7.28.2010

slight vibration sets my most delicate bones in motion

Restored to me via the glossy homicide
of photographs, I examine your face.
A map of Jerusalem, holy and dangerous.
Your mouth and brow--epithets, I'm not sure
I deserve. Your hands perfect, inedible
sugar birds, perched atop a saint's
name-day cake. Your gaze an edict
I can no longer follow.

I longed to please you more
than any inner heathen or priest.
How fiercely I miss your vicinity--
your thoughts charged and dark
as breezes that brave mausoleums.

Though you've removed yourself
from the greedy reach of my five senses,
I put my ear to any ground now--
drenched or parched, planted or fallow,
and from this minute till doomsday,
I'll hear you. Parts of my skeleton
were formed just to conduct the sounds
of your footfall. That slight vibration
sets my most delicate bones in motion.
When you put your foot down, it resounds
faintly, like a dozen harps left standing
on a windy hill. If I listen intently,
nothing can muffle those notes of amnesty.
Even you can't sever that kind of connection.

[Amy Gerstler, 'Dispersion', in Bitter Angel]

7.21.2010

the implications I mistook

  • I declare myself to be free from the word 'should'.
  • I wish I could free myself of some entanglements that have long since ceased to be interesting or good for any party involved.
  • I am thankful that being single as an adult freed me from the mistaken impression that I am "meek."
  • I don't mind paying for extra security, but quiet while I'm trying to sleep should be free.
  • I am free to make alcohol disappear when I'm with my friend E. In fact, I look forward to it!
  • If I could choose one freedom I don’t have today it would be sleeping when and how I choose.
  • In a free and perfect world there would be no personal gain.
  • I am going to write my Declaration of Independence on a piece of ...paper, I suppose.
  • I wouldn’t mind being taxed on what I consume but I highly resent being taxed differently based upon where I do it.
  • When I was younger I was free to do whatever I chose with whomever I chose, but now that I’m older I prefer to ...heh, I do pretty much the same thing!
  • I declare myself free from the destructive habit of answering all email in a timely fashion.
  • I declare myself joyfully addicted to introspection.
  • I don’t think the world will ever be totally free of human centrifuges.
  • With complete abandon, I freefall into a novel.
  • In a hypothetical Superman existence, I would use my power to do good doing mental adjustments to a couple of families I know.
  • I wickedly use my my power to do evil doing overdue [and relatively minor] damage to some people who need their complacency shaken.
  • If I weren’t so dependent on having my bills paid I could be truly independent about chucking the dead weight upon which I waste most of my time, and writing!
  • When I need to free my thoughts from stress and worry, I get asleep or drunk. Hey, why lie?
  • I would like to freely kick punane ähvardus in the seat of her pants.
  • I want to punch at least one person in the face every single day and pay no consequences.
  • I want the freedom to let my silliness run amok also and enjoy a tears-inducing belly laugh every single day.
  • I need the freedom to create intricately-designed mix CDs, laden with meaning, and I don't give a damn what anybody else thinks about it.
  • If I had the power to throw one person in jail it would be O.J. Simpson. Not that his crimes were the most outstanding, but for all that he represents.
  • If I had the power to free one person from bondage of any kind it would be one of my very good friends who's had medical problems for the majority of her life. Though she rarely admits to suffering, she absolutely deserves a break and I'd give her one in an instant if I could.
  • If I could "speak truth to power," I would say to the world 'do more good than you expect to get.'
  • The 3 most important freedoms I have in my life are: the freedom of the press, the freedom both of and from religion, and the right to petition government for the redress of injury.
  • My favorite freedom song is 'Freedom' by the Housemartins.
[from The Cat, of course, who got it here]

