the best email i've recieved in awhile.

June 19, 2009

From: Frenchie

Sent: Friday, June 19, 2009 11:26 AM

To: Kristin

Subject: RE:

Why was I crying last night?

From: Kristin

Sent: Friday, June 19, 2009 11:38 AM

To: Frenchie

Subject: RE:

I have no idea.

From: Frenchie

Sent: Friday, June 19, 2009 11:44 AM

To: Kristin

Subject: RE:

That is all I get?

From: Kristin

Sent: Friday, June 19, 2009 11:48 AM

To: Frenchie

Subject: RE:

You were a pain.

From: Frenchie

Sent: Friday, June 19, 2009 11:59 AM

To: Kristin

Subject: RE:

I realize that… but why?

Maybe the wine, beer, and liquor was a bad idea.

A. I’m sorry.

B. I heard I almost died last night. Not cool.

C. I love you!

D. Can you forgive and forget?

the heart of the matter.

June 18, 2009

It started last night with a text message from one of my good guy friends.

J: “I’ve got a friend I want to introduce you to. We think you’ll like him. Good guy.”

Me: “Who’s we? Who’s he?”

J: “He lives in NC now. Went to Clemson. Good friend.”

Me: “That’s perfect. I don’t want to date anyone in town. They would cramp my drinking habits and immediately learn my crazy.”

J: “Ha. You’re not crazy and he already thinks you’re attractive so it works out.”

Me: “What’s this?”

J: “I showed a picture of you to him.”

Me: “Uh oh.”

J: “I’m trying to fully bring you in to my circle.”

Me: “I love it.”

J: “I’ll send you a picture.”

Me: “Ok.”

J: “Tell me what you think.”

Me: “If he’s cool, sure.”

J: “You at all interested?”

Me: “Does he like Tony Stewart?”

J: “Sure.”

Me: “Ok.”

Then it was the facebook message I received sometime after that from another guy.

“Would you let me take you out to dinner one night… catch up in person?”

***

A few weeks ago I was standing in a bar catching up with one of my best guy friends from high school. A frequent topic of conversation for us is about the guy I dated some in high school that he’s good friends with. The guy that seems to, still this day, not be able to be good friends with me.

“It was pretty obvious today. It’s like his aversion to you grows. I’ve never seen him bothered so much by one girl. But I remember how he was when you ended things with him,” he was saying.

“Ridiculous,” was all I could let out. Because it is. Because I have never had this problem with anyone. I have been friends with everyone, no matter the fling or the date I cancelled or the fact that they make my skin crawl.

“I’ve had my heart hurt,” I told him.

“You…,” he began.

“…yes, I have a heart,” I said, interrupting him.

“Kristin, that’s not what I was going to say. I was going to say… you let someone hurt your heart? I can’t believe that. I can’t believe you ever let anyone hurt you. Or that anyone would.”

“Well I have,” I told him. “I’ve had my heart hurt,” I repeated.

And I don’t know that I’m ready for it to get messed with again.

peer pressure.

June 17, 2009

Time: 5:45 am

Goal: gym

Stephanie: “Wake up.”

Me: “No.”

Stephanie: “Get up now.”

Me: “I don’t want to.”

Stephanie: “I’m picking you up in 10 minutes.”

Me: “Seriously. I don’t want to go.”

Stephanie: “Why?”

Me: “I don’t feel well.”

Stephanie: “That’s only because you don’t want to go.”

Me: “I’m tired.”

Stephanie: “So am I.”

Me: “Then go back to bed.”

Stephanie: “No. Because I already woke up to Boom Boom Pow coming from my phone.”

Me: “Well thanks to you I just woke up to I’m checkin it so hot so hot…”

Stephanie: “So you’re up. Good.”

Me: “No.”

Stephanie: “I will lay on the horn.”

Me: “You’ll wake up my roommate.”

Stephanie: “You think I care?”

Me: “Dammit.”

set up.

June 15, 2009

As we drove North on I-77 last month, headed to Charlotte for the hen party, my now sister-in-law said to me, “Mom thinks you should date The Vet.”

