There Will Be Blood

Just stop reading if you are sensitive to ER stories. Stop right now. 

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OK, now that the squeamish have left, I can tell my severed pinkie story. It's not that bad, I swear. In September, I was trying to make this Ratatouille dish and it called for a mandolin slicer. I asked for one from my parents for Christmas last year and it was still brand new in the box. This would be a great time to use the slicer, right? 

Joe helped me put it together and he said, watch out, it's sharp. Yeah, got it, I said. Five minutes later, I had cut myself. And this is within 10 minutes of taking it out of the box for the first time. I realized I cut myself, and when I looked down, I just thought, oh no. This is not a problem I can handle on my own. I needed to go to the ER, because I had sliced the corner of my right pinkie clean off. 

Joe sprung into action and I grabbed an entire roll of paper towels and we got into the car. There's a clinic down the street from our house right near Union Kitchen, but it was closed. They were throwing a party in the Union Kitchen parking lot, wonder if I was a buzzkill as I got out of car while carrying bloody paper towels and scream-crying. 

I wasn't brave about it at all, lots of wailing and crying. It wasn't even that it hurt, although it definitely didn't feel great. I think it was the shock of it all. I realized I had stupidly done something that I couldn't undo. And all it took was one misplaced second and I would have a horrible, scarred, weird-looking pinkie finger forever. 

Or at least that's what I thought. The clinic was closed, so then we had to drive to Washington Hospital Center. And I couldn't have had a better experience there! Perhaps you do get better service when you are bleeding everywhere, though. The nurse was terrifically nice and put me at ease. "At least we know that you didn't cut off more than 1/8th of an inch," Joe joked. That was the setting of the mandolin.

The doctor, however, didn't  have the best bedside manner. He saw me for less than five minutes, and said there was nothing to stitch. "Doctor, I think she just wants to hear you say that she won't be deformed," Joe said. The doctor refused to say that, however. He didn't have much interest in putting me at ease, haha.

So I got a tetanus shot and went home with bandages. Later that month I got the bill. It floored me: $1500 for a thing of bandages, five minutes with a doctor, 15 minutes with a nurse, and a tetanus shot. Somehow, my crappy, non-compliant-with-Obamacare health insurance paid for the entire thing!!!

This is a huge miracle. I love my crappy healthcare, Obama can pry it out of my hands. But the biggest issue I have is why did this cost $1500 in the first place? I did not get $1500 worth of care, and I can't imagine what an actual problem would cost. But what else could I have done? It makes me never want to go to the hospital or the doctor, and I have an individual insurance plan. I don't think we are talking enough about the inflated cost of healthcare. 

So Joe was so sweet to me. He helped take care of me, and he even went in the apartment and THIS IS GROSS, but he threw the sliver of my finger away. I was too afraid to go back in the apartment. This event was a little traumatizing.

It's been a month, and I've re-learned to type with all 10 fingers, and it has healed completely. You wouldn't even know anything had happen unless you look carefully. My pinkie is numb there though, I think I don't have a fingerprint as well. Now should I throw the slicer away or what? I did go on Amazon to buy stainless steel gloves, I never want to cut myself while cooking again!

Apartment Progress: The Closet Is The Only Finished Room

Hello! So we moved into our apartment in July and I absolutely love it. I've been making "improvements" lately. You be the judge if they are actually improvements. Or if it looks like a demented emo preteen stole Mom's credit card.

For some reason, I am mainly focusing on the closet area. It seems more manageable. And the stakes are lower than the living room. The rest of the apartment is unchanged. Here's what I've done so far, and perhaps that is enough.

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I've loved Keith Haring since high school, and I've always wanted to use wall decals. Better use wall decals before I turn 30, I thought. Thus, I bring you my closet door. Cartoon dogs, I love it! I got the idea of somehow decorating the closet door from the Dos Family house tour in Design Sponge. Their space is the coolest! This is pretty crazy, but not as crazy as their jumping tiger-emblazoned pocket door. 

I bought Blik's decals and they were pretty easy to apply. If you screw up, it can be remedied. But read the instructions first. Not sure why I didn't do that. The videos are a good place to start. 

I emailed a pic to my friend Debie and she wrote: "Your new closet is crazy but I love it!!!  The top two dogs are barking at each other but the third row of dogs look like they're barking at a common enemy." 

So I put the dogs up while Joe was out of town for the weekend. I wish I could've seen his face when he saw it, but i was behind him. "Oh my God," he said. "Are there more?" Haha, no that's it. They are confined to the closet. 

 

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I bought some basic, burlap-inspired Bed, Bath & Beyond curtains to shield our messy closets from prying eyes, and I went on a bender at the Container Store. Would you believe I carried all these boxes (and more) home on the Metro?

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The Frida Kahlo poster from my last apartment is now in the bathroom, and I bought some Jonathan Adler hand towels. I really want a headboard, but channeled that energy into $$ bath towels instead. They had cute little hooks, and I was sold.

Joe said, "Those look like some towels a baby would throw up on." Me: blank stare. I recently showed him a fancy new blinged-out forest green peplum top I bought, and he said, "That looks like a really nice Christmas sweater," which threw me into a fit of despair. But, he was not wrong about the sweater.

I will have the last laugh though, because in case you haven't noticed, everything I've been buying is pink. Poor Joe. I ended up getting the amazing floral sheets I picked out for Racked! They totally match an existing dress I have, to the extent that I'd say one of these companies might have a lawsuit on their hands. 