7.18.2010

a candy-colored clown they call the Sandman

    Craaazy nighttime happenings lately. No, not that kind of crazy.
    A few days ago I woke around 2 or 3:00. Got up to use the bathroom & get a drink of water. Sometime between the moment when I woke and when I was making my way through the bedroom door, I apparently fell asleep again. This is not something that I've ever done before, to my knowledge. No sleepwalking, no blacking out even. So it came as a surprise when I woke up while standing, for one thing, but also pressed utterly flush to my bedroom door, having rammed myself directly into it so hard that I bruised my right hand where it was pressed between my hipbone and the door handle.
    Today, I finished reading a book that was billed as "super scary" but which turned out to be only marginally suspenseful at best. It read much faster than expected, and when I was through I wasn't as jumpy as I might've expected. I was also pretty sleepy. I decided to take a nap. Because it's Sunday and there's no reason not to be decadent on a Sunday, I slid into bed like it's a totally normal thing to do at 3:PM...
    ...and proceeded to have the most vivid, awesome, ridiculous, terrible dream that I can remember in a long, long time. I was staying at a beach house (shades of a book that I read last weekend and did not like AT ALL) with a group of people that I barely knew (the result of a conversation with friends on Friday night about how they Never introduce me to their friends when we all hang out). We were all there because we were going to be in a wedding together, but I was secretly dreading the wedding because I didn't think that the couple ought to be together (which could come from pretty much anywhere, honestly--there are far too many examples of this in my life right now). Still, I am nothing if not all things agreeable (never say 'nice'!) when I've made a commitment, so there I was. Oddly, it was somewhat like a party I attended thrown by a friend in college who had been engaged for a while but broke the engagement when she discovered, belatedly, that her intended was cheating on her. She cancelled the plans and never spoke to the jackass again, choosing instead to have a party to celebrate her own near-miss. She called it her Disengagement Party. It was wild. I was too young to have a real clue what it was all about, but I know it was one Hell of a weekend. It's a bit surprising that no one fell in the river....
    Back to the dream: there were probably eighteen, maybe two dozen of us there. It wasn't high summer or a super tropical location, so jeans & sweaters were more prevalent than bikinis & shorts. There were lots of Activities. Lots of things Planned. It was sort of a nightmare for someone like me, preferring to do what feels right at the time rather than what's next on a list. "As soon as we finish the Frisbee game, then we'll roast marshmallows." Um, OK.... Throughout, I found myself slinking toward the back, pulling away from the crowd, declining a turn. All the action was wearying, and the only way I could stay there at all was to kick back and observe rather than taking part. There were a couple of other people who seemed to be doing the same, both men that I didn't know. I didn't bother figuring out who they were.
    When we came inside after S'Mores that first night (somehow I knew we were to be there for a week or so, though it was never revealed in so many words), we got our "bunk assignments." The bride-to-be read from a legal pad attached to a clipboard (as she had all day) where each of us was to sleep. For some perverse reason, we were arranged in a MFMF pattern. It was at that point that I realized that every single one of us was completely single, with no attachments whatsoever. We had been chosen to stand up in that wedding because that couple wanted to pair us off. It was nauseating. Still, what could I do? I wasn't the first to realize it (now I could see it in the eyes of a few of the others), and to leave at this point--what would it prove? (This element is also a function of a recurring train of thought I've had lately, though it's about reproducing, not gaining a significant other.)
