Wednesday, December 24, 2008
Reprimands and Ranting... and Christmas!
Characters:
Mr Blog
Pia
Ari
Di
Scene 1.
MB: OI! PIA, ARI, DI! COME HERE!
*scrambling as the UOs assemble before their disgruntled blog*
MB: WHAT DO YOU MAGGOTS THINK YOU'RE DOING?
D: Doing, sir?
MB: YES, DOING? WHAT IS IT YOU'RE DOING?
A: Um, nothing... sir...
MB: EXACTLY!! NONE OF YOU HAVE BLOGGED IN NEARLY A MONTH! A MONTH!! DO YOU KNOW HOW DESPICABLE YOU ARE?
P: We do now, sir!!
MB: Is that attitude you're giving me, missy?
P: Sir, no Sir!
MB: GOOD! NOW, BLOG, DAMMIT!!
~Close Scene 1~
So yeah, a bit shameful, we've not blogged in a month. Nearly. Oops.
And guess what happened in that month?
Well, sod all, really, considering that we've all been off school, so not much interesting has happened. I myself have been doing as little as possible, while my fellow Outlaws have buggered off to faraway awesome places leaving me all on my lonesome. *sniff*
So, basically, it's the 24th December, meaning... TOMORROW'S CHRISTMAS!!
YAY!!!
PRESENTS AND TURKEY AND HAPPY, OH MY!
Geddit? No? Ok.
Well, basically, this is a post to wish EVERYONE a VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS and a HAPPY NEW YEAR!!!!
AND A LOT OF EXCLAMATION MARKS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
And now, I will get back to my recordings.
See ya!
~Pia
Saturday, November 29, 2008
Our Service Project
Day 1
8am: Arrive at train station, make innumerable phone calls to determine exactly which train everyone is on. Get the wrong train.
8:30am: Arrive at next station, see large group of fellow classmates getting off the train directly after yours, catch them up, exhale large sigh of relief.
8:45am: Finally find correct platform, catch train to next stop, walk to childcare centre
9:30am: Work begins!
Having arrived at the childcare centre, it became clear that most of the Monday would be spent clearing the garden. As a result, we spent the entire day pulling out fish fern, of which there was a massive (and apparently multiplying before our eyes) quantity, pruning hedges that had overgrown, removing the rose plants because they were spiky (and posed a health risk, thankyou OH&S) and attempting to uproot other stubborn plants.
Unlike the superior intellect of the human, and even the animal brain, which would have given up once it realised that it was fighting a losing battle, the plants decided not to cower even under threat of the clippers, and as a result, many of our group received minor injuries (many were scratched by the rose plants, which put up a good fight). However, all the annoying, overgrown and unnecessary plants were uprooted and bagged, leaving the playing field at the end of the match – us 1, garden 0.
After lunch, we decided to continue uprooting the leftover bits of weeds and all the other stubborn green stuff. Zil and Lauren had spent the entire morning trying to remove a deeply rooted stump, and after 4 hours of digging finally managed to wrench the thing out of the ground, replacing the stump with a large crater where the stump had once sat. (us 2, garden 0).
At 3:30pm, it was time to go home and reattempt the challenge that was the train system. We had removed 36 garbage bags worth of plants, swept the paths outside the centre, and all in all, the place looked a lot tidier.
And very, very bare…
Still. That was to be fixed up on Day 2.
Ciao for now!
~Pia
Sunday, November 23, 2008
I'm all alone, there's no one here bessiiiide me...
And I'm at home writing my account of our school charity project. It's fun, don't get me wrong, but I wanna go somewhere exciting!!
I'm currently talking to another friend who's also gone to France for exchange, and she's loving it there, though she's convinced she's going to die of passive smoking... so Di will love it as long as she doesn't breathe much.
Also, I've run out of Caramello Koalas, which is disappointing cause I was having fun devising different ways of getting all the caramel out. XDD
So, basically, I'm working on my singing at the moment, because next year I'm trying out for Australian Idol. I bring this up now because as I speak the final is on live TV, with one of my besties in the backing choir, which makes me supremely jealous. I'm a little concerned I'm going to be killed when I audition because I've had basically no vocal training - I did lessons 6 years ago, but that wasn't training, that was "go into a room for half an hour and sing Disney songs". Fun, but not very constructive.
So I may be setting myself up for a fall, but to be a singer is one of my dreams, so I'm going to go for it as best I can. Next April, I want to be ready.
Bye for now!
~Pia.
Saturday, November 22, 2008
I'm off to France!!!!!!!!
I am, at this point, very excited, but also very scared. I’ve spoken to my host sister on the fabulous Facebook, she seems really nice and I’m hopeful that we get along well! My mum has spoken to her mum too, and she seems really nice as well. They speak very good English, but her mum said within a few days they will speak French!
Anyway, I’m signing off for a month, but you can read about my adventures; or misadventures as they will probably be on my other blog: http://livsmisadventuresinparis.blogspot.com
I’ll be back on the 21st of December, and I’ll tell you all about it! A bientot!
Bisous,
Di
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
EXTREMELY IMPORTANT UPDATE!!!
I disembowelled a Caramello Koala.
Seriously. You have NO idea how long I have been wanting to do that, and now that I have I am pleased.
Aaaanyway.
See ya round!
~Pia
Thursday, November 13, 2008
Bludge starts... NOW!
And today we had the year 10 creative arts night, which I was hosting with a friend. I brought my blazer, thinking it was all very formal, turns out we had to be a duo, so we ended up going as James Bond and Bond Girl (I was Bond, of course - the dress looked TERRIBLE on me!) I spent the whole time MCing cracking awful James Bond jokes, like:
"Those acts KILLED me, and I thought I was the only one with a licence to kill!" and
"Well, that's all for tonight ladies and gents, I was going to finish this hosting by losing an epic gun battle with a nemesis, but James Bond never loses, so I guess I'll just have to die another day." *groan*
Still, was fun!
Tomorrow I have a party for a friend who's going on exchange to France (and it isn't Di, funnily enough!! Weird, eh?) It's Made Up Superheroes, and I'm not sure what I should go as. My ideas thus far are:
-SuperDork (which is just me in a nutshell, really)
-SuperTemp (DONNA! XD FTW!!)
-Extreme IronerGirl (We have a sport at school that my friends and I claim to do whenever anyone tells us we're not sporty enough, which is "EXTREME IRONING!!" So I could do that.
Anyway. Should be fun, nonetheless.
See you round!
~Pia
Something was bound to go right SOMETIME today!!!
Anyway…
I too have been neglecting this blog, as I have been in exam mode also! Four down, three to go!!! However, I feel the need to blog about my day; it started off badly, but got better, surprisingly enough!