The Vet, a guy from her home town, went to college with us. And while I’ve known him for years, I’ve never known him well. “Doesn’t he have a girlfriend?” I asked her, flattered that her mother would think enough of me to say that.

“I don’t know. They’re always so off and on it’s hard to tell.”

In the weeks that followed since that party, I hadn’t thought more about that conversation.

Friday night, I stood at my brother’s rehearsal dinner talking to my brother’s best friend and her husband, one of the groomsmen, when she looked at me and said, “This might be incestuous, but I really think you and The Vet would be perfect together.”

“What?” I started, “Wait – first – how is that incestuous?” I asked her.

“Well in my head I was thinking of her and your sister-in-law as being brother and sister. But, yea, they’re not. So never mind that. They’ve just known each other their whole lives…”

“Okay. Second – doesn’t he have a girlfriend?” I continued.

“Does he? I don’t know…” she responded, looking around the room for him. He had come to the rehearsal dinner with his older sister, who was also a bridesmaid.

That night we all piled into our cars and headed to the only bar in town, an irish pub by the name of Murphy’s, bearing the slogan: “I’d rather have a beer at Murphy’s pub in Johnston, SC than a martini at a restaurant in your piss ant town.”

The lights flickered on until late in the night as the vodka flowed and the laughter weighed heavily amongst us all. When it came time to leave, my non-betrothed brother and I headed out with The Vet and his sister, said our goodbyes and went our separate ways.

When the morning came and the time of the bridal luncheon arrived, I sat in my designated seat at the nicest restaurant within 20 miles, famous for their shrimp and grits, and talked to the girls around me. “I am so tired,” The Vet’s sister began, “I stayed up until after 3.”

“What in the world were you doing!?” I asked her, knowing we’d left well before that and I had long been asleep in my hotel room by that time.

“Well, when we got home, The Vet wanted to stay up and talk.”

Sounding like the bright idea of one of my brothers or guy friends, I thought nothing more about it. The day continued with the buzz of daisies and dresses and flashes as the wedding neared us.

That evening, after the ceremony has passed us by and the first dance had wooed us all, after the beers had begun being consumed and the dance-offs had taken place, The Vet’s sister stood by my side. “I really want you to date my brother,” she said to me.

Turning to look at her, I’m not sure if my face registered shock or curiosity as I opened my mouth. “You’re kidding,” I said. “That is so weird! You’re the third person who has said that.”

“Really!?” she said, honest with surprise.

As I explained to her each of the other instances, her smile remained until I inquired, “But that’s his girlfriend. With him. Right!?”

Looking in their direction, she simply said, “Girlfriend. Not wife.”

“Remember when I told you earlier that we were up late talking?” she continued. “That’s what we were talking about. His girlfriend. And you.”

And after my dad had done his second appearance of the running man to Twist and Shout this wedding season, her own father stood beside her as she introduced me as, “The Vet’s future girlfriend.”

And I don’t think I found anything more interesting that night.

i'm a 5'4" giant.

June 15, 2009

My brother got married on Saturday. It was the most beautiful, most wonderful wedding I have ever been a part of. The boy who said he understood how the girl worked because of the way I am, married the girl who realized she loved him after he told her he couldn’t just be her friend. And after 5 years together they had the most perfect wedding and the most perfect reception and the most perfect day I could ever have imagined for them.

And my new sister was truly the most beautiful bride.

katie and will 007

i count myself lucky.

June 9, 2009

It doesn’t take much to make me laugh. I laughed when racing Stephanie on the treadmill last night and at her elliptical fear this morning. I laugh at corny jokes and air guitar.  I laugh at the sound of other people laughing and at things that even make me angry. I laugh thanks to The Onion daily and sometimes at our governor.

And I laughed a LOT watching this:

Video Recaps | Full Episodes | Webisodes

feel happier this instant.

June 8, 2009

Glamour magazine publishes a list each month titled “10 Ways To Feel Happier This Instant.” Last night as I picked up my new Glamour and read over this page I started to realize that there are a lot of things that make me happy in the now.