    I took my place in the boy/girl layout. I was between a very young, very nerdy, very irritatingly chipper attorney (Good. Bye.) and one of the like-minded souls who had sat out a few of the day's events. Because I had to crawl over him to get to my sleeping bag, I didn't really take a good look; at that time all I knew was that he smelled good and that I vastly preferred him to my right-side companion simply by dint of his apparent disinterest. We were jammed cheek-by-jowl into an odd C-shaped fold-out couch that folded out in all three directions, so each of us had a back behind us and a foot-part that we could extend in front of us. It also meant that our feet were basically pooled on top of each other in the middle, depending on how long (er, tall) we were. The night was cool, and a very large, thin spread had been thrown over the center of the C; it covered each of us to the neck and was there to keep the chill off while we chatted and had a drink or two before we slept. (More from the bride's clipboard!)
    I got my standard Blue Frog (er, whatever) and settled back to drink and observe. The fellow to my left did the same, drinking a beer that was darker than my preference but not so thick you could stand a knife in it. (Yeah, it's a vague standard, but we've all got to have boundaries.) He noticed me looking at his beer and he sort of curled his lip toward my glass, as if to say, "Are you really willing to start that debate?" I chuckled and bowed my head, acknowledging the point. (Yup, it's a girly drink. Not the girlyest, but it's no Rob Roy and I'll not pretend.) He raised his eyebrows, seemingly surprised that I had any humor about myself. If he thought I was like the other kids, he was wrong.
    Everyone else was talking as a group. Movies, TV, sports, music. The usual, easy stuff. And someone, sitting to my right (but not close enough right to be the baby lawyer) was making a 13-yr-old move on me (or on someone, anyway--how could they know who?) with their feet in the middle of the bed/couch/thing. It was incongruous and distracting, and there was nowhere else to put my feet except closer to Dark Beer...so I moved them. Right on top of his. He looked at me again, eyebrows raised as if he was accusing me of something but wasn't quite sure what. I just smiled wide and slugged back the rest of my drink. And then I realized: I knew him. He wasn't just this good-looking, dark-beer drinking, grumpy single guy next to whom I happened to have been planted. I knew him.
    First, the good-looking part. He looked like a somewhat shorter combination of Patrick Dempsey and Alex O'Laughlin.
    Someone had come for our glasses; apparently fresh drinks were on the way. Everyone else in the room was involved in a loud debate about a reality show celebrity, and paying no attention to us. He turned fully toward me and said something about my feet. I shrugged a little toward my right, said I needed a little more room and that I knew he wouldn't mind. With that, I looked up slowly and made long eye-contact, batted my eye lashes (that's such a 'me move') and grinned. He tipped back his head and laughed one of those laughs that makes you wish you were holding the person, because the laugh runs right through them and must feel so good that you wish you could feel it, too. Maybe that only happens for people who don't laugh a lot, whose real laughter is rare and precious.
    And then he jabbed me in the ribs. Not a hard jab, but a tiny little tickle-jab. Totally unexpected, the perfect transition. I giggled (another 'me move'--by which I mean so totally not me, when I'm schooling my responses) and instinctively rolled away. He playfully grabbed my hands and rolled me over, all the way over (like, 270° rather than 90°)...which brought me beneath him, with my arms above my head, my wrists trapped under his hands. We were both still laughing, breathing heavily, and couldn't look anywhere but straight into each others' eyes. We knew no one was watching, not that we cared. He was just about to kiss me
            when I woke up.
He really does look like that. It was the soul-searing guy from the Nice post. !