Started off badly; I had my maths and history exams today, and I thought I was well organized, did my maths cheat sheet last night, got up early to make sure I was all sorted, and couldn’t find my history practice essays sheet. I had planned to do one of these history essays during the double period between exams, so I was a bit concerned. I had all my maths out though, and put it in a folder and left my cheat sheet out of the folder so it could go on top and be easy to find. Good plan.
So when I couldn’t find this history sheet I went into a stress attack looking for it, and put another folder which had my history sheet in it on top, which I found, and then I left the house. So I was in the car with mum, and I wasn’t 100% sure I had my sheet, checked the folder and realized I’d left it underneath that folder! So Mum had to take me home to get it, and we lost about 20 minutes of our morning. She was not impressed! So, then, with all the stress of the morning, and about exams and other things in general, I had a meltdown in the car, and ended up in tears. Snow Patrol (see above) and holding my yin necklace, Ari’s parting gift before she went on Trek (she has the yang half) calmed me down a lot, and though I don’t think I did brilliantly on my exam, it was better than the last one!
Then after buying chocolate from the tuckshop (which also made me feel better), I went to the library to study with friends…didn’t really study that much though! Then I saw a friend of mine in year 12 who was studying at school, so I was talking to her for ages, and then we went and had lunch, and another year 12 friend joined us. So I actually enjoyed my lunchtime instead of studying, and then I had my history exam, which I think went okay, I had started preparing for an essay topic, which though worded slightly differently was on the exam.
As soon as I got home, I discovered a letter from Ari in the mail! I was so excited!!!! Like literally grinning for about five minutes before I even opened it, and going 'omg, yay!!!' repeatedly. I couldn’t wait to read it! She made me laugh before I even opened it, with the back reading ‘From: The middle of fricken nowhere! (and loving it)’ so I knew straight away all was well. Her letter made me laugh and cry at the same time, but it felt great to hear from her! It was the perfect time to hear from her given the morning I’d had. Bit freaky really, I was thinking this morning as I was walking into school ‘I wish Ari was here to give me a hug right now!’ but after hearing her whole group had gone without deodorant for 5 days, maybe I’m happy she wasn’t!...only joking!
She’s having a brilliant time by the way, it was pouring with rain when she wrote it, and apart from sore feet, bruised shoulders and a few blisters, she’s fine!
So anyway, sometimes its’ just amazing how a bad morning can turn into a pretty decent day, if you’re willing to let it!
xoxo Di
Monday, November 10, 2008
Uuuuuupdate!
Forsooth.
Egads!
There we go. Out of my system now.
Anyway, we're in exam mode at the moment - School Certificate (a Board of Studies exam - yeuch). We had English and Science today - both were bludgy, but I fear the maths exam tomorrow may not be so easy. Just cause it's maths. And I don't like maths.
I've also eaten a LOT of chocolate. I have to sell boxes for our school's charity thing, but I keep forgetting not to EAT THEM.
Also, I bought two bags of those eclair things to eat during exams - they're very handy - I was starving during the exams today so I kept slipping them out of my pocket and eating them!! yum :P
I think I'm typing wrong, my wrist hurts.
Anyway, I'm off to practice for the maths and AHGCC exams (remember AHGCC? BOS mandated torture.) and then on Wed is the computer exam, which is RIDICULOUSLY EASY.
We're talking "which button do you use to centre a piece of text?"
Hmm, lemme think about that one for a while.
NOT!!
anyway, see you round!!
Byee!
~Pia
Wednesday, November 5, 2008
Ari is on Trek!!!
Due to her busy-ness preparing for her month long Trek into the bush, fellow Outlaw Ari has not had time to write a farewell blog, so I shall do a very poor job in her absence. She is hiking, cycling and rafting through the bush for an entire month, including a 48 hour solo, completely on her own! She'll have no contact with her family and friends for an entire month, and she only gets one mail drop towards the end of the trip, after her solo.
She left this morning, and will return on December 5. We will all miss her terribly (we already do, it's been very quiet around already and she hasn't even been gone 12 hours! lol), and Pia and I wish her an amazing journey, and we look forward to hearing all about it upon her return. Hopefully once she is home and rested she will write a ridiculously long blog describing all the highs and lows of Trek!
cya about!
xoxo Di
Sunday, November 2, 2008
Knight in Shining Armour Rescues Pia from Bad Mood.
From the 1998 TV series "Duck Patrol"
He's a dork
He's a nerd
He's a klutz
He's head over heels in love
He's hopeless when it comes to girls
and he's GORGEOUS
*ahem* If you have not seen the gorgeous Darwin in this series, go on over to Youtube and watch. NOW!
It has improved my mood immensely and I hope you like it.
Just a short one from me. So long for now!
Byee!
~Pia
Saturday, November 1, 2008
Boys and Brownies
Thursday was very interesting. Ari and I, along with two of our close friends at school met up with a couple of guys we met a few weeks ago at a school day. We go to a girls’ school, and the teachers think it wise to introduce us to the opposite sex, therefore providing the need for days with neighbouring boy’s schools. So, after our day with one of these schools, we had been chatting to a couple of the guys we met on msn, and decided we’d meet up for ice cream. However there was a slight miscommunication problem...okay, it was more than slight...we’d organized to meet them at the ice cream shop on a very long road, which goes through two (or possibly more) suburbs, and we hadn’t exactly explained which end we were on, and they went to the wrong end, which would have been a very long walk for them, so they had to get off the tram they were on, catch a train back to closer to our school and catch yet another tram. Thankfully, they made it eventually, and we had a great time talking over ice cream. Then, Ari and I had to leave, as we wanted to get to my Guide unit. I am a Junior Leader at Guides, so as part of working towards an award, so I help the leaders and run activities for the girls (ranging from the ages of 8-11). I had told my leaders that I probably wouldn’t be coming, because at that time we were going to get ice cream as it was Ari’s second last day before she leaves (she shall explain where she is going herself), and the leaders suggested I bring her along, as it would be a fun Halloween night, complete with dress-ups, for the girls. Ari jumped at the chance (I’m not sure why...I go to a lot of these things and I don’t particularly enjoy them, but we figured it would be a bit of fun, and she could see what I do at Guides, and why I complain about it at times!).
So, we got home and got dressed, Ari as a witch, and me as a devil (though apparently I didn’t look very sinister), and headed off to Guides. Our tasks for the evening were simple - we took the girls out for five minutes while the leader was preparing an activity, which involved me leading a game of ‘follow the leader’, decorating the back room with really bad decorations which were not remotely scary, making the ‘Dragon’s Blood punch’ (Lemonade, with frozen ‘hands’ – food dyed water frozen inside latex gloves) and making ‘trick or treat’ bags for the girls.
