Friday, April 15, 2011

The First Kiss

!: The First Kiss

The First Kiss

It was a few days after Christmas, 1969. I was loaded down with cash from grandparents, uncles, aunts, and others who years before had given up trying to shape me out. I'm talking about tens of dollars and it was burning a big hole in my pocket.

Little did I know, this gift of cash would be the first domino to fall in a chain of dominos that would lead to the gift of euphoria.

I received a call from my close girl-type friend, Shirley, thoroughly out of the blue. She was going to Willowbrook Mall with a girlfriend, and wanted to know if I would like to join them. Reluctant at first, I felt that hole burning where the cash was pocketed. I wanted to buy the Crosby, Stills and Nash album released the prior June. After a dinky more thought, the first domino fell. I met them at the angle of Bloomfield and Ridgewood Avenues to pick up the bus that would drag us out to the Willowbrook Mall.

I didn't offer to drive them in the house car because I couldn't. I was only weeks from turning eighteen and I did not have my license yet. I was afflicted with Boring Oldest Brother Syndrome, Bobs), a disease that attacks the maturity system; for example rendering one to postpone getting one's driver's license for as long as one maybe can. It's quite crippling really.

Happily, I met them at the bus stop.

Shirley introduced me to Sue. It took, oh let's see, about 3.7 seconds. Nope, I think less. I'm pretty sure it was when I heard the "ue" sound of her name that I promptly felt something deep inside my chest, a ping right below the top of the rib cage, like an galvanic shock only it didn't hurt; it felt in fact goofy, in fact exhilarating.

She was beautiful. Her hair smelled like the freshest Breck shampoo for color treated hair I had ever laid nose on. And she was awash in Shalimar perfume, sending my olfactory glands into nasal nirvana.

During the bus ride to the mall, surprisingly I was overcome by an eerie belief that pushed me to new heights of flirtatious wit. I was on top of someone else's game and loving it! By the time we had arrived at the mall, I was hooked. Oh boy was I hooked. We had giggled our way into some kind of magic. And the very best part, as I would learn later from Shirley, who by then had been ordained the puppet master of Bob's love world, was that Sue didn't just like me, she 'Liked' me--as in capital letters--'Liked' me!

How fast one's fortunes turn when suddenly plunged into the throes of youthful romantic chase. We walked the long winding caverns formed by nameless boutiques and anchor stores, laughing and smiling and teasing and touching and laughing some more. To the casual observer, it was probably nauseating but I didn't care. I was dominoing into a fabulous new world. I bought the Cs&N album. The girls replenished their perfume stock. Before we knew what hit us, it was time to go.

As the bus pulled away, my mind was dancing in heaven. But by the time we arrived back and disembarked where the adventure had all begun, heaven had turned to hell. It was all too good to be true. Rejection was moments away. Such was the fragile nature of my life.

The bus sputtered away from our stop, dumping an ominous black cloud of monoxide in its wake. But all I could immerse myself in was Sue, who by now was wearing a dazzling array of seventeen fragrances she had tested on her delicate soft wrists for me to blushingly critique. The air about her was a gorgeous collage to the finely tuned nasal passages of a teen boy in fresh mushy pursuit. Unfortunately it was a wondrous occasion that could not last. It was time to be noble in the face of her pleasant rejection with an empty smile, and cherish the fond memory of the mall.

I took the lead step in the dance of disengagement.

"Well, I guess I have to get going." As clever a line as I had ever led with.

"Yeah, its evening meal time and my brother is picking me up at Shirley's in ten minutes."

"Hey Shirls, can you give me a call later after din?" I asked, trying not to tip my cards too much.

"Yeah, no problem. I think we have something to talk about." She was so obvious.

"Oh yeah? You think?" I coyly replied.

"Yeah, we need to talk too Shirls?" Sue added.

My heart sank at the foreboding possible of their pending conversation. I reached deep inside to assert the high road.

"All right then, I guess that's that! every person needs to talk! every person is talkin'!" Not a very good job. I probably needed to reach deeper.

Unfortunately my old friend panic had made himself at home in my thoughts. Was this going to be as good as it gets? Was my breath killing her? Was she just now realizing the lowliness of her affection?

I had to say something but what? What could I maybe say to rescue this sweet occasion from the clutches of rejection like all the others?

I found it
.
"Okay then ... Catcha!" My rescue skills needed work.