1. Dinner and a movie with good company. No matter the movie. (For the record, Drag Me to Hell may officially be the worst movie ever. But oh boy did I laugh.)

2. Realizing when someone asks you if you put yourself out there enough, let your feelings be known, that you in fact did.

3. Having a great workout with a great friend.

4. Getting a water from the buck before work.

5. Returning something to Anthropologie and turning around and buying more for less.

6. Sending and receiving emails that leave you in stitches.

7. Knowing that a package waits for you when you get home.

8. Lunching with your best guy friend on a Monday as he drives from Charleston back home to Asheville.

9. Having a daddy that can run by your office in the middle of the day to drop something off for you and say hello.

10. Taking another city by storm with your girlfriends. Where Gavin Rossdale is not far off.

nodoubt!

funny the way it is.

June 4, 2009

The past few days I’ve been working out with one of my good girl friends at a gym she’s considering joining, via our 7 day free trial passes. Our conversations would go like such:

Stephanie: “Pick you up at 5:45 am?”

Me: “Um, no.”

Stephanie: “I will never speak to you again.”

Me: “Whatever. Fine.”

OR

Stephanie: “Don’t you want to join the gym with me!?”

Me: “Do you know how expensive that gym is? I already have a membership. At the cheap gym.”

Stephanie: “BUT ISN’T IT MORE FUN WORKING OUT WITH ME!?”

Me: “We will revisit this issue come October.”

Then this morning I recieved the following email:

factory

Oh great, now I get to spend some quality time with the Department of Consumer Affairs trying to get a refund. (And get to cringe every time I reread the above email and see the word “thru” and the glaringly misplaced commas.)

My dad sent me an email today asking me if I was okay. My response? “No.” He then asked me why and I proceeded to list every little thing that was bothering me. To which he listed responses such as to my “Mom is driving me crazy” a ”get over it” and to my “I’m sick of you being so busy with work” he gave an “always busy.”

One part of my list included that I don’t have shoes. For my brother’s wedding. Which is, oh, a week from Saturday. This fact alone has been causing me some distress and is a small factor in my already planned out visit to South Park Mall in Charlotte for some needed shopping on Sunday.

This afternoon, though, Mom called asking if the shoes had to be sandals. Then she began describing silver peep toes – exactly what I’ve been wanting – that she was looking at and how she’d tried them on and they had our size and she was in line buying them for me. And I totally started to forget about how I ended my phone conversation with her yesterday in tears.

he thinks he's so clever.

June 3, 2009

Boss: “What’s with that face?”

Me: “My head hurts. I think I need a Diet Dr. Pepper.”

Boss: “Why?”

Me: “I have a caffeine addiction. And I don’t drink coffee.”

Boss: “You need to get rid of that addiction then. It’ll only take about 3 days.”

Me: “But then I’ll have a headache for 3 days.”

Boss: “That’s a price you have to pay…”

Me: “But if I have a headache then I can’t work.”

Boss: “Won’t be any different than any other day.”

i am nothing if not genius.

June 3, 2009

Me: “Did you hear that of that American couple that was on the flight from Brazil, the man was a Clemson grad? He was from Greenville.”

The roommate: “No, I was reading CNN.com.”

Me: “Well, it was in The State paper today. I read it while I was waiting on Steph to pick me up for the gym this morning.”

The roommate: “That’s just God telling the world not to go to Clemson.”

Me: “I just think it’s just all so sad. All of it.”

The roommate: “And that is why I am never going to get on a plane again.”

Me: “That should make for an interesting life.”

The roommate: “It’s just… can you imagine knowing for a whole 5 or however many minutes that you’re going to die? And there were 7 kids on that flight. Can you imagine explaining that to your child? Telling them what’s about to happen to them?”

Me: “No. They said early on that if there were no survivors it would be the worst airline disaster since 2001.”

The roommate: “No, I think this is going to be the worst ever.”

Me: “When was that one I remember? Um, TI-89…”

Me: “…wait. That’s a calculator, isn’t it?”

[For the record I was referring to TWA Flight 800. And I was 11 at the time it crashed. And therefore, probably knew a whole of a lot more about a TI-89 at the time.]


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