It was a very hot night, and Ari and I decided to take our shoes off (her in leather boots which would have been really horrible, and me in leather sandals). We went into the back room to decorate, and there were some little wooden toothpicks on the floor where we were walking. I had the misfortune to step on one, which obviously hurt. I lifted my foot to rub it, and saw that the toothpick had imbedded itself in the ball of my foot, and was sticking out at a very bad angle. I looked at it, and showed Ari, whose jaw dropped looking at it. I hobbled over to the couch, and attempted to pull it out, as I didn’t think it could have been in there very far, but it hurt, a lot, and I winced. “Are you okay?” asked Ari. She squeezed my hand, and somehow kept a very clear head throughout the entire thing. She carefully packed up the remaining toothpicks, and went do get a leader, hiding her panic to prevent the younger girls from becoming aware of the predicament.
As soon as the leader saw what had happened she was like ‘Oh...’ and went to get paper towel and an ice pack. Ari held my hand and started chatting to me to try and take my mind off the fact that my leader was trying to remove the skewer from my foot. It came out, and fortunately didn’t bleed much, but it still hurts; now I just have a little bruise where it went in. I’m really hoping there’s none of it still in there, but I don’t think there would be. I’m okay now, but I’m definitely going to remember this event at Guides!
xoxo Di
Friday, October 31, 2008
3rd Post Lucky?
My Horrible Day:
1. Get woken up at 6:15am because sister wants to drag you into the kitchen to show you that a breakfast news program is talking about David Tennant leaving Doctor Who. You watch and agree vehemently with the reporter's comments "to many people he was the Doctor and he's gonna be tough to replace". Scowl, go back to bed.
2. On drive to school, your mother asks you exactly where you see yourself in 10 years time. You get this lecture a lot, why acting and singing is a stupid career path and you'll end up nowhere, broke and "you'll feel stupid then, won't you? When you're watching the successful actors on stage holding the broom ready to sweep the stage when they're done". Usually this speech doesn't faze you, but today you're horrified and shattered to discover that for the first time, when you look 10 years into the future, you can't see anything.
Get to school, go straight to bathroom because you don't want anyone in the year to see you cry.
3. Discover that your rival at school has secured the Awards Day vocal solo, and you don't feel any right to be jealous cause you didn't try out because you're developing nodules on your vocal chords due to misuse (ie. singing 24/7 because you'd die if you didn't.) and didn't think you could get the high note, and you knew she'd get picked anyway cause everyone damn well LOVES her.
4. Spend 1st and 2nd periods being apathetic, deliver a half baked speech and powerpoint on post WWII entertainment in period one and listen to debates in period 2. Go to recess, buy ice cream because you feel so depressed, then feel disgusting because you ate unneccessary calories.
5. Period 3 - the potential saving grace of your day - drama! Seems like a good way to spend 80 minutes, and you're the first one there and you're early. The whole theatre/studio is dark and empty, so you close your eyes and breathe in the magic. Start spinning, feel immediately better. Enter the bitchy girls. Get caught spinning in the middle of a dark theatre. Hear laughter. Sit down meekly, like you always do.
6. Still period 3 - drama teacher enters. You're excited, because they're about to tell you the documentary drama groups that made it into Creative Arts night - where the school puts on a selection of the best drama, design and tech, music and art displays for parents and families. There are three groups in your class, and two get picked. The group you are in is the only group that misses out. Again - this happened for you in the Shakespeare Festival too. Then, you get told that the group that isn't in it (because the other two groups now have to rehearse for their big performance) have to go and help set up the hall for the school play that's next week that you tried out for (and didn't get into). You don't go to the hall, instead you go to the bathroom and sob. Hope and pray that no one in the class finds you, get found by the new girl (who's really nice, if someone had to find me it would be her, admittedly). Make your way reluctantly up to the hall, aware the whole time that everyone can see your bright red face and red eyes.
7. Lunch - buy another ice cream, having forgotten the feeling of disgust from recess. Feel it return.
8. Period 4 - work on service project for 80 mins, whilst there contemplate how to break to parents that you failed maths for the first time in your life because you stopped breathing during the test from the panic.
9. After school - meet up with outside of school friend, go to Gloria Jeans, act happy
10. After Gloria Jeans, eat chips. Remember dialogue from New Earth ("that was our first date" "we had chips!") and nearly burst into tears. Again.
11. Get home to discover no one has noticed any change in your behaviour because you live in your room (which they remind you of). Note baked dinner and lack of hunger from junk food ingestion and general depression. Write blog
I need help.
Bye
~Pia.
Thursday, October 30, 2008
RIP Ten...
Today in english, I burst into tears. I rarely cry, because I'm not really the waterworks type. But I cried, and fell off my chair, hyperventilating.
Because I had just watched David Tennant winning the NTA for Best Dramatic Performance.
Now, this is a good thing. His speech, however, made me cry like a baby.
I quote:
"In January I go back to make four new specials which take Doctor Who through to the end of 2009, but when Doctor Who returns in 2010, it won't be with me. The 2009 shows will be my last playing the Doctor."
*sob*
I need chocolate, I'll write more later.
~Pia
Wednesday, October 29, 2008
Exam Results... suck.
1. Make Christmas list
2. Tell parents about maths test result
3. Drastically reduce Christmas list
Seriously. The yearly exam... and I failed. Never failed an exam before in my life, and I screw up this one.
Technically speaking, if you mark it out of questions I actually answered then I didn't do to badly - 40.5 out of 52.
However, the exam was out of 100, so I'm screwed!
See, here's how it went down. Let's start by saying that nervous and panic induced asthma and maths exams are not a very good combination!!
The day of the exam:
Enter the big corridor leading to the exam hall. Shuffle furiously through notes, trying to remember everything. Flick through summary sheets, of which you have about 20, and remember that this is the most important maths test of your life thus far and you're dead if you mess it up.
Enter exam room. Sit down. Pull out lucky sonic screwdriver, twist lucky armband on wrist, touch everything a multiple of 8 times, wipe the thin film of sweat appearing on your forehead. Begin nervous breakdown.
So there I was, sitting in the exam room, barely breathing, unable to leave my seat to get Ventolin or anything, so I had to sit there are breathe as best I could. Continuing on:
Open the front page. Breathe in, breathe out.
Open the second page. Breathe in, breathe out.
Open the third page. Whimper internally. Oh yeah, breathe.
Realise that you are royally screwed and ready yourself for the first page.
Get about two thirds of the way through and hear "pens down, everyone". Die.
You realise as you flip through your exam that you missed 48 marks worth of questions in your sheer panic and lack of oxygen.
You get the exam back a few weeks later.
You refuse to look at the mark, so someone tells you for you... AGAINST YOUR WILL!