7.15.2010

it's enough to learn to share our pleasures

  1. What was the last thing you made? scrambled eggs with diced Canadian bacon, in honor of the Special Features from ReGenesis, Season One. I'm ready for Season Two to be released, please
  2. What do you think of it? the eggs & northern bacon? Lovely as ever. ReGen? LOVE that show.
  3. What's the weather like? hot, though it's easing some since the sun's setting soonish
  4. How about inside? hot. That's my apt. for ya
  5. What have you eaten today? cereal, tea, turkey sandwich, ubiquitous eggs & bacon
  6. Do you know all the words to the last song you were listening to? last, as in, current? That's "Try Not to Breathe" and oh Hell yeah. Last, as in, just finished? That was "December Sunlight (Cried Out) [Alternate Version to Naked Self]" by The The, and no, I'm only just starting to listen to it.
  7. Do you play any instruments? yup
  8. Been overseas? not yet
  9. What's the worst part about the beach? having to leave
  10. What's the next thing you are going to buy? drinks & dinner tomorrow
  11. What is the best age to die? when you're over
  12. What is an acceptable age to lose your virginity? that at which one is capable of dealing with the potential ramifications of one's actions
  13. How old were you? WAY WAY WAY younger than that
  14. What's your favorite book and why? The Brothers K by David James Duncan. It is something new every time I read it, it always makes me laugh until I hurt and cry hard, and Duncan's writing is what makes me want to be a writer.
  15. Can you remember a quote from it? no - it's beyond
  16. Do you multilingual? Best. Question. Ever.
  17. What's your favourite meal to cook? Puerto Rican chicken fricassee, when there's someone else to tidy up afterward
  18. What's the most romantic thing ever? TBA
  19. What's the most tragic thing ever? thinking that the above is the most critical question on the map
  20. What's the most eye-opening movie you've ever seen? How come? The Professional/Leon. I didn't think I liked violent movies. Ha! I also didn't know that Jean Reno is a genius.
  21. How many times have you been in love? once. [Yes, this number changes with my whim. Today...one.]
  22. What's your blood heritage? same as bones and skin--English and Norwegian
  23. And what's been left physically for you to inherit? are we talking about worldly goods? Pardon me while I bark with laughter. Not the point....
  24. What was your mother's maiden name? Is there anyone on the planet stupid enough to give this info anymore?!
  25. What's your favourite clothing item? it's a tie between a slinky black silk wrap dress and the navy pinstriped PJ pants that I bought to take to Dallas last year
  26. What would you do if your lover was in a horrible accident and had only an hour to live? introduce myself to his girlfriend, I suppose
  27. How do you want to die? unequivocally
  28. Do you think you'll be a parent one day? Magic 8-ball says "Without A Doubt". Time to throw that ball out the window!
  29. What would make you sublimely happy right now? a cool rainstorm, and amenable company with whom to walk
  30. Which direction does your bed face? ...up?
  31. What sayings and myths have you concluded must be true?
    Truth is after all a moving target
    Hairs to split,
    And pieces that don't fit
    How can anybody be enlightened?
    Truth is after all so poorly lit.
    [Neil Peart, from Rush's "Turn the Page"]
[from The Cat, who got it here]

7.14.2010

eyes as clear as centuries

    I was writing a letter a few days ago and somehow got on the subject of my former boyfriend, Nick. In a very odd coincidence, I saw him the other day, buying sunglasses at a roadside shack halfway between here and an outlet mall where I was heading to avoid yet another street dance. This all combined to remind me of a very odd roadtrip that we took, seeking rocks for his aquariums. He wanted big rocks. I don't mean, like, the sort of rocks you can buy in a pet store. (We looked.) Or even the sort that you might get at a landscaping place. (We looked.) We ended up tromping around on the bank of the river, near a weird-but-good little restaurant that really is hidden. He parked the car and scaled the grassy bank (through thigh-high grass and flowers), leaving me behind to make my own way (thanks a lot, not that I was surprised). While he scrounged through the riverbed for rocks twice the size of my fist, I took photos--some of the best I've ever taken. Unexpectedly, perversely, it was a pretty good day.
    The guy, crouched to pull up a rock. Yeah, he's wearing a dress shirt and pants. It was actually a suit. 'Cause that makes perfect sense...for him.
VI1Queen Anne's lace
QAL1Most of the rocks were actually bigger than this one, which was about 6" long and probably weighed 5 pounds.
sample rockI hope it's obvious that I'd never been to this particular spot before. It was lovely, especially at that time of year with the green overgrowth.
VI2Red circle indicates his digging implement of choice: a screwdriver from the trunk of his car. Yellow arrows indicate smaller rocks already retrieved.
VI3I love this. That corona effect in the lower right, over water, is what summer looks like to me.
hot waterThis is more how it actually felt that day, both bright and steamy.
sunny & mildThe postcard shot, river-style.
postcard1The postcard shot, sky.
postcard2I'd never seen lily pads in person and they fascinated me. Don't think Kermit could make a life on one, though.
lily padsIt was only after we'd been wandering by the water for quite a while - and obviously after we'd tromped down through the reeds & rushes to get there - that I discovered the stone steps which would have made the descent a little easier.
stairwayThis shot was (and maybe still is) dude's mom's desktop pattern from the moment I gave her the photos.
QAL2There were lots of awesome flowers, but with flowers come bugs. The wasp in this one was pretty big.
blooms and beesThis is framed and in my living room.
wild