"It was in fact nice to meet you Bob. I had a in fact great time."

My inner voice wallowed, "Yeah right. And I have a nice personality too. Isn't that what you want to say? Go on. I can take it!"

"Me too, Sue. Take care." I answered. Oh well, I was noble.

I turned to Shirley.

"Hey Shirls, talk to ya later!"

With shoulders drooped, I started my trek home in emotional upheaval, feeling exuberance and dread simultaneously. The day's events played over and over in my head. I forced myself to think about something else, like hockey fights, but to no avail. The feel of her warm wrists kept interrupting. I was in bad shape.

I barely ate evening meal that night, which set off all kinds of alarms at home. Mom's inquisition began: was I feeling okay, did someone steal my money at the mall, was I depressed about school beginning in a few short days?

"Nope, I am just falling in love for the very first time. That's all. There is nothing that can be done. My heart must tour this journey alone. It will find its way--somehow. Thank you though for inquiring." I indulged my inner self.

I excused myself from the table to recession to my sanctuary, where I listened to "Suite: Judy Blue Eyes" about forty seven times, waiting for the puppet master's call. Finally, the phone rang.

"Hello?"

"She in fact likes you." She got right to it, a trademark of her no nonsense style.

"Oh God! Really?"

"Yeah. She thinks you're in fact cute and funny."

Suddenly someone else voice.

"Oh my costly Bobby. My dinky lover boy."

Damn! It was my dinky brother Steve. He could come to be a real pitbull of pain if I didn't squelch this immediately.

"Hold on Shirls."

I located my hand over the phone.

"Hey Stevey hang up or I'll chop up your Gi Joe!" I screamed at the top of my lungs. I didn't like playing the Gi Joe mutilation card but I was desperate to stop him in his tracks.

I listened into the receiver.

Click.

I removed my hand and continued.

"Sorry about that. So where were we? Oh yeah, 'cute'? Can't I ever be rugged or athletic or something?" I asked despondently.

To me 'cute' was a notch above 'nice personality'. 'Oh, he's so cute' as in 'he's so cute to like me but I could care less'--that kind of cute.

"Forget rugged. She said 'cute' and meant it in a good way."

"In a good way," I repeated.

"Yes in a good way. Look she Likes you!"

"Are you sure?"

"Yes, I just got off the phone with her! She wanted to know about your situation."

"What situation? I have no situation. I've never had a situation. I'm situation free!"

"That's what I told her--not in those words exactly. I smoothed it out for ya."

"Smoothed what out? I don't need smoothing."

"Don't make me laugh! You need plenty. I told her you were just coming around from a terrible break-up from over a year ago."

"Oh that's plane Shirls!"

"Yeah, I thought you might like it. She thinks you are sensitive and likes that."

I took a deep breath.

"Wow ... Now what?"

I was a fish out of water, pathetically incompetent in such matters. Maybe I could get guidance from my younger brothers. My mind was racing.

"Listen! There is a get-together tomorrow night at Shnooky's house. Sue is going and wants you to come over."

Shnooky lived in this weird world where her dad publicly called her "my dinky Shnooky"; hence the nickname. Visiting her house was like walking onto the set of Father Knows Best.

"Are you positive? Really? She wants me to go?"

"Yes! Don't you get it ... She Likes you."

"Are you going?"

"Yeah but not until later. Gotta baby-sit till 9:30."

"What should I do?"

"Well ... You could call her for starters and talk to her."

"Talk to her? What would I say?"

Shirley was losing patience with me.

"You know Bob ... I don't have time for this right now. Just go. Just be there."

"Just be ..."

"Gotta go. Catcha tomorrow night. Good Luck!"

Click. Dialtone.

My life line was gone in an instant. I was swirling in a sea of uneasiness. I wondered what should I do now?

I immediately ditched the idea of calling her, why take the chance of saying something wrong. So I went to bed counting the hours to Shnooky's instead.

After a long day of worry, 6 p.m. Ultimately rolled around and time to get ready for the big get-together. After showering with my English Leather soap-on-a-rope, I toweled off and sprayed my arm pits with Right Guard, enlarging the ozone hole over Antarctica by about fourteen square miles. Next the goods were crowbarred into two of my cleanest, tightest "fruit of the loom" briefs for precautionary purposes, as the night's activities could in fact trigger an embarrassing situation. After tucking the apparatus in real nice, I put on my popular faded jeans, held nicely in place by my cool surfer belt. I threw on an undershirt, my best blue long-sleeve oxford shirt, tag still attached, thick matching crew socks, desert boots, topping it all off with an old washed out navy blue crewneck sweater. The sweater served a few purposes. Primarily, I was under the delusion that it was a look. It also might make a beneficial cover up should the duplicate binding underpants fail to conceal things in the event of a situation.