You realise that you'll be shot when your parents find out.
So, here's my plan: write a note, put it on the table one morning, go to school, gauge rental reaction with the angry text/phone call you receive during the day, judge whether or not to go and kip at a friend's place for the night...
Bye
~Pia
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
A Guide To Boredom Busting!
So, I managed to go all morning texting without being detected by my teacher, but in my next class, this was impossible (except when I ‘went to the bathroom’). Then, at lunch, there was more texting, and a conversation on speakerphone with another friend of ours, bitching about how boring her day was. Then there was English, where we were watching a film in class (perfect hiding phones under the table time!)
I managed to get away with a lot today, things I don’t usually do…been doing a lot of it lately…conveniently ‘getting tissues’ from my locker when I know she will be just nearby and leaving class (it just so happened I needed to give her a CD…) being late to class coz I was chatting…oh well! I don’t think I’ll get away with these things much longer, might as well enjoy it while it lasts!
xoxo Di
Crazy Friends and History Classes
This entry was originally gonna be titled "Crazy Friends and Fruit Toast" (is what I'm eating right now. The toast, that is, not the friends...) But then I realised this was more apt :P
So anyway. Here's how it goes down.
My history teacher is made of awesome. Let's call her Miss X for the sake of keeping her name a secret. So anyway, I'm listening to my iPod during class (research lesson, so was ok) and my friend sitting next to me was stressing cause of her piano exam, so I subtly (not...) placed the iPod (playing a Doctor Who video) in front of her and watched as she swooned over David Tennant, chuckling as I returned to my work. Suddenly, I couldn't hear the iPod anymore (this iPod is my pride and joy, by the way. Anyway) So I look down suddenly to see Miss X removing the iPod from the earphones and walking away with it clipped to the collar of her shirt. At seeing my flabbergasted look, she simply replied, "there were people making out on your iPod. So, I had to take it! And I'm clipping it here so that every time you look over you will see that I have it." Then, grinning, she walked off. And I fell off my chair in horror.
Then I turned to my friend:
"DUDE!! WHY DIDN'T YOU TURN IT OFF WHEN SHE CAME OVER?!"
Simple response, can't really blame her:
"Duh, Pia, it was GORGEOUS. Do you really think I could pull my eyes from that for a second?"
Ok. So she has a point. I didn't let the confiscation stop my procrastination, though. I spent the rest of the lesson looking at random stuff on the web and listening to "Forgive Me" by Leona Lewis on youtube. And Tim Minchin. He's awesome, look him up. Very rude though. Anyway
I've finished my toast. It was good - tons of sugar on fruit toast! I'll have to hobble really fast tomorrow to burn it off.
Cause my knee is still messed up.
Ok, bye!!
~Pia
Sunday, October 26, 2008
Hanging with the oldies can be surprisingly fun!!
This entire thing came about because on New Year’s Eve of ’06, my mum’s cousin’s wife (but we call her my auntie, just coz it’s easier) had a seizure on the beach. Obviously it was extremely distressing; the short version of this story is that it was discovered she had a brain tumor. Now, she’s had two lots of surgery, and we are pretty sure she is well on the mend. Mum’s cousin (her husband – again, I shall refer to him as my uncle because it is easier) and some of his friends have since began to call themselves the Blackwood 8 and have now organized a fundraiser this year and last year to raise money for cancer research. This function was complete with an auction, selling things like signed and framed soccer tops, a signed Bono electric guitar and a handmade guitar signed by iconic 70’s band Daddy Cool, and a silent auction, raffle prizes and lots of booze, and my favourite, dancing to a band playing 70’s and 80’s music! I went to last year’s function, without my mum and dad, because they were overseas at the time, but this year I had them with me. It was actually extremely fun, I managed to scam Mum into letting me have her glass of champagne (:D), and I talked to lots of random older people who knew who I was but I had no clue who they were.
One rather amusing thing that happened was being introduced to an extremely camp guy who as it turned out knew my uncle from church as a kid. He introduced us to his cousin, who was even more camp than he was (I shall refer to him as Scarf Guy, because that’s what he was wearing), and for some reason, my mum elected to embarrass me by bringing up the fact that I think David Tennant is rather cute to these guys. They thought this was very funny, and Scarf Guy said “Oh, he’s hot!” and then expressed his opinion that David Tennant is gay!!!!!! OMG!!!! I found this very difficult to believe, as did my fellow outlaws when I told them. According to Mum and Dad though, if anyone knew if he was gay or not, they would! Does anyone have any thoughts? Feel free to comment!
Anyway, so much later on, the band began to play ‘The Nutbush’ so of course, I had to go and dance! Mum was too busy trying to find out if she’d won anything, so I went to find my dad, to drag him off to dance with me. Despite my best efforts, he refused to learn the Nutbush, claiming “The Nutbush was invented for people who don’t know how to dance!” to which I responded “then you should have no problems with it, Dad!” but he didn’t listen. I danced with my auntie instead (a different one) and then dad finally agreed to dance. Watching my dad dance is extremely amusing, as he simply ‘bangs his head’ to the music, and doesn’t exactly do it well. I know I’m not a good dancer either, but I’m very enthusiastic! But so is Dad – I applaud him for trying *claps*
Anyway, ‘Throw Your Arms Around Me came on, and all these couples started dancing, and I was dancing with Dad instead. While we were dancing, the hand that wasn’t holding his got grabbed randomly by some guy who was dancing with his wife. I think he was a bit drunk, but it was very weird. Then Mum turned up and we danced as a family, which was fun. As a final song, they played ‘It’s A Long Way to the Top’ (awesome song!) and my uncle tried to teach Dad the Sprinkler move and my mum took her heels off and danced like a crazy person with Scarf Guy, including with his scarf!!!! It would have looked a bit suss if he wasn’t gay!!!!
It was an extremely fun, if tiring night! They raised a lot of money, and my mum was happy coz she got some manufactured diamond earrings and four tickets to see John Mellencamp when he comes next month. I didn’t get home until after 1am, but it was well worth it! And it’s all for cancer research!
xoxo Di
The Formal!
The answer is simple.
HELL YEAH IT WAS!
I sit here, typing this, with an ice pack pressed to my knee and my calves aching from having never worn high heels before and I couldn't be more pleased. Any minute now I'm going to receive many notifications telling me that photos and videos of me dancing even more dorkily than David Tennant or Richard Hammond have popped up, and I won't care! Because I had the best. time. ever!
To begin with, there was the pre-formal. About 20 of us got ready, doing hair and makeup and outfits and things like that, eating sushi and drinking solo, laughing at the various different dates in various different attires (in my books, my half-date had the best outfit - he was wearing a suit and converse :P) (I say half date because he came as a friend, but with me and another person. So yeah.), comparing dresses, being astonished at my friend Margie who managed to come AND look stunning despite having had an appendectomy 6 days prior.
