Tuesday, November 3, 2009
Staying Tuned
Thursday, October 29, 2009
Yawnsville

Laura admires the crazy, confusing wonders of the Opryland Hotel.
Greg and I love faux-dog.Why I'll never need to go to Greece (just kidding . . . I hope).
Friday, October 23, 2009
Silver Pears
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I'm excited about how everything is going, especially when I consider that I haven't officially launched the business yet. So far, I've been getting clients through word-of-mouth or work I've done for other clients. I want to throw a party in the Spring to celebrate and get the word out even more.
Working for myself is challenging because sometimes it's lonely and hard to get motivated, but I love being in charge of my time and projects and being able to experiment without having to deal with the politics of corporate life. My clients are wonderful people and it's such a huge change from the law firm environment (that's not to say that my lawyers themselves weren't wonderful people -- I still love you).
I think my niche in Nashville will become being a consultant to singer/songwriters, which is not at all a direction that I planned to persue, but it works really well. You'll be shocked, but there aren't a lot of luxury products based out of Nashville. I know! When I started to think about it, though, art and entertainment is luxurious. It's a luxury for artists to be able to make money off of their passion, and it's a luxury for people to be able to go see them perform. Not surprisingly, much of what I learned in school applies directly to my clients and their fans.
I'm amazed when I hear my clients perform. I can write, but I certainly can't pull a tune out of thin air and put it to words. I don't know how they do it. So I leave the songwriting, singing and spoken-word art to them and try to spread their work to as much of the world as I can. It's nice to have finally found a way to support myself by doing something I enjoy and feel like I'm "doing good" by promoting art and Nashville culture.
Bit by bit, it's coming together. Last night, my parents and the dogs gave me pear-themed birthday presents to inspire me, and I was excited to put them on my desk to remind me that I really am working for myself. Eek! The cat left me a card, but he's away at the moment on another neighborhood quest, which I hope won't last as long as his last 3-month adventure.
So when you get a minute, check out Silver Pear Tree and let me know what you think.
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
As Promised

Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Fall 2009
Friday, April 24, 2009
Thursday, April 9, 2009
Questions A Girl Doesn't Want To Be Confronted With Upon Arriving Home
Tuesday, April 7, 2009
Would You Eat the Moon?
Tuesday, March 24, 2009
Monday, March 23, 2009
Spring Break 2009
Sunday, March 22, 2009
Tuesday, March 10, 2009
Monday, March 9, 2009
Still Unsolved: The Case of the Early-Riser

Endless Source of Ideas
Hi, I am looking for a fun loving, preferably christian, married, 30+ man with nice size belly to dance to Madagascar 2's- "I like to move it, move it" for my best friends surprise bridal shower next week. We are all married, good christian, sunday school type women so no undressing or anything like that. Just fun-loving. and enough to embarrass her to death! Pay is minimal ($35) but good for fifteen or twenty minutes of dancing. Plus we'll have some really great refreshments!!!
Saturday, March 7, 2009
Let the Job Games Begin!
Person in a Chicken Suit (downtown)
$250 for your help (nashville)
Guy in a Beaver Suit (Downtown, Nashville TN)
. . . looking for an energenic and animated person to walk the streets in a beaver suit with our Beaverettes . . . . must be able to tolerate heat and added weight of the suit itself.
Saturday, February 28, 2009
Unsolved: The Case of the Early-riser
Friday, February 27, 2009
Wherefore Art Thou, Kitty?
Thursday, February 26, 2009
Solved: The Case of the Early-riser
5:59 a.m. at the door

The witness

Now we know *

Mystery of the Early-riser solved by an earlier riser. I still can’t decide which of these scenes is my favorite. Is it the watch documenting the time in the first or is it the poor Harris Teeter employee who arrived at work at 6:00 a.m. only to be sucked into one family’s mission to expose a neighborhood blight?
Although this was supposed to be a family assignment, Mom and I copped out the night before because the thought of waking up at 5:30 in 30-degree weather was really unappealing. Had I known that I’d be getting up at 6:00 anyway, I might have made a bigger effort to go along as the wheelman.

Once in the store, he cornered the WSJ keeper and asked again who took the papers each Saturday morning. Seeing no way out of this interrogation, the keeper answered, “Oh, the lady who owns the restaurant down the street comes in and takes them.” Martha! The whole time the W2 had been right under our noses – on our very street no less!
Martha owns the Belle Meade Mansion restaurant named, well, Martha’s. Technically, it’s called Martha’s at the Plantation, but no one calls it that. According to her web site, Martha believes that cooking is an act of love and she wholeheartedly supports sustainable food systems. Yes, both of these are very nice philosophies. You know what’s also a nice philosophy? Sharing!