Once dressed, I had to work on the face, no easy proposition. Apparently, during the prior night while sleeping, no less than four pimples showed up and five long wispy dark chin hairs. A quick buzz from my trusty rotary bladed Norelco and the chin hairs were history. A splash of British Sterling, well more like a dunking, and I was smelling pretty damn good. It was a skillful blend of the natural fruity notes from Prell, the woodsy undertones from the English Leather soap, the bold sporty scent from Right Guard, and the raw sexual power of British Sterling, coming together in a circus of sensuality as harmonious as a Schoenberg symphonic poem.

This odor thing was very prominent because it was going to have to mask the pungent stench emitted by the two pounds of Clearasil I was about to cake on the pimples.

With pimples buried, hair combed, and lips glistening in Chapstick, I was ready to go out and conquer the night. I managed to get to the evening meal table in time to down some grub, avoiding eye feel and transportation with Steve the entire time. Successfully accomplished, I raced upstairs, gargled, brush my teeth and popped some Sen-Sen for added fresh breath insurance. I was as ready as I could be.

At arrival, I greeted Mrs. Shnooky, and made my way downstairs to the closed basement.

There she was. We made eye feel immediately and I smiled a grin so big that I could feel the plaster-like Clearasil on my zits cracking. She looked so beautiful.

We sat close and talked awhile, staring into each other's eyes the entire time. I could smell her hair. I was melting. At one point she took my hand in her hand. It was like nothing I had ever felt before. Her hand was warm and soft; her fingers silky plane to the touch. It wasn't just skin a felt. It was flesh; wonderful, living flesh. Instantly, alarms were set off from my brain to every nerve ending in my body. I began to shake uncontrollably. I had three thousand layers of clothing on and I was shivering like a chilled baby. I would learn later on in life that I got the shakes with every new hand I held.

"Hey are you okay?" she asked in the sweetest disarming voice I had ever heard. I inhaled her breath. Electricity promptly shot down to my toes.

"Yeah, I just have these shakes for some reason. I'm not even cold."

"That's weird."

"You're tellin' me?"

There was an awkward occasion of silence. Then she spoke in a whisper.

"Hey, I need to talk to you about something in private. Want to take a walk exterior in the snow?"

I stared blankly. I didn't hear a word she said.

"We could walk over to the country club. It'll be fun." She stopped talking and studied me for some kind of response. I needed to say something but what? I played the tape back over in my mind until I found some key words to play off of.

"You want to take a walk?" I nervously repeated.

Oh God the touch of her hand was so nice, I pleaded internally 'please don't let go ... Please don't let go ... Please, oh please, oh please, don't let go'.

"I mean sure. We can walk and talk. I mean you can talk while we walk or I can ..." she squeezed my hand, squinted at me with her attractive blue eyes, and saved me from myself.

"Come on ... Let's go." She said calmly, prominent me by the hand up the stairs.

We threw on our coats, gloves and hats, and exited out the back door. Once outside, she put her arm around my waste, and in a reflex reaction I put my arm around her shoulder. I had never hugged a girl before. I started to shake again. Even though it was about twenty degrees out, even though we were swollen from layers of thick heavy clothing, even though I was shaking spastically, and even though my Clearasil was flaking off in crusty chunks, I felt like we were one being.

We prolonged to make small talk, during which I was able to get her to laugh as we trudged through the snow, crossed the freshly plowed street and walked onto the country club golf course. I didn't want the occasion or feeling to end. It was in fact dark out, although the dry white snow brighten the way by reflecting what dinky light passed on by. It was hard to tell from the drifting snow but I think we were walking over a green when she suddenly stopped and turned to face me.

"You're shaking. Poor baby." She lifted her arms up and grabbed the collar of my coat. I located my arms around her waste.

"Remember, I wanted to talk to you in private," she whispered, her minted breath filling the crisp night air, dancing into my soul.

Here it comes, the 'nice personality' speech. I was so short on belief of any kind. I decided to gallantly cut her off at the pass.

