmm....maybe I should try that?) I particularly like Anja's theory that it must be bunnies, and the animated effects reminiscent of Disney as a lesbian couple are skipping through the park. Even if you aren't a fan of the show, you should try to catch the repeat of this one. :)


Well, that's all for now. I'd better run....

Monday, October 22, 2001

Is there anyone out there!

I visited my friend Zabet's blog and she suggested trying out the Brunching Shuttlecocks. I put in my name, Eilir, which according to them means "E.I.L.I.R.: Electronic Intelligent Lifeform Intended for Repair". Ah, that's certainly the truth!

Oh, and here's my original description of this blog:
What's a rabid librarian? Well, it can mean a lot of things. It could be someone who's fanatically addicted to books and other sources of trivial yet bizarre information. It could be someone who's been bitten by a cute but understandably upset squirrel. Or it could be someone who happens to be a librarian and who is, to put it mildly, 'loopy as a bowl of fruit'. Or, in my case, it could be all three. Well, at least the squirrel didn't wind up being rabid. Enjoy!!!

That should just about cover the sorts of things you'll see here.

Okay, I haven't posted for a few days. I've been busy trying to recreate the wizard school of Hogwarts for a Harry Potter party coming up in a couple of weeks. Today I've been painting the Gryffindor common room. It's been fun but exhausting at the same time.


So, let me give you a quick update. First of all, there's The Dream--probably the weirdest nightmare I've ever had. No gore, no spooks, no torture (in the traditional sense), but I felt tormented the whole time. This happened on Friday morning. I dreamt that I had a new job. It was one of those anxiety-ridden days taken to the nth degree. I wasn't sure which floor I needed to go to. In fact, I couldn't even remember the name of the business I worked for. Or even what it was, for that matter. I thought it was a publishing house. I kept riding up and down the elevator, hitting random floors. One had a restaurant. One a deli. Up and down. The building was square (much like the World Trade Centre, no doubt where that aspect came from)--although in Lexington, Kentucky, which doesn't actually have anything over 30 stories, and about five "skyscrapers" total--but when you looked out onto the floors they were circular. The business was actually on the 48th floor--which for some reason was actually rectangular and went on and on and on, a sea of cubicles and small offices. I finally found it. Heather Locklear was my supervisor. I shared an office with a blonde woman I'd never met before. Later, the officemate turned into a friend, A, who has longish blonde hair, but is a guy. At one point we went down the elevators together, and I showed him the candy mall on floor 11. He loved it. It was like a giant collection of gumball machines, but with every conceivable type of candy. On the way out of the office, I had seen a jumpsuit hanging by the elevator, with punch keys to a calculator in its stomach about where a Teletubby would have its TV. I shouted that they need to turn the keys over so you could see them better when you were actually wearing the suit. They said they would change it. So apparently the business was also into strange techno-designs. I had been invited to go to lunch by some friends from my last job, but I didn't know how long my lunch was supposed to be. I asked the owner, Herbert Hoover "call me Hoove" Something-or-other (who looked like Ross Perot), but he said whenever. But he'd also told me when he hired me that we'd be docked if we didn't take timely breaks. So I didn't go. But as I headed back to my office, I discovered Captain Janeway (Kate Mulgrew) and Captain Archer (Scott Bakula) of Star Trek having a tryst on my desk. So, I decided to go ride the elevator some more. I went down to the 4th floor parking garage and the attendant, who was Roz from Night Court, told me that they were towing cars and that people were going to be pissed because they'd been told that they could park there. I went to check on my car. When I came back in, they were frisking people who came through the main entrance but never even looked at those of us who came into the side door. Then I went up and down the elevator some more, then headed back to the office to see if it were safe yet.


At this point I woke up. Later, when I told D about it, he said, "you know, it's still going on, you're still riding that elevator." I asked him what he meant, at which point he explained that when we dream we peek into our unconscious. Just because I woke up, that didn't mean anything had changed in my unconscious, I just didn't have access to it anymore. I'd never really thought about it that way. (Thanks, D). So, in the end, that was more unsettling than the dream itself. It had just about everything neurotic person might fear except maybe going to work naked or something like that. But it was so vivid--I recall all these details three days later, and it's just as fresh in my mind. The odd thing is that I hadn't watched TV or anything before that. I don't know why all those people wound up in my dream. I was really glad to realise that I still worked at the job I'm in now, with lots of control of my environment and surrounded by much less scary people. (You may not find Ross Perot frightening--I do, apparently). So anyway, that was Friday.


Nothing much else has happened over the weekend. I saw Riding in Cars with Boys, which was good; I suspect the book is better. I cried, I understood my mom and dad for the first time (they got married because I was on the way, which was a bigger deal in the sixties), and I wanted to slap Drew Barrymore's character for being so self-centred, too, but only because I recognised myself, and I know that at least right now, I'd probably make the same sort of mom myself. Of course, I'm working on that. :) I'm getting ready to start a year-long therapy programme on Monday nights that incorporates something called Dialectical Behaviour Therapy. I'll let you know how it goes. I've signed a confidentiality clause, so I won't be writing about my colleagues etc., just my feelings, reactions to the exercises, etc. I hoping maybe other people who have similar problems might be helped by my keeping a log. Well, that's all for now. Blog. :)

Thursday, October 18, 2001

AAAAAARRRRRRGGGGGGHHHHHH!

Grrrrr....Ah, technology! I just spent the last 20 minutes composing my first entry and it went [poof] somewhere into the aether. I'm too frustrated to try again just yet. I'll try again later. But all in all, it's pretty typical of how my days go, so maybe it's not such a bad introduction after all.