July 09, 2000
Cherry amaretto ice cream
Ken, Cynthia, and I were putting stolen year decals on Ken's van's license plate. At the same time, we were trying to hide from the K-state cops. We were going to put a picture of these two people on there too, but it wasn't coming off fully. I told Ken we can't put it on, but he insisted that we must.
I killed a silverfish on the wall.
I rearranged my apartment and thought briefly about putting the table in the kitchen, but decided it would be to difficult to walk around it. There were windows in the kitchen and living room. One window looked over a creek; the creek wandered down to a very rich person's backyard. Mom envied their bridge. She also wondered, "if you can afford any kind of fence, why would you pick green cast iron?" I saw her wading in the creek feeding the fish and I called her on her cell phone shortly afterwards asking if she had heard about this crash--
On the rich person's property, there was a huge RV loaded with twenty people attending a class. The class met as it traveled the country. As the RV turned down the winding road of the property, It tipped over. Somehow I saw everyone's faces as it overturned. One guy was a mix between Fred Astaire and the Man from Another Planet (Michael J. Anderson) from Twin Peaks. He had a freaky-shaped head.
I was making cherry amaretto ice cream at work. Someone told me I needed to put vodka in it to help with the coloring. I had red food coloring in there, but sometimes when it was stirred, blue streaks would appear. Another time a miscellaneous guy stirred it and it went dark brown. We looked for vodka in David and Brian's office, but only found Asian cooking oils (including Glaxco's mineral water oil). The guy said that "the boys" had probably put it in the display cases...or it was in Stephanie's "do not touch" pile? We went outside and David and Brian were drawing at a patio table. David drew a big monster face with people on people-movers (those flat escalator-type things that they have at Disneyland and O'Hare) carrying them into the monster's mouth. It was the third or fourth version of the same drawing that he had done.