7.11.2010

there are no bloody awards for 'nice' anyway

On my mind today: the concept of being nice. See, I don't consider myself a terribly 'nice' person. I know that I can be, when I put my mind to it or the situation demands it. At work (irony acknowledged) and with family (likewise), I can behave in such a way that no one would stop to ponder the question. But deep down, in my heart of hearts, I think that's done. A part of me that used to be, and will be no more. The great Minnesotan philosopher Garrison Keillor once wrote, "You taught me to be nice, so nice that now I am so full of niceness, I have no sense of right and wrong, no outrage, no passion." That is a perfectly fine way to describe me for my whole life until maybe 5 years ago. Pure vanilla. Mild as can be. Soft.

Please don't get any fancy psychological ideas--this isn't a divorce-reaction thing. I am quite certain that "this" is "about" independence. Learning how to live by myself, really live, by myself, as a self-contained unit. I'm sure there are people who caught that lesson at a younger age, with less drama, not so disruptively. I'm glad for them, and envious. However they managed to do it, I didn't. I wouldn't really recommend that anyone else try anything else that I've done in the course of my life, so this is no exception.

I started thinking about nice-ness today while I mentally pondered my non-relationship with a man who, when I think about it objectively, is a lot like me. We both like History and beer and are fairly well obsessed with reading, and have no tolerance for pretense and obviousness and stuffing (that insulation-like product that's served with turkey). The funny thing, that's not actually funny? He's not particularly nice to me--by which I mean, he's never actually been what one could call "nice", to me. Regardless of what I do, he seems to ignore, and then suffer, my presence. And then suddenly, with no trigger that I can see, the situation is transformed, and we are delicately balanced between wringing each others' necks and tearing off each others' clothes. OK, so maybe he's closer to the former and I'm perched just outside the latter, but you get the point. I wonder whether I've ever been nice to him? Or if it matters, in terms of his relative (perceived) antipathy? Is it likely my lack of nice-ness a significant criterion to someone who doesn't seem to value it?

None of this is intended to be some sort of sniveling, self-indulgent plea for compliments; I do realize that there are aspects to my personality that make me worth knowing. I am loyal, determined and generous, I can be funny (although "witty" comes closer and "clever" is preferred) and precise (is that a compliment?), and I make both a good house guest and travel companion because I am self-contained and reasonably copacetic about scheduling. And, of course, I am easier to talk to than girls are. (Here is a shameless plea, if you're in the market: if you actually know me and haven't filled in my Johari window, please do.)

Nice is not something that I want to be. It is an also-ran trait, praised when one lacks something more desirable (akin to having a lovely singing voice). Maybe I'm not 'nice,' but I'll tell you the truth, sometimes make you laugh, and otherwise not waste your time exercising my voice for the hell of it. In the final accounting, maybe that will be enough. Not enough to get whatever I want, right when I want it, but...enough.