This was the point where two of my friends, Rinn and Fi, grabbed me, wrestled me into a chair and attacked me with brushes, hair straightening irons, powders, liquids, creams and various other odd smelling items to make me look pretty. They did a pretty good job - I didn't look at every photo and cringe!! *only most of them :P*
Then was the actual formal, where my half-date insisted on flirting and trying to chat up each of the teachers there. I danced like a mad person, often finding myself the centre of a crowd of cheering people encouraging me to dance even more. It was discovered that many of the guys had dancing talents that we had not seen - my friend's date could dance dorkily and make it look cool, another friend's date could breakdance (in a SUIT, of all things!) and my half-date could dance... with everyone...
Then, the afters, which were not really afters because it was really a birthday party for two of my friends. There was a karaoke machine, of which I made good use, as well as it being a jukebox and there being an abundance of junk food... and a chocolate fountain! :D
All in all, it was one of the best nights EVER, and was well worth whatever I had to pay! Not only that, but I'm probably one of a select few people in my year group that went through the night with absolutely no alcohol whatsoever! Apparently lots of people were going to afters with booze, and there was some at the formal (according to what I heard). I'm kinda proud of the fact that I share my opinions with friends that are sufficiently intelligent to recognise that you don't need alcohol to have fun.
In fact, I think having it must make it LESS fun. It's like, "hey, let's go to a party! We'll drink tons of booze, then we'll make out with someone we don't know and throw up everywhere! Awesome!"
Not.
So yeah! That's what happened!
Talk later - now I have to go and do Latin.
Byee!
~Pia
Saturday, October 25, 2008
Right, now it's my turn!
This is partially in response to Ari’s and Pia’s blogs about the topic of fangirling and guys – I thought I’d put my own spin on what they have said.
I’m a little different to these two. Initially, I used to be very shy about guys, maybe because I had a little sister, who would berate me endlessly if I said anything (specifically I am talking about my first fangirl experience, Ben McKenzie of The O.C fame). In year 7 and 8 I never said anything to anyone, until my sister watched The O.C with me and said “Don’t you reckon he’s hot?” and I agreed.
I quickly moved on though, discovering Robin Hood and the gorgeous Jonas Armstrong with the help of Ari, and others after that. Speaking of that actually, it makes me think of meeting Ari about two and a half years ago, and I first asked her about guys, and she went on a long rant about how guys our age are all immature and painful and how she had no interest in getting a boyfriend. At the time, I had to agree with her, and to an extent I still do, but when I asked her about hot celebs, she looked at me like I was crazy. I thought, “Ah, she’s a bit younger than me, hasn’t gone through it yet, it will happen eventually”. Now, I’ve discussed this with her since, and she has stated she was not lying about it at the time, but it took her absolutely AGES to admit to me that she had more than one reason for watching Robin Hood! (Sorry, random tangent, I do this a lot, just warning you!)
Anyway, so it probably wasn’t until I had some really close friends that I was willing to talk about it, but really, my fangirling has never been of an obsessive nature, more a passing fancy. I don’t have strange dreams with them involved, unlike Ari (though at times I wish it did! ) and I do not stare at photos for ages, I can’t for some reason, it feels…wrong. Okay, that came out a bit weird but I hope someone knows what I’m saying. I think these guys are very cute, and I have been known to re-watch shirtless scenes, but I’m not really obsessed if that makes any sense.
I used to not mention any of these things to anyone, but now I can have a conversation with girls at school who are not close friends about how good looking the guys from Gossip Girl are and no-one will judge me. In fact, I recently discovered a number of girls I know have a thing for David Tennant as well, though the topic has never really come up with some of them. I think the reason I didn’t talk about it for so long, particularly at high school was a fear of being judged. It goes back to primary school when one of my ‘friends’ used to pick on the rest of us about boys, and say if we didn’t like anyone (I’m talking about people we knew, guys in our classes here) then we must be lesbians (although, she never liked anyone….but that’s another story). Most of us were in general a little young for fangirling, and then at one stage I expressed that one of the guys in our class was at least ‘semi-normal’ and not really mean to me, unlike most of them, and the entire thing got blown way out of proportion, and it wasn’t helped by the fact that whenever we played the ABC skipping game where whichever letter you land on is the first letter of the name of a guy you liked, I stopped on the letter ‘L’ (his name was Liam – and it was NOT INTENTIONAL – I NEVER LIKED HIM!!!!). So since then, I didn’t discuss it, until by a few years into high school I discovered basically everyone had the fangirl gene in them about someone or another, it was just more prominent in some.
I still get a bit embarrassed discussing these things with my mum, and particularly my dad, but I try not to let it bother me anymore. Ari has said before she can’t discuss it with her mum, but mine is pretty good about these things in all honesty. One time, Ari and Mum and I ended up having this very long conversation about guys when she was taking us home from a concert. It made me feel a bit weird to start with, but I’ve soon gotten used to it, I’d just prefer she didn’t mention these things to randoms like she did last night (again, another story which I wish to tell at some stage)! And apart from calling men she likes (celebrities, and also my dad) ‘a spunkrat’ – don’t ask! Apparently it was a ‘cool’ phrase for a while, I consider myself pretty lucky. Ari and I had trouble deciding which was worse once, her mum saying ‘Isn’t this the guy you and Di think is a bit dishy?’ about James McAvoy while watching ‘Atonement’, or my mum’s insistence at saying ‘spunkrat’ at any opportunity!
So, in conclusion, I’m probably the most open fangirl of the three of us, but also most likely the least fangirly, so I’m not sure how that works. I can safely skim the fangirl surface with most people (my own age) I’m relatively comfortable around, but will only go deeper into true fangirling with a few select people, these two and a couple of other close friends. I haven’t really found the satisfaction in fangirling with other fangirls on forums as of yet, I have used them a bit but not that much. This is probably though because I am the first person to admit I FAR prefer to actually TALK to people in person, or at least over the phone, rather than to chat on MSN, I find it impersonal, and you don’t get to hear or see people’s reactions to things (and no, emoticons do not count!). I think, however, at some point (hopefully during the summer holidays, well after exams and my trip to France I shall have time to discover the real joys of forums.
Speaking of time, I haven’t been doing my homework in the time I’ve been writing this, so I best go! Sorry it was such a long one!
Cya!
xoxo Di
This is the filler blog, it's just a filler blog... (Chaser's War, sorry...)
