Posted by: tlnemethy | May 2, 2013

Gymming for the Wanderer

I only got a membership for a gym so I could work on my swimming, right? So wouldn’t it be just my luck for the pool to be closed for an entire quarter of my membership? Well, la-de-fricken-da, it is. So, instead of just going to chill in the lane next to the old guy with the flippers or the middle-aged man who can swim circles around me with his perfect form, I’ve been hitting the machinery.

Usually, unfamiliar machines make me nervous and especially when I don’t want to look like that newb reading the instructions on the machines before I do my rows or tricep presses. Also, the machines all have those adjuster knobs for the seat or the pad or the rest and it just becomes a major hassle to readjust when I do a circuit and someone cuts in. Today, I actually sat on one of my favorite machines for leg curls and awkwardly adjusted knobs until it sort of fit me. Then, I spent another five minutes searching for a mysterious third knob that I never actually found. Instead, I slunk away from the group of muscle heads who’d surrounded my machine group, fully aware that they had seen my failure.

Guess no leg curls today: I worked on arms because I knew I’d signed up for a spinning class and didn’t want to burn out instantly. Good thing I planned ahead, because I burned out almost instantaneously anyways. Yay for a sedentary lifestyle. So when I went to sign up for the class I was talking to the guys at the front desk and I asked them how it was as a class.

Guy 1: “So easy. Like simple.”

Me: “Oh. So it’s easy then? I’ve heard otherwise. Hmm.”

Guy 2: “Yeah. You’ll be fine. Except you’ll probably feel horrible by the end. Like exhausted and just plain sore. Actually, it’s really a difficult class.”

Me: “… Right…”

So I walked away from that conversation extremely confused as to the difficulty level I was getting myself into and I didn’t even know the length of time it took.

I showed up a few minutes early for the class, mostly so I could get acclimated with the weird-ass bikes they use and introduce myself to the instructor. She was wearing hardcore cycling shoes and looked like she never stopped biking. Ever. Off go the lights in the room and class gets right under way. She had some awesome music blasting, pretty much the exact playlist I would have chosen myself and she kept talking to us through one of those microphone headphones. I couldn’t help but laugh as she attempted to get us pumped up for some pain.

“Okay. We’re going up a hill now. Push. Push.” I don’t know what type of “hill” she was taking us biking on, but I can say that I would have never chosen to go biking on that hill. I would have sat at the bottom of the hill, one foot planted on the ground and the other on the pedal of my bike, and looked up at the winding mountain road and just said, “Screw this.”

Good thing these hills were imaginary because I would have just veered off course and headed home if we were actually road-biking. By the end of the second song I was already gasping and I actually saw sweat glistening on my legs. WTF. I do not sweat. Like ever. And if by the tiniest of chances that I do sweat, it damn well isn’t on my knees.

We get to an Alanis Morissette song and the instructor is going all out trying to motivate us. She telling us “come on, listen to the song. She’s angry. Get ANGRY.” I start laughing through my pain, imagining Patches O’Houlihan from Dodgeball instructing my class.

At this point, I start rethinking my decision to take this class. I’m mentally calculating the songs it will take to play out a half hour class and then I realize it might be an hour-long class. My legs are in so much agony that I have stopped feeling the sharp pain in my ass from the hard bike seat that started the moment my cheek touched the thin leather. I can tell you right now that I have since started feeling the biting pain of jostling around for an hour on a bicycle seat.

Posted by: tlnemethy | April 29, 2013

Sock Money

As my time at The Mart is ramping down before I head to Minnesota, I figured that I should probably write a little more about my experiences working in retail.

The past few weekends I’ve worked have been extremely aggravating interspersed with bouts of hilarity that could be deemed disturbing. I was checking out this old man, and by checking out I mean the kind involving me ringing items through the register, and he gets all frazzled at the end because he just couldn’t remember where he put his cash. He’s patting his pockets and fiddling around with his jacket (which was totally unnecessary because it was freakishly warm outside) while I’m just standing there with a Stepford Wife expression on my face as I chuckle to myself.

Old people are my favorite brand of people to come through the store. I’m just standing there with that placid smile on my face as I attempt to rearrange my workspace into a more aesthetic and feng shui’d one. All of a sudden, he gets this adorable aha look on his face, like he just had his first ever Eureka moment. He lifts up his hand and gives me that hold on one second look before he ducks underneath the counter and I can openly smirk while he’s tucked out of sight.

So he finally rights himself and hands me a twenty that had been folded into a neat little square. It’s damp and warm. Like a swamp dollar. I raise an eyebrow as I unfold the bill and he must’ve felt then was the perfect time to explain. “I keep it in my shoe. Never falls out of my pocket that way.”

“Smart plan. I used to do that myself.” Yeah, when I was like seven or didn’t have any pockets. I was also dumb enough to store loose change in my shoes. It always started out fine, with the change tucked solidly behind my heel or even under the arch, but then it would devilishly sneak its way under the ball of my foot and become crippling. Imagine willingly placing a Lego in your shoe. Only this Lego liked to rearrange its shape.

So yeah. I took that sweaty sock dollar from the old man, processed it, gave him a receipt, and violently hand-sanitized after he left.

Posted by: tlnemethy | April 25, 2013

Model Behavior

It’s a little outside my forte, but I figured I’d give you guys an interview this time. I recently stumbled across a modelling photo pre-millenium and I figured some people might like to hear the mindset or the experiences of modelling at that time. So I went about contacting and had the good fortune of getting some first hand experience. Enjoy her recounting the events of the day.

It was the early 90’s when I stood, barely under my own power, on the purest sand of a gently warmed beach. I’d been drinking early. In those days it seemed that I couldn’t function without the plastic cup in my hand, would start to cry harsh, choking sobs if I found it empty or even if we had to part. I was truly a mess.

It was both the beginning and the end of my modelling career. But that day I was beautiful, even if I wasn’t completely there.

My hair was styled in the fashion of an average beachgoer; a casual mixture of loose dark strands that seemed both to separate and clump with the salt-laden sea air. I wasn’t looking at the camera when the shot was taken, instead something distant had caught my eyes and I’d turned slightly to the right to watch it.

I was wearing a bandeau top: the thin floral pattern covering only a bare minimum of skin. My skin was lightly bronzed from days under the sun, but I wasn’t wearing a smile. I don’t remember what caught my eye, or even what I was thinking about, but my expression holds a wistful sadness that betrays the romanticism of the atmosphere.

I tottered then, my feet swaying from their splayed stance in the form-fitting sand until my grass skirt flared and I plopped down into the sand.

I’m sure I cried then. I don’t remember much of those days besides t4504_88968300682_1671743_n(1)he stories I’ve heard through the years, but I’m sure I didn’t contain myself after toppling to the sand. I was much more emotional in those days.

But hey, modelling is something I just kind of fell into. It isn’t for everyone, and it definitely took its toll, but I had some good times posing. Here’s my most famous shot.

Har har har. I got you. I bet you all thought the poor girl had some sort of drinking problem. All wobbly and emotional without her plastic sippie cup. Lol. Nah, that’s me for all those people who can’t tell.

Cool story, bro.

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