To diorama… to sleep, perchance to dream

I know that Thanksgiving just passed, but as soon as I start to smell the cinnamon scented candles and see people sipping gingerbread lattés, I start to think about the new year. More specifically, I start to think about my resolutions for the new year.
I’ve mentioned before that I don’t so much come up with resolutions as I do a theme for each year, and my 2006 theme was “More Love.” Although I won’t bore you with the specifics, I will happily say that this year lived up to its name on many levels. Not to spill too much, but in the wise words of my mentor and idol, Cyndi Lauper, she bop, he bop, a-we bop, I bop, you bop, a-they bop. Be bop, be bop-a-lu, she bop.
So anyway, that was this year – let’s talk about next year. I’ve been contemplating the 2007 theme for quite some time now, gone through countless iterations and at least two legal pads, and am pleased to announce that next year will be all about… REVIVAL.
It’s a broad theme, I understand, so I’m tackling it in pieces. There are spiritual revivals, Broadway revivals, sexual revivals, friendly revivals – no wait, that’s friendly rivalries, scratch that one. The point is that if I’m going to be successful in 2007, it will require a laser-like focus. That’s always been a problem for me – I lack focus. I’m a hobbyist, a friend once told me. I am prone to fads.
Figure painting led to film classes led to bartending school led to tap dancing led to jug band led to hip-hop. Somewhere in between, I took up knitting, paint-by-numbers, latch-it-hook, and crock pot cookery.
Well, hobbyist no more. I’m narrowing down my passions to a critical few. My artistic revival in 2007 will be all about getting back to the basics, like whittling, and now my latest passion, which is diorama. What’s more basic than a shoebox, some clay, a few pipecleaners, and your endless imagination?
So I guess I let my passion get the best of me a few weeks ago, because I got a little short with my friend Natasha when she didn’t fully approve of my latest pursuit. Sure, she was fine with the whittling idea – she even promised to buy me some balsa wood – but as soon as I started to get serious about diorama, things changed.
“I can’t wait to get started! I need some shoeboxes, a bunch of different colored clay, some twigs, and… hey, where would I find that fake grass? Like the kind they use with model trains.”
“Okay, first of all, you cannot have any of my shoeboxes. I need them all. Secondly, I forbid you to go to a model train store.”
“You forbid me? Whatever. You’re not the boss of me.”
“No, Jenny, I’m serious. You cannot go to one of those stores. Those people are insane! You’ll never get out!”
“You’re just jealous, because I’ve got a cool new hobby that involves things that are tiny. Oh, I’m going to a model train store, all right. And there’s nothing you can do to stop me!”
“Fine. Just don’t say I never warned you.”
So against Nat’s advice, I did some research online, hung out in a few model train chat rooms, then finally got up the courage to go to a model train store. I think the only way to describe my experience is like this: Cowboy rides into a new town, dusty and parched from his long journey, so he walks into an unfamiliar saloon. The doors swing behind him, squeaking. The piano player immediately stops playing his jaunty tune, and the tawdry ladies pause from flirting with the poker players. Three mangy roughnecks at the bar turn in unison to look at the outlander. The one with the scar across his left eye kicks back his shot of whisky and slams the glass on the table, hard.
“Looking for something?” says the old barkeep, as he pours another shot of whisky.
“Uh… no, I mean yes. I’m just looking… my nephews just started getting into trains. So, I’m just going to look around. For them. For Christmas. Gifts for my nephews.”
The cowboy then quickly ducks into the aisle with model airplanes and water rockets, randomly picking up boxes and pretending to examine them.
What I learned from this experience is that sometimes you really do need someone to be the boss of you, to forbid you from doing certain things. Because when you are free to do whatever you want, to pursue your every whim, what happens is that you will walk into a model train store in a little suburban town, where the owners are sitting behind the counter, and they’re really passionate about model trains. And then when they ask you what they can help you find, you won’t even know enough to fake it, so you’ll blame your nephews. (Aside: you often blame your young nephews when you buy things that embarrass you, like Spongebob Squarepants stickers, or six boxes of bombpops, or Gameboy games, or porn.)
Not understanding that you’ve walked into their store partly as an anthropological research assignment, they will continue to try to assist you. And then when they ask you technical questions about what kind of (imaginary) trains your nephews have – because without this information, they can’t possibly know if you’re buying the right type of equipment (accessories?) – you will glance down at the rack of miniature hay bales and cows and fences, and say, “I think this kind.”
And you’ll see from the look in their eyes that your answer made no sense. Then later, when they see the box you have in your hand, which you grabbed because you now feel obligated to buy something and this was only $6.95, they will ask you if you’re looking for a military set. And you won’t understand the meaning of this question at all, particularly because the box you have in your hand has nothing to do with the military, but instead depicts some strange rural scene somewhere in Asia, so you just say, “Uh, this just seemed really interesting.”
$6.95
You will eventually try to distract the owners from discovering what a fraud you are by asking them if the store gets really busy around the holidays. This question will probably initiate a 15-minute description of the unique seasonality of model train business – when it ramps up, when it slows down, what they do when the unexpected pockets of off-season customers crop up, how they wish they could close on Tuesdays, but some Tuesdays are busy. You might then suggest to them that if they just closed on Tuesdays, those Tuesday customers would simply come another day, but again, the look in their eyes will indicate that your answer made no sense.
asian garden
Finally, to redeem yourself, you’ll probably say something like, I’m sure you’ve both been to the model train exhibit at the Museum of Science and Industry, right? Then if they tell you no, they’ve never been there, can you believe that, you’ll respond that oh my gosh you have to go! Then you’ll start to talk about the unbelievable detail and how the El tracks light up and how the bridges really raise and lower and how they decorate everything for the holidays (although you’ll have a sneaking suspicion that you made up that last part).
snap
Anyway, if you’re smart, you’ll make your exit right then and there, on that high note. You’ll have an Asian diorama set that you never wanted to begin with, you will have tricked them into thinking you know something about trains, blamed it all on your nephews, and it will only have cost you $6.95 plus tax.
boy observes girl observing well
So you see? Revival. Revival of mind. Revival of spirit. Revival of soul. And yes, revival of the lost arts like whittling and diorama and macramé owls. Everything old is new again, and I just know that it’s going to be even better the second time around.