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Will keep you updated should I move out of the closet in my decorating efforts. xoxox

I Ate a Cronut! Also Racked DC Launched!

Long blogging pause, but big news! I tried a cronut! And I am the editor of Racked DC, which is so incredibly exciting. Way more exciting than the cronut. But the cronut almost got more likes on Facebook than Racked DC did, so I definitely have my work cut out for me. If you could like Racked DC on Facebook and follow on Twitter, that would be the most amazing thing! I promise to make it worth your while. It's going to be so fun. There is much happening retail-wise in Washington, we should all be proud of our city.

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Here are three of my favorite stories to write so far: a profile of the amazingly creative director behind M29 LIFESTYLE in Georgetown, watching the bizarre spectacle that unfolded as shoppers practically mugged Target employees for Phillip Lim purses on launch day in Columbia Heights, and mapping out the best places to acquire a new handbag in Washington. 

OK, now it's cronut time. So I went to NYC last weekend and all I wanted to do was eat a cronut. The hype got me. But I guess I didn't want it enough, because we never got around to standing in line. So I figured my cronut moment would never happen. But then miraculously on the last day of my trip, deus ex machina, a cronut in a box arrived at Debie's door. It was good, yes. And beautiful. But honestly, normal donuts are so good I don't think that this is an improvement. It is just a delicious variation on the tried and true.

So I did wait in a massive line for Mighty Quinn's bbq, waiting more than an hour. But I have no idea why there was a line because it was cafeteria style. It was pretty great though, I recommend going no bun on the pulled pork and the baked beans had too much meat, too little beans.

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Taim roasted red pepper falafel will haunt my dreams, so delicious. 

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Ramen from an unidentified ramen shop, I got greedy with two eggs and couldn't come close to finishing this.  

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The Kate Spade Saturday shop is a cute little universe that I would like to inhabit. 

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I was lucky to go up to New York for the Racked Awards  and we ate lunch at the very gorgeous ABC Kitchen. They can make popcorn on an ice cream sundae look elegant. Anna Wintour and Vera Wang happened to be on a lunch date here! I thought I saw Anna, but then thought better of it. Don't be such a tourist, I said to myself. But it was her.

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The coveted Golden Turbans at the Racked Awards, with a very cool band. Great party!

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I regret that I did not get my fortune read by Roxanne. Another day! 

Tunes Tuesday, "Walking Lightly," Junip

I really loved Jose Gonzalez's solo work — his cover of "Heartbeats" is so spare and beautiful — but somehow I've lost track of him since then. I got an email about Gonzalez's band Junip and fell in love with their single, "Walking Lightly." It's kind of a loping groove, to the extent that even though it's mainly Jose singing "We're all walking lightly" over and over again, the song is definitely going somewhere. Adding layers and layers of the instrumentation will do that.

New single from Junip (Mute/City Slang) Watch the video here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GxC4f3G8iRw Buy on iTunes: http://smarturl.it/jnit Buy on Amazon: http://glnk.it/2ag Walking Lightly EP out now!

Dig it? Junip will be at the Ottobar in Baltimore on Wednesday, so you can hear Jose's  voice for yourself. I saw him at Sixth and I Synagogue way back and loved the show. 

Tunes Tuesday: "Dreaming," Smallpools

I have to post this song, because I watched tennis obsessively during the U.S. Open and during practically ever commercial outro they would play a few bars of this song. And I knew that I knew it, but I had no idea what it was.

SMALLPOOLS EP OUT NOW! DOWNLOAD HERE: http://smarturl.it/SmallpoolsEP?iqid=v Music video by Smallpools performing Dreaming. (C) 2013 RCA Records, a division of Sony Music Entertainment

It's Smallpools, from that Daily Candy summer playlist! The singer's voice is a little punk-pop emo, but it is definitely an ear worm. Apparently the band just played their first show this summer, so maybe US Open syndication money is big money for them. Will radio be next?

Guest Post: The Product That Saves Dying Nails

 Beauty advice interlude: My super cool friend Debie is a makeup artist in New York, and today she was nice enough to share one of her tricks of the trade. 

Ladies-- when it comes to first world problems, we know that chipped, broken nails can be one of the worst offenses.  They snag our most delicate of clothing, ruin our favorite tights, and leave us living in fear of every soda can top.  As a former nail biter (I was one of those “I didn’t even know I was doing it and oops now my nails are bleeding” die-hard addicts), a part of me wonders if the nail gods are making me pay for my once-terrible habit with the curse of weak, brittle tips.

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Fortunately for those of us not blessed with naturally fierce claws, relief is found in the form of Rejuvacote, a miracle product manufactured by Duri Cosmetics, a company operating out of Brooklyn.  This humble pink antidote has transformed my cracked and peeling nubs into healthy tips, growing stronger by the day with each slick application.  Directions suggest you apply a fresh coat daily for 7 days but I found it hard to resist applying multiple coats in one sitting to achieve a finish that’s distractingly glossy.  One brief week later and my “dying nails” might not be “to die for” as their tagline promises, but they do look and feel pretty darn good.

Rejuvacote certainly isn’t the only effective nail strengthener out there but for about $8 a pop (I purchased mine from my local Bed Bath & Beyond), it’s a much cheaper option than other strengtheners (comparable alternates are OPI Nail Envy which retails for $17 and Nail Tek Xtra which retails for $12) and infinitely more practical than indulging in a weekly manicure.  Armed with Rejuvacote and a little patience, let those fear of pop tops fade away and instead let those nails shine (literally)!