Author: Claire

  • In teaching…And…Life.

    You will never reach your destination if you stop and throw stones at every dog that barks. ~ Winston Churchill

    HT: Wendi Lynn‘s twitter feed

  • Just FYI, Trekkahs.

    Canadians can cast votes for the People’s Choice Awards. (Check the forthcoming URL. It says “cdn”.)

    Would you believe that Chris Pine and Zachary Quinto are in the same category?

    I kid you not.

    A part of me started to lean towards Chris because of his talented turn as Captain Kirk.

    But then I felt the pull of ZQ.

    That photo is not mine. I found it here.

    *sigh*

    What’s a fangirl to do?

    ETA: I might abstain. If I vote for one without the other, it’s highly likely that the guilt will plague me for days.

  • Why am I jealous…

    …of this doll?

    Maybe ’cause I almost was her–hairwise–a few short months ago.

    Check out one of her friends.

    Gorgeous, eh?

    *sigh*

    *walks away* I can’t believe a doll–A DOLL, of all things!!!–is making me wistful.

    Have mercy.

    HT – Custom DREDS for your Fashion Doll

  • Hair, you are.

    I cut my hair yesterday.* It was insane. I’d bought clippers at least a month ago from Walmart.

    I tried my best to be patient. I took my time and made sure I had enough new hair so that when I cut it, I wouldn’t be completely bald.

    (I have a friend who’s been scalp-baringly short before. And gorgeous, to boot. I, on the other hand, just didn’t have the nerve.)

    Prior to yesterday’s shenanigans, my last major hair move came in September.

    I’d gotten my hair straightened, on a whim. I was bored. And lazy. And, quite frankly, trying to play it safe. (Stupid reasons, I know.)

    Mind you, I enjoyed my new look. For about a month. Afterwards, I started to resent a few things.

    1. The upkeep. Say what you will about wet-setting or air-drying. At first, I was convinced that the only way I could get my hair satisfactorily strait was if I did hard time under a dryer.

    And even after I mellowed and decided to do without the dryer, I wasn’t content. Which brings me to my next point.

    2. Straight hair isn’t me. It’s not my natural texture. I rediscovered myself nearly a decade ago. Since then, I’ve found what God gave me incredibly irresistible.

    *start the time machine for My Hair Story*

    When I was about 24, I was in Toronto. Pretending to study something I’ve never ever used IT.

    My hair was texturized. (For those not in the know, that means I used to put a relaxer in my hair, but not let it get super-straight.) However, I hadn’t had a touch-up in a while. My natural hair was growing in, and the time had come to take care of business.

    I decided to get my roots done at a fancy-schmantzy salon. I remember my consultation very well. After admonishing me about the evils of doing one’s hair at home, the stylist made one thing very clear to me.

    My hair was damaged. Overprocessed. It had to be cut off before anything else could be done with it.

    HAD TO.

    At first I was terrified. I couldn’t remember a time when I didn’t have hair. Did we really have to go that route?

    Yes, Claire. You HAVE TO.

    And so I made an appointment. For an overpriced buzz cut.

    At first I was nervous about how I would look. I remember, I asked the stylist to leave a little fringe at the front. Some bangs, if you will.

    I ended up looking like a plucked chicken, and wound up changing my mind.

    By the end of it all I looked…Pretty much like how I appear in the photo below.

    It was the first time in who knows how long since I’d had my own unaltered hair to deal with.

    I was enthralled.

    *steps away from the time machine*

    In the intervening years, I’ve fallen into a pattern where I let my hair grow out, then decide to alter it chemically. And then, disgusted, I cut it off again. The cycle seems to be about two years long. As I get older, I realize that the madness must end.

    After thinking I wanted dreads, and trying to cultivate them for several months, I changed my mind. One day, very recently, I thought about re-twisting my loose hair–for a temporary ‘do. But I didn’t follow through because I didn’t have any patience.

    Plus, I’d left Toronto and returned to my hometown. A place that isn’t as multicultural as the big city. My resolve started to weaken as I thought about blending in.

    In hindsight, I realize that I wasn’t meant to blend in.

    *sigh*

    I did some research and read up on a woman who said she decided to go back to straightening her hair because–among other things–it made her look older.

    I could stand to look older, I thought.

    (Mind you, when I told myself this, I ignored an important fact. Genetics being what they are, I’m probably going to have this face until I’m 40+.)

    Anywho. One day, I took the plunge. I even opted for a (supposedly harmless) relaxer. I did my best to make myself feel less guilty.

    And it worked. For a while. I actually enjoyed myself until I started resenting spending an hour under the dryer every week. Not to mention missing what The Good Lord gave me.

    Fast forward to yesterday, at Heaven-knows-what in the afternoon. (Or was it the morning? At that point, I’m not kidding when I say there was no time for me. Only “Get this &%# off my head!”) I was fed up. I knew The Day had come. First, I put my hair into four braids. Then, I clipped off the end of said braids–about an inch. I took one look at myself and said “Who do you think you’re kidding?”

    I went to the bathroom and hunkered down with my clippers and a pair of scissors…Snip, snip, snip, quickly became chop, chop, chop, and then finally, buzz, buzz, buzzzzzzzzzz.

    And there you have it.