And yes, I agree, Shakespeare IS better than Stephanie Meyer. Honestly, people were going ape over Romeo YEARS before they were swooning over Edward Cullen. (Although, that Hamlet... :P)
I have to agree with you there, although it's slightly different in my case. I am very undercover as well, though not so much around my friends. My entire group knows about Mr Armstrong and Mr Tennant, plus a few others, though those two are the main ones :P
The people I hide most of this from (other than the girls at school like the Meyerites) are my family. I keep EVERYTHING to do with my fangirliness from them! For example, if they found this blog, I'd be shot!
One day, I was watching Doctor Who (Utopia, AWESOME ep :P) and suddenly I thought "what if they knew? What would change?" I know, philosophical, eh? It's amazing what Doctor Who makes you think.
So yes, I keep much of this kind of thing away from family members, preferring to feel the satisfaction of knowing that others share my obsession (Ari - you're so right - I never thought text on a screen could be so brilliant!), even if I've not met those people in real life.
Right! I apologise for this blog (by the way, if you're looking at the blog title and thinking "WTF is she going on about?" type "the chaser filler song" into YouTube, then laugh.
This was mainly just a little drabble to remind Ari that I am the best blogger around here :P
And also one to post before my sure to be massive post about the formal...
...which is tonight!!
So, for now, adios!
~Pia
Friday, October 24, 2008
A Confession . . .
Perfect example: today, at the end of a hectic day and a thoroughly exhausting week I was tired and worn down. Then I discovered that my iPod was missing. My iPod touch is my pride and joy. It has 16 gig of storage space, wireless internet connection and a touch calculator (which is surprisingly handy). I’m never seen without it. I was livid when I couldn’t find it. When Di came looking for me at the end of the day I was in a right state. I was swearing and panicking and close to tears (something that doesn’t happen very often to me). My first thought was ‘OH GOD MY IPOD! MY FOUR HUNDRED AND SOMETHING DOLLAR IPOD!’ then I thought ‘How can I live without my iPod? What will my parents say?’ and then thirdly, a horrible thought struck me that made the shudder, wince and gag at the same time. What if someone found the iPod, went through my pictures and found my folder full of British eye-candy?! How would I explain 15 beaming pictures of Jonas, David Tennant, Richard Hammond and Chris Martin being on my iPod alongside the photos of me and my friends all dolled up for a social? Would I be able to look that person in the eye again? Would I be able to look anybody in the eye again? A terrible panic seized me along with a determination to save my vanity and find my iPod.
Ok, so it was in my sports bag the whole time but that’s not the point. The point is that I was more worried about it being found and my pictures being discovered than losing it in the first place. I hate the thought of the girls in my year level discovering my crushes and I don’t know why. Unlike most girls my age I have a very specific type that I’m attracted to and I stick to just that type (and I have very high standards) but that’s enough to write a whole blog on alone. That still doesn’t explain why I’m so shy! I’m normally a tomboy and I only open up about these things to a select few. A select few real world friends that is. Di and a couple of our other friends are the only ones I talk to about these things face to face and I still find that awkward. There’s something reassuring about text on a computer screen that emboldens me. Maybe it’s just nice to know that the people on the forum are exactly like you: unashamedly fangirly. They’re not going to laugh or pass rumours on to their friends! I think only us fangirls can truly appreciate the value (the entertainment value that is) of evaluating, comparing and enjoying masculine perfection. Mean-time, I’m still not gonna say anything about my weird dreams and crazy obsessions to the girls I sit next to in English class. After all, these are the same girls that presented a case to me just the other day about why Stephanie Meyer is far better than Shakespeare. Puh-lease!! If you take that into account can you blame me?!
Ari
P.S. I can see that the start of a competition between Pia and I is going to end badly . . . it'll be fun though *blows raspberry at Pia* :P
Hello Drama, I Pwned You!!
I think it's the best one I've ever done!!
See, all of my other performances have felt like recitations - there wasn't any acting. This one was Documentary Drama, which we did in quite a short amount of time, so there wasn't enough time for us to get bored and make it monotonous.
The other good thing was, it was sufficiently soon that it felt like just another rehearsal. So, I wasn't as nervous as I had been in the past. Which was good. Very, very good.
But mainly, I'm really proud of myself cause I was acting!! *sigh* Not much, but it's a start, hey? It's a bit indescribable, a bit out of body, and it's AWESOME!!
Anyway, I'm off, I'll stop rambling :P
Byee!
~Pia
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
I Should Be Working...
I am currently being subjected to a legalised form of torture commonly known as Aus Geography, Civics and Citizenship. This is a subject where you sit for 80 minutes perfecting your glassy-eyed look (highly necessary for occassions such as long assemblies... and speech day...) and pretending to care. Then, you go into the end of year exam and die. Yes, I could have paid attention earlier on, and I sort of did, which is why I passed the exam we just got back. Just...
*sigh* I am very, very bored. Subsequently, I will do a Dr Cox-esque rant as to what I would rather be doing right now:
Right at this very second I would rather be playing hockey. Even though it is raining. There's something fun about playing hockey in the rain, even though all the protective gear gets totally waterlogged. (I'm a goalkeeper, see. Keepers are the coolest people. So there.)
I would very much like to be on Facebook, reading amusing lists of things that bag me out... and are all true.
I would prefer to be dancing like a crazy person to "Lose My Breath" as I was at 7:30am...
I would rather be in English presenting my Catherine Tate movie. Even if not many people laugh. For the love of all things holy, I hope they will...
Aaaand, AHGCC has drained my intellectual resources to such an extent that I can no longer think of what I'd rather do. This must be what brainwashing feels like!
So, for now, I'm off! I may be back on later to tell all about how my audition for a speech day solo went... it's at lunch... I don't like my chances...
Love,
~Pia
Tuesday, October 21, 2008
We are so naughty!
Before I continue, I wish to point out to Ari that in the immortal words of Seth Cohen, that you are neither the brains or beauty, but the bitch!!! (haha only joking! Only fellow O.C fans could possibly get that one anyway!)
Now, to the point of the matter! You see, Ari and I spent the entire afternoon today hanging around school (no, we aren’t total losers, let me explain!). You see, in an attempt to hang out more, we have been ‘doing homework in the library’ on occasional afternoons. Now, as you can imagine, we get very little actual work completed, but we always enjoy ourselves! Anyway, today Ari had been having some issues joining this blog (as Blogger was being extremely annoying and not letting her join. Anyway, back on topic!).
I should explain that our school believes we should all have laptops for “work purposes”, and one day, in a certain classroom on one side of this school, someone discovered there was an unsecured wireless network which we could connect to, and therefore use Blogger/JAF/ Facebook/Myspace/MSN and other things usually blocked by the school server, so whenever we have a class in that room, we use every opportunity to make proper use of its excellent facilities!
