Jun 14
Revisiting: Boots
Posted by Diana in life, memories, vacations, wishlist on 06 14th, 2008| icon3No Comments »

I haven’t created a new look at ShopStyle.com for a long time now (it’s an incredibly fun timewaster, though, but I don’t have all that much leisure time anymore). However, I’ve lately found myself revisiting this style more frequently:

It’s all in the boots, people. I first became enamored of Doc Martens-style boots at the age of 15. I was in public school, and rules on footwear were much more lax than they’ve become in later years. I bought my first 10-eye-Doc Martens-imitation pair at a Payless Shoe Store and wore them daily: to school, to hang outs … I have to confess that I even lost my virginity with those boots on my feet. They lasted more than enough, considering the wear and strain on them, and they were cast into the dark oblivion of my closet as soon as the sole went unglued. Later on, moths did their final work on them and they were rendered irreparable.

Later on I fell in love with another pair, this time off a Delias catalog. They were 14-eye with a raised toe, slightly glossier than what I was used to. They were incredibly uncomfortable at first, but I broke them in, and after that they were a total hit in my life. I loved those boots until their fiery demise five years ago.

I haven’t owned a pair of proper boots since then. I guess I thought I had outgrown the boot-wearing phase, but this sudden obsession has proved me wrong. I bought a pair of knee-high boots the other day at Hot Topic:

They look incredibly cool, but I realized today they’re not that awesome for walking long distances or for extended periods of time. Part of the boot-craving is to have a good pair of shoes to massacre on my upcoming trip to NYC. These boots do not fit the bill for such a purpose.:-(

So I’m back to square one on my quest for some nice, comfy Doc Martens boots. Maybe I should cut the crap and invest on the real deal. I think I’m ready to commit to boots again.

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Jun 11
Adulthood Dementia
Posted by Diana in life, writing on 06 11th, 2008| icon3No Comments »


Since I turned 30, I’ve felt a certain amount of mania creep into my actions and intentions. I don’t know if it was always so, and that I just became increasingly aware of my own nature, to this particular point in actuality in which I am sure I’m on the same league as hippies and hysterical moms. Or maybe things did change as I got to that figurative milestone of The 30s.

But as the mania set in, so did a ridiculous sense of prudence and shame, to the point that I check and double-check the things I write, the facts I disclose. And, yes, I have one particular friend to thank for that level of awareness(yes, you! You know who you are, you lurking scoundrel! I love you, though!), but I can’t really let the blame rest solely on others. I guess that the more things I get to write, the less I want to put “on the page”. The more complex I become as a person, the less I want to show about me.

A nitpicking of the public image, I guess. And it feels weird, because that’s not the way it used to be. At the same time, however, the less I publicize, the more free I feel. Isn’t that funny?

I guess that this strange sort of “writer’s block” will come to a close as soon as I get my first assignment to write something for a class. I have a feeling that my writings will change, and the absence of the word will give way to a forest of twisted facts entwined with thick tendrils of fantasy and fiction.

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May 20
Should I Stay or Should I Go?
Posted by Diana in life, work on 05 20th, 2008| icon3No Comments »

Last two weeks have been intensely interesting, to say the least.

- I considered myself unemployed, my head about to burst with the effort of pushing through the last two weeks (those drasted two weeks’ notice good employees always give).

- Then suddenly I’m not so unemployed anymore. All my worrying about whether I’d be able to study, if I’d be able to hold my job in spite of the fact that I’ll be going on an already-paid-for vacation to NYC in July … worrying simply because I quit without a safety net, and I was plummeting speedily towards the Sea of the Idle and the Impoverished. But then a great friend trusted me so much and had so much faith in what I can do, that she twisted things around the way I thought they couldn’t be twisted.

I’m a happy (and very peaceful) camper now.

Other things are happening, though, and my life apparently refuses to be without a bit of drama and uncertainty. It’s as if I am a magnet for trouble and … well, let me not gripe too much about it. Drama and uncertainty is what makes your blood pump quicker. :-) I need all the livelihood I can get.

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May 3

#1, next Monday is going to be, in some measure, surreal. Going back to 1995, the expectations, the nervousness.


#2, next two weeks, on the other hand, are going to be more real than I would like to deal with. Most people will not understand my reasons for the decision I’ve made. Some will come as far as to be annoyed. I even expect the random colleague to come across and demand answers and explanations, and I’m afraid I won’t have a generally satisfactory answer.

#3, Mother’s Day is drawing near, as well as my sister’s birthday, all of it during a moment in life in which money is going to be a precious commodity. I think the best I will be able to do will be to offer them homemade food. My sister has been clamoring for some cheesy potatoes (potatoes au gratin, if you wanna get more gourmand in the description), and my mom has asked in more than one occasion for my pasta carbonara. I think I will oblige (and will probably throw in some homemade dessert for good measure). It’s the best I can do.

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Apr 30
Molting: Breaking the Shell
Posted by Diana in life on 04 30th, 2008| icon3No Comments »


It’s just begun, the process of shedding. In the coming days I’ll break it out properly, but this is the exact moment I was waiting for for the last 10 years, and it’s become much more complicated than I thought. Victories swish around the same glass as failures. The sweet and sour bubbles of reality fill my nose. I guess I’ll have to drink first, to breathe the fresh air later.

This is the beginning of molting.

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