21 Responses to “To diorama… to sleep, perchance to dream”

  1. Dave2 Says:

    My only resolution is to survive TequilaCon 2007 PACNW. I can’t even think further out than that. :-)

  2. margaret Says:

    I’m totally jealous of your new hobby. Years ago, I made a series of dioramas in big clam shells and glued them all over the refridgerator… my mom was not so proud of me.

  3. peefer Says:

    You frighten me.

  4. Rhea Says:

    Luckily for me, the model train shop in my neighborhood just closed down. Who knows what manner of trouble I could get into in a model train shop. Well, actually, now I know. Thanks.

  5. jenny Says:

    Dave2: TequilaCon ’07 – the ultimate revival!
    Margaret: Wait… you glued the actual shells to your fridge? YOW! I love the idea of using a shell instead of a shoebox, though! Food for thought…
    peefer: You can’t fool me, Peef. Your lips say, “You frighten me,” but your eyes say… well actually, I guess they say the same thing. Damn.
    Rhea: It really is like an entirely different world. And they smell fear.

  6. shari Says:

    Still, no grass for your diorama, eh? Well, that’s okay. Green sugar sprinkles work in a pinch. Don’t ask me how I know, I just do. OK?

  7. Anonymous Says:

    Dear Jenny,
    “You’re just jealous, because I’ve got a cool new hobby that involves things that are tiny” is brilliant. I ha ha am hee hee hee still ha ha laughing heeeeeeeeeeeee!
    Love,
    Vivian

  8. heather anne Says:

    Jenny, I hate to rain on your parade, but it looks like what you bought was an albino train set. That’s okay, though. It was only 6.95.

  9. Tracy Lynn Says:

    I love coming here. It’s nice to have the example of looniness that isn’t actually mine. Very refreshing.
    Things that are tiny. Priceless.

  10. Dustin Says:

    Snarky comment in 3…2…1…
    “Wassa matta’? You couldn’t widdle your own liddle people?”

  11. nina Says:

    What? No more horses on canvases? That’s why/how I found your blog to begin with. Tell me you wont give up on paint by numbers. Please!

  12. nina Says:

    What? No more horses on canvases? That’s why/how I found your blog to begin with. Tell me you wont give up on paint by numbers. Please!

  13. nina Says:

    I promise I am not drunk. Just seeing double.

  14. diane Says:

    Ha! I too have been known to pass the buck off on my cousin’s little kids. I was in Florida, and I had to buy (for myself) this adorable little souvenir plush dolphin that the hotel sold. When I went to the counter, the guy behind me in line said, “Aw, your kid will love that!” and I said…oh, I don’t have kids…it’s for my cousin’s little girl.
    Heh.

  15. ms. sizzle Says:

    i can’t wait until i can blame my porn purchases on my nephew.
    wait, did i just use plural on that? um. . .

  16. Don Says:

    Ah, those wonderful hobbies du jour. But there’s one you must be careful never to try. Very dangerous. It’s called “blogging”.

  17. jenny Says:

    shari: Wasting sprinkles on a diorama?!? Blasphemy!
    Viv: It’s true, though – she was sooo jealous!
    heather anne: No kidding! No one ever told me that you actually had to paint these model train sets – yuk!
    Tracy Lynn: No shortage of looniness here!
    Dustin: Why I oughta…
    Nina: I’ll never give up on the paint-by-numbers. At least not until I complete the three kits that well-intentioned friends bought me. :)
    Diane: That’s what kids and nephews are for – giving us excuses to buy goofy things for ourselves!
    Sizz: Yeah, you should probably wait until he’s old enough to walk before you start making him your scapegoat! :)
    Don: I’ve heard about that blogging thing. Seems like a pretty flash-in-the-pan kind of fad to me.

  18. sandra Says:

    Um…can I have your “more love” theme for 2007?

  19. allison Says:

    I already made my first pre-New Year’s resolution not to be late anymore. I am giving myself the rest of the month as a ramp-up period.
    Hey, with the water pump you could do a mini version of the Helen Keller story.

  20. sween Says:

    I’m creeped out by model trains. But that could be because of the model train serial killer on CSI last week.
    Based on real life, Jenny? HMMMM?
    [Raises eyebrow accusingly.]

  21. ashbloem Says:

    This is pretty much the best post ever.