So that I could help Ari finally join this blog, we sat ourselves in this classroom on the internet for the next hour and a half. Now, Ari is a new Facebook user (ssshhh) and had recently discovered the joys of joining random fangirling groups, and it made my task in wrenching her away in order to solve the Blogger problem extremely difficult. At about four o’clock, she was STILL fangirling and we were no closer to getting her into the blog. At this time, we then lost connection to the wireless network, and we became somewhat concerned (okay, VERY concerned) that we would not be able to resume our activities if we could not connect again.
At this point, Ari received a great many slaps from me, and a few touches of my apparently cold hands just to annoy her because I had actually thought we could sort that out and then do some work (boy, was I naive!). Thankfully we did manage to get back on the rogue wireless and I FINALLY got her into Blogger (after much frustration on my part, not only at Blogger but at Ari as well for giggling in my ear at something on Facebook).
I think she’s had enough payback for this one though, considering I got a call from her on my way home saying she’d been egged by some randoms celebrating the end of their schooling, which we affectionately call ‘Muck-Up Day’!!! (Nice one, guys!!!!!!)
xoxo Di
*Double Take...*
I have an announcement of excitingness for you all.
I am going to... a formal!!!
Ok, so perhaps not as exciting as I made it out to be. But by golly, it is!!
Although, there are a few flaws in the whole "OMG THE FORMAL IS SO AWESOME!" thing.
Allow me to list them.
1. The Date. This is the person you take to the formal, which makes or breaks people's opinion of you until the next formal (at least - many will remember for LIFE). And so, to avoid this, I thought, 'How about I go by myself and just dance like a crazy person with my friends?'
Uh, no. Sorry, doesn't work like that - that's the same as going alone, which makes you strange.
So, if you have no option for a date and you don't want to go "alone", here is my advice to you.
Take a guy friend!! "No," I hear you wail, "I have no guy friends!!". Yes you do, you just may not have met them yet! Ask your friends, for they will have guy friends, and meet them a week or so beforehand. And all is peachy!
2. The Dress. This is the most glaringly obvious point, and yet is so overlooked! I got my dress 2 weeks before the formal, which gave most of my friends heart palpitations because they thought I'd never get it in time. However, I got it (relatively cheaply compared to other formal dresses, but FREAKISHLY EXPENSIVE according to my monitary capabilities...) and I like it. So there. Which brings me to my next issue...
3. The Shoes. I own 4 pairs of shoes - school shoes, trainers for PE and hockey, an old pair of sandals and a pair of boots. So, you can imagine my surprise when my friends said, "Great dress.. what shoes?" I died inside. So, we went shopping. I found shoes. I tried them on. They were pretty.
AND I COULDN'T WALK IN THEM!
Not to mention that they were even more expensive than my dress.
Something tells me I may end up wearing the threadbare sandals - at least I'll be able to walk by the end of the night!
4. The Look. This is a combination of hair and makeup. Now, here's the problem. My hair is a block of the most boring colour and the most boring length, and subsequently there is approximately NOTHING that can be done with it. Damn.
Makeup - I own none. The only makeup I've ever worn is stage makeup, which you couldn't wear anywhere where people are going to be standing anywhere near you because then you look like you could peel your face off at any second like a Slitheen or something. So, I'll have to entrust my baby-faced complexion to the hands of my make-up wise friends... I'll let you know how it goes if I come out alive...
5. The Cost. Ok, let's add up the expenditure:
- Your ticket: $50
- Date's ticket: $50
- The dress: $60
- The shoes: ??? (the ones I looked at were $90, so let's add that into the overall cost)
- The hairstyle: (salon cost) Up to $50/$60
- The makeup: Cost my friend nearly $160
All up: $470
Nearly $500 for a night out. Worth it?
I'll let you know... it's on Saturday :P
Bye for now!
~Pia
Two for the price of one!
*awkward wave* hello! Welcome to our new blog. We’re the Undercover Outlaws and we’re three Aussie teens talking all things stupid, pointless and Jonas! Isn’t our name brilliant?! I thought of that . . . I just thought I should get that in somehow . . . credit where credit’s due and all . . .
Back to the intro: My name’s Ari, short for Aramis of Three Musketeer fame. I’ll be joined by my friends Di (short for D’Artagnion) and Pia (short for Porthos) and we’ll be kept in line and told off occasionally by the wonderful (if scary) boss musketeer Athos (Lucky for you! *wink*) I’m the tallest of the Outlaws but I make up for my gift of height with my lack of intelligence and a tendency to be a little (ok a LOT) non sequiter. I’m the only one of us who plays more than one sport. I play soccer and cricket and am actually pretty good at them! I also love reading, writing, singing and acting but I can dance a damn sight better than the other two as well. It’s glaringly obvious that they’re the brains and I’m the beauty (thought they might have something to say about that *runs and hides*!)
This is my second chance at writing a blog and when I first decided on this with my friends I was determined to better my first effort. Unfortunately I got a little less determined and a little more distracted so you’ll just have to make do with what’s left.
I’ve been away from forums and fansites for a little longer than I would have liked, mostly because I was banned by my parents. My favourite lurking place was http://www.jonasarmstrongfansite.com/ until my parents found out about it. Over the past few months when I haven’t been in contact with my friends on JAF I must admit that I strayed. I abandoned Jonas for David Tennant, then I discovered Chris Martin and THEN I saw Richard Hammond. It came to the point where in games of ‘Marry, Shag, Throw off a cliff’ Jonas was having his life cut short prematurely on quite a regular basis. Shocking, I know. I came back to the site when I was in desperate need of updates on a friend who was about to give birth and have become addicted all over again. People remembered me and I’ve rekindled old ties as well as made some new friends. This prompted me to think: do certain things ever really change?
Now I know people say change is all around us, not only that, most people say change is GOOD for us but I reckon that if you look a little deeper you’ll start to see uncanny similarities between certain ‘changes’ in our lives. Example time: When I was 7 I lied to my parents about nicking half a packed of butterscotch lollies from the car glove box, when I was 11 I lied to my parents about eating three of my little sister’s Easter eggs and just a couple of weeks ago I lied to my parents about whether or not I was responsible for a quarter of a block of chocolate and some crisps disappearing. I’ve grown up and ‘changed’ in many ways but I still nick food occasionally and my parents always know I've done it.
