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Favorite thing of today

I love that the flowering dogwood’s common name is the "Cherokee Princess". Isn’t that great? I also love the way tea olive trees smell. And white pine trees. And swamp roses. (But today the favorite scent is tea olive).

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I had a spectacular weekend. I don’t have time to give all the details, but lets just say that I look like a kid that just got back from an irresponsible summer camp. I have bug bites all over me and lots of bruises. Bug bites are what happens when spend too much time outside in rural Georgia and bruises are what happen when you (or at least, I) drink beer. Drove down Thursday with Anne and Cristina – stopped through in Augusta so I could vote (we also ate lunch with my dad at favorite sandwich place, picked up food from my mom, and kissed the dogs).

Friday we spent the day on the beach, it was 85 degrees and partly cloudy. And everywhere I looked was an old friend and a new friend. There was a dance off around 5 – involving mostly guys – that a large portion of the beach took part in. Friday night was random and scattered – chatted with old boyfriends and old crushes – it was like a time warp – but also tons of fun – and I made the correct decision to go home with my friends before it got to late. Okay, I will give details, I’ve already started.

Allison brought me back all the stuff I left in Sea Island from Saturday night when I went to the house she was staying in for a dance party and a late night swim after we got off the bus. Important things recovered:
1. Cell phone
2. Black rainbow flip flops which I love with all my being
3. Digital Camera – complete with exceptional photos from the weekend.
4. Adorable leather flask purchased in Rome that holds great sentimental value and which I just recently recovered from parents home.
5. New Koozie from North Atlanta National Bank – Jessie’s contribution to the weekend.
6. A bit of cash that I desperately need.
7. Favorite Lipstick collection (chubby, lipstick, two glosses, and a tube chap stick – the blue kind).
8. Drivers License
9. Favorite t-shirt (50/50 blend) – "My Dad is an Old Dawg" – UGA football letterman club shirt (wasn’t that worried about this one, I have about six)
10. Black clutch pocketbook that has been through a lot with me.

Now, as bad as this sounds, most of these things were in my pocketbook, and as such – lose one thing and lose a lot is the case. And to be fair, I knew that I had left my pocketbook seconds after leaving the driveway, but Allison, as driver, said she would bring them to me, and I wasn’t worried (she did say that she found my pocketbook, flip flops and cell phone scattered about the house, but the important thing is that she found them).

back to chronological order:
Saturday:
The bus down to the game worked out perfectly. So this is how it works. The game is in Jacksonville. But everyone stays up and down the coast. Most of my friends stay in St. Simons/Sea Island or in Amelia/Fernendia. St. Simons is about an hour and a half from Jacksonville – 2 hours on game day. So most people charter buses in order to make things safe and easy. But it is a huge hassle to get together. And you always run the risk of being on a bus with people you don’t know, or worse, don’t like. Because it is always pretty random. It was wonderful to get on a bus with people I like a lot, especially after speaking with my roommate from freshman year who was on a bus with a group of people that I could not have handled. But it made me love my old roommate that she felt the same way.

The game was awesome, I did get really sleepy at one point during half time, but while play was going on, I was in tune. Hot dog count – 3. Dip -n- Dots – 1. Coca- Colas – 3. Got to hang out with Travers – always a good time.

The bus ride home from the game was one of the most fun things I have done in years. We had a dance party all the way home – we popped champagne – and I just have to hand it to whoever had the mixed cds that we listened to, because they kept everyone awake, this was no time for people to go to sleep. All the other bus rides back to St. Simons I have experienced involved reasons to sleep – we lost. This time, we won. Overall, the bus ride was a success. The house we stayed in was a success – the people made all the difference here as well. I got a new t-shirt at the game, and I made some new awesome friends. At after bus dance party – danced to "Thriller" about seven more times, also spent some quality time dancing to other Michael Jackson songs (before and after swimming). Wow. No wonder I am the worst law student in America.

