My Mojo
On March 1, 2005 | 7 Comments | Uncategorized |

I am not cool. Sorry to disappoint you, but I’m not. And I never have been. If you’ve been thinking that by hanging out with me, or being my friend, or reading my blog, you are identifying with some kind of “coolness,” then you are wrong. Dead wrong. So sorry.

Proof? I love prepositional phrases. I love drawing parentheses around them– all of them– in a sentence, thereby reducing the possible subjects. But I love simply identifying prepositions, too. Love it. Around, with, over, beyond…. These are great words. So it might not surprise you when I say that I also love to diagram sentences. This is great fun. This is exciting. Sad, I know. And I love solving equations. Honestly, your simple algebra is just too fun. I could solve for x all day.

I also have a favorite punctuation mark. The semicolon. I love it. Love it, love it, love it. It makes me happy to use it every time I use it, and I try to use it a lot.

It gets worse. I was in the orchestra in high school. In High School. All Four Years. And I didn’t even play a wind instrument. I took a full academic roster of courses all the way to the end, which means that, in my senior year, I didn’t have any free periods. Why not? Because I liked school (can you say geek?) and I didn’t have any cool friends to hang out with.

I’ll admit there is some minimal evidence to the contrary. For example, I dated a quarterback for my junior and senior years, but he went to a different school, and it wasn’t a cool school. And I was elected to the Homecoming court my senior year, but that was just because all the nerds got together and tried to elect a queen. But it didn’t work; I was a runner-up. (Did you see the semi-colon?)

Nonetheless, I have been mistaken for cool. As I said earlier, some of you may have made that mistake yourselves. But I like classical music too much to be cool, I like to read too much to be cool, I like sentences too much to be cool, I like words too much to be cool. I have a list of them. Not favorite words, necessarily, but just good words, that sound good, and are nice to say.

I am Not Cool.

But yesterday, just a brief twenty-nine hours ago, in fact, I think I got a toe– just a toe– over the edge into Cool. I got an iPod.

Okay, I’ll admit that it’s an iPod Shuffle, so it’s not near as expensive as a full-on iPod, and so maybe not as cool. But I think it is just as cool, if not more cool.

It weighs only .78 ounces and is .33 inches thin. It’s so small, and sleek, and slender. And it’s white, so you can see it. So Everybody can see it, and think I’m cool.

It is loaded with 120 songs, and last night, while my husband and guests chatted at the conclusion of the Academy Awards, I changed sheets and changed towels and folded laundry in isolated bliss, reveling in song after song that no one could hear but me. So Cool.

And this afternoon, while my guests discussed business (they are musicians– so cool) and my children played with friends all around me, I sat at my desk and wrote letters and listened to my iPod, and was virtually unaffected by the din. Very cool.

I think it is only fair to admit that the iPod was not my idea. No, that would mean I was maybe a little bit cool. Which I’m not. (See above.) The iPod was Bill’s idea, my husband’s idea, because he loves me. And he went and bought it, and he loaded it with really cool songs, and he gave it to me. And now I can listen to Bono and Pearl Jam and Train and their ilk whenever I want to, all by myself.

That Bill gave it to me should come as no surprise, really. I mean, any coolness you might sense in me comes directly from him. The fact that I like Pearl Jam and Train is the result of his influence– his coolness– leaking into the atmosphere that envelops us, and working its way into my musical taste. My sense of humor, too, and my acceptance of new ideas, and my comfort with what is unusual– all of this comes from him.

So maybe Bill, and not the iPod, is my Mojo.

What is Mojo? I had to ask, because I didn’t know, because I’m not cool, and Bill told me, because he knows: Mojo is “coolness; that which makes you hip.”

Thanks, Cool Mo.

Comments 7
tworivers Posted March 1, 2005 at3:41 am   Reply

You have been assimilated. You have joined the Cult of the iPod. And I think, in the grand scheme of things, that the Shuffle is Cooler than the big clunky iPods that hold so many songs and audio books that one could never in a lifetime listen to it all.

You are definitely Cool, my friend.

And I also like the semicolon. And the subjunctive mood. And I am Cool … so there! You must be, too.