It doesn’t have to be stretched out over several years either, it can be in the space of a few months: back when I had my first blog I wrote about smacking my head on the shower soap holder when I shaved my legs for the first time. Since then I’ve tried several different methods of doing it, some more successfully than others. I tried running a basin of water in the sink and then standing one leg up on the side of the bath. I got soapy water everywhere, got the dust from the bath stuck to the soles of my feet and then I slipped and cracked my shin on the tiled ledge. Ouch. The next time I tried phasing out the bath and standing my leg up on the basin with the water in it. I was at first bemused by the rather strenuous and undignified half-split-thing that resulted from putting my foot up to the height of my mid-thigh. The sole of my foot soon got damp and I started slipping on the edge of the basin (with the razor still in my hand). I grabbed the corner of the shower to steady myself but by then my hand was damp as well so my hand slipped from the side of the shower and I was left doing a rather comical hopping wobble while waving my arms around like a pinwheel. I eventually regained my balance but I nicked my knee in the process (God knows how) and it ended up bleeding for a few minutes afterwards. Ouch. A month ago I tried doing it in the shower, well, kneeling in the shower with the leg I was shaving out of the shower. It was all going swimmingly until the soapy water swirling around the knee that was in the shower made me slip and come crashing down rather unceremoniously onto my rear. Ouch. Again. Just last week I thought I had it figured out. I should do it in the shower, with all of me in the shower and just push the shower head down so the water shoots at the wall. In the process of going up and down and while washing my razor I’d been very careful to avoid that troublesome soap holder. I finished and thought to myself with unmitigated smugness ‘I am so clever, and I didn’t even smack my head’. Straight after I had thought this I stood up very quickly and smacked my head square on the shower head I’d pushed down. Yes, the metal shower head. Big ouch. I still think of Athos telling me to run myself a bath whenever I hurt myself.
It comes as no surprise then that as soon as I realised that there are Ghost Squad re-runs playing late on Saturday nights that I started re-watching and got re-hooked. How could I ever have doubted him? Jonas is just as gorgeous as I remember him (and with any luck this Saturday should be the one with the shirtless scene in it!) I’ve gone back through my old stash of photos and have had a good ogle. It just doesn’t help that my family remembers him too. When my dad saw me watching it last weekend, while I was over at my cousins’ house (now THAT’S devotion) he said at the top of his lungs ‘Oh look, it’s your boyfriend!’ I wanted to disappear, which isn’t the easiest thing for me to do seeing as I’m not the most inconspicuous person around. I hadn’t seen him in three months but as soon as I clapped eyes on him again I remembered why I joined JAF.
The point I’m trying to make here is that not only am I stupid, clumsy and incompetent, but that some things will never change.
Till next time
Ari :D
Monday, October 20, 2008
A Rant. Because I Can.
Thought I'd have a rant. Fun, eh?
Anyway. Today I was attacked. By a rogue cockroach. However, this nasty little roach wasn't homicidal. In fact, if I wasn't so scared of them, I'm sure if I had sat down and had a good chat with the little thing I would have discovered it to be quite the nice chap.
It was being wielded by my sister. Now, as I said a few lines back (blink and you'd miss it. So don't blink. Don't turn your back, don't look away and... uh... sorry, back on topic...) I have this fear of cockroaches. Don't deny it - you do as well. Everyone does - they're creepy little things.
So, this morning, having slept in (as is my right, obviously), my sister decided that the best way to wake me up would be to deposit a live cockroach on me. Effective. But very, very mean.
I screamed. Duh.
Got out of bed, chased my sister around the house, told her to go to my room and remove the offending insect matter. She went in, and decided she couldn't find it. So I had to. It was nestled between my doona and my pillow, looking quite cosy. Yelling, I told her to remove it, fuming all the more as she skipped merrily away. So, doing something that I thought was highly rational... I locked myself in the bathroom and refused to leave.
For, you see, this is not what I usually do. I don't take one jibe from a sibling and chuck a massive spaz. Usually I laugh and deny them the satisfaction. But today I didn't, cause I just wasn't in the mood.
So, having locked myself in the bathroom (with my iPod, otherwise I would not have survived 2 minutes...) for 20 minutes, I was rather impressed at my resilience. So, spurred on by another track from the Pigeon Detectives, I listened to the barrage of abuse I was receiving from my sister, hearing how it was muffled and distant and I could barely hear her opinion of me, which was nice.
Then... the parents arrived. And I was stuffed.
Conversation went a little like this:
Parent1: Um, you gonna come out any time soon?
Me: Depends. You got a key?
P1: No. Why?
Me: Cause the only way I'm leaving is if you remove me! (Which wasn't true - I had every intention of leaving with sufficient time to arrive at school and present my Catherine Tate movie about satire. Anyway.)
P1: Right. *P2 arrives*
P1: Any particular reason why she's in there?
P2: She's being a teenager, being stupid. Leave her.
P1: But, why?
P2: She had a cockroach chucked at her by a sibling. And now she's throwing a hissy fit.
P1: Well, that wasn't very nice!
P2: *defensively* Well, she slept in! It was her own fault!
I love my family.
*ahem*
So yes! That's a rant for you! Hope you enjoyed that, and next time you see a roach lying around, please, throw it out, not at.
That last sentence made no sense, so I'd best go.
Byee!
Love,
~Pia.
Saturday, October 18, 2008
Welcome!
Welcome to the Undercover Outlaws!!!!
Obviously, we are undercover ---> (see usernames), but we thought we'd introduce ourselves! & thank the brilliant Lucky for giving us this opportunity!
Hello, I'm Di! What can I say about myself...mmm...well, I'm 16, very short (shorter than Pia even, who's not exactly tall), i've got brown hair, but I put highlights in it coz it's a bit boring. I'm from Australia. I love reading, music, the internet (esp JAF!!) and chatting to my fellow outlaws, Ari and Pia here! I'm the most clumsy and awkward person around (and no, I'm not exaggerating here, I am actually serious! It's really bad, I hurt myself all the time!), and also probably the most serious minded of the bunch - which is saying something, because we're all nutbags most of the time!!! I'm absolutely hopeless at sports of any description, and prefer to sit on my bum all day rather than exercise, unless my mum drags me off to the gym. I spend far too much time on the computer/internet than can possibly be considered normal, and use it as a good excuse for avoiding my homework...which i'm doing right now!!!
So I'd better sign off!
xoxo Di
The Undercover Outlaws
We are the Undercover Outlaws - Pia, Di and Ari. This, faithful reader, is Pia speaking.
Firstly, praises to Good Queen Lucky for letting us outlaws blog here. *bows*
Right! Myself:
I am Pia, the middle of the Outlaws. AKA BBC Addict and Honorary Gallifreyan. Probably the shortest, and definitely the stoutest, I am average in most areas - shortish brown hair, square block glasses (geek chic :P), no sense of style and a high level of annoying-ness.
However - I'm not ALL useless:
I sing. And act. And dance... awfully.
And now, I will sign off and make way for my fellow UO's to post their own descriptions... for there is TV to be viewed, people to talk to...
...and dances to prepare for...