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This weather is almost more than I can handle. I LOVE it. The only thing that I don’t love is the fact that whatever is in the air makes me feel sick. Like, I have a terrible cold but I don’t actually feel bad sick. My throat hurts. But I’m not sick. I have started taking my adderoll again full time (crazy people never like to take their medicine and I am no exception), and I didn’t sleep very well last night. So when I woke up this morning, I wanted to pretend like I was sick. But, I wasn’t. And I have stuff to do today. I have an interview in about a half an hour, and I have volunteered to be Elizabeth and Staci’s witness for mock trial (since Christy and I dropped out). After being up for a couple of hours I am glad I didn’t try to be sick today. If you didn’t know, I am a hypochondriac, and a lot of times the only thing that is going to keep me pretending to be sick is a busy schedule.

My friends Emily and Jennifer and moving to DC, and it is sad. These are two of my best friends in the whole world and I am going to really miss them. With Libby in New York, I feel like everyone is leaving me and I have to stay. Emily already went up there for good, and Jennifer is leaving after this weekend. The one thing this weather really makes me wish I had is a front porch. I need a front porch. So I think I am going to go home this weekend and sit on my parents front porch, with my dogs. I miss my dogs. I feel so torn sometimes when it comes to Augusta and Athens. This week I have this overwhelming desire to live in a neighborhood with a big porch and backyard. Jennifer says this is just something that happens sometimes in Athens and that I should "shake it off." And she is right.

I have felt unstable since I came back from Greece, and I think this is part of the problem. I went to Greece because I wanted to get out. And I had such an intense experience. I was so emotionally exhausted, and I don’t think I have recharged yet. I am hoping that some of my friends from Greece are going to come visit for the LSU and the Tennessee game, because I think that will help me. I really miss them. I didn’t realize how much I missed them until I talked to a bunch of them last week, checking on the hurricane in New Orleans and just finally getting in touch with other ones (like Kallie and Niki). So, Greece friends, if you get this, I love you and I miss you.

I just had an interview, and it was fun. The girl that interviewed me was a Theta at Florida State, and so we got along. It is a litigation firm in Birmingham, and although I know there are things about litigation that don’t sound appealing, part of it seems like a lot of fun. And I liked these people. We will see, interviewing is good experience.

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I came to the conclusion today that I don’t write much about my only other hobby besides this journal. And that hobby is running at the botanical gardens. The State Botanical Gardens of Georgia are in Athens, and are one of my favorite places in the world. I really love them. A lot. And I really like to run there. Even though it is really hilly, I love it. Because I love running hills. I don’t know if this makes me a masochist or something, but I love running up and down hills. If you want to know something else disturbing, I also love to run steps. We used to run the steps in high school at basketball practice for punishment. I thought this was great because I enjoyed it. This probably means I have problems, but if anyone wants to go run the bleachers at the track with me, let me know.

But back to the botanical gardens. There are miles and miles of trails. Some are overgrown, but most are kept clear, either due simply to the foot traffic or because the caretakers of the gardens care enough to cut down the trees that fall in the trails. And these trees are huge. There is a large portion of the trail that runs along the middle occonee river, and the trees along the river have a tendency to be consumed and eaten by the river. Because of all the hurricanes that have been swirling around lately, heavy rain has caused the river trail to flood. I was hoping it would be all dried up today in order to get a good run in before hurricane Ivan blows into town, and it was for the most part, but there was a substantial section of straight mud. Between picking my way through the mud and dodging the high school cross country team I felt lucky and thankful to escape without injury.

Normally the mud isn’t that much of a problem, although the gardens do get a lot of rain. I think my favorite thing about the gardens is that they remind me of so many things I love about Georgia, especially North Georgia. The gardens take me back to the summers I spent in Rabun county and the intoxicated smell of white pine trees in the sun after a rain (this is most definitely my favorite smell in the world, sweet and fresh and clean). I love the gravel roads that run through the garden, I don’t know why but a winding gravel road in the afternoon is strangely comforting and gives me a great deal of peace.

I have so many feelings about the gardens, and Georgia in general that I don’t think I can tell them all tonight (my run there today was long, and I am tired), but the one thing I do know is that when I am in the gardens, back in the trails or on the gravel roads, I am convinced that I will never be happy anywhere too far away from here. It is so nice to go far away and find such beauty and to come home and discover comparable beauty in your own backyard.

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