"Yeah, I remember. Hey, look. You don't have to say ..." But before I could be gallant, her glossed lips puckered and headed my way. I instinctively closed my eyes before contact. Then, as if swallowed by the Earth, she stepped off the lip of a giant sand trap we unknowingly had been standing precariously above.

In my exertion to grab her as she slid down the slope, my feet went out from under me. I rolled down the hill in hot pursuit, crashing into her at the bottom, some eight feet below. We both began to laugh as she rolled over on top of me. And we laughed some more. Then we laughed a dinky less, and a dinky less until the only sounds one could hear were those of our silence and stare. And then she leaned down and kissed me.

What I remember most was that our teeth smacked into each other. I feared I had chipped one of her upper incisors. So I pulled back. She smiled. No blood. Nice whole teeth. Undaunted she tried again. This time we were fine.

For more hours than I wish to reveal, I have wrestled with capturing in words what I had felt at that literal, instant. After many awkward, empty attempts, I realized I have neither the vocabulary nor the quality to do so. But that's okay. I think what I was attempting to do is akin to capturing the majesty of the Grand Canyon in a picture taken by a cell phone camera. It can not be done. And for those who have tried either, they understand what I mean.

I will leave it at this--on Tuesday, December 30th, 1969 at 8:23 p.m. Life for me had changed.


The First Kiss

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Sunday, April 3, 2011

Central Line Stations With traveler Attractions and Shopping Activities

!: Central Line Stations With traveler Attractions and Shopping Activities

The Central Line, the red line on London secret maps, runs over central London.

The line starts from Epping in the north-east and terminates at a) Ealing Broadway in the west and b) West Ruislip in the north-west. The Central line covers a distance of 74km (46 miles) and serves 49 tube stations.

Listed below are some of the 49 tube stations that most tourists are likely to use when they visit London.

Stratford hub is the stop where the Olympic community (London Olympics 2012) is located. You need to turn here for the Docklands Light Railway (Dlr) and stop at Pudding Mill Lane (1 stop from Stratford station) where the Olympic Stadium is located.

Liverpool road hub is one of the main railway stations in London. This is the hub where visitors take the train to Stanstead Airport.

Other attractions near Liverpool road hub consist of the Gherkin Building, Toynbee Hall and the Whitechapel Art Gallery.

Bank hub is close to several traveler attractions along with Mansion House (the official abode of the Lord Mayor of the City of London), the Bank of England, The Royal Exchange, Leadenhall shop and the Lloyd's Building.

Lloyds construction is the home of the guarnatee institution, Lloyds of London, the world's leading guarnatee market.

St Paul's hub is a short walk to St Paul's Cathedral, the second largest cathedral in the world after St Peter's Cathedral in Rome.

Other traveler attractions near St Paul's hub consist of the Museum of London, Millennium Pedestrian Bridge, Shakespeare's Globe Theatre and the Tate Modern. From the Tate contemporary you can take a relaxing walk along the river bank and enjoy the amazing sights and sounds of London.

Near Chancery Lane hub are the Inns of Court, the Royal Courts of Justice, the Yeomanry Museum and the London Silver Vaults (the home to the world's largest retail variety of fine old silver).

Stop at Holborn hub for Lincoln's Inn, the British Museum, Sir John Soane's Museum, The Hunterian Museum, the London School of Economics and the Royal College of Surgeons.

During the year Law students are required to dine "in Hall" of Lincoln's Inn a sure number of times before they qualify to be "called to the Bar".

You get off at Tottenham Court Road hub if you are visiting the British Museum, the Dominion Theatre and the Central Ymca. Most of the West End theatres and London Chinatown are settled in the south of Tottenham Court Road station.

Tottenham Court Road shops are illustrious for the sale of electrical goods like televisions and Computers.

Oxford Circus hub is the centre of the busiest shopping district in London. This is where Oxford road (running in east-west direction) meets Regent road (running in north-south direction). Both Oxford road and Regent road are very busy shopping streets and that is why most citizen prefer to stop at Oxford Circus when they come to the West End to shop.

Bond road hub is one stop west of Oxford road station. Shops in Bond road stock elegant and expensive designer clothes and Accessories. Celebrities from all over the world are often seen shopping in Bond Street.

New Bond road and South Moulton Street, both streets illustrious for elegant and expensive jewellery and watches, are only a short distance away from Bond road station.