Martha also mentions on her web site that she would be happy to talk to you about anything that’s on your mind. I wonder if she’d like to talk about this. Actually, I’m thinking about going down to Martha’s this Saturday and buying every single one of those Wall Street Journals back.
“Good morning. I heard you carry the Wall Street Journal.”
“Why yes, indeed, we do.”
“Oh, super. I’d like to buy all of them.”
“All of them?”
“Yes, I’d like to buy all of them. Is that a problem for you?”
Wednesday, February 25, 2009
Cornify-ment

Tuesday, February 24, 2009
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
The Curious Case of the Cat & the Collar
Whence did this collar come? We may never know.
Tuesday, February 17, 2009
How to Feign an Interest

The first boy walked us through the fraternity recruiting process without mentioning beer once, which was pretty impressive. The second taught us how to make ravioli. The teacher gave us a quick lecture on counting carbs that ended with an anecdote about a grandmother, diabetic candies and diarreah. The last boy presented the riveting piece (I know, I shouldn’t throw stones), “How to Use Chopsticks,” but he never really got to the “how to use” part. Anyway, he gave us a whole run-down on the history of the chopstick. The earliest chopsticks date back to 1200 b.c. Chopsticks then described the different materials from which chopsticks could be made. They can be fashioned out of wood, bamboo, ivory, jade or metal.
When he mentioned the last material, Chopsticks exclaimed, “Although, I don’t know why anyone would want to stick metal in their mouth!” And I’m thinking to myself, “Um, you mean, like a fork?”
I hope that good fences make good impressions and that I move one step closer to teaching. No, it’s not at all my dream job, but it’s a job. It’s a job that I can do here or in New York or even Paris. Hopefully, it will be a job that will earn me enough money to move to a place where I can find something that’s a bit more luxurious.
Monday, February 16, 2009
The Mysterious Case of the Early-riser
When I lived in big cities, I was surrounded by mysteries. They popped up everywhere. In New York, I wondered:
- What were the dreams of Caesar, the boy who fixed my coffee every morning before I even ordered it?
- Why was it so important that day that the drycleaner chase me down the street yelling “Beeeeshop!” just to tell me that he was holding a package for me?
- Was Homeless Babbo Natale actually homeless . . . and was that his girlfriend?
- Why did Shirtless Old Man have such a humongous Chinese paper light? Why did he prefer placing a fan in the window every single night rather than buy an air-conditioning unit . . . and was that his girlfriend?
In Paris, the mysteries seemed even greater since I knew fewer people and didn’t speak the language fluently.
- Why did the tenant in the building next to us adorn his window with real x-rays? (Creepy!)
- Why did the crazy lady on the 1st floor always come out of her apartment to tell me that Clovis the Cat wasn’t her cat, whenever I stopped to pet him?
- How was it possible that I still functioned on such an enormous lack of sleep?
- Why did the hobo spit on Jody and why wasn’t that other guy wearing pants in the Metro?
Here in Nashville, though, the mysteries are dwindling. People share too much. I have discovered a few, although none are as colorful as the unknown motivations of the spitting hobo or the pantless rider.
- What are the dreams of Matt, the boy who fixes Mary and my coffee and entertains us at Bread & Co. in the morning?
- Why do people continue to use street names when giving me directions when they know that I operate on a strictly landmark mapping system here?
- Why does the cat simply stare at the corner of the dining room for an uncomfortable amount of time most nights?
I hope to never understand the answer to the third mystery, but the first two could be solved easily enough. The second really isn’t a mystery so much as a frustrating fact. Just as I feared that all of the mysteries would be lost, however, one most mysterious mystery presented itself at the most mysterious place of all, the grocery store.
On Saturdays, Tom goes to the Harris Teeter to buy the Wall Street Journal. Every Saturday the Harris Teeter has sold out of the Wall Street Journal and Tom must go down the street to the Kroger. Tom mentions this to the Harris Teeter manager most Saturdays. The manager doesn’t seem to care. A few Saturdays ago, Tom went to the Harris Teeter particularly early and still they were sold out. But how? How does a Harris Teeter in Nashville sell all of their Wall Street Journals before noon every single Saturday? When Tom posed this question to the keeper of the WSJs, the keeper replied that a man comes every Saturday right when they open and he buys all of the Wall Street Journals – every last one.
Tom proposed a logical solution, “Why don’t you order more copies?”
The keeper responded, “Well, he buys every one we have.”
Yes, clearly that is the soundest explanation. It’s entirely reasonable to assume that no matter how many copies of the WSJ you ordered, this mystery man would purchase all of them (never mind that he is buying them to resell them somewhere else). Anyway, there are many ways to solve this problem – order more copies, put one aside for Tom, tell the reseller that he can’t buy more than 3 – but how to solve the problem isn’t nearly as intriguing as how to solve the mystery of the WSJ Weasel (aka "W-squared" or "W2").
We have a few theories. As a family, we have narrowed the W2’s location down to the stretch of Highway 70 between the Kroger in Bellevue and the Harris Teeter in Belle Meade. Our method wasn’t interesting enough to describe here. The W2 could be the manager of the Bellevue Publix, which isn’t yet on the WSJ route, but will be soon. We think he might be the proprietor of the Loveless Motel, but we’ve yet to call to confirm that they offer the Wall Street Journal in the restaurant on Saturdays.
Unfortunately, the most effective way to solve this mystery is for us to show up at the Harris Teeter on a Saturday before it opens and go from there. We are currently in the planning stages of attack. To be continued, of course . . . .
Sunday, February 15, 2009
The Arrow & the Song
It fell to earth, I knew not where;
For so swiftly it flew, the sight
Could not follow it in its flight.
I breathed a song into the air,
It fell to earth, I knew not where;
For, who has sight so keen and strong
That it can follow the flight of song?
Long, long afterward, in an oak
I found the arrow, still unbroke;
And the song, from beginning to end,
I found again in the heart of a friend.
— Henry Wadsworth Longfellow