First page of the kind word archive.

the breakup box.

Posted by jessica on Feb 19, 2010 with 22 Comments
in Funny Stuff, photography, Thoughts and Feelings
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He said I’d just be ready one day, but I didn’t believe him.

My counselor, I mean.

I nodded and went through all the motions of agreement, but I could hardly imagine it. I guess because I’d never been there before. It’s like trying to describe the color purple when you’re blind; when you’ve never seen color anyway. You could talk about a mixture of red and blue, how it mingles and fades into something else entirely, but that has no relevance because you’ve never seen that either. You might as well be the President talking about a mixture of peace and healthcare reform; they are just words, and once said too much without the actual idea it represents, they lose their power. And then peace and healthcare reform become like red and blue; they mingle and fade into something else entirely. Though I’m not sure it’s purple.

There’s this song we sing in church, I Can Only Imagine. It’s a beautiful song that frames the afterlife in lyrics and the key of D. Well, it’s in D when I sing it, anyway. And I have this vague notion that the time after death will be good, that I will finally and once and for all be hidden from enemies that hate me for no other reason than God loves me. And yes, the fact that what I do, whether I ever say another kind word again, has absolutely no bearing on either of those–the love of a God and the hatred of another–is stunning.

But the afterlife.

I am going to be honest now and say that the very notion of it scares me. I’m not saying I know it won’t be good; I am simply saying that I don’t know it at all, and I have a long history of fearing the unknown.

But just because you cannot imagine something does not mean that a). it will not come to pass or b). it will not be okay. Because it’s true, my counselor was right. I was driving in the car, on my way to the gym, and all of the sudden I just knew I was ready to move on with my life.

And I stepped into the unimaginable like it was an old pair of sneakers. Or at least pretended to. And I looked around for someone to pronounce the Time of Death, but nobody was there; so instead I texted my brother Jason that it was time. I even used the d word.

And no, not that d word.

I am talking about divorce, but now that you mention it, the other d word could have been appropriate too.

But how?

How do you go from both saying I do to one saying I didn’t to me now saying I don’t?

Beats the heck out of me.

But this is my journey and I pinch myself often, but not in the pinch me, I’m dreaming sort of way; more like pinch me, this absurdity just can’t be real.

Not when it involves a link to a site that my friend sent me, after we talked about how I was thinking about selling my rings:

outofyourlife.com

I’m not even joking. They send you a box, a breakup box, and once you fill it with your unwanted jewelry, you mail it back to them and then wait for a check to arrive once they’ve sold it for you. If you think you could get more than what they got for it, you have the option of returning the check in exchange for the jewelry.

Nice. Low risk. I’m not in the riskiest mood right now. You don’t generally see a lot of survivors playing Russian Roulet; you just don’t.

My breakup box arrived just this afternoon. And I cannot believe how ridiculous the name of that thing is; cannot help but like to say it, because WTF. The F stands for freak, in this case. As in I sometimes freak out when I take a long hard look at the landscape of my life.

Or maybe, just maybe the F doesn’t stand for freak.

But if you ever wondered what a breakup box looks like, now you know.


And I know, I was kind of let down by how normal it looked too. I mean, really, not even a broken heart? Or even a cartoon black widow spider, happily munching away on her mate?

But then I opened it.

And saw this.

And couldn’t help but laugh.
At least it wasn’t Girls Rule! Boys Drool!, I guess.
But again, WTF.
How in the world is this my life?

opening night in Tokyo!

Posted by jessica on Aug 12, 2009 with No Comments
in Performance, photography
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Ah. Another opening night.

Only this one was kind of special because it was in Tokyo.
And we had super big screens to the right and left of our stage with characters on them that looked like this:
#$#
#
#$%
&*
Okay, so not really like that, per se, but that’s the closest thing I have to actual Japanese characters on my keyboard.
One good thing about having an audience that speaks Japanese is that if you happen to go up on a few of your lines in your one number, as long as you keep saying something, than they will never know the difference.
Right?
Well, at least that’s what all your friends tell you. Because they’re your friends and they generally are in the business of making you feel better when you’re disappointed in yourself.
But then when you go to the swanky opening night party and see Japanese celebrities on the arm of a man who is certainly not Japanese and definitely speaking English, you realize that the jig is up. He, at least, knew. Because when you started simply saying doo bee da dee da ba for about one full phrase, he could recognize that it certainly wasn’t the Queen’s English anymore.
Shoot.
But then it goes full circle when, right as you lean over and tell your friend that you are rather embarrassed that you scatted just a little during Sing!, especially since you know that the English–speaking man was in the audience–that same English-speaking man next to the Japanese celebrities mouths to you across the way, You were fabulous tonight. And then he smiles. And so do you.
Okay, okay, so do I.

Because believe it or not, that scenario was about me.
And bless that English-speaking man’s heart for saying that. It’s amazing how much a kind word can buoy the spirit.
Oh, and this is Anthony who plays Richie and here we are, all dressed up in our party finery.
The thing about Anthony is that this is our third tour together and our second time in Asia together. See, he was my Tyrone when I played Iris in Fame Korea. We then did the National Tour of Will Rogers Follies together, and here we are on the line every night, you guessed it–together.
We joke that we need to start telling producers that we come as a package deal.
He’s a sweetheart and a kind soul and we have laughed often together and had our share of deep talks that involve anything from Jesus to men to what we want to do when we grow up.
And one last thing about Anthony: he is the third man that I have ever kissed. We had some great smooches every night in Korea for about two months and boy does that man know how to keep his lips soft.
Oh and one last thing about opening night: although the Japanese do love the show (we’ve been told) they are very very conservative when it comes to laughing or even applauding for the most part. Many of us don’t quite know what to do with our punch lines now that they are no longer followed by laughter. Raucous, wild laughter. Cause you know how amazingly hilarious we all are.
Ahem.
We’ve also added an actual bow to the show, instead of just letting the lights fade on our final kick line. This is because the audiences here will just keep clapping at the end of the show because they won’t know it’s over and won’t leave. I am thinking that we might not give them enough credit, but hey, that’s just me. Anyway, now we have this really cute little bow involving our hats and then we partner up and tip offstage, so it’s really quite fun.
Plus the audience gets a chance to appreciate us and that is just never a bad thing.