    Here’s hoping I don’t do this to myself again. Both the chemicals and the cut. I like having big hair. Fortunately, any sadness that I might feel is being held at bay by the following mantra, “It’ll grow back!”

    And indeed, it will. 😉

    *Just to clarify re length, because I have a couple of different pics of me up on the web: Prior to my cut, my hair was long. Not bouncin’-down-my-back long. More like at-shoulders-but-above-bra-strap long.

  • Heeeeere Trekkie, Trekkie….

    I have the DVD. Two disks. No complaints.

    This video pretty much summed up the reaction I had. In my head, I mean.

    (HT – Space: No Uglies)

    As for the next film, do you remember this post?

    At the end, I wrote the director a note.

    Dear J. J.

    I want another Trek. By no later than 2012, OR ELSE.

    Bless you…

    Well.

    Even though I was teasing when I typed, it looks like I was onto something. In this interview, Mr. Abrams says

    I believe the next Star Trek film will be in 2012.

    So if the world doesn’t come to an end (HA!), at least I’ll have some Trek to keep me warm.

    ETA: Another Space: No Uglies find. Just because.

  • Bodacious Banana Bread

    Hey Readers!

    I’m busy. I hate love my life. I miss writing, and in particular, blogging.

    Here’s something I scratched up a while ago…

    Enjoy!

    I keep scratching up notes for entries on my transition into small-town living. But I’m lazy too busy to develop them thoroughly…In the meantime, let’s talk about food!!!

    For health reasons, I’m trying to keep off of sugar. Nevertheless, urges for my favorite banana bread keep coming.

    mybananabread
    Shortly after this photo was taken, my subject was eliminated.

    Banana bread…There are ample ingredients in the pantry. The bananas are getting spotty….

    *sigh*

    Incidentally, how do you like your bananas? I’m only willing to eat them when they’re golden, with barely-there-green tips. After that, somehow, it’s funny…Once the spots start to come in, they are dead to me. Well…At least as far as eating is concerned. Meanwhile, in my head, the first thing that comes to mind is, “Banana bread!!”

    In my book, there are two keys to making a good banana bread. Butter and sugar. Yesterday I was watching Oprah. (Oh. Shut. Up.) The show was all about food. Ms. O played a clip featuring Paula Deen. At one point she asked Ms. Deen what she would tell her health-conscious critics. If I remember right, she said, “I’m a cook, not a doctor!”

    Dangit, Jim!!

    Now, I’ve never posted a recipe. And to this day, I can’t remember who gave me this one. But I’ll tell you something. I thank the Lord and Baby Jesus* every time I make it.

    Bodacious Banana Bread
    1 cup butter
    1 cup sugar
    4 eggs
    3 cups flour
    3 ripe bananas, mashed
    1 tspn vanilla
    1 teaspoon allspice
    6 teaspoons baking powder

    Preheat your oven to 350 degrees. Grease two loaf pans and set them aside.

    As for your ingredients…

    First, grab a large bowl. Use a mixer. Whip your butter and sugar into a frenzy. Add the eggs and bananas. Then, add the flour and baking powder.

    Next, add the vanilla. And at last…

    The time has come for you to have some fun. Here’s your chance to…Improvise.

    I know the ingredient list says “allspice”. But I don’t have any allspice. Haven’t for years.

    Instead, I use a combination of cinnamon and a cloves. And to be honest…I don’t actually measure the spices. But I do shake in enough cinnamon to season an entire box of Apple-Cinnamon Cheerios. I also add a dash of cloves.

    Now…You can do what you want at this point, but if you’re messing with cloves, I should warn you–if you use more than a dash, you’re playing with fire. Cloves are kind of like love dancing nutmeg. Under the right circumstances, their powers can be used for good. But too much of that good thing can turn into evil. If you don’t keep an eye out when you’re shaking the cloves over your batter, it’ll be overpowered faster than you can say “haberdashery”.

    And I suggest omitting the ginger inthe this recipe. Unless you really want to. Ginger does nothing for it.

    *ahem*

    So your mix is all together, yes?

    Pour your banana bread batter into your loaf pans. Put ’em in the oven. They’re going to stay there for about a half hour. Be sure to give them a glance and poke them towards the end of their journey. Your banana bread should be golden brown.

    Please don’t worry if your loaves come out with a crack on top.

    If all goes well, your Bodacious Bread will be fluffy and moist.

    And gone within minutes of leaving your oven.

    *Once upon a time during my teachers’ college practicum, I met a fellow student named Nick. One day when he was overjoyed about something, instead of letting out a “Cool” or a sugar-laced expletive, he said, “Thank the Lord and Baby Jesus”. I never forgot the phrase, and use it whenever it fits.

  • Good Hair


    I would like to see this film. I’m curious.

    As an aside, I was a bit irked when they started talking about weaves. There are plenty of black women with straight(ish) hair, whose strands are all theirs.

    Overall, I don’t have a problem with educating the public regarding the cultural insanity that involves black women and the hair-care industry. Yet I’m curious about assumptions that some of the audience will make after watching Good Hair…As well as the sides of the issue and how they are portrayed. (Black women wearing their actual, natural hair as a viable alternative, anyone…?)

    We’ll see.

  • Jill!

    Sitting here alone on a summer evening…What could be better than the gift of good, glorious music?