7.08.2010

on Thanksgiving Day we acknowledge our dependence

  1. When was the last time you jetted away for the holidays? I've never, but prehaps this year. My parents are taking a foreign vacation for Christmas, so my plans are up in the air. Maybe I'll make that literal.
  2. What is your fondest birthday memory? Hmm. I've lots of un-fond ones (the death of a pet as a child stands out; a spectacularly shitty gift for a milestone day was memorable; a terrible fight after a Cubs game followed by a completely silent train-ride home is the most recent), and not just too much to counter that. Maybe the 18th? I finally had the chance to get to know someone I'd admired from afar.
  3. What names do you go by? just the given, and standard derivations thereof
  4. What do you look forward to most in the next six weeks? watching some racing
  5. Where is your least favorite place to be, and why? the dentist's office. I'm pretty sure that I'm being sexually harassed by my hygienist.
  6. Have you ever had a scary stalker type? yup. It's been a few months but I seriously doubt that it'll ever really be over.
  7. What is your favorite holiday tradition? Thanksgiving at the Cat-Beast's
  8. What are two activities you do after eating Thanksgiving Dinner? watch football & flirt in the most low-key way possible...to no useful end
  9. What did your family do for Thanksgiving when you were a kid? Do you still do it? If not, explain why. Thanksgiving was a BIG deal when I was a kid. My mom's side of the family would gather at my grandparents' house (~40 min. away) in the late morning. There would be totally insane quantities of the best food imaginable. Grandma would roast turkeys, and my mom's sisters and brother's family would all bring various dishes to go along. I can't remember ever trying anything that wasn't fantastic, and the house smelled completely ridiculous. The kids would play, the older kids would help out in the kitchen (upstairs) or the pantry (basement), slicing rolls or plating. The guys would do guy stuff, I guess. The women made the final food prep. We would eat early-afternoon. There would be people propped on every flat surface you could see, and we would all eat until we were stuffed beyond comfort. After the meal, some people would clean up, while some would go for a long walk in the woods (i.e. the men would take the kids out to keep us out of the cleaners' way and burn off some steam). When we were through with that, we would play games and eventually draw names for our Christmas gift exchange. Sometime in the early evening we would pull out the food again and have a cold supper, much smaller than the first meal but no less awesome. When we were full and quiet, we would spend another hour or so saying our goodbyes before heading back home. It was a long day, probably 12 or 14 hours there, but some of the best days I've ever had.
    My grandmother died when I was 16, and my grandfather a couple of years later. Since then, the family gets together as a whole only for weddings and funerals. My mom's generation seems to have lost the spirit of it since they lost my grandma; she was the one who tied the extended family together.
    That is part of why I don't "go home" for Thanksgiving. Another part: the year that my former spouse and I broke up, my parents were in a particularly bad frame of mind in November and did not treat me particularly well. Because of that - perhaps in honor of who I used to be, that flawed and needy person who was not just "abandoned" but forcibly turned away - I choose to find my own way now. Not all the time, but for that one time of year when I
    had to be utterly alone. It's proof, y'know, that I can do it.
    And another part, this one wholly good: because I have come to love spending my Thanksgivings with the Cat & Beast & Sparky, and Beast's dad, and the nephews (the hot, disruptive, soul-searing one and the coltish, kind, silly one), and sometimes the niece (
    beee...yaaa...tch... um, don't mind me...) and her husband and whomever else might be there. That house is more comfortable than home, those people (well, the first three, anyway) are the very definition of gracious and comforting (not to mention entertaining, amusing and amiable), and the food is always good, too. Pie for breakfast kicks ass. The only thing that would make it better (besides either more or less disruption from the nephew): just a couple more days to enjoy it.
[from The Cat, who got it here; title quote from William Jennings Bryan]

7.07.2010

hometown in pix, day 8

My mom has many houseplants. Her true love is Hawaiian hibiscus. This one, like the cat, is called "big orange."
flower1It had just started to flower during my visit.
flower2I like the little antennae. No, you really don't need to correct me with the proper botanical name.
flower3Rather inconveniently, as it turns out, my visit coincided with the Second Annual (which sounds a bit ambitious, if you ask me) local Triathlon. The "long" course took participants directly past the parental homestead, which gave me the unique opportunity to photograph elite athletes at their best...while wearing jammies and eating pancakes that my mommy made for me.
Trinona1Trinona2Trinona3Trinona4Trinona5Trinona6I really did go up for my bro's GF's daughter's graduation party. Here's proof:
party balloonsparty tableIt took eight days, but I finally saw the elusive kittens. They apparently only come out after dark. Using special infrared photography...
kittens with arrowsnah, I just got lucky.
kittens sans arrows

7.02.2010

hometown in pix, day 7

...a.k.a. "tattoo day." As promised, I'm not posting any photos of my ink. This, however, is the arm of "my guy"—the artist who does my stuff. No, I didn't have him redo it on me.
armIt's a tradition that we go out for Chinese after tattooing (or serious discussions thereof). For some reason we ended up parking way the fook West, all the way down by the Courthouse. This is what I grew up thinking that court buildings looked like. Is it any wonder that I wanted to be a lawyer?
courthouse 1It looks that nice inside, too.
courthouse 2