Beth Posted March 1, 2005 at6:12 pm   Reply

Here is the thing. Cool is when you are doing something that no one else is doing. Or when very few people are doing it. Everyone has an iPod these days. It is no longer a designator of cool. It designates normal. Everyone has one. Like a cell phone or Tivo. To be cool would be to say – I know what an iPod is, I could have one but I choose not to have one. No one chooses not to have one, thus in not choosing one, you become cool.
So you are normal. And really with your obsessive love of the semi colon; normal is a good thing.

(having a blog and writing wonderful entries on it… that is cool. So I guess you are cool after all. Or maybe that is hip. Hip is much better than cool.)

Tom B. Posted March 2, 2005 at8:30 pm   Reply

Wow, that iPod must have made you really cool because you missed an overly ripe opportunity to drop some semi-colons on us.

You wrote, “But I like classical music too much to be cool, I like to read too much to be cool, I like sentences too much to be cool, I like words too much to be cool. I have a list of them.”

Now if that grammatically incorrect sentence isn’t a grand opportunity to drop semi-colons on the rest of us, I don’t know what is. You must be jammin’ on the iPod.

Guess Who? Posted March 2, 2005 at10:52 pm   Reply

“My Hobo”
I am no fool. Sorry to disappoint all of you that may think I am a fool. If you think that by hanging out with me, or being my friend, or reading my inane response to a blog on cool, you are identifying with a fool, then you are wrong. Dead wrong. I’m just sorry. No, really, just sorry. A sorry excuse for a person.

Proof? I love to write random things for a response to a blog. Until a month ago, I didn’t know what a blog was. Now I reply to blogs rather than write my own. Rebecca, I also like prepositions. But my favorite thing in the english language is the onomatopoeia. What a great buzz word (catch the use of the onomatopoeia in buzz!). Oh yeah. I am a fool. I also like solving equations, but prefer non linear algebra. Yes, I’m a fool and a dork.

Oh well, I gotta run and can’t write anymore. Can you guess who I am?

Rebecca Posted March 3, 2005 at3:27 am   Reply

tworivers,

Do you think maybe we can start the Cult of the Semicolon? It has a nice, alliterative ring to it, and it would definitely be “alternative,” and so maybe would fit into Beth’s definition of what is Cool.

As for me actually being cool, well, I’m not. But thanks, anyway. You go ahead and be cool, and can I still hang out with you sometimes?

Beth,

I did point out that really Cool Mo Beav is my Mojo, so I’m not really relying on the iPod to get the Cool, anyway.

Thanks for liking my blog, man (that “man” is supposed to sound cool).

Tom,

Hey, welcome to my blog! Thanks for writing, and for making a very astute observation about opportunities for semi-colon usage. You need to know that I, of course, knew about the opportunities you pointed out, but I chose not to take advantage of them. Why, you ask? Because overusing the semicolon is like eating too many potato chips (something I like to do) or too many chocolate chip cookies (something else I like to do) or talking on the phone too much (another thing I seem to like to do): it ruins the enjoyment. So I use my semicolons sparingly, and get a little thrill every time I do.

Scary, huh?

Hey, William and I are mailing you something snail-mail tomorrow (if I remember to put it in the mailbox), so keep an eye out.

By the way, you are right. That is a grammatically incorrect sentence. I like to call it poetic license.

Guess Who?,

I don’t know who you are. Really, I don’t. I thought I did, I think I might, but I don’t. And you know what? It’s just a little bit scary. Just a wee bit.

Onomatopoeia is a stellar aspect of the English language. I like to spell the word “onomatopoeia.” That’s a tricky thing. And fun.

Non linear algebra is something I don’t remember anymore, but I’m happy that it’s there for you.

So. Who are you?

tworivers Posted March 4, 2005 at5:08 am   Reply

I was just remembering, when you mentioned listening to a song that no one else could hear, that gentleman who sang a song while listening on his headphones to a CD of a song … at the talent show. I won’t take up your bandwidth describing this event here, I’ll save it for my own blog sometime. But whether that was cool or just … wierd … I don’t know. Do me a favor, though — don’t do that.

Rebecca Posted March 5, 2005 at1:22 pm   Reply

But that’s one of the risks of having an iPod, tworivers. I mean, there you are, listening to some of your favorite music (one would hope, since you choose the music yourself), and can you help singing along? And of course you’re listening loudly, because why not? and because that’s the best way to shut out the din (if you have din, which I do), and so you don’t realize how loudly (or badly) you are singing. See the trouble?

So I’m sure I do it. But I won’t do it at the talent show, if that’s what you’re worried about….

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