Most Improved Yell

Content warning: In this post, I acknowledge the risk of sexual violence (but do not describe anything violent).

A couple of years ago, I stopped being able to leave my house alone at night. Even going out alone in the daytime was hard. If friends asked me to meet them somewhere and Devin couldn’t go with me to drop me off, I couldn’t go. If I took a yoga class that ended after sundown, I knew that all the relaxation I felt at the end of class would disappear the moment I walked outside to wait for the bus. I live in a place that gets dark at like 3 p.m. in the winter, so you can imagine how this complicated things for me.

My fear wasn’t triggered by anything specific. It felt more like the result of living with the fear of assault and harassment for decades, like I had spent all this time going out in spite of the fear I felt, and I just couldn’t anymore.

I felt ridiculous. It didn’t seem rational. I didn’t feel like I deserved to feel as afraid as I did. But I couldn’t shake it.

One day, I saw an email advertising an “empowerment self-defense” class. I had recently taken a pay cut to do a job I cared about, so I knew I couldn’t afford to take the class, but I signed up and applied for a scholarship, which, thankfully, I got.

The class was transformative for me. We met in a basement conference room and practiced legit self-defense moves like kicks and punches. (One of my favorite days was going to the parking lot and practicing how to resist getting stuffed into a car: pretend you are a cat who doesn’t want to take a bath, grab hold of the edges, and hang on. I didn’t think I could do it, and I did!)

But the important lessons of the class were much bigger. I learned to assert myself and take up space, to intervene and take control of situations instead of always reacting.

I like to joke that I won Most Improved Yell because when I started the class, I could hardly say “No” and by the end of class, I could project my voice so loudly that my classmates looked like the Edvard Munch scream emoji.

This morning, I got to pay back my scholarship by donating to the RCC’s annual fundraiser, which went virtual because of the pandemic. They delivered coffee and cake to all the attendees so it felt like more of a shared experience, and I loved hearing all the speakers express what the RCC has done for them.

I decided to write this post to share my appreciation and my story, in case any of you have ever felt this way, too. I think there are empowerment self-defense classes in lots of different cities, and I would encourage you to check one out if you can. And if you’d like to donate to the organization that leads the class I attended, here is the link for that.

Most Improved Yell

My Funny Valentines

On Valentine’s Day, I got to be an extra in an ad. The ad was for whiskey, but we were actually sipping on a mixture of apple juice and coffee. (Delicious and avant-garde! Sure to be a hit at your next brunch!)

I arrived at the photo shoot and immediately liked two of my fellow extras. They were funny and gregarious! They were not too cool to talk to me! Throughout the shoot, I lamented my lack of friend-making savvy. If only I were more like my mother blah blah, etc.

Thankfully, one of the extras suggested we go to my favorite coffee shop after the shoot. When we got there, the barista took one look at me and, before I could say “soy latté,” he asked me if I was Kristy. I am Kristy, but I had no clue who he was. “It’s been a while…” he trailed off, leaving me with no choice but to stammer, “Yeah—um—who—I don’t recognize…”

“I’m [generic boy name with interesting spelling].”

Cue the memory montage of meeting [generic boy name with interesting spelling] at a Cat Power show, being serenaded on the guitar to Elliott Smith and Bob Dylan, hearing about his passion for latté art and his dream of working at a snobby coffee shop (mission accomplished). It all ended with him reading me a farewell letter from his Moleskin notebook at a bus stop, asking to kiss me, & yelling, “Miss you already!” as I boarded the bus.

I should clarify that this epic saga lasted all of two and a half weeks during which we saw
each other three times. But! If I leave out that part (and the minor detail that we just weren’t that into each other), I think I have the perfect indie love story on my hands.

I mean, what are the chances of running into each other four years later on the opposite coast of the country? And did I mention that he made a perfect latté art heart on my drink?! (Everyone else got platonic palm fronds.) Tweak the ending to happily ever after, add “handwritten” titles & credits along with a sweet indie pop soundtrack. Ta-dah, love story of our times.

Please advise me on how to sell a movie idea to a major studio. Aesthetically, it should be a mix between The Science of Sleep and 500 Days of Summer. I’d like Emily Haines to do the soundtrack. I’d also like it to be teeming with product placement and for much money to be given to me. Please and thank you.

Back to the pretentious coffee house of my dreams, I sat there dumbfounded and tried to look normal while getting to know my new friends. A few minutes later my phone buzzed thanks to my cousin Vanessa, who asked if I wanted tickets to the Harlem Globetrotters. This turned out to be the perfect way to cement a friendship as my new friends were totally down to see the globe’s best b-ball team!

So, let’s recap: on Valentine’s Day I learned that it’s easy to make friends. All it takes is getting a job as an extra in an ad, going to your favorite coffee shop with other extras, having a weird experience, and getting free tickets to a comedic basketball game just in time to invite your potential friends. Um yeah, I’m still mystified. Please advise me on how to make friends.

Also, does anyone have coffee shop recommendations in Williamsburg? I have to find a new favorite.

My Funny Valentines