Selfridges group Store is just a incorporate of minutes walk from the station.

Marble Arch hub is settled at the west end of Oxford Street. Opposite Marble Arch hub is Park Lane, illustrious for its 5 star hotels such as the Dorchester Hotel, InterContinental Hotel and Hilton Park Lane. If you walk halfway down Park Lane, you will see the Animal in War Memorial. This memorial is to commemorate the contributions made by animals that serve alongside forces while the war.

Hyde Park is settled to the west of Marble Arch hub and the Speakers projection is only less than 5 minutes walk away.

Lancaster Gate hub is where you get off if you are visiting the Hyde Park Italian Gardens, the Serpentine, Diana, Princess of Wales Fountain and the Bayswater Road Artists Gallery.

Queensway hub is the stop if you are visiting Kensington Palace. You can also start your "Diana, Princess of Wales, Memorial Walk" from Kensington Gardens over the station. This is a 7 mile walk over 4 Royal Parks, 3 Royal Palaces and several popular London landmarks. You just effect the Diana Memorial Walk plaques that are embedded along the route.

Fashionable Notting Hill Gate is illustrious for the Notting Hill Gate Carnival. This event is held here annually while the August Bank Holiday and is organised by the Caribbean community. This is a very popular event and each year hundreds of thousands of citizen converge here to join in the celebrations.

Portobello Road shop is also internationally known and is busiest on Saturdays.

Holland Park is a lovely park with its illustrious Orangery, Kyoto organery and open air theatre.

Holland House, originally known as Cope Castle, is now a ruin, having been destroyed by bombs while World War Ii.

Next to Shepherd's Bush hub is the Westfield Shopping Centre with more than 300 shops under one roof and is currently the largest urban shopping complex in Europe.

White City station. Here you can visit the Bbc Television Centre and join its tours. Nearby is Loftus Road Stadium, home of Queens Park Rangers Football Club and the London Wasps Rugby Club.

Apart from Stratford hub (zone 3) and Holland Park, Shepherd's Bush and White City stations (zone 2), all the other Central line stations listed above are in zone 1. So if you are not planning to visit these stations, you only need to buy a 1-day Travelcard for zone 1. That will give you unlimited tour for a day in zone 1 by bus as well as by tube.


Central Line Stations With traveler Attractions and Shopping Activities

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Friday, April 1, 2011

Fun Dishes For Easter

!: Fun Dishes For Easter

Easter time means that it is time to get with the family and bring lots of scrumptious dishes. Either you are having a brunch or dinner, there are abundance of fun dishes to be created. If you have a dish that you traditionally bring to this feast, think trying out a new recipe instead. Just make sure to don your wholesale apron and try it out on your own family beforehand to avoid any disasters!

To make a festive, color and unique dish for any meal on Easter, a Peeps sunflower cake is in order. Bake the cake mix (whatever type you want) in two round cake pans and spread chocolate frosting between the layers and over the top and sides of the cake. To make the sunflower petals, arrange almost twenty yellow Peeps around the outer edge of the top layer of cake. Neatly arrange chocolate chips in the middle of the Peeps to generate the seeds and you are finished! everyone will enjoy this adorable cake that looks like you spent tons of time creating.

If you are going to have brunch with the family, everyone will enjoy some peaches and cream French toast. Join brown sugar, butter and corn syrup in a small pan and cook until the sugar is dissolved. One of your white aprons should keep your clothes protected from any splatter that might happen. Poor this combination into a 9x13 inch baking dish. Next, plainly arrange a can of sliced peaches neatly on top. Layer some cubed cream cheese and day old French bread on top of the peaches. Mix together 12 eggs, some cream and vanilla and poor over the whole dish. This will need to be refrigerated overnight and then baked for about an hour just before meal time. This dish is super yummy and everyone will want seconds!

Hosting the Easter meal is as stressful as the cooking itself. If you will be having lots of kids running around the house you should have some fun activities to keep them busy. There are abundance of websites out there that you can find Easter pictures that you can print out to make a homemade coloring book. This is quick and easy and doesn't wish the use of bib aprons. Of policy you can't forget the tradition of hiding Easter eggs. They will all enjoy the task of finding those wee colorful eggs full of goodies. You can also have a table set up where they can dye hard boiled eggs. When they are accomplished you can whip up a quick plate of deviled eggs that will please everyone.


Fun Dishes For Easter

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