In Little Rock, my favorite dance clubs were Backstreet and Discovery, and it makes me very sad to know I have only been dancing in Austin once since moving here, and then it was ten minutes before last call.
This is me breaking it down at the monthly Cool Shoes Dance Party. One time with my friend Scott, other times with a bunch of strangers. I'm friendly.
This is me breaking it down at the monthly Cool Shoes Dance Party. One time with my friend Scott, other times with a bunch of strangers. I'm friendly.
I want to go out dancing again on my birthday, and I'd say I should take a few tips from the video:
But I can't get over how the costumes remind me of this:
I'm also thinking the finale of the video is very Faulkner-esque:
"A Rose For Emily," anyone? I wasn't allowed to teach that story to my sophomores, but I did to my summer academy students. It may be high time to giddy up on that higher degree so I can get to teaching the material I love most - Faulkner, the naughty parts of Chaucer, (I got in trouble for using "The Miller's Tale" to get my seniors interested in Chaucer - it was worth it), etcetcetc.
So for my birthday festivities, I want to go back to Qua and dance with the sharks and fishies. Anyone from Austin know other good places for dancing? The two Little Rock clubs were great because they stayed open until 5AM. Being nocturnal, I do not approve of 2 o'clock shut downs.
Speaking of time - twenty-six! Yikes! In honor of my racing clock, I have devised my perfect "older but fabulous" birthday ensemble, complete with flats so as not to poke holes in the shark tank plexi-glass.
2 comments:
You really weren't allowed to teach that story? What on earth was their reasoning? I love that story. It's a good basic intro into many literary elements.
Anyway, I love your blog :)
those stories were too "disturbing" or "sexual." It was the bible belt and very conservative, or something like that. And thank you!
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