Glorifying the Mundane

Glorifying the Mundane does exactly what it says. You might hear about baby carrots and milkshakes. You might hear about the pungent guy on the subway. I can only promise that the absurdity will be ordinary, quintessential and tempered with my acerbic observations.

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

One Green Apple

Wow. I have neglected my blog for about a month. More importantly, I have neglected you: my readers. Let me reward you by letting you know that today I have eaten: 6 baby carrots, 2 stalks celery, 2 slivers of full-size carrots, appetizers of slivers of tuna with wasabi mayo on tortilla chips, similar appetizers of miniature rare beef on white bread, grilled zucchini & eggplant, quinoa, brown rice, wild rice, goat cheese, one smallish portion of chicken breast, one portion chicken quesadilla, prosciutto, salami, pineapple, one banana, zero apples, ginger tea, one glass of tangy white wine.

I went to see the dedication of my aunt's portrait at the NYC Bar Association tonight. It has left me hungry yet proud. She is the second woman to be a President of the Bar Association and she has trillions of other impressive accomplishments too. Following the ceremony and reception there was a second reception across the street at the Harvard Club. This was my second time this week at the Harvard Club. The HC makes me think that I forgot my twin sweater set at home or that I am an idiosyncratic extra in a Gilmore Girls episode.

One of the evening's highlights was when I found out that my dad had called my cousin and left a tender, sweet Mother's Day message on my cousin's voice mail. No, my cousin is not his mother. His mother is staying at my other cousin's apartment, hence the wacky mix-up. Speaking of my grandmother, she has actually turned off the voice mail function at the apartment she stays at. She says that people can just keep calling her until they reach her. With no flashing light on an "answering machine," she was not remembering to check the voice mail in a timely manner. If you work with the public, you may have the same begrudging attitude toward no-answering-machine people that I have. However, I sweetly told her that she was a VIP, so it was fine with me to go the extra mile.

You may wonder what happened to the apple. Why is it a zero apple? I am a firm believer in the Apple a Day policy. As the Harvard Club feminist after-party was winding down, the waiter begin to wheel away the ornate mounds of fruit, cheese and meats. The succulent green apples I had been eyeing were about to escape. I had been trying to overcome the inappropriateness of me chomping into a big green apple in a room full of business women versus the inappropriateness of me taking the green apple and putting it in my purse. My aunt saved the day. As they were wheeling the cart away, she said "Wait, wait, hold on!" and chose a morsel of bread and brie to avail herself of. Under the cover of this distraction, I plucked my green apple from the cart and placed it in my purse.

9:55pm - taking the F train home. One homeless man specifically asked for money and apples, fruit, a sandwich. I gave him my green apple. I am usually not into generosity, but well the Zen meditation must be working and that dude is one apple richer.

3 Comments:

At 10:41 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

you know what's weird about this apple-centric blog? My apple fact about its caffeine-like qualities was given before I read it. First platypusses, now apples. What's a-goin' on? The comment about the twin sweater was funny. Props for hooking up the homeless man.

Ok. I'm spending too much time reading your blog entries. I'm neglecting tonight's "Lost." Ergo, I go.

 
At 11:16 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

One shouldn't have to feel ashamed to desire nature's bounty. Granny Smith apples are perhaps the one example in nature of something green actually tasting better than its red counterpart.

This is not even my opinion. It is fact, backed up by a vagueley misremembered article in Scientific American that I no longer possess. Hence irrefutable.

 
At 6:23 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

This is great info to know.

 

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